1
The few who have a broad experience of life, whose
reason is sufficiently alive to judge both fruits and roots correctly and whose
intuition is sufficiently active to recognize nobility when meeting it, who want
the whole truth and nothing less, will find a friend (for he will not
wish to be anything more) who will decline to permit others to hold a fanciful
vision of an earthly perfection which is non-existent; who will be humble, sane,
and balanced above all things, and yet prove with time - if they themselves
prove loyal - to be also a sure and benevolent guide in this dark forest where
so many wander bewildered, deceived, or self-deceived. Excessive unreflective
saint-worship raises exaggerated and even false hopes. It has historically often
ended with exploitation of the worshipper. But even where it does not, it is
still incompatible with healthy self-development; an affectionate respect is
wiser and safer. Let us not ask a teacher to be a god, because thereby we are
liable to deceive and endanger ourselves, but let us ask him to be competent and
illumined, truthful and helpful and compassionate.
2
Not by our own exertions alone, and not by the gift
or grace of an external being alone, can we be brought to final realization, but
by both.
3
Those who can let themselves be uplifted by some
inspired or enlightened person should understand that he is capable of lifting
them to the point of touching their best self, the divinity within them. Some
may even gain a glimpse of it, a memorable unforgettable experience. But will
they let it happen?
4
We are not left to find out for ourselves what the
truth is. Now and then messengers appear among us, each bearing his own personal
communication about the existence of a higher power and the need of a higher
life.
5
We may help the Overself in drawing us to the goal by
surrendering to the guidance of a competent spiritual adviser or we may obstruct
it by clinging to the ego's. But an incompetent adviser will also obstruct it,
and in fact become a channel for the ego's truth-obscuring tactics.
6
The difficulty of the task of self-improvement is not
to be underrated and it is because of this as well as for other reasons that
seekers since ancient times have been advised to obtain the help of a guru. From
him they can get inspiration, guidance, and a certain telepathically transferred
strengthening power which is called Grace.
It is not necessary to be living always near a guru in a monastery as so many seem to think. What is really necessary is to meet him on this physical plane once only, even if it be just for five minutes. After that his help can be received inwardly and mentally by telepathy without any further physical meeting. This is because the real guru is not the body, but his inner being, the Mind behind the body, and it is that inner being with which the seeker must try to come into relation. Such a relation he builds up himself by his own mental attitude, by his faith devotion and obedience to the way that is shown.
7
Wherever there is instruction to be got there is an
ashram. And whenever you go there you will get instruction from the experiences
of life. Therefore the whole world is an ashram to a discerning student. Much
the same applies to the question of a teacher. Says a Bengali verse: "Wouldst
thou make obeisance to thy master, my heart? He is there at every step, on each
side of thy path. The welcome offered thee is thy master, the agony inflicted on
thee is thy master. Every wrench at thy heartstrings that maketh the tears flow
is thy master."
8
Any book or person seen or art production which
reminds a man of his diviner self, is to that extent his teacher. Any happening
or event or experience which alienates him from such remembrance, whether it be
regarded by the world as good or as evil, likewise is his teacher. Even his own
unworthy actions will, because of the consequences to which they must infallibly
lead, also be his teachers.
9
Those whose inner development or outer circumstances
or personal karma have prepared them for the truth will come to it anyway: they
may need a little prodding or a lot of reflection, but in the end they will
recognize it for what it is. But they confound this recognition with the
relation of discipleship to some guru. The two things need to be separated if
they are to be correctly understood.
10
Teaching is always available in some way or some
form, for Life, through varied situations, takes care of its own; but a Teacher
in his physical form may not be available just at the necessary point in time.
In that case, one may be met through his writings. If this does not happen, he
may come into the mental life during a great anguish or an enforced inactivity
or an unusual relaxation or, finally, through or during meditation.
11
(Mira Bai) "On the way I found two guides: the
spiritual preceptors and God. To the preceptors I make my bow. But God I keep in
my heart."
12
Happiness depends on our understanding of life,
understanding depends upon the penetration of insight, insight depends upon
right instructions received from a competent teacher.
13
The inspirational and moral, the intellectual and
meditational helps which a competent guide can give to a worthy disciple are
valuable. If such a worthy, honourable, selfless, experienced, and expert guide
can be found - and this may be counted exceptionally good fortune - the disciple
should certainly submit to his tutelage and surrender to his influence.
14
The need of a saviour arises from the fact that the
ego cannot lift itself by its own bootstraps, cannot rise out of its own
dimension into a higher one, and will not willingly encompass its own
destruction. Yet its spiritual career arrives eventually at a point where it
finds and sees that it has done what it could, that further efforts are futile,
and that only some power outside itself can bring about the next forward move.
However, it may not without self-deception declare this point to be reached when
in fact it ought to continue with its strivings; it may not cease prematurely
from its struggles. If it does so, then it would be equally futile to seek a
master's grace.
15
Those who refuse to admit that a Master is
essential to the neophyte will at least grant that his aid is advisable. Only a
man severely handicapped or a fool would undertake the study and practice of
medicine, or building, or of any other art without a teacher, an expert who has
himself mastered the subject. How then can anyone take up the art of
soul-unfoldment, subtle and recondite as it is, without realizing the usefulness
of a Master?
16
Heaven lies within and without us, it is true. But
in most cases, only by the intervention of some authentic spiritual genius do we
seem able to translate this into actuality for ourselves.
17
Life is teaching us all the time but its voice
needs a human being as a more direct medium, its lessons need human speech or
writing to gain clearer utterance.
18
Nature herself is forever silently voicing these
majestic truths and if we are unable to receive them from her lips, as we
usually are, then we must receive them from a teacher's lips.
19
We know that the mere reading of books and journals
is not enough, and our essential conviction (as also the acknowledgment of the
Orient since time immemorial) is that a personal guide who can instruct and
inspire one to travel through the twilit jungle land which lies between
ignorance and truth is indispensable.
20
The missing element in many quests is the spiritual
guide.
21
One of the greatest helps to convert our timid
thoughts and our trembling wishes into deeds is the inspiration received from a
superior mind.
22
Most men find they need a concrete symbol to
receive their devotion and concentrate their aspiration. In short, they find
they need a Spiritual Leader, be he historical and of the past, or contemporary
and of the present.
23
It is said that wisdom comes with experience. But
the sages who offer to impart it, whether in person or in writing, may save us
some of the effort and suffering which accompany experience.
24
Every generation has to find its own way through
these mysteries and to these truths anew, despite the heavy freight of recorded
teachings and revelations which it receives from all the previous ones. This is
why new prophets have always been needed to provide the old, old clues.
25
Something or someone is needed to draw us from the
ego to the Overself behind it.
26
When he finds out that all his efforts at
self-improvement are movements around a circle, that the ego does not really
intend to give itself up in surrender to the Overself and therefore only
pretends to do so, he realizes that left to himself he cannot succeed in really
changing his inner centre of gravity. Help is needed from some outside source if
he is to free himself from such a hopeless position.
27
The purposes of human evolution require the
presence at all times through human history of some spiritually fulfilled
individuals to act as guides or teachers. At no period has the race been left
entirely without them, no matter how bleak, how savage, or how materialistic the
period has been.
28
While the dream is still continuing, he cannot help
taking its scenes and figures as being quite real. But if someone rings a bell
until he awakens from the dreaming state, he will then see that both scenes and
figures were mere figments of his own imagination. In a sense, the teacher of
philosophy acts as this awakener did, except that he directs his efforts to the
sense-deceived consciousness of everyday life.
29
It is not enough to set up a spiritual ideal for
him to attain. He needs also the psychological help, the emotional and mental
re-education which can remove large obstructions to that attainment.
30
No seeker is so wise, so informed, so perfect, or
so balanced as not to need the constructive criticism and expert counsel of a
true spiritual guide.
31
Such is the world today, with its tensions and
greeds, its confusions and wrongs, its ignorance and evil-doing, that if anyone
has a store of virtue and an awareness of divinity, people have need of them and
hence of him. There is too little of the one and hardly any of the other among
us.
32
A man needs comfort and support in these times more
than in ordinary times. Where can he best find them? By sitting humbly in
intellectual discipleship under those who have been blessed by the higher power
with the revelation of its own existence. He can absorb from them a certitude
that the world is still ruled by higher laws and its history by higher purposes.
33
If someone knows what I do not yet know, if he has
trodden farther on this path, then it is well to learn from him if he will teach
me.
34
The instruction and criticism of a qualified living
guide are worth having. But owing to the rarity of such guides, many seekers are
unable to find one.
35
He should appreciate the value of finding a master
worthy of being followed. The inner demand of the one will attract in time the
outer meeting with the other.
36
No maniac can cure himself. We dare not leave the
treatment of humanity's mania entirely to the humanity themselves. The help of
sane outsiders is needed. But it should be given indirectly and unobtrusively.
37
If the more mature, older, and more experienced
nightingales find it necessary to give lessons in singing to the younger ones,
why not the same situation among human beings?
38
It is the greatest irony of man's existence that in
the end he will be saved from his meanness and misery not by those who shout the
loudest but by the quietest, the most silent of his fellows. For the power and
knowledge which he will gain from discipleship with them will be what he needs
above all else - power over the baseness in himself and knowledge of the divine
World-Idea.
39
In the single matter of learning meditation alone
one will encounter all sorts of obstacles within oneself and difficulties
without. They will be much more easily and quickly overcome if one places
oneself under the training of an expert preceptor whose long experience in this
matter and natural gift for guiding others makes his advice mentally
enlightening and practically useful.
40
The beginner cannot take his lessons from the
skies. He has to find a teacher, even if only to impart the right atmosphere and
inculcate the right ideas.
41
The use of a teacher is, firstly, suggestive. His
influence is a definite aid to incline us to travel along the proper path. It
is, secondly, protective, for under his constant guidance we learn to be wary of
pitfalls.
42
Not only is the teacher helpful in pointing out the
proper path to be followed and also in exposing the errors of the disciple but
furthermore in bestowing upon him an impetus to the practice of meditation and
the strength to obtain the concentration required for it. The impetus is needed
because through long habit engendered over many reincarnations of the past, most
people are unbalanced. That is, they are either too extroverted and overactive
with outward matters or live in a state of continual mental restlessness through
being too busy with their own thoughts. The strength is needed because keeping
the attention along a single track and sustaining it for a certain period is an
extremely difficult task. Once the inner contact has been properly established,
quite often the mere thought of the master will be enough to inspire the
disciple and thus give him both the impetus and the strength required to make
his attempts at meditation more effectual.
43
Other results of associating with one who is more
spiritually advanced are that it incites a student to excel himself, strengthens
him in the resolve to pursue the quest, and fans the spark of longing for the
Divine.
44
It is said in the Yogic and Sufi schools that the
company of enlightened men tends to arouse those who dwell in darkness to seek
light, as it tends to hasten the development of those who are already engaged in
this search.
45
It is when one reaches the end of a particular
phase and has first to find, then to begin a new one that help from outside is
useful. The same is true when one reaches a difficult place on the Quest. This
help may be found in a book, a lecture, a guru, a chance meeting, or in some
other way.
46
The help of a master shows itself principally, and
is chiefly important in, the course taken by the mind during meditation.
47
One of the chief benefits of meeting with an
illumined book or an inspired man, is that such an encounter opens up the
possibility of moving more swiftly from a lower to a higher standpoint. It opens
up truths which would ordinarily be too far ahead to be noticed, thus acting
like a spiritual telescope. It also brings us face to face with our own errors
in thought and conduct. Such a movement might otherwise take several years or
sometimes a whole lifetime. But it remains only a possibility. It is for us to
recognize the true character of the opportunity and for us to grasp and take the
fullest advantage of it.
48
It may be that he keeps the spiritual quest in the
background of his mind only. If so he needs a quickening impulse. Such an
impulse can be given him but only by a master. He imparts the necessary impetus
which helps the student towards the realization of his finest aspirations.
49
Whoever seeks to raise his own consciousness to the
Overself's, will get most help from seeking out an individual who has already
accomplished that task. In the presence of someone whose own consciousness is in
the Overself, he will receive the inward inspiration which can energize and lead
his personal efforts in the same direction.
50
The entrance of a book of truth, or of a man
bearing truth, into the aspirant's life will, at certain periods when he is
ready and prepared for further development, be like turning on the light in a
room to shut out the darkness.
51
The earnest seeker will get more from a single
meeting with a truly inspired man than from attendance at a hundred sessions in
an organized spiritual school or ashram. For the first will awaken his intuition
whereas the second will merely add to his information. The first will really
advance his progress whereas the second will only give the illusion of doing so.
But such is the widespread ignorance and inexperience of these things, as well
as the suggestive power of pomp and prestige, that the organized institution
will always attract fifty followers where the lone illuminate will attract five.
52
A human channel is needed for the superhuman
inspiration, grace, teaching, or revelation because the recipient minds are not
sufficiently sensitive, pure, or prepared to receive it directly for themselves.
53
His own little experience may be too limited to
comprehend mystical revelations aright. Consequently he may in parts or at times
misinterpret them. A safeguard against this is first, to call in the experience
of other seekers, which he may do through their books or speech, and second, to
call on authority, which he may do through joining his inner life to a
trustworthy teacher.
54
The beginning aspirant lacks the experience to
judge himself aright and even the intermediate lacks the impersonal view to
judge himself correctly.
55
Even a single meeting with a master is vastly
important to the aspirant. He may never enter into any personal relation with
the master but that meeting will alone suffice to do four fundamental things. It
will vindicate the value of his aspirations and demonstrate their attainability;
it will convince him that the Overself does exist and show him in what direction
he is to seek it.
56
When he himself forgets it, man is reminded of his
divine linkage by prophets, teachers, and sages.
57
One advantage of having a personal teacher is that,
to some extent, you can watch his mind work.
58
The master can see the disciple's character and
motives, hidden complexes and unrevealed weaknesses better than he can himself.
59
So long as experience and results have not
established sufficient confidence in his intuitive guidance and sufficient trust
in his philosophic knowledge, he needs to continue travelling with a teacher.
60
The master is the wonderful catalyst who makes
possible a quickened development, an inspired renewal of the aspirant's inner
life.
61
At a certain stage in the life of the aspirant it
is of the utmost importance to him that he improve his character and karma.
This, neither he nor anyone can hope to do so effectively alone as when studying
under a genuine teacher. In the latter case, it is possible for him to
accomplish within a relatively short time that which would ordinarily require
many more years of floundering self-effort.
62
What the earnest mind is struggling to formulate to
itself vaguely and uncertainly and unclearly, the teacher states decisively,
assuredly, and definitely.
63
A phrase or two, coming from an inspired man, may
set a subconscious process working in the mind of another and lead him in the
end to acquire a new truth or a new view.
64
Those who come forward as gurus driven by the ego,
the ambitions, and ulterior motives are not gurus at all. They are trespassers
on a fine vocation. We must remember that those who work to earn a livelihood
and come home tired have not the time or strength to think for themselves or to
search for themselves. For them the ready-made support of established religion
is indeed helpful, while the guidance of sincere, competent, and available
teachers is even more sought for.
65
To follow one's own path, rejecting the idea of
seeking the expert help, tested knowledge, and accumulated experience of a
Master is to follow a haphazard course of trial and error. The determination to
maintain such independence and to make one's way by one's own effort is not of
much use. One will be far better off working under guidance than without it.
66
An aspirant is most fortunate if he has been led
safely upwards past the delusory sidetracks and bypaths which detain so many
other seekers. Only in this way can his consciousness arrive at what really
constitutes the Highest Truth.
67
Teaching is necessary. How can those who do not
know the true cause of their afflictions know the way out of them? Someone must
warn them, someone must awaken them.
68
We do not go all the way with the Tibetan saying
that "without the guru you cannot get liberation," but we do go part of the way.
69
The need of a guide and mentor is obvious but this
is no reason to exaggerate it to the extent that so many have done.
70
Sri Ramakrishna once said: "A man who himself
approaches God with deep longing for Him, and earnest prayer, will find Him even
if he has no guru." When asked why a teacher was necessary at all, he
replied, "Very few people have this deep yearning and therefore the guru
is necessary for them." By this he meant that the teacher inspires and
encourages seekers of God not to give up when the going is difficult, but to
stick to the Quest, regardless of the many long years it inevitably takes.
71
It is always pleasant to learn that a seeker has
found a good teacher. It may be puzzling then to hear that the teacher can no
longer continue with his pupil. However, in such a case, the individual should
not be unnecessarily distressed, because he can most certainly continue to make
progress on the Quest irrespective of whether or not he has an outward teacher.
All he needs to do is to pray humbly to God, whose love and forgiveness will
accompany him always where a human teacher's cannot.
72
Is there then no real need of a master? The answer
is "No!" for some men but "Yes!" for most men. He is needed to wake up
the sleeper by telling him the highest truth from the very first time,
and then descend by degrees to the stages while still holding on to the truth.
The master serves only by showing a seeking person his real self, his Overself:
or holding a mirror up to him. This can be called, also, giving him a "glimpse,"
or, more truthfully, being used by the higher power as a vehicle to do so.
73
He who is working under the guidance of a master is
not exempt from making mistakes, but he will make fewer and expose them sooner
and correct them quicker than he who is not.
74
I write all this in no sneering or disparaging
manner, but rather as one who understands sympathetically the need of most
beginners and many intermediates to find guidance outside themselves for the
all-sufficient reason that they cannot find it inside. Indeed it is because I
have been a disciple that I myself know why others become one, and can approve
of their action. But that experience is also why I know the limitations and
disservices of a discipleship.
75
To say that no teacher is necessary is to set
oneself up as a teacher by that very statement.
76
Self-instruction cannot be as correct and
efficacious as instruction by an expert, a specialist, or a fully experienced
person who can also communicate adequately as a teacher.
77
The original Shankara, Adi Shankara, made it an
absolute necessity that whoever sought to realize the spiritual Truth must seek
out a guru. This injunction has hypnotized the Indians who came after him as it
hypnotized those before his time because it was laid down in the Mundaka
Upanishad long, long before. Shankara even warned his readers and hearers
that even an expert student of the Vedas should not engage in such a
search by himself. Yet there are several cases in Indian history where men have
experienced this realization without any guru whatever.
78
We need to build up an intimate inner relationship
with a being whose compassion is wide enough to understand us and whose power is
developed enough to help us. It does not matter that he is dead.
79
Those who know only a single mode of living, that
of the extrovert, or a single mode of thinking, that which is sense-based, need
to expose themselves for sufficient time to the influence of a spiritual master
before they can begin to become even dimly aware that they have a soul. But
since a fully evolved master is hard to find, something else must act as his
next best substitute. This must necessarily be an inspired writing produced by
such a man.
80
The truth is that nearly all aspirants need the
help of expert human guides and printed books when they are actively seeking the
Spirit, and of printed books at least when they are merely beginning to seek.(P)
81
It is not essential to find a teacher in the flesh
- he may be in print. A book may become a quite effective teacher and guide.
82
In the absence of a sage's personal society, one
may have recourse to the best substitute - a sage's printed writings.
83
Inspired texts, portions of scriptures, great men's
writings and sayings offer guidance on the course of action to be followed, the
ethical considerations to be heeded, the decisions to be made under certain
pressures, crises, or confrontations - decisions whose consequences are often
quite grave. Who can price the value of such readings at such times?
84
Books are most useful to those who, whether by
necessity through lack of sincere competent instruction or by choice, to avoid
narrow sectarianism, seek the goal by themselves.
85
Most students seeking inspiration have no other
choice than recourse to the printed words.
86
The personal contact with a master does not
necessarily require a face-to-face meeting. It can also be effected through a
letter written by him - nay, to some degree, even through a book written by him.
For his mind incarnates itself in these productions. Thus, those who are
prevented by circumstances from meeting him physically, may meet him mentally
and gain the same results.
87
The perspicacious student will cling steadfastly
throughout his life to the writings of illumined masters, returning to them
again and again.Their works are the truest of all, pure gold and not alloys.
88
There are men whose thought went deeper and
understood more clearly than that of their fellows. Their record exists, their
sayings and writings also. Their study is worthwhile, their precepts can be put
to the test in practical everyday living.
89
In these books the voice of men who were
spiritually illuminated long ago speaks to him. They are the only way in which
it can speak to him today. Therefore he should respect and cherish them.
90
Those who have towered above all other men as
Masters, who have left records of their path and of its attainment, can be good
guides.
91
Why not make these great men your teachers through
their preserved teachings? Why not be the disciple of Socrates, Buddha, Saint
Paul, and dozens of others?
92
However distant a teacher may be, whether in
country or century, by means of this written record he is able to help whoever
is willing to lend his time and eyes.
93
If a book gives correct teaching about the quest
and necessary warning about its pitfalls, it should be studied with proper care
and respect.
94
A man can take from the printed word what he is
unable to hear from the spoken word.
95
The truth-seeker will be wise to make use of such
outward helps as appeal to him. They may be the written word, the printed book,
the molded statuette, the pictorial representation, or the human photograph -
always provided they are referable to a genuinely inspired source. He should
study the words and works, the lives and examples of practising mystics, and
follow in their footsteps.
96
Good books are not to be disdained, despite
contemptuous references by fanatical mystics or ill-balanced ascetics.
Negatively, they will warn him against misleading elements likely to cause a
deviation from his correct course. Positively, they will guide him where no
personal guide is available.
97
But he must beware of imagining that the pleasure
he derives from spiritual reading is any sign that he is making progress in
spiritual living. It is easier to read lofty thoughts than to think them out for
oneself, and to live them is the most difficult of all.
98
Books, too, serve as guides if they are properly
used, that is, if their limitations are recognized and if their authors'
limitations are acknowledged. In the first case it is the intellect's own
inability to transcend thought that stops it from realizing truth. In the second
case it is the evolutionary status of the man's ego, and the accuracy of his
attitudes - themselves victims or controllers of his emotions, passions - which
matter. For if his mind cannot register the impact of truth, because of the
blockage set up partially or even all around him, the author's work will reflect
his ignorance. He cannot teach what he does not know; his own mental obscurity
can lead only to the reader's obscurity. Yet such is the deceptiveness of
thought, that a wrong or false idea may be received and held in the mind under
the belief that it is a right or true one.
99
The writings of these Masters help both the moral
nature and the intellectual mind of the responsive and sensitive, who are
excited to the same endeavour, exhilarated to the same level, and urged to
realize the same ideas. These stand out from all other writings because they
contain vivid inspiration and true thought.
100
The very fine writings of philosophers and
mystics of all times may bring into one's life some emotional inspirational and
intellectual guidance, even, possibly, stimulating his power of will. Through
the long, unavoidable years of struggle on the Quest, they can, to that extent,
act the part of a teacher or guide. However, it must be remembered that some are
infinitely more worthwhile than others, and it is essential for one to be able
to discriminate between what is true and helpful and what is false and
worthless.
101
These subjects are becoming more widely known and
more studied than they were a half-century ago. There has been quite a flow of
literature, original works, commentaries, and translations in our time making
both mystical and philosophic ideas more available.
102
With the universal spread of elementary
education, and the issue of cheaper paper-covered texts and translations, it is
now possible for most earnest seekers living in the free countries to come into
possession of the teaching.
103
If he cannot understand the more intellectual
portions of these books he should not worry because they are written for
different classes and those portions which he cannot follow are particularly
addressed to highbrows and have to be expressed in a more complicated and
scientific style.
104
If the literature on these subjects is so much
larger today, the problem of choosing correctly what is most reliable is so much
more difficult.
105
Book teaching is too general. It makes no
allowance for individual differences, for the wide variation from one person to
another. It is always necessary for the readers to adapt the teaching to their
own sex, age, character, strength, and circumstances.
106
From these great writings, he will receive
impulses of spiritual renewal. From these strong paragraphs and lovely words he
will receive incitement to make himself better than he is. Their every page will
carry a message to him; indeed, they will seem to be written for him.
107
Every book which stimulates aspiration and widens
reflection does spiritual service and acts as a guru.
108
With such books he will feel for a while better
than he is, wiser than he is.
109
One of the helps to kindle this spark into a
flame is the reading of inspired literature, whether scripture or not - the
mental association through books with men who have themselves been wholly
possessed by this love.
110
A chance phrase in such an inspired writing may
give a man the guidance for which he has long been waiting.
111
The words of inspired men are like a lighthouse
to those seekers who are still groping in the dark.
112
Perhaps one prime value of a book is its power to
remind students of fundamental principles and its ability to recall them to the
leading points of this teaching, for these are easily lost or overlooked amid
the press of daily business.
113
He will draw from such reading the incentive to
keep on with his quest and the courage to set higher goals.
114
It may not be in the power of any piece of
writing to guide a man all the way along this quest but it certainly is in its
power to give him general direction and specific warning.
115
Let him study the literature of mystical and
philosophic culture to become better informed about the Quest, about its nature
and goal, and about himself.
116
By comparing what is described in the books with
what he has so far experienced for himself, an aspirant may check and correct
his course.
117
Those who were awakened by this reading could
then look elsewhere for the personal guidance they seek.
118
Through a book help is given without involving
the helper in the personal lives of the readers, but through a letter or a
meeting involvement begins.
119
It is a man's own fault if, through his failure
to seek spiritual guidance or understanding, none is vouchsafed to him. "Ask,
and it shall be given unto you," said Jesus in this reference, which complements
and is necessary to the assertion of the Chinese sage: "Those who know do not
speak."
120
It is said, "When a pupil is ready, the Master
appears." This means that such is the wonderful sensitivity of the mind, such is
the reality of telepathic power, that when a man's search for truth has reached
a crisis, he will meet the man who or the book which can best resolve that
crisis. But the crisis itself must be filled with uncertainty and doubt, with
helplessness and despair before the mysterious forces of the Overself will begin
to move towards his relief. It should seem to him the most momentous consequence
that it shall be brought to a satisfactory end, if life in the future is to have
any meaning for him at all. There must be a sense of inner loneliness so acute
that outer loneliness compares as nothing with it. There must be no voice within
his world which can speak to his condition. This critical period must fill his
mind with exaggeration of its own self-importance to such an extent as to blot
out every other value from life. It will be at such an opportune moment, when
his search for truth will be most intense and the required preparation for
meeting its bearer most complete, that the bearer himself will arise and bring
into his night the joyful tidings of dawn. The influence of such a man or his
book at such a period is incalculable. Emerson gives its innermost meaning in
his lines, "If we recall the rare hours when we encountered the best persons, we
there found ourselves.... God's greatest gift is a Teacher." The seeker knows at
last that even if he has not found the truth he is at least on the way to
finding it. He has begun to find harmony with himself.
121
If the strong yearning for truth be absent, a man
may meet a thousand masters of the quest but he will neither recognize them for
what they are nor experience any exaltation in their presence. This yearning
must indeed be as strong as the hunger of a starving man or the desperation of a
traveller lost in the desert.
122
His desperate need drives him to go in search of
help wherever he can find it.
123
In obedience to this inner urge he should take a
path which will lead him to the friendship of the few sages living in his time
and bring him to their feet.
124
The man who begins to feel this need in himself
should seek out spiritual direction. He should find an authoritative source to
instruct him in spiritual truth and to clear up his questions.
125
Contrary to common belief, the teacher is not
found in the inner psychic life first and then the discovery reflected in the
outer physical life later. He is met first in the flesh; but the discovery must
eventually become a settled psychic fact before any real relationship can be
established between the two. He must be found unshakeably established in the
innermost depths of the heart as a presence and in the background of the mind as
a picture.
126
There has arisen too much harm and exploitation
from the teacher-seeking attitude of some. Firstly, the request for a teacher
should arise from a deep, sustained, and urgent sense of needing such help - not
merely for the sake of having one.
127
His Overself may lead him to seek and find
another man who shall be its intermediary with him: its representative to him,
its image for him.
128
A knowledge worth understanding is not less
important than a teacher worth seeking.
129
If a seeker believes that he has achieved a
certain extent of self-preparation and self-purification, if he is convinced of
the desperate need of a master, and if he does not succeed in finding a worthy
one, then let him pray for help in the matter.
130
It is not enough to try to follow the counsel
given by prophets, mystics, and sages, to look within. It is necessary also to
look deep enough and long enough to get really worthwhile results. This applies
just as much to the search for help as to the search for truth.
131
The individual seeking a teacher must not be
disappointed nor discouraged if he is not accepted as a pupil. Prayer and
aspiration directed toward the Higher Self will bring the sought-for guidance
from within. Moreover, he may have been given help of which he is as yet unaware
and, eventually, this will come through into his conscious mind. He should not
exaggerate the need for a teacher. Ultimately, his development will depend on
principles rather than on personalities.
132
The seeker should resolve to appeal directly by
constant aspiration and prayer to his own higher self, in the knowledge that it
alone can help him if he is to work without a teacher. On the other hand, if his
karma has decreed that he is to have a guide, his higher self will bring before
him the mental image or intuitive thought of the Master. If this happens, he
will not need to seek out the Master's physical person; the inner picture will
bring results.
133
Although it is true that meeting with inspired
men does arouse some persons for the first time to the need of a higher life, it
is also true that deep probing would show to what a large extent previous events
or reflections had already mentally led such persons to the verge of this need.
The inspired teacher does not create it. He only indicates it. Fate brings him
at the right moment into the other person's life to enable this to be done.
134
And somewhere, sometime, for every man who
sincerely seeks there must come a Guide, merely because this personal opening of
the gate is part of Nature's program.
135
At times it seems to him that the help promised
him has not materialized. This is his opinion. But it may also be that his ego
was so strong that the help could not reach him because the ego stood in the way
too obstinately. In any case it should have been made clear to him in books and
conversations that the advanced mystic is not a Master but only a fellow
student. If he could not get the required help from such a one he must accept
the fact that it simply was not meant to be.
136
Even when a teacher is found he may be a master
of one path only and unable to guide aspirants properly along those with which
they have individual affinity and for which they have the requisite mental or
emotional or volitional capacity.
137
Another false idea is that the masters seek out
disciples, make the advance towards them, whether "astrally" or physically. On
the contrary, aspirants must take the first step themselves, must request
acceptance.
138
With all my Western education and intellectual
outlook, I am still simple enough to believe, with Eastern people, that it is
worthwhile making a journey to get the blessing of a superior person.
139
But although philosophers do not engage in making
proselytes or in starting crusades, the man who is attracted by any tenet of
philosophy will sooner or later find someone who will be ready to explain or
discuss it with him.
140
When it is said that the readiness of the seeker
determines the appearance of the master, this applies to the first fundamental
initiation of his spiritual life. It does not mean that a master will come into
his town and seek him out, but that he will come into his life. And this may be
brought about in various ways - as by the seeker himself being led, either by
worldly circumstances or by his own seeking, out of his own town to the town or
country where the master is living.
141
The location of his spiritual guide will in part
be the accident of his own geographical situation, for he will obviously be
limited in his selection to possibilities and reputations in his own country or
nation or race. The sheer physical and financial difficulties of travelling
throughout the world - not to mention the obstacles of personal circumstance,
family obligations, and ignorance of where to search and whom to approach in
foreign lands, combine to set this limitation upon his inquiry and hence upon
his opportunity.
142
It is foolish to seek holiness geographically or
holy men in particular places. I have found that one man may live in a Himalayan
abode and be a scoundrel and another man may live in a Bowery slum and be a
saint. Wherever they live, men always carry their own thoughts and their own
selves with them. The Soul, which is the object of our quest, is within us. The
Master, who is to guide us upon our quest, will appear whenever we are ready for
him and wherever we happen to live - or else we will be led to him. There are
men in the West, in Europe and America, not less wise and noble than any men in
Tibet and India. If we have not met them, "the fault, Dear Brutus is ...in
ourselves," primarily in our unworthiness, and secondarily in our incapacity to
recognize what is beneath the surface.
143
It is not necessary in the modern West to follow
the Oriental custom of living with or near the Teacher. However, it is
advisable to try to arrange a meeting, even if only for a few minutes. When this
is impossible, one substitute is to enter into a written correspondence with him
- and to keep his photograph in a hallowed place where one's eyes fall
frequently upon it and one is thus reminded many times a day of the need to work
continuously at improving oneself and one's character.
144
The effect of the first meeting with a master
fades off with time, like the effect of a mystical glimpse. When that happens it
needs to be renewed by another meeting, and that again in turn still later by a
third.
145
It is right and just that the ardent aspirations
of a sincere candidate should eventually bring him a rewarding meeting in person
with someone more advanced or in print with a qualified disciple. If he merits
more, if he adds preparation to his aspirations, then a personal meeting with
such a disciple may follow. But it is wrong and unjust for him to be too
demanding. He should expect further meetings only as he works upon himself
enough to be worthy of them, as well as only as the disciple has time to spare
for them. And if he is so fortunate as to meet an adept, he should be satisfied
with that single meeting.
146
Such a meeting always brings certain tests with
it and usually leads either to a powerful enhancement of the relation or to an
abrupt cancellation of it altogether. This is because the tests arise from the
power of opposition.
147
The beginner who ventures out in quest of a
teacher may have to stumble from charlatan to incompetent until he either finds
the right one or abandons the effort as impossible.
148
In most of the other affairs of life we find it
necessary to use the services of specialists. Just so, here. We surrender our
body to the surgeon. We must surrender our mind to the spiritual guide. Both, if
incompetent or unscrupulous, may maim us for life. It is of the greatest
importance therefore to exercise right judgement in the choice of one or the
other.
149
When Dillip Roy, a famous Bengali musician, first
came to Sri Aurobindo for an interview, the latter said: "You must tell me
clearly what it is exactly that you seek and why you want to do my yoga. Seekers
approach yoga with diverse aims. Some want to get away from life. Others aspire
after supreme bliss. Yet others want yoga power or knowledge or a poise
impervious to the shocks of life. So you must first be definite as to what,
precisely, you seek in yoga."
150
If he falls into the wrong hands, or if he lets
himself be guided by an incompetent amateur instead of a wise and expert man,
his way will be hindered and even the good he thinks he does get will turn out
to be evil.
151
He should be determined to wait calmly for the
assent of his whole being before he makes a decision which must necessarily and
tremendously affect his whole future.
152
Most people react strongly to these gurus -
either emphatic rejection straightway or infatuated acceptance superficially. A
clear perception which is unaccompanied by sitting in judgement or rushing into
acquiescence, which justly notes what is, unidealized yet unbiased
evaluation, is rare.
153
The ordinary aspirant, whose intuition is not
sufficiently developed, should test the man he proposes to accept as his master.
This will require him to watch the other closely for a period of time. In some
cases a week will give the answer, in others three months will be needed. In all
cases, the aspirant ought not commit himself until he has had enough evidence
that he is committing himself rightly.
154
Discrimination is of utmost importance in the
selection of a spiritual path and Teacher. One must apply all his intelligence
and intuition, caution and common sense to a decision of such consequence.
155
Those who lack the innate discernment or wide
experience needed to detect the real character and true capacity of a master,
should wait sufficiently long and seek outside advice before entrusting
themselves to him.
156
The faith that the Overself is working through a
particular man can be tested for its validity by watching, for a sufficient
length of time, what happens to those who reject him utterly or respond to him
ardently.
157
In their excessive eagerness to discover a
master, they fail to practise discernment.
158
But to wait for the true master requires a
certain patience and strength.
159
A true sage is hard to find. A false one,
drooling his plagiarisms or his platitudes, is easy to find.
160
Just because a man happens to feel he has
attained happiness or truth, is no sufficient ground for accepting that he has
done so. He could get the same feeling out of the self-betraying attainment of
the illusion of happiness and the illusion of truth. Hence we have not only to
overcome the difficulty of finding honest and disinterested spiritual guidance
but also the difficulty of finding competent undeceived guidance.
161
This problem of finding a master in what is
almost a masterless world, is a difficult one. The only realistic suggestion
which can be given is to select somebody in whom you have so far been able to
place most confidence. But if such a person does not exist, then select the book
which helps you most and make it your tutor.
162
The next best thing to studying under a teacher,
if the latter is not available, is to associate with his mental image, where the
latter is available through a previous meeting. If, however, even this is not
possible then the seeker should study the teacher's writings. In this way the
teacher takes the disciple by the hand through the medium of the printed word.
163
The seeker who is fumbling for the right
direction to take should welcome the help of a competent guide. But where such a
guide is not personally forthcoming, the best substitute is a personal disciple
of his or, failing that, a book written by him.
164
The disciples' case-histories of a spiritual
guide, like the patients' case-histories of a medical physician, are always
instructive and significant.
165
As to the public teachers of the occult,
there are none in the West really competent to lead people into truth, whatever
their claims may be. The real teachers are so rare nowadays that it is almost
impossible to find them. In these circumstances it is safer and wiser to confine
oneself to the study of authoritative books rather than to associate with
inferior sources of help.
166
The seeker who has gone unsatisfied from cult to
cult for several years should waste no further time seeking God through such
organizations or through self-named Masters but should strive earnestly to
purify his heart of all lower feelings, such as anger, envy, irritability, fear,
and depression, and work constantly on his character to improve it. After
vigorously doing this for at least six months he may begin to pray daily for
further guidance.
167
It is often said that when the pupil is ready the
Master will appear. But I have not yet read anyone's additional statement - that
he may be invisible and unhearable - that is, he may be entirely within you.
168
I do not say that finding the master internally
in this manner is the best way, but that for many seekers it is the only way.
Their own limitations combine with destiny to make it so.
169
If it is his destiny to find a master only in the
mind and not in the body, if circumstances force him to search internally and
not externally, then he will be wise to accept the leading and not rebel against
it. For he will find that, faithfully followed, it will bring him to a vivid
presence within, a voice that guides where there is seemingly none to guide.
170
In many matters it is needful to submit to the
will of destiny. He should know, however, that by the right mental attitude, the
inner contact and the inner meeting can be obtained even if the outer cannot.
That inner meeting, after all, is the real one - more real than the physical. It
is enough to have had a single physical meeting to receive ever afterwards the
possibility of this inner contact.
171
The truth is that the Master may appear in three
ways: first, inwardly alone for the whole lifetime; second, inwardly at first as
"the Interior Word" and then later as the physically embodied human guide;
third, as the embodied Master from the very beginning. The first two cases
presuppose the practice of meditation and its development to a certain degree of
intensity. The third case needs no prior meditation but it does require an
attitude of search for truth, help, or guidance developed to as great an
intensity as in the other cases.
172
All seeking and finding of spiritual instruction
through a spiritual teacher becomes real, in the end, on a mental plane only.
Therefore he should direct his efforts in that direction with complete faith.
173
The difficulty which you mention about finding a
teacher need not be overrated. You have within yourself a ray of God, which is
your own soul. If you pray to and beseech it constantly for guidance, it will
surely lead you to all that you really need to know.
174
Those whose quest of the Overself through a
master has failed them should take this very failure as instruction on the quest
itself. Let them remember that God is everywhere present, that there is no spot
where God is not. Therefore, God is in them too. This indwelling presence is the
Soul. Let them turn to it directly, no longer seeking someone else to act as an
intermediary, no longer running here and there in search of him. Just where they
are now is precisely where they may establish contact with God through their own
Soul. Let them pray to it alone, meditate on it, obey its intuitive behests, and
they will not need any human agent. From this moment they should look to no one
else, should follow the Buddha's advice to depend on their own forces. But since
these are lying latent within and need to be aroused, the aspirants need to
exert themselves through physical regimes that will provide the energies needed
for this great effort.
175
If you can find someone whose person attracts you
most, or whose teachings appeal to you more than those of others, or whose
writings inspire you above all other men's writings, then make him your
spiritual guide. You do not have to apply for his permission for it is to be
done within the privacy of your own inner life. You are not dependent on his
personal acceptance or rejection for the idea of him which you believe in and
the image of him which you form to become alive and effectual. But, you will
object, is not the whole process a self-deceptive one and does it not lead to
worthless hallucination? We reply, it could become that if you misuse it and
misinterpret its results, but it need not if you work it aright. For telepathy
is a fact. Your faith in, and remembrance of, the other man lays a cable from
your inner being to his own and there will flow back along it a response to your
attitude.
176
Those who seek a teacher may be reminded that
they may take anyone who appeals to or inspires them, and by their own mental
attitude of faith in and devotion towards him, together with obedience to his
published teachings, draw inner help and inspiration telepathically from him.
Thus they create for themselves a mental relationship which, to that extent, is
not different from what would have come into being as part of the regular
teacher-disciple relationship. They need also to be reminded that even after a
physical meeting, in all cases a teacher can be found only when they are
sufficiently sensitive to have the capacity to feel his mental presence within
themselves and when they are sufficiently developed to be ready for him. The
most practical course for most seekers is to engage in the work of
self-improvement.
177
What is the hope for those who are unable to
enter the shrine of mysticism and have left the fold of religion? Are they to be
abandoned to a bleak despair or a hard cynicism? Are they to become engulfed in
the waters of moral wickedness? No, let them take the unseen hand of a personal
saviour or spiritual guide, whether dead or alive - someone whom they believe to
have attained adeptship in yoga, or sagehood in philosophy, and who has
announced his intention to give his life to the enlightenment of mankind. Let
him become their secret refuge. Let them ask and deserve his grace. The same
help can be utilized by those who feel they cannot make the intellectual effort
demanded by philosophy but wish to advance beyond the stage of ordinary
mysticism in which they now rest.
178
The wise and good dead men who have left their
examples for imitation or their words for germination, and any living men whom
we have heard met or read about - all these are our spiritual guides; all these
can become our masters if we only make them so. Why then should we narrow
ourselves down to a single man with a single point of view?
179
If he cannot find entry into the society of a
master, he can meditate upon the life stories of historic masters of the past.
Let him take the significant situations and devotional attitudes of these great
souls into his own thought and study, to analyse the one and imitate the other.
Let him think often and long of their character and conduct. Let him also read
and reread the written messages they have left us. In this way he will imbibe
something of their quality.
180
Such is the rarity of qualified teachers that
today it is no longer a question of selecting one who particularly or personally
appeals to the seeker, but of finding one at all!
181
The search for a master is often fruitless and
abortive. Why is this? The answer is first, that few such masters exist today
and second, that few of the searchers are qualified to work with one.
182
Those who have this knowledge are not easily
accessible nor, even when found, do they easily divulge it. They are exceedingly
rare.
183
Not only are teachers more rare but the most
sensitive seekers feel shyly inhibited from approaching them.
184
It is a claim at once irrational and unjust that
no man is to be saved who does not approach a master in the flesh. For few men
can find such a master nor, finding him, can they always know him except from a
distance.
185
In ancient times there were few books to guide
the aspirant and fewer still available to him. Consequently the need of a living
guide was much greater than it is now. Even in ancient times such teachers were
hard to find. "That Guru is rare who can bring riddance to his disciple from the
sorrows which agitate his heart," says Skanda Puranam.
186
Men of the highest spiritual calibre are not
necessarily waiting around for disciples to come to them. They know quite well
that each man is his own teacher in the end.
187
If the aspirant is fortunate enough to meet a man
or woman in person or writing who genuinely represents the true and real, no
effort will be made to influence him; it will be left entirely to his own free
choice whether he follow this light hidden behind a bushel or any
will-o'-the-wisp masquerading as a light.
188
It is hard to establish human contact with a
master, hard to get him interested in one's personal activities.
189
It is not the actual meeting with a master that
constitutes its importance, but the recognition that he is a master.
190
There are men who come as ambassadors from
heaven, and the writings or arts of men, which come as revelators. But unless
the reaction includes recognition, the contact is fruitless, the meeting
useless.
191
How shall he know who is really a master, and who
is not? It is easy at a distance of a thousand years to put an estimate on those
who have left the effect of their spiritual greatness on generation after
generation, but it is hard to measure contemporaries who look like other
ordinary mortals.
192
Sometimes an aspirant, a candidate, a neophyte,
or a disciple will refuse the opportunity of personal contact with a master when
it occurs, because he feels unworthy, shamefaced, or even guilty. It is a grave
mistake for him to reject what a favourable destiny thus offers him. However
sinful he be, there is also the fact that he aspires to rise above his sins,
else he would not feel sorry for them. However pure the master himself be, there
is also the fact that he blames no one, shrinks from no one, extends goodwill to
the virtuous and the sinful alike. Of the master it may truly be said that the
utter absence of pride or conceit leads to the utter absence of the thought that
he is holier than another. The chance to meet him should be taken despite all
personal fears of him or personal feelings of one's own lack of virtue.
193
Occasionally one feels he is not worthy enough to
contact a spiritual teacher because he does not have a "clean heart." This is a
wrong mental attitude. He needs assistance in getting this "clean heart" and
there is nothing wrong in seeking such help.
194
You will walk a long time or visit many cities
before you find another illuminate. Greet him well, therefore, and think of him
well, that you may make something of this fortunate meeting.
195
It needs some humility and more discernment to
approach such a man and ask him to give us the benefit of his knowledge, his
insight, his experience, and his wisdom - all of which are unusual and rare.
196
If such a man's presence, face, bearing, and
teaching show something godlike in him, we should not hesitate to give him the
benefit of recognition as being inspired, even if we are not willing to give
more.
197
Remember that the master is not likely to live as
long as you are, since he is probably an older man. Take the best possible
advantage therefore of his presence.
198
If he lets the chance slip by unused, it may not
occur again.
199
He may secure valuable help from different
sources that he meets on the way but he must above all find the teacher to whom
he belongs by inner affinity and in whose school he feels most at home. Once
found, he should stubbornly refuse to be drawn out of the teacher's orbit, for
if he were to allow it to happen, he would lose precious years and encounter
needless suffering, only to have to return in the end.
200
Do what he may, he will not be able to change
teachers permanently. The spiritual guide allotted to him by destiny, as well as
by affinity, is the one he has to accept in the end if not in the beginning.
This is his real master, the one whose image will rise again and again in his
mind's eye, obscuring or blotting out the images of all other guides to whom the
seeker turned for needed temporary direction.
201
Among living mortals there is one with whom he
may find this link, one whom he may never meet in the flesh but only through a
photo, a work of art, a name uttered by someone, or perhaps through a piece of
published writing. Among those who no longer live in the body, but with whom the
link was made in former births, the echo will return and the idea itself
will suffice.
202
What we can hope to find today is no longer a
teacher to instruct our minds nor a master to guide our steps but an inspirer to
set us aflame, to show us the world as the Overself sees it. There is for each
seeker only one man in the whole world who can do that. He and he alone can work
this miracle.
203
It is a strange mystery why destiny has decreed
that these seekers after God should have to depend on this one man's lit mind
and strong heart for the help they need more than on any other man's. Strange,
because until they find him their search seems to have a great lack in it which
almost brings them to anguish.
204
The attraction which makes a man select someone
as his master and makes the master willing to help him is analogous to chemical
affinity. It is not that they deliberately and consciously choose one another
but that they cannot help doing so.
205
The master knows, automatically and immediately
by his own intuition, whether a candidate for discipleship is in affinity with
him or not, and hence whether to accept or reject the man or not.
206
If he is sensitive and aspiring, and if there is
any real spiritual power in the other man, he will feel involuntarily an
internal excitement and an intuitive expectancy almost from the first minute of
their meeting. But if he is also at a sufficient degree of readiness and longing
to learn, and if there is personal or prenatal affinity with this other man,
then he will feel shaken to the depths of his being, captured in mind and heart.
For he will feel the beginnings of discipleship.
207
With the meeting, the aspirant's supreme chance
has come. When an aspirant comes into contact with an advanced soul, his own
longing is like a magnet which itself spontaneously attracts spiritual force and
thought from the other man. Thereupon he experiences an uplift and an
enlightenment. If the meeting is a personal one this result is at its fullest.
If through a book or letter written by the other man, it is still present but in
a weaker degree.
208
Seeking the Master: Great possibilities attach
themselves to the first interview between the student earnestly seeking
direction, needing guidance, or requesting counsel, and the illuminate who has
established communion with his own Overself. These possibilities do not depend
upon the length of time it takes nor upon what is said during the actual
conversation itself. They depend upon the attitude which a student silently
brings with him and upon the power which the illuminate silently expresses. In
other words, they depend upon invisible and telepathic factors.
209
Only when he is finally ready for a master will
he find a true one. But to be ready the aspirant must bring his character to its
highest possibility. When that is done then even at the first meeting the power
of attraction will speak silently yet eloquently. Both will know, before that
first meeting ends, that the other is the right one; there will be no doubts, no
hesitations; they can exist only when judgement is wrong. He will know an
affinity of soul that can and has previously been experienced with no one else.
Affinity has its own clear language. It will put both men at perfect ease.
210
When a sensitive heart, a receptive mind, and a
strong yearning for spiritual perfection meet a man who embodies such perfection
to a large degree, there is or should be some recognition, some brief
purification, some intellectual clarification, some emotional exaltation,
amounting in all to a miniature mystical experience.
211
When the predestined disciple meets the master
for the first time, he may feel either that he has known him before or else that
he has known him always.
212
Sometimes we have the feeling on meeting a
stranger for the first time, that we have known him long and known him well. The
feeling on first meeting the destined master is much the same but greatly
expanded and deeply intensified.
213
The feeling which is aroused on this contact -
whether affinity or antipathy - must be his first guide to the choice of a
master.
214
He may feel the force of a real attraction when
first meeting his master, in most cases, but it is just possible he may not.
215
The man in whose presence your character rises to
its best and your faith to its highest, is the man who can help you spiritually.
Without this inward affinity it is of not much use to attach yourself to a
guide, however reputed he may be.
216
The seeker whose preconceived picture of what
constitutes a master is correct - but this is uncommon - will be able to
recognize one at their first meeting. He will feel with positive certainty the
inner greatness of the master. Yet it does not follow that this is his
particular master. There must also be a feeling of personal affinity as well as
an intellectual appeal of the doctrines taught.
217
Without this feeling of affinity, and the
considerable satisfaction which derives from it, he would be prudent to look
elsewhere and not accept this person as guru.
218
Take that man as your teacher whose character and
mentality approach the ideal you have formed, and with whose doctrine and
personality you feel in sympathy.
219
The meeting with a master is a rare opportunity
which should not be missed but should be eagerly followed up. It may not recur
again during one's own lifetime or during the master's lifetime. But it can be
followed up only if the aspirant feels intuitively that there is a "ray of
affinity" between them, through which the inner contact can be established.
220
Sometimes disciples attach themselves to a master
with whom they have no basic affinity. They have been drawn to him by a partial
self-deception about his nature or by a partial misconception concerning his
teaching. After a period has elapsed when the harmony with him or his teaching
has come to an end, and the usefulness of both is not sufficient to justify the
connection, they usually leave and seek elsewhere for inspiration or help. But
in those cases where, for some improper reason, they fail to do so, he may
deliberately provoke an incident or arrange a circumstance which will prompt
them to go away.
221
It often happens that seekers do not get the true
master simply because they would not be attracted to him even when they met him.
They naturally are drawn to one whose temperament, character, mentality, and
actions are like their own. The unbalanced and the neurotic would be repelled by
a sane and equable teacher, the hysterical by a disciplined one, the futile
dreamers by an efficient and active one.
222
There is really no choice in the matter - only
the illusion of a choice. That which draws him to a particular master is
predestination. He may try again and again with someone else. He may not wish to
come to this man, but in the end he must come. His head may argue itself
out of the attraction but his heart will push him back into it.
223
It is said that a man will recognize in a moment
the master with whom he has true affinity, when meeting his person or words.
That is true, but the recognition may be so vague or partial or faint that a few
years may pass before he will become aware of it, and hence before he takes any
action about it.
224
It would be foolish for anyone to continue to
follow a teaching for which he has no liking, or a teacher with whom he has no
affinity. But it would also be foolish to judge either by merely personal and
emotional reactions alone.
225
What is present in the surface consciousness as a
mild interest may be present in the subconscious as a strong love. But, however
long it may take, the disproportion will eventually be righted. When this
happens, and as pertains to this particular matter, the man comes to know
himself as he really is. This is why the meeting with an old Master or a new
truth may not lead to immediate recognition, may indeed take some years to
ripen.
226
A guru who is supposed to be an enlightened man
but who awakens no feeling of kinship, awe, peace, reverence, or goodness in the
person who approaches him may not be enlightened at all - or may not be the
proper affinity for the seeker, who may take this as a signal to look elsewhere.
But it would also be a signal to be patient, wait a little, look deeper, and
really get to know what is in this man.
227
Something within seems to recognize the true
teacher when he appears. This is not miraculous when one understands that the
visible present has its root in the invisible past and that discipleship is a
relation which reappears in birth after birth. However, the philosophic path
does not depend only on faith or intuition but also on rational appeal and
proved fact. Therefore, some time must elapse before one knows thoroughly that
he has found the right path and the right teacher.
228
Another sign that you have found the right master
is when you find that he is the one who inspires you to go more deeply into
yourself during meditation than any other.
229
He will recognize his master not only by the
feeling of affinity and the attraction of his teaching but also if, ever since
the first physical meeting, the other man's face persistently keeps recurring to
him.
230
He who has found his destined Master will know it
well after a few months at most. For he will find that it is as hard to leave
the Master as for helpless steel filings to leave a powerful magnet.
231
The blessing of peace or power which the seeker
feels in such a man's presence, the fading away of all questions in his aura -
these are indications of authenticity and spirituality.
232
Another thing to look for as a sign of the right
master is that his way of thinking should be congenial to the seeker.
233
That person is best fitted to be a man's master
with whom he is able to be his own best self.
234
Humility is required to recognize that here is a
man whose wisdom is greater than one's own.
235
The kind of master he seeks will be a loving one
- a master who is large-hearted enough to receive him, sins weaknesses
foolishnesses and all.
236
Other things being equal, choose your teacher
from among those approaching the end of life, or at least well into middle life.
For they have the mature experience which younger people lack; they can give the
tranquil counsel which comes from the acceptance of life, the adjustment to its
situations, and the waning of physical desires.
237
The teacher is not to be measured only by his
weaker disciples nor by his foolish ones. A juster measurement must take into
reckoning the wiser and stronger ones also. What he has done for most of them
has been done in spite of themselves, for the egos have thwarted or twisted his
influence all too often. Nevertheless it is there and in twenty or thirty years
it will still be there, inevitable and inescapable, awaiting the thinning down
of the ego's resistance.
238
It is a discriminating seeker who responds only
to what is wise and true and fine in a teacher, but rejects what is frail or
fallible in him.
239
A student is often dismayed, anxious, or upset by
the aura of apparent impersonality which surrounds the Teacher. Such reactions
are natural but also must be checked - which can be done by learning to smile at
oneself and be at peace.
240
Do not look for truth among the unbalanced, the
ego-obsessed, the brainless, the hysterical and the unsensitive. Look for it
among the modest, the serene, the intuitive, the deep-divers and those who
honour the Overself to its uttermost.
241
Many take to an imperfect, half-competent or
half-satisfactory teaching because no better one is available.
242
Incompetent instruction is undesirable but it may
be helpful in some cases if it is stopped at the proper point.
243
The student may be certain that if there be
competent guidance on this path there is no standing still. Either he must go
forward and onward until he reaches the goal, or he must get rid of his guide.
244
How useless it is to go to a teacher who has only
an intellectual - that is, a talking - knowledge of it, for help is clearly
shown by an old Hindu story. Once upon a time a certain king developed a desire
to obtain divine consciousness. He obtained a Brahmi pundit as his guide. For
two months he received teaching but found that he gained nothing in the actual
experience of divinity. He thereupon threatened the Brahmin with his royal
displeasure. The pundit returned home in a sorrowful state of mind. He had done
his best and did not know how to satisfy the king. His daughter, who was a girl
of high intelligence, saw her father's distress and made him tell her the cause.
The next day she appeared at the court and informed the king that she could
throw light on his problem. She then asked him to order his soldiers to bind
both herself and himself to separate pillars. This was done. Then the girl said,
"O King, release me out of this bondage." "What!" answered the king, "You speak
of an impossibility. I myself am in bondage and how can I release you?" The girl
laughed and said, "O King, this is the explanation of your problem. My father is
a prisoner of this world-illusion. How can he set you free? How can you gain
divinity from him?"
245
If anyone who presents a world view really knows
what he is talking about, there should be some noticeable vitality in his talk.
246
If a teacher empties the purse or wallet of his
pupils, be sure he is a false one. If he demands servility from them, he is most
likely a false one. If he makes no response to someone's approach yet has the
stamp of authenticity, he may not be the particular one with whom that person
can find affinity.
247
A weakness among these cultists is that they
persist in seeing their leader with a kind of character and a height of
consciousness which are not sustained by the facts. He is turned into an
unerring superman or even deified as a living god. His virtues are either
exaggerated or invented, his most commonplace words are pondered over as if they
were oracles of prophecy or epigrams of wisdom. And if they do not gift him with
cosmic omniscience and total prescience, he is gifted with something like it.
The consequence is that the expectations of votaries, having been lifted too
high, must fall too low when his personality is deflated and his shortcomings
are exposed. Their disappointment inevitably follows. However, since not many
spiritual seekers of the kind who join organizations are possessed of the
qualities of discrimination and intelligence, the bulk of his followers cling to
their idol. An honest and sincere leader would be alarmed at such exaggerated
worship, and do his utmost in self-deprecation to bring it to an end. He knows
that making a cult of a particular person will divert attention from the proper
object of devotion.
248
We have seen a number of spiritual teachers
either arise in the West or come here from the East and each one seems to find a
certain number of adherents. These teachers and their teachings are of varying
quality and may be helpful to many of those who join them. But it is necessary
to give a measure of warning against exaggerations made by the teachers about
themselves or, if not, made by their followers. It is easy for untrained and
inexperienced seekers to be taken in by confident claims to the highest
enlightenment. It is better to look for the signs of humility and impersonality.
249
The excessive importance given to the guru, the
exaggerated devotion given to him, can only have value in the earlier stages of
the quest. The point of view then present has so much ego in it that the
aspirant would not be satisfied unless he had a guru. But it is still an
attachment, this relationship, so it has to be let go later on.
250
This over-idealization of the guru, so widespread
in India and so much copied now by Western seekers, could indicate an elementary
stage.
251
We may extend great reverence to the person who
is worthy of it - saint or sage - but we may bend the knee in worship only to
the everlasting Spirit. No human being has the right to receive it, much less to
demand it, and it is idolatry to give it.
252
He is a human being, after all, a person not a
demigod. Worship of the man is not only irrelevant but also, in a sense,
irreverent.
253
We may admire him for his fine qualities but that
does not mean we have to agree with him in all his views.
254
"So many teachers come to us with their
doctrines. Who of them is right and who is wrong?" Gautama was asked. "Not
because you think, 'Our teacher is one to whom great deference is due,' should
you accept a doctrine," was the answer.
255
A superficial emotional approach to truth is less
concerned with the message than with the messenger, with the ideas taught than
with their human origin.
256
Many Orientals suffer from the bad consequences
of an exaggerated respect for their spiritual guides whereas the Europeans and
Americans suffer from the consequences of an insufficient respect for them.
257
It is not necessary for disciples to indulge in
fulsome panegyrics about their master. This helps no one, for it raises
extravagant hopes in their hearers; it lowers their own capacity to receive
truth; and it embarrasses the master himself. They need to learn that his
greatness can be far more sincerely appreciated by restrained description, that
the grandeur of his inner being is better pictured, and more readily believed,
by dignified statement of the truth as it is. If others can be impressed only by
fanciful embellishment or foolish exaggeration, they are not ready for him and
should seek elsewhere among the cults which cater to the naïve.
258
In their overpraise of the guru, the disciples
prevent the careful inquirer from learning the truth. In their refusal to see
the plain facts of the guru's human weakness or imperfection because they are
committed by their theory to see him only as God, they alienate such an inquirer
and strengthen his involuntary feeling that to become anyone's disciple is to
abandon that very search for truth which is supposed to be the motive for doing
so.
259
All this exaggerated praise tends to put off
cooler and clearer minds, so that what is deservedly laudable tends to get
minimized.
260
Why do they arbitrarily try to make the
illuminate into a perfect and superhuman creature and not let him remain the
human being that he really is? Why do they remain quite unseeing to his
shortcomings and find glib excuses for his failings? Is there not enough genius
or greatness still left in him to be quite worthy of our deepest admiration? Why
not give him his due without this unnecessary act of deification, which merely
drags the sublime down to the absurd? It is because they inhabit a plane where
emotion runs high and fanaticism runs deep, where discrimination is absent and
imagination all too present. It is because they have not attained the attitudes
of, nor felt the need for, philosophy.
261
The practice is all too common in the Orient of
presenting a guru to the literary public in a most fulsome and adulatory manner.
Those followers who write as if their spiritual guide is a faultless person,
never blundering in any way and ever angelic in all ways, do their guide a
disservice. They deprive him of his humanity and others of the hope of attaining
his condition. His reliability and competence, his trustworthiness and holiness,
as a guide, are not diminished if his limitations and faults as a human being
are acknowledged.
262
Their followers put these men forward as being
flawless demigods, not knowing that by doing so they render a disservice to the
men themselves as much as to the cause of truth. What is worse, they throw
confusion into the path of all aspirants, who form wrong ideas as to what lies
ahead of them and what they ought to do or be.
263
The traditional attitude of an Oriental towards a
guru attains fantastic degrees of utter materialism. We have observed disciples
drinking water in which the guru's feet were washed, and kissing the tail of the
horse on which he rode. They are in part the result of the poor teaching they
have received. They mistake servitude to a guru for service to mankind.
264
I distrust the legends which are told about most
gurus by the disciples. They all exaggerate. Why? Because they have stopped
seeking truth.
265
When a man turns belief in the superior knowledge
of the guide into belief in the virtual omniscience of the guide, it is
dangerous.
266
After having charted all the merits and
capacities of the enlightened man, his devotees and disciples easily fall into
exaggerations and forget his limitations, or ignore the simple fact that he
remains a man among men.
267
The disciples exaggerate the master. They create
a new deity. If later some among them inevitably discover that he has his minor
faults and makes his little mistakes, there is almost an emotional collapse, a
nervous shock. Why, with all his wonderful attainments, can they not accept him
as a human being?
268
It is inevitable that they will demand continuing
individual attention and it is just as inevitable that he will be unable to give
it. Disappointment will ensue and negative thoughts will start breeding.
269
They associate him with omnipotence, if not
omniscience, but when time shows up the extravagance and the exaggeration of
their idealized expectations, their faith falls to the ground, deflated.
270
Nearly every professional who helps people
intimately or mentally has to undergo certain tests or temptations or ordeals.
When he deals with a neurotic patient of the opposite sex, the psychoanalyst,
the physician, or the schoolteacher may pass through the same experience as the
spiritual guide. If she is too emotionally affectionate or too physically
sensual, or if she is starved of affection or sensuality, she may naturally fall
in love with him for a time. I say "for a time" advisedly because the succeeding
phase - equally known to the spiritual guide - is to become antagonistic to him.
Psychology has identified this first phase and calls it "transference."
271
The same disciple whose exaggerated enthusiasm
caused him to regard the master as an archangel, now, by a curious process of
transformation, regards him as an archdevil!
272
The guide is up against the fact that most
aspirants expect too much from him. Even if he warns them at the start, his
words are given little weight or else are soon forgotten. They expect him to use
some trick, whose secret he alone knows, to turn them quickly into illumined
mystics or even powerful adepts. Consequently they react emotionally against him
in their later disappointment.
273
When the discrepancy between the real man and the
preconceived mental image of him becomes too obvious and too large, they blame
him instead of themselves.
274
It is because followers place him in such a
unique and exalted position in their hearts that they do real psychic injury to
themselves when they believe it necessary to throw him down from it.
275
The first and last illusion to go is that any
perfect men exist anywhere. Not only is there no absolute perfection to be
found, but not even does a moderate perfection exist among the most spiritual of
human beings. Hence, the atmosphere of personal idolatry is not a healthy one.
It is right that the impact of an unusually outstanding personality should
produce an unforgettable intellectual or emotional experience. But it is wrong
to believe him a god rather than a man, or to lead others to believe it, for
that is an excess which can only lead to the reaction of disappointment in the
end, as sooner or later he will be reduced by further knowledge to human
proportions. To ask that a spiritual master or a loved mate shall be perfect in
every respect is to ask the impossible and the non-existent. In the case of a
seeker, it is likely to result in missing the very opportunity he is seeking. In
the case of one who is already associated with a master or mate, experimental
straying away is likely to result in disappointment and a retracing of steps.
Let us not turn them into what they are not. They are human, they make mistakes;
they are not gods.
276
This desire to deify their teachers, which is so
common among Indian disciples, can have no place among philosophic ones. We look
upon the teacher as a man, as one who incites us to seek the best and inspires
us to self-improvement and guides us to the truth. But he is still a man to be
respected, not a god to be worshipped. He has his imperfections.
277
How honest was that reputedly wise man Socrates
in saying what so few gurus have ever said. He had just answered Xenophon's
request for advice on a certain matter and concluded: "But my opinion is only
that of a man."
278
It is not my business to make known matters that
would only stir controversy about past history quite uselessly. But it would be
a serious omission of duty not to utter a warning that human perfection does not
exist; that famous figures in history, politics, warfare, government,
literature, religion, mysticism, and art have committed grave errors of
judgement, impression, or teaching; that these errors are known only to a few in
each case, and will probably never be known to posterity at all. A man may be
successful in leading his people through a war to final victory but, on the way,
he may have made blunders that were heavily paid for by others. A teacher may be
spiritually enlightened but personally inexperienced; his opinions on unfamiliar
matters may not have much value.
279
So long as a man is turned into a god and is
worshipped as such, so long as he is regarded Perfect and without defects, so
long are those concerned - both the man and his followers - kept outside the
philosophic goal by their own deficiencies.
280
The Master had his shortcomings or frailties just
as we all have, but he also had what few of us have - a direct contact with the
Overself.
281
Where is the man who is wise enough to give
everyone else spiritual guidance, personal advice, marital counsel, and
prediction of future? Who with a single look knows all about you as he already
knows all about God and the universe? Let us not look for fantasies of wishful
thinking but see humans as humans.
282
Let him not expect to find perfection in any
mortal. Let him be satisfied to find someone who has so developed his
spirituality that he is worthy to lead those who are still much in the rear.
283
There is no man without his defects: it is a
dreamer's notion that the perfect human being exists on our planet. Hence the
disciples who servilely copy their guru in all things may copy his defects too!
284
Where is such a master, such a faultless paragon
of virtue wisdom strength and pity, to be found? Look where we will, every man
falls short of the ideal, shows an imperfection or betrays a weakness. The ideal
sage portrayed in philosophical (as distinct from mystical) books, has not come
to life in our times however much he may have done so in ancient times.
285
Behind the majestic phrases of most of these
spiritual teachers, we usually find in the end of a searching investigation
based on living with them or on the historic facts of their lives, that there
stand poor frail mortals. Hence those few who emerge as being one with, and not
inferior to, their teachings stand out all the more as truly great men.
286
It is misleading to put such a man forward, as so
many Indians put him forward, as being faultless. His consciousness of the
Overself may be perfect, but his conduct as a human being may be not. Is there
anywhere a faultless man?
287
He may be wise but he may not be wise all the
time. For history shows lapses of judgement, impulsive actions, and other
regrettable happenings due to karmic pressures even where least expected.
288
There are many ways to undermine the student-guru
relationship: if the guru is put upon an unreachable pedestal, if he is turned
into a god and his humanness is denied, or if the guru is believed to be
perfection itself. The possibility for perfection in any man is a debatable
point.
289
There are no Buddhas in our age, only would-be
Buddhas. Let us face the fact, acknowledging man's limitations, and cease
bluffing ourselves or permitting ourselves to be bluffed by the self-styled
Masters.
290
Too many seekers create a supernatural halo
around the master's personality. Too many wrap it in dramatic and romantic garb.
Too many expect too much from the first meeting with him. The consequence of all
this is often a tremendous emotional let-down, an unreasonable disappointment
after the reality of an actual meeting, and they lose their balance altogether.
It is inevitable that a close-up view of the master will not prove so striking
as a long-range one seen through romantic glasses. From a distance it is easy to
bestow admiration and feel awe for a man they have almost turned into a deity.
But drawn into close contact with him it is just as easy to swing in the
opposite direction and turn the master into a man. They do not notice how brief
is their firsthand acquaintance with him, how few are the appearances that
constitute the data for their conclusions, how conceited it is for spiritual
pygmies to think they understand a spiritual titan. Because what they appear to
have found does not correspond with the mental image they have previously
conceived of him, he is judged to be no master at all. Nor are these the only
reasons for such a failure. Equally important is the fact that such a meeting,
or the period immediately following it, becomes the signal for opposition by
adverse force. Evil spirits may find their opportunity just then to lead him
astray, mischievous ones may try to bewilder his mind, or lying ones may give
untrue suggestions to him. His own weaknesses of character and faultiness of
judgement may become greatly magnified and foist an absurdly wrong estimate of
the master upon him. He may even feel personal antagonism toward the master. All
this is of course a test for him. If he thinks he is judging whether this man is
fit to be his master, life in its turn is judging whether he is fit to have such
as master. Here then are some of the answers to the question "Why, if we concede
that the adepts have a right to hide from the multitude, do they also seem to
hide from the earnest seeking few?" The adepts are confident that those
individuals who are really ready for them will meet them when the right time
comes. They know that this will happen not only under the direct working of
karma, not only under the impulsions of the seeker's own higher self, but also
under the wise laws which govern the quest itself. These are high and hard
truths. But they are the realities of life, not dreams for those who like to be
self-deluded. Whoever rejects them for such a reason does so at the risk of
being harshly shocked into awakening one day.
291
They approach such a man with a kind of awe, if
not of reverence. It may or may not be justifiable: that depends first, on the
man's quality and second, on his mood.
292
It needs clear eyes to see the truth about these
spiritual teachers, eyes such as both their ardent followers and intolerant
critics do not possess.
293
Most people are simply not competent to select a
guru properly; they are too governed by outer appearances, physical impressions,
and emotional reactions.
294
The search for an ideal master may obstruct
itself through an excessively critical attitude equally as through a
sentimentally romantic one. For however divinely inspired he may be in his best
moments, the master must still remain quite human in many ways most of the time.
295
Those who form romantic grandiose exotic or
miraculous pictures of what a master is like and of what they seek in a man
before they can accept him as a master, doom themselves to frustration and
assure themselves of disappointment. For they do not yet understand what
masterhood really is, hence they are still unfit for personal instruction by a
master.
296
If he is not connected with any religious
association or mystical tradition, any institution or monastery, he is looked
upon askance. For who or what is there to validate the "correctness" of his
teaching and the credentials of the man himself? They look for a doctrine that
is "official" and a revelator certified by "authority."
297
The man who seeks a master to whose cosmological
vision, expressed thought, and behaviour he hopes to give perfect acceptance,
seeks the impossible. He does not want a teaching which is liable to disproof by
scientific knowledge, yet he does not want to limit himself merely to that
knowledge.
298
If his preconception of a master is wrong, as is
likely because of the ludicrous caricature in the pictures drawn by popular
cults and books, he may not be able to recognize a real master even when he
meets one. There will be an inner struggle instead. He will suffer the agony of
mental or moral indecision.
299
He may seem cold and unapproachable by the
sentimental standards of those who mistakenly regard him as a glorified
clergyman.
300
He sees an image which he has himself created,
not the reality of the other man. Only by close association with him under one
roof will it be possible to find out how different the image is from the person
it is supposed to represent. The first is a perfect but impossible creature. The
second is a human creature.
301
It is understandable and even pardonable that the
weak, the neurotic, the unhappy or the undeveloped, the innocent or the
inexperienced should look for a father image who will carry all their burdens,
material as well as spiritual. They are entitled to do so. But they should seek
him within religious or mystical circles, not within the philosophic circle.
302
The mistake so many seekers make in approaching
such a man is to demand that he teach them on their terms, in
their way, and not his own.
303
If he has not got the appearance they think he
ought to have or they expect him to have, that is another cause for offense. The
reality is blamed - and not themselves - for disappointing the fantasy.
304
You do not see the master when you see his body.
You do not know him when you know what he looks like. You do not love him if you
are attracted only by his handsome appearance. The real master is his mind.
305
A man's spiritual status does not reveal itself
immediately to anyone who looks at his physical body. Not only so, but if the
latter is ugly, deformed, and senile, repulsion may misread his inner nature
completely.
306
Those who reject truth because of the external
repulsiveness of the truth-bearer, do so for the right reasons, that is, they
are not ready to receive it. Those who accept truth because of the external
attractiveness of the truth bearer, do so for the wrong reasons, that is, they
have not received it at all. For in both cases it is not the mind or the heart
to which appeal has been made, but the senses. It is not reason or intuition,
sufficient experience or sufficient authority which has judged the testimony for
truth, but bodily sight hearing and touch.
307
The personal traits of the spiritual guide may
repel the seeker. Yet if no one else is available who has the same knowledge, it
is the seeker's duty to repress his repulsions and enter into the relationship
of a pupil. If he does not, then he pays a heavy price for his surrender to
personal emotion and sensual superficiality.
308
A master would not necessarily be recognized as
such if he were walking in the street, not even by those who are looking for one
and have read all the books about him.
309
That a man wearing quite ordinary clothes whose
face was clean shaven, whose hair was of quite average length, could be an adept
is much less likely to be thought by most persons, than one who was
theatrical-looking and conspicuously dressed.
310
In the worldly life a successful man usually
seeks to give others the impression of his success but in the spiritual life an
unassuming man may be a great master.
311
The aspirant is not ordinarily in a position to
judge what illumination really is, and who is a fully illuminated man. He can
only form theories about the one and use his imagination about the other.
312
Many will speculate on the teacher's motives.
That they could be pure and selfless, seeking only to bring men closer to
awareness of the Overself and to knowledge of the higher laws, only a few will
perceive. To the others he will be a man like themselves, actuated by selfish
motives.
313
Those who reject a noble message and sneer at its
messenger, who pronounce him to be a false prophet, a deceiver of men, thereby
pronounce their own selves to be falsely led and self-deceived.
314
To many blasé and worldly people, the teacher
will be classed with ambitious charlatans at worst or regarded as
self-hypnotized at best. But even to those who do not question his sincerity,
the goal he points to them must seem so utterly absurd and distant from the
commonly accepted goals and the path to it so oddly eccentric that few persons
are likely to be attracted to them.
315
Those of his followers who expect him to behave
with impeccable propriety and are ready to leave and follow someone else if he
does not, will either be victims of, or gainers by, their own judgement. If the
teacher is really unified with his Overself, any judging of him done by external
standards will be only partly applicable. There is a point where neither his
character nor his motives can be correctly measured by such standards, and
beyond which they may be quite misleading.
316
The mystical and cultist circles which talk much
about these matters use the name "Master" to trail such an accumulation behind
it of falsified facts, superstitious notions, and nonsensical thinking, that it
is needful to be on guard for semantic definition whenever this term is heard.
317
The mistake that some followers make is to fail
to see that their demigod is recognizably human. The mistake that most
non-followers make is to fail to see that he is, in his best moments,
superhuman.
318
The excessively critical attitude which seeks to
find a flaw in a holy man and soon succeeds is as foolish as the excessively
devout attitude which pronounces him perfect and continuously faultless. The
hostility of the one leads to imbalance; the naïveté of the other leads to
expectancy. The holy man is still a man subject to the limitations of his
species.
319
The Theosophic teaching that the master takes on
the karma of his pupil is often misunderstood. So many students think that the
master hesitates to accept a pupil because of this heavy liability of accepting
his karma. The measure of truth in this belief is that the master does have some
moral responsibility for the self-injuring mistakes committed by the pupil as a
direct consequence of special knowledge entrusted to him or for society-injuring
misuse of special powers transferred to him or aroused into activity within him
because of special instructions given by the teacher - in either case before he
was sufficiently strong morally and pure in motive. But the general karma of the
pupil is not accepted nor can it be accepted by any master. That is the pupil's
making and he himself must work it out.
320
The student is mistaken if he thinks the teacher
ever places obstacles or temptations in anyone's way. He does not have to do
that; it is done by life itself, or, more precisely, by the karma arising from
the individual character and its special needs. The teacher may note them and
act accordingly, but he does not create them. In the end, the student himself
creates his own obstacles and his own temptations by his thinking, by his
character, and by his karma.
321
He is not only an instructor but is too often
called upon to play the role of mentor, to be a wise counsellor at all times and
a trusted friend in difficult times, to solve personal problems and guide
personal decisions. This ideal person is yet to be found, alas! But the wish for
one is strong enough to clothe lesser men in imagined perfection.
322
Those who regard him as an unreliable visionary
are not less victims of prejudice than those who regard him as an omniscient
prophet.
323
Even the man who talks from the Overself's
inspiration can convince only those other men who are ready. Not all are
sensitive to his spell.
324
They equate man's powers with God's powers,
blandly refusing to see that he can create nothing but can only provide
the conditions which make some creations possible. They exaggerate what is true,
that he possesses, potentially, certain godlike attributes, into what is untrue,
that he can do what God does.
325
It is a self-deception to believe that the master
can interfere in all sorts of miraculous ways in the disciple's worldly life or
intervene in all sorts of arbitrary ways in his spiritual life. The master's
true function, the most important role he can play in the disciple's career, is
to assist the latter's efforts to withdraw into his inner self, to guide,
strengthen, and protect his endeavour to practise meditation.
326
There is a common Indian belief - picked up by
and transferred to some Western cults - that without submission to a leader,
master, guru whose guidance is to lead them and whose power is to lift them into
Nirvana, they can never win access to this goal. It is an exaggerated belief
when it refers to authentically enlightened men and a false one when it refers
to all others. Blind acceptance of it has precipitated a nervous breakdown in
some cases, and much feeling of morbid frustration in most cases where seekers
have failed to find a guru or, finding, have become disappointed or
disillusioned afterwards.
327
There is no celestial witch-doctor, no angelic
magician coming to change their characters overnight.
328
Those who do not understand that true development
is self-development will look for, even demand, a guru's "magic," as they
believe it to be. This will lead them to frequent his vicinity or even live in
it permanently, in order to be more or less constantly under his mesmeric
influence. Thus they come to depend increasingly on an outside source - another
person - and remain ungrown.
329
The disciples exert so much pressure and
encouragement on the guru to do what he cannot do for them that they go on
believing their own desires in the matter, that is, their ego, rather than him.
They think he can give them total protection against risks, perils, and falls on
the spiritual path. That is impossible, said Ramana Maharshi. The guru is not
omniscient and not almighty. He is still a limited human being. Why force him
into accepting a false position?
330
The idea of a master as being some sort of free
perfect and infallible counsellor in all the domestic personal and professional
perplexities of life is an appealing one. If it were true there would be many
more disciples. But it is only a romantic piece of wishful thinking.
331
To place oneself under another's spiritual
tutelage is an act which may be dangerous or may be auspicious. It depends on
the other - on whether his mind is really irradiated with the divine effulgence
or whether it is darkened by its own ego.
332
Spiritual help cannot be given indiscriminately
and at the same time given wisely. It should be conditioned by readiness,
worthiness, and willingness to receive it. It should be offered only by those
who are properly equipped, suitably qualified, and purely motivated.
333
Dr. Osborne Mavor, a Scottish physician,
said: "Building up personality is a job for Socrates, Christ, and Confucius
working in the closest co-operation. I should not care to entrust my
personality, such as it is, to any individual of a lower intellectual and moral
standard than that." This critique is also applicable to spiritual teachers, as
well as psychotherapists, against whom it was directed.
334
I divide all teachers into two classes: titular
gurus and real gurus. The former are quite common, the gap between their
doctrines and their behaviour being noticeable, whereas the latter are rare
indeed for they have achieved a conquest over the ego which reveals itself in
their conduct and reflects itself in their lives.
335
The demand for inspired teachers is always
insistent but the supply is wholly insufficient. Unless the teacher is an
inspired one he will be of little help to the would-be mystic. By inspired, we
mean either in communion with his higher self or fully united with it.
336
Few are the teachers, guides, priests, and
leaders of men who do not put into their work the false opinions and favoured
prejudices that they themselves have been taught or have acquired. Few, also,
are those who have scrupulously striven to become as free from these things as
they possibly could be.
337
Such teachers are unable to free themselves from
the relativity of their own position. Hence they give instructions which are
pertinent only to those who wear the monk's cowl.
338
The appeal of a teacher will depend upon the
depth of his own inspiration, and the appeal of his teaching will depend upon
how well it fits in with the prevailing thought and the pressing need of his
epoch.
339
The modern teacher should be a man of the world,
not a man of the ashrams. He should be one who does not practise a fastidious
asceticism, does not frown on human frailty. Such a man begins his teaching by
making other men feel that wisdom is priceless and holiness is beautiful.
340
He must so manage the two tendencies that they
balance each other. Insofar as he deals with the eternal verities, he can utter
only the old, old truths. Insofar as he belongs to his period he must restate
them in a contemporary way.
341
The possession of such power and influence,
although it is directly limited to spiritual matters, is indirectly manifested
in worldly matters too; for men have to live and act in the world. He will gain
more esteem as a teacher, and certainly as a leader, who is known to be
honourable, conscious of his responsibilities and obligations, whose character
is well-balanced and whose promises are solid, whose statements are backed by
facts and whose doctrines are worthy of trust.
342
He is a true messenger who seeks to keep his ego
out of his work, who tries to bring God and man together without himself getting
in between them.
343
Such a teacher would not claim to be an
intermediary with God but rather a counsellor with man.
344
No master who is a true channel for the divine
life will accept the adulation of others for himself. Their flattery will never
be allowed to fool him. Instead, he will always transfer it where it belongs -
to that life itself.
345
He will accept none of the homage for himself; he
knows it is not due to him, but to the higher power which intermittently uses
him.
346
He is not a leader anxious to appear infallible
before the members of his cult.
347
He who has found authentic peace within himself
is in a position to assist others who are still seekers, but he who has not yet
transcended mere theories and erudite studies about peace can only give
them some more thoughts to add to the burden they already carry.
348
The man who lets himself be warmed by sunshine
will be able to radiate some of its effects to others. But they ought not to
claim in consequence that he is the sun! He is not the originator of those
effects but only their mediator.
349
"My son," said an old sage to me, "the ocean does
not rise any higher when streams flow into it, so the true master does not swell
with pride when many disciples attach themselves to him. He takes it as a matter
of natural course; for he knows that they come to seek out the true Light, not
merely his body."
350
Humility will not let a man teach others until he
knows himself what he tries to teach them.
351
Patiently and perseveringly, the true teacher
established himself in awareness of the truth before offering to lead others
into it.
352
The guide under whom he studies, who watches both
his progress and his lapses, can minister to him competently only if he himself
is a liberated and inspired individual with an aptitude for such service.
353
He who is to act as a spiritual guide to others
should himself have reached the goal toward which he proposes to lead them.
354
If the faith of such a man stimulates those who
receive his message, they in turn stimulate his own. If they feel inspired by
the contact with it, he feels awed and humbled by its power over them.
355
Only that man who has overcome the lower nature
himself can help others to overcome it in their turn.
356
The capacity to receive truth is one thing; the
power to communicate it to other men is another. Moreover, only he who has
himself lived near to our own experience of the quest, our own falls and slips
and tumbles, who himself remembers how he struggled step by step along it to
reach his present height, can best help those he has left far behind him.
357
Only he who has securely established his own
realization can safely guide others to theirs. Automatic progress on the quest
can be guaranteed by nobody. Like all human enterprises it is subject to ups and
downs.
358
He who is unhappy in himself, or whose home is
discordant and unhappy, can show the way to happiness only out of intellect, not
out of experience.
359
If his counsel is to be effective enough to help
others, it must spring from a mind which has faced and resolved the same
problems within itself. But it need not necessarily have done so in external
conduct. It may have done so in imagination or in intellect only. The quality of
the mind will measure the value of such a course.
360
The true teacher assists his disciples to find
their own spiritual feet so that they can walk increasingly without leaning on
him or anyone else. It is the duty of an honest disinterested spiritual guide to
point out to his followers that their dependence on him is a weakness to be
overcome, not a virtue to be cultivated. The false teacher, seeking to profit in
some way by the situation, makes them utterly dependent on him.
361
The true teacher seeks to bring his disciples to
learn how to guide themselves. So he patiently explains and willingly discusses
his own counsel where the false teacher leaves it wrapped in obscurity and
involvement. The true guide directs them continually toward that place where in
the end they must realize the truth - within themselves - for there is its only
source.
362
He is a proper guide who gives each disciple a
chance to develop according to his own individuality and does not try to make
him a copy of the guide. But such a tutor is rare, and would not even call
anyone "my disciple."
363
Just as the ego-led teachers seek publicity so
the egoless teachers seek anonymity.
364
A true teacher will practise the utmost
self-abnegation and will seek and work for the day when his influence or
interference are brought down to nothing.
365
The ordinary kind of guru points to himself, his
necessity and importance; but the rare kind points away from himself, to
the seeker's own higher self, its reality and availability.
366
It is only the half-baked, half-finished masters
who have this craving for power over others, whose little egos need a following
of adoring disciples. The fully developed ones - and they are quite rare -
remain unaffected but not indifferent. For they recognize in each person who
comes to them a heeding of the inner call, a response to the pulling power of
their own divine Source.
367
He desires not to win disciples but to lose them!
He wants them to seek find and follow not mortal man but the light that burns
serenely within their own hearts.
368
The sincere teacher seeks to wean his disciples
at the earliest possible moment. To succeed in doing so, he will promise nothing
as a gift but will emphasize how necessary it is to apply the teaching to their
personal lives honestly and continuously.
369
The Master Jalaluddin Rumi did not allow
disciples to have constant contact with him. At a certain point he dismissed
them. They had henceforth to work alone upon the foundations laid down. He was
an original Teacher, and a successful one.
370
Every text and every guru must in the end, and
better from the beginning also, point away from themselves. But this will happen
only if full authentic enlightenment is present.
371
Such a teacher looks for no adoration but rather
directs it toward the disciple's own Soul.
372
If the true master imposes no obligations toward
himself on those he helps and demands no rewards from them, this is because he
wishes to retain his freedom, his independence, his detachment as much as it is
because he gives out of compassion and goodness.
373
Emerson conquered the most subtle temptation that
can beset a man of his type. He was openly a teacher, and the teacher's natural
tendency is the wish to be looked to for continual guidance. But Emerson was too
pure a soul to show the teacher's egotism. He wished to set others firm on their
own feet. Mr. Woodbury tells us how, finding himself differing from his revered
master, he went and stated his case. Emerson deliberated, then, with his bright
kindly look: "Well, I do not wish disciples." It was a shock, but a healthy one.
It shook the pupil off from his support, but thereby he learned to walk alone.
374
The man who can sometimes make other men aware -
however momentarily - of their divinity is a true master.
375
The guide will not only point out the way to
spiritual maturity but also will encourage the pupil to follow it. He seeks no
other recompense than your loyalty, no better payment than your faith, no
superior satisfaction than your own spiritual progress.
376
The true mentor will possess a penetrating
insight into his pupils' needs.
377
Such a guru seeks neither money nor personal
power.
378
He will be able to perceive from what source a
man draws his life, whether from the impulsion of the ego or from the
inspiration of the Overself.
379
The instantaneous and adequate nature of his
replies to all questions shows a deeper understanding than the merely
intellectual, hence must be intuitive, inspirational, or realizational. On such
a basis a man's fitness for guruship becomes more evident.
380
The role of spiritual guide involves a code of
ethics, a special moral responsibility on the part of the guide.
381
The appellation of spiritual teacher should be
given only to one who not only can communicate spiritual truth intellectually
but who also lives it fully.
382
The teacher must not only provide instruction; he
must also set an example of how to live and act in the world, and he must not
only do both of these but he must also provide a profounder influence than other
men by virtue of his own attainment, as telepathically revealed by his mere
presence.
383
The perfect teacher is he who lives up to the
teaching itself. The semi-perfect one tries to live up to the teaching. The
imperfect one does not even try: avoid him.
384
Actions, deeds, are the final test of the
spiritual man or guru. The life he leads must be a pattern.
385
The spiritual guide who asks his disciples to
practise self-discipline and remodel their characters, will seem to them to be
offering impossible counsels of perfection unless he himself is willing to do or
has already done what he asks. However sound his theoretical guidance may be, it
will fail in persuasive power to the extent that it is not at one with his own
experience.
386
What the Hindus call a spiritual dispeller of
darkness, what the Eastern Christian Church calls a Spiritual Father is not only
holy himself but is also an experienced teacher of the way to holiness for
others.
387
He who takes upon himself the task of guiding
disciples should possess sure-footed experience gained by years of work with the
most varied kinds of apprentices.
388
To be a guru is to accept a responsibility. For
this, one needs the capacity in oneself and the mandate from the higher power.
389
Only when a man is permanently and consciously
established in the higher self may these occult powers be safely acquired and
these relations with disciples be safely entered into. Only when other planes of
existence are accessible to him and higher beings from those planes are
instructing him can he really know how properly to live down here and be able to
competently instruct others to do so.
390
Nobody is entitled to wear the mantle of a master
merely because he has received teaching from a master. He is at best only a
transmitter of information and not the originator of it. For he may transmit
knowledge which he does not himself understand, which is far over his head or
which he is even capable of misunderstanding and therefore likely to lead others
totally astray. How can such a person be called a qualified master? Let us
therefore make a sharp differentiation between those who are competent to be
called teachers and those who are merely transmitters of teaching.
391
It is all right for a teacher to have only a
partial and limited knowledge of his subject so long as he recognizes it as
such, and so long as it is not applied in cases where complete knowledge is
essential.
392
So long as some of the truth - perhaps some vital
aspects of it - remains hidden from him, so long must he be stern with himself
and reject the temptation of setting up as a master.
393
He must live in freedom and not in dependence,
whether outwardly or inwardly, on followers or disciples: therefore he keeps
them at a distance that they in turn may find and experience the truth within
themselves. His work ends at pointing the way.
394
A professional lawyer or surgeon accepting
clients is expected to have certain qualifications before he undertakes to serve
them. A spiritual prophet who sets out to guide others needs certain
qualifications too. He needs the intellectual capacity to explain teach and
clarify, the temperamental patience to put himself in their shoes, and the
altruistic compassion to work for their benefit. Moreover, given the innate
facility, it is easy to teach ethics to others and hard to live those teachings
oneself. He needs the ability to set a right example for imitation in his own
conduct.
395
It is quite wrong to conceive of a spiritual
guide in a highly sentimental way. He would reveal his incompetence and bungle
his work for you not less if he were to pamper as to nag you, not less if he
were to be emotionally too solicitous about your personal life as too
authoritarian. For he would make you more egoistic and less disciplined, more
dependent and less self-reliant, more incapable of achieving real progress and
less informed about the factors concerned in it. He would, indeed, make you a
flabby parasite instead of an evolving entity.
396
He is a man whose perception goes farther, whose
awareness goes deeper than the rest of his fellow men. It must go so far and so
deep that it rests durably in the "I Am" of the Overself. Without this he does
not possess the first, the most essential and most important of all the
credentials needed for communicating to others the art of attaining the
Overself. The second credential, and admittedly a lesser one, is the
compassionate desire to effect this communication as much as possible. The third
is that he have special power to teach others what he knows.
397
It is possible for one who has mastered his own
mind to affect that of another person, whether the latter is in propinquity to
him or is placed at a great distance from him. This fact becomes especially
evident where there is an attempt to learn and practise meditation.
398
What the master can do for a disciple is limited.
He can stimulate the latter's natural aspiration, guide his studies, and point
out where the pitfalls are; but he can do little more. He cannot take on his own
shoulders responsibilities which the disciple ought to take.
399
It is the will of a higher power that he, whose
own inner eye is open, shall be instrumental in opening that eye for others
wherein it is closed.
400
His help is provided by what he is - the power of
example - and by what he teaches - the power of suggestion.
401
What a guide may be able to do in certain cases
is to facilitate the awakening of higher consciousness and to make easier the
entry of higher truths.
402
He understands the feeling of love which a
disciple expresses and he accepts it on the level of the same feeling which he
himself gives in turn to Those who are his leaders. The attraction is
inevitable. But in the case of female disciples, it must be kept on a high level
and never allowed to mix with lower emotions. It must be pure and, in a certain
sense, even impersonal. The teacher walks the path of life outwardly alone and
uninvolved with any "person" as such. The only way anyone can come closer to him
is to approach the attainment of union with his own higher self. Do not expect
the adept to behave as ordinary human beings, with their desires and emotions,
behave. He has committed suicide in that direction. It was the price demanded of
him for what little peace he has found.
403
The disciple who poses as a master is a fool. The
master who poses as a disciple is a sage.
404
He cannot submit to the pressures and claims of a
personal relation without falsifying his status and adulterating his service.
405
He has the power to awaken the Glimpse-experience
in other men, but not in all other men. He can succeed with those only who are
ready enough or sensitive enough.
406
It is usually quite impossible for the average
aspirant to determine who is a fully qualified master. But it is sometimes quite
possible to determine who is not a master. He may apply this negative
test to the supposed master's personal conduct and public teaching.
407
If a man claims to have attained the fullness of
his higher being, we may test his claim by the moral fruits he shows. For he
ought constantly to exercise the qualities of compassion, self-restraint,
nonattachment, and calmness on the positive side and freedom from malice,
backbiting, greed, lust, and anger on the negative side.
408
He who takes up the vocation of spiritual service
should do so only if he be sufficiently prepared for it morally - only if he be
destitute of ambitions and greeds, detached from women and the thought of women,
isolated from personal motivations, liberated from the lower emotions.
409
A master issues no command and requires no
obedience. Others may do so but not he.
410
He will bear no grudge if his advice is rejected.
411
The guru who performs the Oriental potentate to
his court of disciples may be unconsciously playing up to their desires or
expectations but also playing down to his own desire for power. It may help to
keep them in juvenile dependence on him but also keep him within the ego and
thus reduce his capacity to serve them.
412
Even if he were not ethically more sensitive and
hence more scrupulous than most people, his own spiritual dignity and personal
self-respect would alone forbid his taking advantage of the credulous, the
inexperienced, or the unbalanced.
413
The spiritual guide who is not himself free from
passion is a dangerous guide for those who are still struggling in the grip of
passion. The teacher who has not utterly subdued personal egoism is unfit to
assist those who seek liberation from it. He should learn to solve his own
problems before he can safely venture forth to help solve the problems of other
people.
414
The true teacher identifies himself with his
student and does not sit on a Himalayan height of self-esteem.
415
A guru who thinks of himself as having disciples
has attachments. The ego is present in him. They are mentally held as
possessions.
416
A man who is privileged to carry a message from
the mountaintop down to his fellows should feel no envy of other messengers, no
emotional disturbance at their success or his own failure. If he does, it means
that the ego has inserted itself into his work and poisoned it. On the contrary,
he ought to be glad that some more seekers have been helped to hear truths which
they could not hear for themselves. He ought to rejoice at their blessing,
otherwise he is still worshipping himself and not God. A true messenger will not
look for followers but for those whom he can help.
417
Exposed to flattery and obsequiousness though he
will be, he will nevertheless keep quite free from pomposity and vanity.
418
The teacher has to bear patiently with the
defects and weaknesses of his students. He could not do this if his insight were
too limited, his compassion too small, and his calmness too superficial.
419
The teacher whose own mind rests in the serenity
of the Overself will feel no concern over the slow advance of any of his
disciples. He has submitted this in advance to the care of the Overself, just as
he submitted his own in earlier days. Yet this detachment will not in any way
abate the constant flow of counsel, guidance, encouragement, and inspiration
which will go forth from him to those disciples.
420
If the truly advanced mystic ever gives the
impression that he frowns on any person who has erred, a totally false
impression has been received. For he knows that it is through that small part of
evolution which is devoted to free will that we learn and grow. He who has
himself learnt and grown in this way never frowns at the mistakes of others,
but, instead, forgives them.
421
Helping others to understand the art of proper
living is itself an art. A man may be good and yet not a good teacher.
422
Wise teachers try to harmonize the
contradictions. They use practical scientific ways along with mystical interior
ones.
423
The man who is fluent and articulate makes a
better teacher so far as communication is concerned; but the man who has had
divine experience, who knows what he is talking about, is still the best teacher
of all.
424
If he knows in experience as in theory, and if he
possesses the ability to communicate this theory, then the impressions left will
not be vague but quite distinct.
425
A teacher who gives a well-argued discourse about
the Truth helps us, but so does the teacher who announces the Truth in
non-discursive terms. Both are needful in their place.
426
The guru is one who not only knows the truth but
can teach well what he knows - and not necessarily in words, for silence can
also be used as an effective medium.
427
The spiritual guide must be someone to be trusted
more than any man, to be looked to for guidance, knowledge, hope, inspiration,
and warning.
428
He respects every confidence that is reposed in
him and keeps all confessions in the hidden archives of memory.
429
Whatever confidence he receives during the
interview, the other person may feel sure that it will not be betrayed.
430
The man who professes to guide others spiritually
and to inspire them with higher ideals cannot escape being watched. If he
resents the ordeal, his service to them will be impaired; but if he accepts it,
he shows thereby that he is not looking for self-glory.
431
Contempt and slander will be the unequal reward
some will pay him; miscomprehension and minification will be received from
others. He will accept them all unconcernedly.
432
No true master will take money for his services.
433
Such a man could not charge others for his time,
his counsel, or his trouble, could not commercialize his work, could not bring
himself to make money out of truth-seeking wanderers. His service to them is a
holy thing, unpriced and unpriceable. For it is done at the dictate of his
higher self.
434
We must recognize a sharp, clear-cut distinction
between spiritual teaching as a duty and spiritual teaching as a business. The
one expresses his true relationship to the disciple, the other seeks financial
return from him.
435
Spirituality is no commodity to be bought and
sold in the marketplace. It must be worked for step by step and won by personal
effort. This still remains true even though in the end it is conferred by Grace,
for without such preparation the conferment is unlikely, nay almost impossible.
This is not less true if the efforts may mostly be buried in the history of past
lives. If any religious organization or cult-leader even mentions a price, a
fee, or even a contribution as a prerequisite to Grace, initiation, or higher
consciousness, then the devotee is being deceived by imposture.
436
It is an ancient tradition that such instruction
should be given free and that a teacher is degraded by receiving payment.
437
The Overself is costless. It is, as Jesus pointed
out, as free as the wind which comes and goes. Whoever has realized it will
gladly teach the way to anyone who is ripe and ready for his teaching. If any
man puts a price on it and offers to sell it to you, be sure he is offering a
false or shoddy imitation.
438
If he accepts gifts or contributions he will
probably be asked for, or expected to allow, concessions of his time, attention,
and even grace which others may not hope to receive. The intensity of devotion
rather than the value of offerings must always govern the master's response.
439
A guru has an official position, which is
accompanied by appropriate duties. They include: (1) taking a personal interest
in the disciples' inner welfare and growth; (2) instructing them in the truth,
and in the way to its attainment; (3) inspiring them telepathically with
glimpses of the higher states; (4) encouraging them to persevere in travelling
along the way; (5) warning them against the pitfalls and obstacles.
440
The teacher's duty is to give direction, provide
knowledge, warn against pitfalls, correct errors. It is not his duty to save the
pupil necessary efforts of will and thinking.
441
The master powerfully removes the sluggishness of
the intellect of his disciple; clarifies his ideas about what is eternal and
what is perishable, what is real and what is unreal, what is material and what
is mental; and opens to him the realm of truth slowly but unmistakably by
constant appeal to his reason.
442
The first service of the Master is to point out
the way, both inwardly and outwardly, to the disciple. This shortens his journey
by several lifetimes, which would otherwise have to be spent in wanderings,
explorings, gropings, and searchings.
443
It is to expound truth and correct errors, to
place an example before the others, and to purify them by his company that such
a teacher appears in the outer world.
444
Another phase of his work is to stimulate the
yearning for higher attainment where it exists, and to inculcate it where it
does not.
445
It is his work to show them what they cannot see
for themselves - their own higher possibilities.
446
His function is to interpret man - and more
especially spiritual man - to himself.
447
His task is to make known to other men their
godlike possibilities within themselves.
448
His mission is not to bring men pleasure, but to
raise them to appreciate truth.
449
The teacher assists his students to attain a
degree of concentration beyond that which they are able to achieve by
themselves.
450
He detonates the higher potentialities of each
disciple, breaks the closed circle of his senses, and leads him towards a moral
and mystical regeneration.
451
The duty of any spiritual teacher is to lead the
seeker to her own Higher Self, to find her own source of inner light and
strength and thus not to lean on outside human beings.
452
A guru who is quite competent does help the
leaner: he shows the way, illuminates problems, untangles knots, dispels
confusions, explains meanings, and encourages effort. Tutelage has its place.
453
He who directs anyone's wakening spiritual faith
is that man's teacher.
454
If he guides us to notice hitherto unobserved
truths, if he leads our thought and faith away from hitherto strongly held
errors, then a teacher fulfils a useful function.
455
His services include the unveiling and exposing
of psychic or mystic experiences which are merely self-suggested or mainly
hallucinatory.
456
He cannot do more than help them find and fulfil
their own ways to the goal, but it is enough.
457
The teacher has to be firm at some times, gentle
at others.
458
A spiritual guide's duty to an erring man will
not be fully carried out if he only arouses the man to recognition of the
necessity of taking a new road.
459
It will not be enough to show them the path. He
must also keep them steadfast on the path.
460
He who would appear publicly as a religious
prophet or mystical teacher must deal with the people of his century as he finds
them, must speak to them in a language which they can understand. But even
though he thus tries to conform to the requirements of those he has come to
help, he cannot give them the intuition, the sensitivity, and the intelligence
needed to understand his message, nor the aspiration and reverence needed to
appreciate it.
461
Some teachers do not have a single disciple -
they merely help a few people in a friendly way.
462
He who teaches well, learns himself.
463
He who has dedicated his life to this kind of
service will find before long that others come to him - perhaps a few at first,
but later many more - to pile on his sturdy shoulders the burdens and
sufferings, the perplexities and gropings which they find so difficult to deal
with themselves.
464
There is a kind of guru active in East and West
alike who hungers for followers, is eager to acquire disciples, plays the
dictator to his little circle, and not infrequently tries to get money from
them. His teaching may be quite plausible, his promises quite attractive. But he
is self-appointed, not God-appointed.
465
When he lets his followers regard him as a
demigod and will not accept the slightest criticism from anyone, it is a sign
that his personal ego is active.
466
Certain teachers develop an unhealthy lust for
power, imposing their personal will on hapless disciples.
467
Many seekers through following such self-styled
teachers have either remained stationary or gone astray altogether.
468
If his following of the quest is wrong it may
also be because he has chosen for guru a man with an enlarged ego making
exaggerated claims.
469
The peril of incompetent guides is not lessened
when, as so often happens, they are sincere. For they may be, and usually are,
utterly ignorant of their own limitations.
470
The teacher whose motives get mixed up, whose
desire to help and serve others twines around his desire to gain money,
prestige, influence, or power is one who begins to teach before he is ready to
do so. Both he and his disciples will have to pay the price for his premature
activities.
471
When the heart has ardently cherished the wish
for a master and the mind has consequently entered a highly suggestible state,
the chance meeting between a would-be follower and an over-eager spiritual
Fuehrer is foolishly regarded as a divinely ordained event!
472
It is better to have no teacher at all than to
have one who has psychologized himself into the delusion that he has reached the
God-realized state, who mistakes self-deception for self-realization.
473
The man who constantly tries to make other
persons over into a copy of himself, who tries to change their living habits or
thinking-ways into the same as his own, who seeks zealously to proselytize their
religious beliefs, is too often merely asserting his own ego and practising a
subtler, more self-deceptive form of egotism. If he really felt love for them,
as he often professes, he would leave them their freedom to choose what suits
them, not thrust himself and his own beliefs aggressively upon them.
474
The kind of spiritual guide that most people want
is one who pats them encouragingly on the shoulder, flatters them constantly in
speech or writing, and habituates them to refer all their personal problems to
him for solution. The kind of guide they really need is one who will critically
point out their faults and weaknesses and who will unhesitatingly throw them
back on their own resources. It is better to encourage men in good conduct than
to pamper their neurotic religiosity.
475
The aspirant comes to the philosophic teacher
with a mind filled by error and ignorance. He comes to the philosophic life with
a character filled by egoism and prejudice. Thus he is the largest stumbling
block in his own path. He himself prevents the spiritual consciousness from
approaching him. So the first duty of a teacher is to show him all this error,
ignorance, egoism, and prejudice for the ugly things they are and make him aware
and ashamed of them.
476
He must cast aside much of his carefully
heaped-up pile of knowledge and begin afresh. To make a man teachable, you must
first convince him of his own ignorance. And the master will show him that he
really knows little of his own self.
477
It is an important part of his task to show men
what their personal lives look like from an impersonal standpoint. Hence he
points out the fallacy of their egotistic actions and the foolishness of their
egotistic purposes.
478
Whatever he says or suggests to his disciples is
said or suggested with a view to their ultimate good. Therefore he may sometimes
recommend a course of action which brings immediate pain or self-denial or
self-discipline.
479
He may gently chide one man for errors and
shortcomings, or firmly warn another man against sins and lapses.
480
It is hard to bring a man from a wrong point of
view to a right one, not only because he may not be intellectually or
intuitively capable of making the transition, but also because he can make it
only by losing some of his emotional egoistic self-esteem. This is true of
general propaganda among the masses as it is of the preliminary correction of
pupils by a master.
481
The first task of a genuine guide is not to
flatter the seeker but to criticize him, not to let him remain ignorantly in the
grip of his unrecognized weaknesses but to point them out relentlessly to him.
482
Let him not think the teacher brutal for pouncing
on his faults.
483
One of the first duties of a spiritual guide is
to correct the beginner, show where he has mistaken his way, and expose his
fallacies of thought, feeling, and conduct. A competent guide will be quick to
perceive and fearless to point out these matters however unpleasant a duty it be
and however unpalatable to the pupil.
484
It is part of the task of a spiritual director to
point out tactfully but firmly the faults and deficiencies of his disciples, to
make them more aware of what is needed in their moral self-correction.
485
The spiritual director who is over-severe in his
correction of the aspirant's faults, needs correcting himself.
486
The paternal spiritual guide who coddles his
bleating disciples renders them a disservice.
487
It is a common experience with abbots of
monasteries in the West and with gurus of ashrams in the East that attention
given to one disciple may rouse the ego's conceit in him and the ego's envy in
the others.
488
The guide who refuses to appease the ego of those
who approach him, may nevertheless be eager to help them. Yet they will resent
his counsel and feel rebuffed! They do not see that he is trying to help them in
a wiser way by showing them how to help themselves. Only longer time and further
experience may bring them to their senses and show them the logic of his advice
and the prudence of his attitude.
489
The spiritual leader who is always soft and
sentimental may help some of his pupils but he would help them more if, at the
same time, he were also hard and firm. The first attitude will attract more to
him, but without the second to balance it neither he nor they will get the
proper view of life.
490
A true teacher must warn his followers against
false expectations and irredeemable promises.
491
One of the first tasks of a philosophy teacher is
to restrain the missionary fervour of his younger pupils and to impress upon
them the need of caution, discrimination, and even secrecy in this matter.
492
It is not enough that he has the penetration to
perceive the truth; he must also have the courage to tell it to his disciples,
even though he knows it will shock them.
493
The guru whose ego still harbours vanity will
find it flattered by every new disciple, will be endangered afresh by every
widening of his personal influence.
494
He finds that the disciples come to him for their
emotional comfort, they do not come for their ego's emotional quietus. They want
to remain enclosed in its little circle, not to be taken completely out of it.
495
The kind of master needed and sought after by
those who are on the religio-mystic-occult path is one who will take a keen
interest in their personal life as well as spiritual welfare, one who is always
willing to help them with any and every problem, one who by virtue of residence
or correspondence is always and quickly available to them. The philosophic
master is not like this but of a different kind.
496
He is not a missionary telling others that they
must follow the Quest but an educator telling them that they may follow
it if they so choose.
497
The title "leader" implies its corollary
"follower." But a spiritual leader of the kind here described does not want a
mass of followers trailing behind him in a partisan spirit. It is enough for him
to give others a few inspirations, ideas, insights, and yet leave them free to
work on the material as they wish, unobligated to join any movement.
498
It is needful for you to understand that a
philosophic teacher never really wants anyone to follow him but only to follow
Truth. Socrates humorously described himself as practising the same vocation as
his mother who was a midwife - the only difference between them being that
whereas she helped women to deliver themselves of infants, he helped men to
deliver themselves of the true ideas with which their minds were in labour. His
business, like that of all genuine teachers, was not to impart truth as
something new and foreign but to assist the student to elicit it from within
himself. Every genuine teacher tries in his work to lead the student's mind in
such a way that his thinking gradually changes without his becoming conscious of
the fact at the time, although he will recognize it in retrospect later. He
makes students think for themselves; stimulates them to solve their own
metaphysical, personal, and emotional problems; periodically gives an inner
mystical impetus to their meditation practice; and points out the pitfalls and
fallacies which lie in their life-path. Because his outlook is so disinterested,
because his primary purpose is to liberate and not limit them, to give and not
get, such a teacher's services can never be bought by anyone - although they may
be claimed by those who are prepared to cast off the shoes of conventional
prejudice at his door and who are willing to refrain loyally from imposing upon
him their preconceived notions of what characteristics the teaching, the
teacher, and the quest should possess. Thus if he will not shackle them, they in
their turn must not shackle him. Such would-be disciples are rare, but such
teachers who practise what they preach are rarer still.
499
The method of a philosophic teacher is not to
make the decisions of the pupil for him but rather to lead him to make them for
himself. The teacher will outline the process of arriving at the correct
conclusion, but he will not deprive the pupil of the responsibility of trusting
that process and accepting its outcome. The teacher may even make available
information which will be helpful to the student in arriving at a decision, but
beyond that he cannot go if the student is to arrive at independence and
maturity. The relationship which we find in mystical or Oriental circles, which
leaves the pupil completely or continuously dependent upon his guide and causes
him to come constantly running to and fro for advice as to what he should do
next, will only increase the helplessness of the pupil. The philosophic way is
to help him develop his own ability to dispose of problems and confront
situations effectively. The philosophic method is to lead the pupil to the point
where he requires no teacher. The mystical method is to lead him to the point
where he cannot do without the teacher.
500
The teacher who demands blind obedience from his
pupil belongs to a vanishing age. The teacher who strives to make his pupil's
own mind understand each step of the way he travels belongs to the coming age.
The first often ends by enslaving his followers, whereas the second ends by
liberating them. The first is a dictator, the second a companion. The first
creates nonentities, the second, men.
501
A wise teacher will not lecture to his students,
will not try the superficial way of telling them every detail of truth. But by
discussion questioning and encouragement he will help them to elicit it for
themselves and thus enable them to make it deeply and lastingly their own.
502
The right way to teach men is to propose truth,
not impose it.
503
A philosophic teacher often prefers to let the
student make his own discoveries on the basis of clues provided rather than lead
him into rigid imprisoning dogmas.
504
The true teacher should stimulate thought and not
stereotype it. If an aspirant is fortunate enough to get direct and personal
guidance of this kind, he is fortunate indeed.
505
The master gives a candidate the seeds and
teaches him how to cultivate them: how to water, nourish, and tend the plants
which sprout up from them.
506
The highest type of teacher does not want and
will not encourage a blind unquestioning acceptance of his own views.
507
The true teacher interprets the divine will for
his disciple but does not impose it on him. Such a guide may proffer advice and
tender suggestions but he will never issue orders and dictate decisions. Instead
of trying to deprive the student of his capacity to intuit truths for himself,
the disinterested teacher will try to create it.
508
A genuine teacher will not seek to dominate the
soul of a student, will not strive to impose his own will upon him. For the
teacher desires to see a natural and not a forced artificial growth, to free men
and not to enslave them. The real master spiritualizes his disciple but does not
debilitate him.
509
The guru who does not want to enslave disciples,
will guide them to do what they themselves ought to be doing, but are weakly and
foolishly expecting him to do for them.
510
A prudent master prefers not to help people but
to help them to help themselves.
511
It is merely mockery to admonish a weakling to
become strong if you do not put into his hands the knowledge and equipment
wherewith he can acquire strength.
512
It is the teacher's duty to foster his disciple's
creativeness, not his imitativeness; to encourage the disciple to develop his
own inspiration.
513
The average teacher takes from his own personal
experience what helped him most or what his own teacher led him to, and passes
it on to the student as being "the Path," the only way to God, the
sole method of arriving at truth - whether this particular way or method suits
the individual type or his degree of development or not. He almost forces it on
the student, even if it is contrary to the latter's entire temperament or need.
The poor student finds himself imprisoned and locked up in his teacher's
personal opinions and practices, as if nothing good existed outside them.
514
The wisest master lets the disciple develop in
his own way, according to his own individuality.
515
Such a teacher will be the student's motivating
influence while, paradoxically, encouraging him to preserve his independence.
516
What the wise teacher does is to wait for the
right situations to develop in which his own efforts can be most fruitful.
517
He has waited for years, reserving the full
expression of his powers until the crucial hour when the aspirant is ready to
receive him. Until then, he must conceal his identity.
518
His wisdom in refusing to influence the students'
decisions will not be apparent at first. Indeed it will be regarded as unwisdom
- and his attitude will be felt as unsympathetic.
519
It is not the business of a master to save the
disciple from suffering so much as to save him from the faults in himself which
create suffering. He may suggest and advise but never impose his will upon
yours. He turns a lamp upon your problems but leaves you free to work them out
for yourself.
520
A master's work is not to issue commands which
must be obeyed by enslaved disciples, but to formulate principles which must be
understood by enlightened ones. It is not to create belief but to strengthen
knowledge.
521
The philosophic teacher leaves to the individual
pupil how he shall apply these principles to his own life, and does not try to
chalk out the precise details of such practice for him.
522
His unwillingness to give specific advice on
practical personal matters should not be construed as unwillingness to help, or
as lack of interest in them. It is only that he wants the solution to come
straight out of the student's own being, so that the growth will be the
student's too.
523
Only the inexperienced over-enthused novice will
want to share the whole of his knowledge with others, will want to let them into
all its secrets without delay. The prudent expert guide is much more restrained.
He carefully refrains from giving more than the others are ready for, holding
the rest back for a later time. It is not only prudence which warns him against
yielding all his secrets at once: Nature, in her own operations, likewise lets
the mind of her animals grow by degrees through a graduated process of
development.
524
It is the mark of a well-qualified teacher that
he adapts his advice to fit each disciple individually. If everyone is
recommended to practise the same method irrespective of his competence, his
personal history and temperament, his grade of development and capacity, his
character-traits and tendencies, in a number of cases it will be largely
ineffectual.
525
His long-range work is to lift the disciples to
his own level, but his short-range work is necessarily concerned with their
levels.
526
His refusal to give everything out to everyone
must be judged by this light, this recognition of the fact that there exist
various levels of understanding, and hence of readiness to learn these things.
527
A teacher of spiritual culture, ideals,
principles, and practices must think of the intellectual level of those he seeks
to instruct, and address his message to that.
528
Because there are different levels of aspirants,
different levels of teaching are necessary.
529
He takes the view that these multiple teachings
are successive steps leading in time to the highest truth and that it would be
harmful or unwise to present this truth at too early a stage.
530
There are three methods of approach used by the
teachers, depending on the level of the people they have to deal with. They are:
first, terrorizing the lowest type by fears; second, coaxing the better evolved
ones by baits and lures; third, giving a fair, balanced statement of the truth
for those people who are mentally and morally on the highest level.
531
A competent teacher puts himself behind his
pupil's eyes, inside his pupil's mind, and starts his instruction from what he
finds there.
532
The prudent teacher will reveal what will best
help people, not necessarily what they like to hear or all that he knows. He
must give people what is best for them, must first evaluate how much truth they
can take in. It is utterly impracticable and imprudent to give all people all
the spiritual truth at all times.
533
The prudent teacher will give out only slightly
more than the seeking enquirer is able to receive.
534
To explain such subtle teachings in all their
fullness to anyone who will not be able to understand them or to feel as
interested as the student does, would be foolish. Nevertheless, he is not the
proprietor of them so he cannot keep them solely for his own use; nor is he so
separate from others that their inner fate is not his concern. If someone comes
who asks questions sincerely or needs comfort spiritually or seeks guidance in
bewilderment, the student must give what he can. But he must give it prudently,
not pouring out one drop more of his knowledge or power than is needed for the
particular person at this particular stage in evolution. There is no necessity
to keep truth jealously guarded, as in medieval times, nor to rush to the
opposite extreme and give everything to everyone.
535
The message will reach him only when it can
re-educate his understanding.
536
All spiritual progress is individual. Each man
grows by himself, not as part of a group. Therefore, if instruction is really to
be effective, it should be individual instruction.
537
The outer teacher's prime duty is to lead the
aspirant to his own inner teacher. But if he leads the aspirant towards
ever-increasing attachment, dependence, and submission to himself - that is,
outwards and away from the inner teacher - then he only exploits him rather than
directs him, and there is only false progress.
538
Real progress will be the fruit of their own
endeavours, not of the goodwill of others. It is one of the obligations of a
true spiritual guide to make aspirants feel that they have the power to achieve
it and to encourage them to take their spiritual destiny into their own hands.
539
He formulates precisely and expresses definitely
an idea which a number of minds are moving toward but have not yet produced.
They recognize it when he gives it to them, and thus become the willing
receivers of it.
540
The teacher passes some of his own consciousness
and force into the disciple, thus enabling him to realize the truth of what
might otherwise be but theory. Moreover he provides "truth-words" for the
disciple who, by constantly ruminating over these, attains intuitive knowledge.
541
The question of helping students more
individually is a question of practical functioning. The teacher wishes to keep
his own freedom and at the same time leave them free too.
542
The aim of a teacher is not to create a
philosophical elite for its own sake but for the larger sake of mankind.
543
The starting of a cult to gain a personal
following would be abhorrent to the spirit of any truly selfless spiritual
guide, but the creation of a school for spiritual development and philosophical
learning he might consider helpful to many earnest but bewildered students of
life.
544
The true master is to work for the few. There are
several agencies who will spread their activities thinly on a wide surface but
his will penetrate to a deeper level. Theirs will be more showy but his more
effective.
545
Adepts not only seek the few who seek them but
they also seek the fewer still who are qualified for them.
546
The teacher does not lift the veil of Isis for
everyone he meets in the street but he will always lift it for those who ask
aright.
547
He cannot help all the millions of mankind. He
can help only the seekers among mankind. Nor can he help all the seekers. He can
help only those who come into sympathetic and receptive contact with him or with
his work.
548
To be someone's disciple is to go farther in
relationship than to be his student.
549
If men call themselves disciples sharing his
views, two paths become open to them. The first is to become lay disciples, who
limit themselves to intellectual sharing only. The second is to become full
disciples, who go all the way with him into the philosophical discipline and
life.
550
One great advantage of the path of personal
discipleship is that it requires no intellectual capacity, no special gifts of
any kind, to get its profits and make progress along its course. What could be
simpler than remembering the master's name and face? What could be easier than
mentally turning to him every day in faith, reverence, humility, and devotion?
551
The advantage of having a living master is
immense. Man is so sense-bound that it is easier for him to follow an embodied
ideal than a disembodied one, easier to understand truth in action than truth in
the abstract. Should anyone have the good fortune to be taken under the wing of
a sage, his progress will go forward at a far quicker rate than would otherwise
be possible. It is not a little thing that he has someone to turn him in the
right direction or that his movement in this direction is guided by an
experienced pioneer.
552
Although the master cannot do the disciple's work
for him, he can put the disciple in command of the special knowledge derived
from long experience which can help him do the work more efficiently and more
successfully.
553
The master will teach with love what the student
must learn with reverence.
554
As the Master brings the disciple to clarify his
own thinking and knowledge and awareness, the latter turns his attention to what
it is that he really does believe.
555
The zeal of the Master will by slow degrees
permeate the heart of the disciple.
556
Under the sunshine of this encouragement,
inspiration, and stimulation, the inner life expands.
557
Only those who have themselves felt it can
understand how he is able to exert such drawing power and arouse such fervid
devotion in disciples.
558
There is intimacy in the fellowship between
teacher and disciple which is unique. There is an impersonality in this most
personal of human relationships which is equally unique.
559
No other relationship, whether familial or
friendly, can compare with this relationship in depth or beauty or value.
560
There is no tie so strong, no attraction so deep
as that between Master and pupil. Consequently it persists through incarnation
after incarnation.
561
It is a special kind of relationship, one which
is less dependent on physical conditions than any other human relationship. If
they never meet again, never see each other again, it remains unchangeably the
same to the end.
562
The average aspirant does not find the true
teachers because he would not behave himself correctly with them if he did.
Sooner or later he would abuse the lofty character of the relation of
discipleship and seek to force it to become a half-worldly one. It is probably
true to say that even imperfect teachers, who are all that the public is likely
to know, often receive from their followers frantic appeals for this or that
personal intervention or frenzied outpourings concerning this or that personal
material problem for which immediate help is demanded. But even when the
aspirant has linked himself up with an embodied master or invisible adept, a
scriptural personage or his own higher self, he may start to assume that the
higher power or person is henceforth going to settle all his personal troubles
without his own exertions being called for. This is a piece of wishful thinking.
The very purpose of evolution would be defeated if he were to be deprived of the
opportunity of tackling his problems and troubles for himself: it is only so
that his capacities can stretch out and his understanding enlarge itself. We may
sympathize with the need of troubled disciples, but a wrong notion of what
constitutes the teacher-disciple relation will not help them. It will lead to
false hopes and the anguish of subsequent disappointment. For what is it that
they are really trying to do? They are not merely using the teacher as a
spiritual guide, which is quite correct, but also as a material guide,
leaning-post, and father-mother, which is quite wrong. They want to shunt their
own responsibilities and shift their personal burdens onto the back of a master
or at least to share them with him. Such a conception of discipleship is a wrong
one. Also it is an unfair one. Instead of using the master as a source of
principles and inspirations to be applied by themselves in practical life, they
try to exploit him, to avoid the responsibility for making their own decisions
by saddling it upon his shoulders. The master cannot solve all their personal
problems or carry all their burdens. This task rests with the disciples
themselves. To seek to shift their responsibility for it onto the master's
shoulders is to demand the impossible, the unfair, and the unwise. If
successful, it would defeat the very purpose of their incarnation. It would rob
them of the benefit of the experience to which they have been led by their own
Overself. Such excessive reliance on the guide makes them more and more
incapable of independent thought and judgement. But it should be the object of a
competent guide to help them develop these very things and grow in spiritual
strength, as it should be the aim of a sincere one not dictatorially to rule
their conduct but suggestively to elevate it. If they are to advance to higher
levels, disciples must learn to rely on their own endeavours. No master can
relieve them of this responsibility. It is not the work of a philosophic teacher
to save students from having to make decisions for themselves. It is, on the
contrary, his duty to encourage them to face up to rather than to flee from the
responsibility and profit of working out their own solutions. The prudent master
will leave them to work out for themselves how to apply philosophy to their
personal situations. For him to manage their lives, settle their problems, and
negotiate their difficulties might please their egos but would weaken their
characters. Hence, he does not wish to interfere in their lives nor assume
responsibility for forming decisions on those personal, domestic, family,
employment, and business problems which they ought to arrive at for themselves.
At best he can point out the general direction for travel, not supply a definite
map; he can lay down the general principles of action and it is for them to find
out the best way of applying these principles. The agony of coming to a right
judgement is part of the educative process in developing right intuitions. Each
experience looked at in this way brings out their independent creative faculty,
that is, makes them truly self-reliant. The principles of such solutions are
partially in their hands; practical horse-sense must be harnessed to shrewd
reason and guided by ethical ideals and intuitions.
563
It is not right for the would-be disciple to take
the new relationship as an excuse for releasing himself from all personal
responsibilities, all personal decisions. He should not expect the teacher to
take entire charge of his entire life for him. Nor is it right for a teacher to
accept such a position, to play a role consisting of father and mother and God
combined into a single person toward an individual who has reached adult life.
It will not help a disciple to let him evade his responsibilities and shirk his
decisions. If the atmosphere between them is surcharged with emotion alone
without the restraining balances of reason and common sense, this is the kind of
situation which is likely to be brought about. A wise teacher will try to meet
disciples upon the proper ground between accepting such helpless dependence and
rebuffing it brusquely altogether. Any other meeting would be unhealthy
emotionally and unsound intellectually.
564
Emerson: "Why insist on rash personal
relations with your friend? Why go to his house, or know his mother and brothers
and sisters? Why be visited by him at your own? Are these things material to our
covenant? Leave this touching and clawing. Let him be to me a spirit. A message,
a thought, a sincerity, a glance from him I want, but not news nor pottage. I
can get politics and chat, neighbourly conveniences from cheaper companions.
Should not the society of my friend be to me poetic, pure, universal and as
great as nature itself?" - These words are just as applicable to the disciple.
565
Whoever entrusts himself to a master or his mind
to a teaching, cannot escape his own personal responsibility for what he does.
This is not to absolve either the guru or the author of the teaching from their
own responsibility, which they also have, but it is to make clear that the
followers share it too.
566
The disciple's reverence for the Master can still
hold room for sight of the latter's failings and imperfections. If he gets
enough inspiration from the Master to help his spiritual life, it would be a
foolish decision to leave him because of those failings and imperfections.
567
In primitive tribal times it was the custom in
most places to measure knowledge by the length of the beard. Today it is found
that many of our cleverest atomic energy scientists are comparatively young and
certainly beardless! It is as sensible to follow the primitive custom nowadays
as it is to measure virtue by the beauty of the face. Yet it is not an uncommon
attitude for self-styled truth-seekers to follow one spiritual teacher because
his facial appearance pleases them and to reject another teacher because his
physical figure displeases them! Says S_oren Kierkegaard in Concluding
Unscientific Postscript. "He (Socrates) was very ugly, had clumsy feet, and,
above all, a number of growths on the forehead and elsewhere, which would
suffice to persuade anyone that he was a demoralized subject. This was what
Socrates understood by his favourable appearance in which he was so thoroughly
happy that he would have considered it a chicane of the divinity to prevent him
from becoming a teacher of morals, had he been given an attractive appearance
like an effeminate cithara player, a melting glance like a shepherd lad, small
feet like a dancing master in the Friendly Society and in toto as
favourable an appearance as could have been desired by any applicant for a job
through the newspapers, or any theologue who has pinned his hope on a private
call. Why was this old teacher so happy over his unfavourable appearance, unless
it was because he understood that it must help to keep the learner at a
distance, so that the latter might not stick fast in a direct relationship to
the teacher, perhaps admire him, perhaps have his clothes cut in the same
manner? Through the repellent effect exerted by the contrast, which on a higher
plane was also the role played by his irony, the learner would be compelled to
understand that he had essentially to do with himself, and that the inwardness
of the truth is not the comradely inwardness with which two bosom friends walk
arm in arm, but the separation with which each for himself exists in the truth."
568
If you as the student choose him as your guide,
and if he as the teacher accepts you, what will follow? You should not have
mistaken or exaggerated notions about this relation, should not imagine, for
instance, as so many have imagined, that within a week of acceptance you will
have supernormal experiences, magically attain the transcendent insight, or
receive hour-by-hour watchful care from him. The path is a lifetime one; it may
well run into several lifetimes. For the first and second things to happen is to
run contrary to the laws of nature. His own work is so widespread and so
surprisingly varied, his correspondence so large, his writing labours so
important, that it is physically impossible for a teacher continuously to pay
personal attention to the several hundred individuals seeking his help. What
help then may you legitimately expect from him? You may expect help in the three
branches of this path: the development of philosophical intelligence, the
practice of mystical meditation, and the living of a wise and virtuous
existence. Concerning the first item your intellectual difficulties questions
and problems will be cleared up through advanced disciples or through the post
or, less frequently, at personal interviews. Concerning the second item, you
will be given a practical initiation at a personal meditation with him, which
may even be repeated a number of times if possible. In addition you may be given
the same privilege with his advanced disciples. But beyond this you must travel
your own path. You must faithfully study the needful books, carry on the regular
meditations, and try to adjust your actions to your ideals for yourself and by
yourself. You cannot omit any part of this work and then rightfully expect the
teacher to carry you forward to successful achievement of the goal. He may be
there to direct, inspire, and encourage your work, but that does not absolve you
from doing the work itself. When Buddha w as asked by critics if all his
disciples acted according to his teaching, he frankly answered: "Some do and
some do not." The critics exclaimed, "How is it that even your own disciples do
not follow you?" So Buddha explained, "My task is merely to show the path. Some
tread it and others do not."
569
The master must have the continued co-operation
of the disciple, if he is to do his best.
570
The expectations of disciples, their high
estimate of his character and notion of his outlook, may help to make him what
he is.
571
The disciple who does not follow the path pointed
out to him, who obeys only when it is easy or convenient to obey, commits fraud
and does insult to his master.
572
The student's delight in learning must be matched
by the master's delight in giving.
573
The student's faith must meet the teacher's
patience and the teacher's knowledge and integrity must be such as to inspire
confidence in the student.
574
It is better in every way that the teacher should
belong to the same sex as the disciple.
575
The attitude of the student towards his teacher
is of great importance to the student, because it lays an unseen cable from him
to the teacher, and along that cable pass to and fro the messages and help which
the teacher has to give. The teacher can never lose contact with the student by
going to another part of the world. That unseen cable is elastic and it will
stretch for thousands of miles, because the World-Mind consciousness will travel
almost instantly and anywhere. Contact is not broken by increasing physical
distance. It is broken by the change of heart, the alteration of mental attitude
by the student towards the teacher. If the attitude is wrong, then the cable is
first weakened and finally snapped. Nothing can then pass through and the
student is really alone.
576
Trust lays the cable and trust keeps it in place.
Doubt severs the cable and mistrust destroys it altogether. Therefore it is
prudent and proper for a would-be disciple to clear his doubts and answer his
questions before choosing the teaching which he is to approach as his
faith, and not after the choice has been made.
577
It is essential for aspirants to realize that in
such a relationship it is the mental attitude, especially the faith and devotion
- rather than outward association and physical contact - that is of true
importance.
578
It is not only needful to link up with the guide
in a general way by a right attitude of faith and devotion towards him but also
to link up in a special way by a daily meditation which seeks to put the
disciple's mind in rapport with the guide's.
579
Osmosis, the principle of absorption as a result
of being with or near a thing or a person, is active here as elsewhere.
580
His silent influence can lift up the other man's
inner being much more easily if the disciple sits relaxed in body and emptied in
mind.
581
A master may give out his teachings, methods, and
instructions. Sooner or later some among his followers - if not his opponents -
will twist them, reinterpret them, modify them, or even deform them. This
process even starts during his lifetime, but becomes considerable and important
only after that - when he's no longer present to attend to needed corrections.
This shows that not all who hear him understand what they hear, and that there
are different levels of capacity among the followers.
582
The spiritual counsellor who takes personal
advantage of the dependence placed upon him or of the trust shown in him,
thereby renders himself unfit for such a high position. Therefore in his
dealings with disciples it is best for him to maintain an independence in
practical affairs and worldly relationship as well as a cool detachment in
social contact and personal intercourse. It is inevitable that the disciples
should feel hurt at such impersonality and such objectivity, but therein lies a
protection both for themselves and for the teacher until such time as they are
more developed, better balanced, more controlled, and farther seeing. Then and
then only is it possible for the teacher to revise the relationship and make it
not only a warmer one but even a more personal one, with safety to both sides.
Disciples who are not well-balanced and are somewhat neurotic often try to get
the teacher personally involved in their lives. For they want to be set free
from the need of developing themselves, the duty of improving their characters,
the burden of accepting their responsibilities, and the painfulness of working
out emotional problems which are merely the result of their own egoism. If the
teacher succumbs to their appeals, then they remain unevolved and the
relationship itself remains unpracticable. But if he firmly resists them he may,
by such resistance, force a change in their attitude and consequently an
increase in their wisdom. In doing so however he courts misunderstanding on the
part of his disciples, who may first become bewildered and later resentful.
Affection may turn to anger for a time, and the disciple may even withdraw
altogether. If they are so foolish as to do this their development will not only
be stopped but also, what is worse, set back for months or years.
583
Possessive love is natural. We want to have and
keep what we love. But when its object is another human being, there is an
inevitable desire for the return of our love, for the restriction of their
affection to us alone, so that what we give is not given in purity but in
extended selfishness. Hence when others love you they want to deprive you of
your freedom. But when the disciple loves you, he must give you your freedom.
584
It is also an error to believe that one disciple
must necessarily associate with the other disciples of the same teacher. Only
where there is real temperamental harmony and personal affinity should disciples
associate together. Where these are lacking, it is much wiser and safer not to
do so. For then the evil forces take advantage of the chance to develop
disharmony, quarrels, ill-feeling, and even worse. This spoils the progress of
both.
585
The real business of any disciple is with the
teacher, not with the other disciples. Such a situation cannot be helped and
must be accepted. Human beings are all born with different characters and
dispositions. Only the sage can harmonize with all; others must recognize
limitations.
586
If one cannot be happy with certain students, he
must wish them well and then go his own way. He must never allow himself to be
drawn into quarrels for then the evil forces become active.
587
The relationship between them is a beautiful but
free one. If the disciple takes a possessive attitude and tries to annex the
teacher, if he betrays jealousy of other disciples or demands as much attention
as they get, he substitutes an egoistic for an impersonal relationship, fails to
understand its distinctively and uniquely free nature, and thus spoils it.
588
He must insist on getting the same freedom from
his disciples that he allows to them.
589
Whether physically together or physically apart,
that is a true relationship between master and disciple, husband and wife,
friend and friend, which refusing to be tightly possessive or personally
demanding, is satisfied by the silent fact that the other exists at all.
590
No guru can lead anyone to enlightenment if he
himself is attached to the role of guru, nor can any disciple ever receive
enlightenment if he wants to play the role of disciple forever. Both are
suffering from attachments which prevent enlightenment. This is why the whole
thing becomes a stage play, whether serious or comical, in which the actors are
performing their personal parts. Even if they babble about the necessity of not
getting attached to the world, they are still attached to what they are supposed
to be, that is, questing. A truly enlightened man has no such attachment and
unless he is invested by the Higher Power with a special apostleship, or with a
special mission, he would not consider himself a guru, nor anyone else as a
disciple.
591
The way of leaning upon a guide, or being carried
by one, is a way which of itself can never lead to the goal. It can only lead in
the end to the superior way of struggling to one's own knees again and again
until one is strong enough to walk to the goal. The master must not stand in the
way, must not direct attention to himself unduly and at the expense of seekers'
own attraction to his central inner self. S_oren Kierkegaard writes in
Concluding Unscientific Postscript, "A direct relationship between one
spiritual being and another, with respect to the essential truth, is
unthinkable. If such a relationship is assumed, it means that one of the parties
has ceased to be spirit. This is something that many a genius omits to consider,
both when he helps people into the truth en masse, and when he is
complaisant enough to think that acclamation, willingness to listen, the
affixing of signatures, and so forth, is identical with the acceptance of the
truth. Precisely as important as the truth, and if one of the two is to be
emphasized, still more important, is the manner in which the truth is accepted.
It would help very little if one persuaded millions of men to accept the truth,
if precisely by the method of their acceptance they were transferred into error.
Hence it is that all complaisance, all persuasiveness, all bargaining, all
direct attraction by means of one's own person, reference to one's suffering for
the cause, one's weeping over humanity, one's enthusiasm - all this is sheer
misunderstanding, a false note in relation to the truth, by which, in proportion
to one's ability, one may help a job-lot of human beings to get an illusion of
truth. Socrates was an ethical teacher, but he took cognizance of the
non-existence of any direct relationship between teacher and pupil, because the
truth is inwardness, and because this inwardness in each is precisely the road
which leads them away from one another. It was presumably because he understood
this, that he was so happy about his unfavourable outward appearance."
592
The relation between a pupil and his teacher can
be based upon complete submission and dependence on authority, or it can be
based on a reasonable freedom and moderate self-reliance.
593
The belief common in India and the Near East that
a guru must take over your mind and your life is welcomed by the weak or
misinformed here too. But it forms no part of philosophical teaching, practice,
and training.
594
The rule of absolute submission to a master may
be as unsafe to follow as the rule of absolute independence from a master.
595
The problem is one of reconciling the giving of
complete faith to the teacher and the keeping alive of one's inner freedom to
think for oneself and to receive intuition from oneself.
596
No master has the right to ask any candidate for
discipleship to surrender himself absolutely, to place himself unreservedly in
the master's hands and to obey unquestioningly the master's orders. The trust
demanded should arise of its own accord by progressive degrees as the
relationship proceeds and develops, and as the master proves by his conduct and
effectiveness to be fully worthy of it.
597
Because he gives the master devotion he does not
also have to give him idolatry.
598
His disciples are taught how to unite independent
thinking with loyal feeling in their attitude toward him. This satisfies them
both.
599
There are those who think that he neglects to
answer his mail. Because he leaves their letters so long unanswered, they
conclude that he means to drop them out of his life. Nothing could be farther
from the truth. It is true that his mail accumulates for long periods of time.
But it is equally true that he lacks the staff needed to handle it, that the
pressure of work like writing and meditation and research notes leaves him
little remaining time. However, those who have met him personally and call
themselves his disciples often cannot understand his behaviour so he gives this
published explanation. Once inner contact is established by a single physical
meeting it is not necessary to have further ones with the guide although they
may be helpful. Sri Aurobindo granted only a single minute to each individual at
his first or later meeting with a disciple or a candidate for discipleship. Thus
it is evident that he does not consider more than sixty seconds really necessary
to establish it. Not only are further physical meetings not necessary but even
further personal action on his part, such as writing letters to the disciples
are also unnecessary even though they may be helpful. Thus a spiritual guide
does not need to do anything physically or write anything personally to keep up
the internal contact, it being kept up by the student's remembrance, devotion,
faith, and meditation.
No disciple can be effectively trained by the long distance method of an occasional exchange of letters. He needs personal supervision, personal contact, and personal discussion of his special problems. No conscientious teacher will ever undertake to give instructions by mail and declare it sufficient. It gives too meagre a basis for accurate understanding on the disciple's part or for an adequate communication on the teacher's part.
Then again he cannot accept the position of personal counsellor under the guise of being spiritual teacher. That is not his work. Most students who keep on failing to recognize this fact against all previous and present warnings and who send letter after letter with every fluctuation of their personal moods and fortunes, in an attempt to wrest advice or intervention from him, may force him to break the external contact with him until such time as they do realize what the true situation is. If he were to adopt a counselling position and to agree to show students how to apply the philosophical teaching to every change of their own personal life, he would soon have no time to give out those teachings at all. Consequently he must refuse to respond to all these attempts often openly but sometimes hidden, often naïve but sometimes cunning, to get him personally involved in the life of the seeker or to mix both their personal problems together. So many of his correspondents try to force him into this highly personal guru-student relationship, and thus to impose their own responsibilities upon his shoulders, that he has to fall into lengthy periods of silence to protect himself. Moreover, if he were to respond to the emotional or worldly problems in the way such response is desired, it would only mean the downfall of both of them and the breakdown of their pure relationship. To maintain this purity, to safeguard the relationship itself, and to protect the master as well as the seeker, the proper teaching must be given from the start and that is: the teacher must be regarded as a symbol, not as a person. He is to be considered merely as an agent for that which he represents, not as just another human being entering into a human relation with the disciple. Often the beginner, finding that the teacher does not fully respond to his emotional craving for continuous personal attention, soon becomes disappointed. This feeling may develop until it rea ches a critical stage where one of two things may happen. Either he will fail to pass the test, for so it becomes, and will withdraw altogether from the relationship - perhaps even maligning the guide - or he will continue his trust, gain a new point of view, and make the needed change to a higher attitude in the end. If, however, he allows his egoism or emotion to lead him into disobedience of this rule, he will only endanger the relationship. If he persists in this disobedience, he will even find it brought to an end for a time. So few understand what is really involved in this relationship, so many misunderstand it and are therefore disappointed by it in the beginning or along the way, that the teacher prefers with rare exceptions of well-advanced cases, not to enter into it outwardly at all but instead to offer a little friendly help without obligation.
600
No real master is ever afraid that he might lose
any particular disciple. He takes possession of no one and leaves everyone as
free as he found them. He understands quite well that the man's need or search
and his own higher self's gracious response brought the master into the picture
as an indirect medium through which the response could operate. He understands,
too, that all the instruction and advice, the uplift and help which he gives the
disciple originate ultimately and really within the man himself, as the latter
will one day discover when he has developed his own direct access to them, and
therefore refuses to regard the relationship between them egotistically.
601
There are inexorable laws, not of his making,
which govern the opening of a spiritual relation between a master and a would-be
disciple, however much his devotion and loyalty are appreciated. The chance
remains open to him on a probation only, which is necessarily of a limited
number of years. If during that period they are able to make personal contact,
it will be helpful for the disciple's progress in understanding the teaching,
and he can then profit by it to clear up misconceptions and weed out faults.
602
He may be generous enough to accept them as they
are, with their weaknesses and mistakes, but the law of karma is above all human
emotions, whether they be generous or ingenerous. It demands full payment and
distributes to them the consequences of their actions.
603
The master did not formulate these laws governing
the quest and, however urgent the plea of his disciple, he cannot do away with
them.
604
No aspirant has the right to seek personal
discipleship with a genuine teacher before he has sufficiently developed himself
for it, any more than a child who has not learned to read and write has the
right to seek entrance into a college.
605
The immediate presence of a teacher acts as a
catalyst upon the student. His defects, no less than his virtues, cannot then be
hidden for long, and circumstances will usually so arrange themselves that these
qualities will glaringly reveal themselves in time. Hence this is necessarily a
probationary period. Tests will come not through any arbitrary act on the part
of the teacher but through the ordinary events of everyday life and also through
persons met. They are not alone tests of a ethical kind - after all, we are all
sinners until we realize truth - as of his devotion to truth rather than its
counterfeits. The student will be tested first to observe how far he can remain
personally loyal to the teacher - because the latter stands in symbolic relation
to truth - despite the efforts of critics and enemies to put a plausible face on
their opposition. The most elementary condition of spiritual instruction is
complete confidence between the teacher and pupil. All sorts of blind critics
and malicious enemies will appear from time to time to attempt to disturb that
confidence. They are unconsciously or consciously the instruments of the adverse
elements in nature. He will be tested, too, by surface shocks to his prejudices,
preconceived notions, and expectations. He will be tested to reveal how far he
is willing to go in the unselfish service of humanity when such service comes
into conflict with his personal interests. It does not follow that if he does
not know when and where he is being tested the test is unfair. It is for him to
use his intelligence at such times as at others, and to consult his pledge
whenever doubts arise and difficulties occur. These tests will sometimes be
plainly evident and therefore comparatively easy to pass through, but there are
others which are more subtle or disguised and therefore more difficult to pass
through. However, all tests have one object alone - to detach him from the path
towards truth. If he keeps this clearly in his mind, it will help him to
understand them, and those who emerge with unwavering confidence despite all the
oppositions encountered will receive their reward. If after the probationary
period is over - and its length cannot be fixed for it will vary with each
individual - those whose feet still follow the teacher unhesitatingly and
completely will naturally find the interval of time between probation and
acceptance is much shorter than will those in whom doubts still linger and
hesitation still arises.
606
From the time when he begins to take instruction
from his teacher, the disciple also begins a period of probation in his inner
career and of separation from his inner weaknesses. The probation will enable
him gradually to show forth all the different aspects of his personality and
will indicate how receptive he really is to the teacher's influence. During this
process, qualities which are lying latent beneath the surface will arise above
it; situations will arrange themselves in such a way as to force him to express
them. In short, what is hidden will become open. Thus he will be given the
chance to look to his moral foundations before he advances to the intensive
mystical training which places hidden power and hidden knowledge in his hands.
Without first getting such a foundation, he who gets possession of these powers
may soon fall into overpowering temptations, with disastrous results to himself
and others. The inner conflict which results from the probation will force him
to face himself, to look at the weaknesses which are present within him and to
try to conquer them. If there is no other way to get him to do so, then he will
have to take the way of suffering their consequences so as to have them brought
home to him. Such a phase of the disciple's career will naturally be filled with
strains for himself and with misunderstandings about himself. The term of
probation is a period of severe trials and strong temptations. However, the
principle of probation is a sound one. Out of the vortex of its tests and
stresses and upheavals, he has the chance to emerge a stronger and wiser man.
607
His probationary period is concerned with the
general purification of character from egoism and animality as well as with its
sensitization to intuition and instruction. Without such a basis to work upon,
it would be dangerous for him to venture into mystical work or public service.
Nor would the teacher permit him to do so, as there are inexorable laws, not of
his making, which govern the matter. He must be on guard and not mistake
psychism for spirituality, pseudo-intuition for the real thing, mix personal
motives with altruistic service, nor lose himself in dreams and fantasies
instead of finding himself in inspired action. These faults are common to most
mystical aspirants. The Quest is deadly serious and demands so much. It is far
easier to go astray from it than to keep on it.
608
An aspirant who approached a Zen Master in Japan
was refused personal instruction. Nevertheless, he waited around in the vicinity
for half a year. Then, tiring of the lack of success, he abandoned further
solicitation, resolved to depend on his own efforts, and arranged to depart. But
on the very eve of departure the master sent for him and agreed to teach him.
609
It is not the custom of a true master to accept
personal students externally and formally from among those who apply for the
first time, but only from those who have been in touch with him for some years
at least and hence have had sufficient time to make sure that this is really the
teacher they want. Such a teacher would not desire and ought not to accept those
pupils who do not belong to his orbit by inward affinity. He would be foolish to
accept a candidate whose true call is with some other teacher, unwise to permit
a passing enthusiasm to waste his own time and disappoint the enthusiast's
hopes. It is easy in transient moods of enthusiasm to make a mistake in this
matter and to find that he is not, after all, the kind of man they originally
believed him to be or the kind of teacher that best suits them. So for their
sake no less than his, it is better to look elsewhere unless they have the
patience to wait a few years before making such a firm and final decision. For
every teacher will naturally possess his own notion of the qualifications for
discipleship which he values most and seeks most. He always places more stress
upon deep loyalty than upon any other virtue. He would not even mind so much
that his students should drink alcoholic liquor to excess as that they would
fail him in this regard. Fidelity is the finest of virtues in his eyes.
Disciples who lack this will soon be dropped. But if he asks for loyalty he does
not ask for slavishness. He will be perfectly satisfied to be taken for an
ordinary mortal without being turned into a perfect, unerring god. He is the
last man to wish to be set up for what he is not. Nor will he demand from anyone
that blind servility which does duty with most aspirants in place of the genuine
loyalty that ought to be offered. Externally and formally, however, there is
nothing to stop anyone meanwhile from appointing himself, if he so wishes, a
student - mentally, secretly, and internally. For discipleship is self-created
by the mental attitude of devotion which by reaction spontaneously brings him
interior help. He will not then really need the external signs of acceptance.
610
He will be handicapped to some extent by a
consciousness of the difficulty of securing adequate loyalty to a teacher who
refuses to surround himself with all the paraphernalia of ashrams and all the
trappings of guru-worship - both of which are repugnant to him. There are
excellent reasons in the student's own interest - and perhaps to some degree in
the teacher's, too - why in this case such personal loyalty must be emphatically
insisted on. The pupil's allegiance will sooner or later be subjected to the
unexpected strain of severe tests. The adept possesses far too sensitive a
temperament and far too strong an independence to endure with indifference the
telepathic reflections of this strain, which are invariably produced when the
relationship effectively exists with the profound obligations on both sides
which it entails. He may be philosophic enough to smile at misunderstanding or
desertion but he will also be human enough to be sensitive to them. For even
were a student to break with him he could never break with the student. His own
conception of loyalty embraces a wider stretch than the frail seekers are likely
to understand. Some indeed have been so deceived by the compulsions of personal
karma and the logic of mere appearances as to imagine that he is devoid of human
sympathy and indifferent to human feelings.
611
The Master is well aware of the bitter and
painful lessons the aspirant must learn before attaining maturity and balance,
and wishes it were possible to stretch out a helping hand. During these
difficult times, outer lines of communication should be kept open for they are
helpful and, indeed, are necessary until the individual becomes sufficiently
intuitive. The Master never closes the inner lines, but they need maintenance on
both sides if they are to be effective.
612
He may wonder why he receives so little direct
help and personal encouragement from his teacher during the first few years of
their relationship. He has to reach a certain point in his mental development
first and this cannot be until he has experienced events which are like tests.
613
For anyone to try to lose his personality in
someone else's, even in a guru's, is a desertion of his own divine powers.
Nevertheless, in the case of beginners it cannot be helped - where they are
seeking a guru's assistance. But the sooner the guru makes them ready or
instructs them to stop this practice and to lose their personality in their own
higher self, the better for them. It is a question of direction. In merging in
someone else's personality they are going outside of themselves; in merging in
their own higher being they are going inside.
614
In Pythagoras' school at Crotona, the pupils
passed through a series of three grades, and were not allowed personal contact
with Pythagoras himself until they reached the highest or third grade.
615
If the Master had no patience with his disciples,
he and they would soon part. If he had no belief in their eventual evolution, he
and they would never join.
616
If a man has hitched the wagon of his spiritual
effort to the star of a competent and worthy spiritual guide, it is nonsensical
to object that he surrenders his freedom whenever he surrenders his own personal
judgement to the guide's or even whenever he obeys a command from the guide. For
who chose the guide? He, himself. By the exercise of what faculty did he make
such a choice? By the exercise of free will. Therefore the initial act was a
free choice. It was also the most important one because it was causal, all his
other acts as a disciple being merely its effects, however long be the chain
which extends from it. It is because he respects the larger wisdom of the guide
and trusts his disinterestedness that the disciple follows him in thought and
practice, not because he has become a puppet.
617
The aspirant who believes that he can come to a
master for a few days or weeks and glean the teaching will glean only a sample
of it. It will take him all his life not only to receive what a master knows but
to be adjudged worthy of and ready for it. If he lacks this patience and
humility, he will fall into self-deception.
618
Plato has pointed out in his seventh epistle that
the philosophical wisdom "requires long continued communion between pupil and
teacher in joint pursuit of the object they are seeking to understand, and then
suddenly, just as light flashes forth when a fire is kindled, this wisdom is
born in the mind and henceforth nourishes itself."
619
Two such individuals as Master and student are
linked together by ancient ties. Much may remain to be done in the future as it
was in the past. If, in a previous incarnation, the student attained a higher
phase of development than at present, this must again be achieved before results
can appear in consciousness. In such a case he should work especially hard to
make progress.
620
In the earlier stages of their relation, the
disciple needs to attach himself more and more closely to the Master. He is
still learning what the quest is, still weak-willed, uncertain, and undeveloped.
But in the later stages he should release his hold on the master, discipline his
feelings, and let go of what has become so dear to him. For now he should
increasingly depend on making for himself the direct contact with his higher
Self. (Memo to P.B.: use this para as the key to rewriting essay on spiritual
self-reliance.)
621
He should constantly look forward to the time
when he will be independent enough to steer his own course. It is not meant that
he should be left with nothing but his ignorance and weakness to guide him, nor
that he should face all his perplexities by himself, but that he should face
many or most of them as he can and that he should carry to the teacher only
those which seem too hard to understand or bear. The teacher may occasionally
intervene to help on his own initiative but only if and when he deems it
desirable and necessary to do so. In this way the object will be fulfilled of
leading the disciple to increasingly correct thinking and more careful
behaviour.
622
It is naturally strongly repugnant to a developed
mind to allow another to have such great power over his own, whereas it is
strongly attractive to an undeveloped one.
623
Excessive guru-worship provokes a reaction, a
critical, sometimes sceptical attitude from which there must also be a recoil.
Only after that can an honourable, honest, and true relationship be established.
He should rather object to anyone's making a cult out of him. Why not respect
his wish and let him remain what he is - a researcher?
624
Faith in the master is the first step, obedience
to his injunctions is the next one, devotion toward him is the third step, and
remembrance of his presence, name, or image is the fourth. Such following of the
master and practice of his teachings will bring his graces.
625
Those whose temperament is innately submissive
and dependent make better disciples than the others. But they are less likely to
advance farther than the others.
626
But if the teacher must have the capacity to
point out the right way, the student, in his turn, must have the capacity to
travel every step of it in thought with him.
627
There are some tremendously difficult problems
involved in the highest Quest. The key to these problems must be placed in his
hands by the teacher. The wisest plan for him, therefore, is to work out in
detail and patiently the few hints given by the teacher, to study the books
suggested and to plod on the path doggedly, thinking of it as a period of
patient preparation for the karmic time when he will assuredly receive what he
is seeking. This he will get if he has the right mental equipment, if he has
expressed the desire for guidance in the right quarters, and also if he
recognizes the necessity of serving humanity.
628
If a teacher must put into finite phrases every
communication from his inner being to a pupil, if he must use material means for
every transmission of his own thought, then the man is not yet ready to be a
disciple.
629
The disciple who has to depend on constantly
receiving letters from his teacher is ready only for inferior teachers. The
disciple who imagines that, because the teacher has not written him for two or
three years, he is no longer interested in helping the disciple or has forgotten
him or is disappointed in him is utterly mistaken.
630
If he becomes so dependent that every problem as
it arises is at once put before the teacher for solution, the consequence will
eventually be an utter helplessness before all problems. The capacities for
independent judgement, for taking the initiative, for showing creativeness and
forming decisions, will decay and even disappear.
631
Becoming a satellite and revolving around a guru
may be beneficial to a man. But the harm begins when this revolution becomes a
permanent one, so that he is never again able to move into a fresh orbit and
fulfil the evolutionary intention secreted within his own being.
632
It is absolutely indispensable for the disciples
to learn how to live their own lives.
633
The guide must not only be competent to do what
he proposes to do, but the disciple also must be qualified to take advantage of
it.
634
"Rare is the true disciple," says an old Asiatic
text.
635
It is better to have a few earnest students who
willingly work hard for their self-improvement than a mass of students who do
nothing more than read books and talk among themselves.
636
The kind of student he likes to see, but
unfortunately rarely does see, blends a fine moral character with good
intelligence and sound practicality, all topped by profound mystical intuition
and a proper sense of reverence. Such a one is thoroughly dependable and
reliable, his words are not the mere froth of emotion to be quickly forgotten.
637
When a seeker's determination to follow the quest
becomes tough enough not to be deviated by adversity or by luxury, he is ready
for a teacher.
638
This eagerness to become a disciple and learn
truth is the first necessary qualification. Without it nothing can be done; with
it everything will come naturally in automatic response from the Overself.
639
It is not enough that the would-be pupil is ripe.
He must also be able easily to enter completely into sympathetic relationship
with the particular teacher to whom he applies.
640
Reverence for the master is based on the belief
that the Overself is working through him. Any lack of this quality deprives the
disciple of available help.
641
He must first feel humble before the master's
high achievement.
642
The would-be disciple must supply faith and
loyalty, obedience and practice, along with the aspiration which brings him to
the teacher.
643
If a hearer receives the master's words with joy,
that is one indication that he is ready.
644
When he entrusts himself to a teacher's care he
should cultivate patience and not seek immediate results. It is a serious matter
to break away from a teacher and it should not be done in haste or it may bring
bad results.
645
It is not necessary to display frenzied fervour
in order to be a devoted disciple.
646
If the disciple feels personally humiliated or
becomes hysterically tearful at the teacher's well-meant fair and constructive
criticisms, he is not only suffering needlessly but also rejecting the expert
help for which he came to the teacher, even though the form it takes is
unexpected and disagreeable. Good advice is still good even when unpalatable.
647
Nobody need remain long puzzled if he will come
humbly and converse frankly with his teacher in any difficulty, instead of
proposing to regard himself as fit and qualified to sit in judgement upon his
teacher. His humility will always be met by kindness and his frankness by an
equal frankness. The teacher is ever ready to help him clear up these
difficulties, but he is not ready to assist any to the slightest degree who come
with a mind already prejudiced to distrust, or who do not come at all but assume
their fitness to understand the teacher or his doctrine prior to initiation and
acceptance.
648
A genuine teacher who is sincere, competent,
kindly, and illumined will know this truth - that groups of the same grade
reincarnate together - and, knowing it, will himself expect and accept only his
"own." For if, through sentimental soft-heartedness, he yields to the
importunities of those who are not in inner harmony with him, then either the
flow of events or the disharmony of the student will break the relation and
separate them. Similarly, an earnest aspirant who feels that his inner life
belongs to a particular teacher will, if he is wise, desist from making
experiments or from wandering to other hearths, and remain loyal to this
teacher. For if, through emotional enthusiasms or through misunderstandings
arising from his own limitations, he strays elsewhere, then the ultimate sense
of inner dissatisfaction or the unexpected pressure of outer disillusionment
will turn his feet homeward again.
649
The seeker who has found the path proper to him
and the teacher in affinity with him should waste no more time in the
experimental investigations of other paths, other teachings, and other teachers.
If he is to get the full benefit of his association he must remain absolutely
loyal to his guide. If he is to make the quickest progress in the shortest time,
he must cease wandering about and remain on the chosen path until he arrives at
its goal.
650
If in the beginning he is to cast his net so
widely as to search for truth in every corner, in the middle of his course he is
to narrow his world until he has no ear for anyone else except his teacher. Only
so can concentration be achieved. In the beginning, width; in the middle, depth.
651
The belief of ignorant seekers that by visiting a
number of teachers they will accumulate a stock of knowledge and help, is sheer
self-deception: on the contrary, they will end in confusion. A disciple may
study the teachings and follow the practices of masters other than his own
without harm provided first, that they are not discordant with the latter's and
second, that his sense of personal loyalty is not weakened.
652
It is permissible to have various teachers for
lesser subjects, including Yoga, but is impermissible to follow more than one
Master in the Quest of Higher Truth.
653
If it be true that a man cannot desert this Quest
without being forced back onto it by life itself sooner or later, it is also
true that he cannot desert the Master of the Quest without having to return to
him sooner or later. For just as pursuance of the Quest will become inseparable
from the happiness that he seeks, so devotion to the Master will become
inseparable from the salvation upon which that happiness depends. Why this
should be so is one of the mysterious workings of Destiny which can only be
illuminated when and if it be possible to illuminate the earth lives of his far
past.
654
The Master says to a straying one: "I take you
into my heart. You are now my accepted pupil. But profit by the lessons of the
past mistakes made by you and remain resolutely with me. Whether you return only
in heart or also in body, is not of material consequence to me, but it will be
to you."
655
Although guidance and teaching from other sources
should be gladly welcomed as enrichment or supplement, as completion or
rounding-out, the inner affinity is so personal, so intimate, so deeply felt,
that no one else is really able to take the place of the karmically destined
guru.
656
The aspirant must not seek counsel from anyone
other than the teacher, or he may be unwittingly led to a path which, while
permissible for others, would be inadvisable for him.
657
Many aspirants are volatile in their loyalty and
mercurial in their beliefs. They change gurus as they change clothes and denude
themselves of earlier teachings when new ones appear. However there may be some
good in this as well as bad. If they change from an inferior to a more advanced
guru, or from an imposter to a knowledgeable person, or from a commonplace
platitudinous belief to a superior and original one, obviously the change is for
the better. In this way they may in the end and during many years study several
facets of the truth. Others simply move from one phantasy to another.
658
Where a teacher genuinely derives his authority
from the higher self, reverence and obedience, love and respect should surely be
his deserts.
659
Of all the many forms of work which a man can
find to do, of all the several ways in which his active functions can express
themselves, there is none higher than this, that he guide men out of illusion
into reality. It is not wrong therefore to give his office great reverence and
himself great devotion.
660
Our debt to these spiritual teachers is
unpayable. This is because that which directs the body is more important in the
end than the body itself.
661
We ought to be grateful and respectful to
all those great lights of the race who brought it truth, whether they be
dead or alive, Occidental or Oriental. Yet at the same time we ought to be
specially grateful and specially respectful to the particular one who brought us
to see the truth more than any other did.
662
The Very Reverend W.R. Inge has rightly pointed
out that Christ chose his twelve apostles not only because they were naturally
and extremely religious men but also because they were loyal enough and brave
enough to live and die for their Master.
663
Few are ready to pay the entrance fee of lifelong
loyalty and steadfast service which are demanded, for this payment must be made
in actual practice and not in lip movements alone.
664
The disciple should trust and walk unwaveringly
at the Master's side even when understanding cannot keep pace, and his fine
loyalty should shine out like Sirius in the sky.
665
The quality which will endear him most to the
teacher, and which will carry him farthest on the Quest, is loyalty. Yet this
same good quality will be the biggest obstacle in the way of the seeker who is
so gullible, so superficial, and so poor in judgement as to attach himself to an
unworthy or incompetent teacher.
666
To find many candidates for discipleship is easy
but to find a few disciples is hard. There is much enthusiasm over a newly
gained master, but little sustained loyalty to an old one.
667
Unthinking mystics still praise this quality of
servile obedience which primitive gurus demanded from their followers.
Thoughtful mystics no longer do so.
668
A guide who can understand his disciple's
character and stimulate his intelligence, who can open to him the gates of
higher worlds and newer views, does not need to hold him by the bonds of blind
obedience.
669
Without a passive and humble attitude of the
mind, a devotional and reverent feeling of the heart, the profits of meeting a
man who has come close to the soul are largely missed. Criticism erects a
barrier.
670
To listen properly to a guru, is not to bring in
the ego with its interpretations. To read correctly from an inspired guru's book
is to keep out the common tendency to put in one's own personal meanings. In
short, let the mind Be Still and know the Truth!
671
It would be useless to place oneself under the
guidance of a teacher if one were not prepared to obey him.
672
"You are full of your own opinions," said a
modern Japanese master to an inquiring intellectual. "How can I show you Zen?
First empty your cup."
673
If the master's exposure of his weaknesses is
offensive to him, then he unfits himself for further discipleship and will
receive no further advice.
674
When a man who is still in his pupilage deems
himself to be wiser than his master, he is being led astray by the cunning
flattery of his ego.
675
If this stimulation by contact with a master
makes him assert his little ego, because he thinks he has become more
"spiritual" than others, then the good done him and the inspiration given him
are endangered by the conceit bred in him.
676
If a man is strongly egoistic and arrogantly
self-opinionated, if he lacks humility even when he approaches a Master, then
not only can he not follow the path but he must circle around looking for its
gate. Such a man, uneducable and unteachable, is unfit for the path of
discipleship. Life is the only teacher he is ready for. It is intelligent enough
to bring him exactly the kind of experiences he needs - crushing
disappointments, frustrations, humiliations, and disasters.
677
If the disciple does not obey the regime laid
down by the teacher but follows his own ideas as to what he ought to do, then he
is not truly surrendering his ego, but is thereby showing his attachment to the
ego. Consequently he will not get the hoped-for results. When disappointment
follows he should not blame the ineffectiveness of his teacher for this but
rather his own obstinate egotism.
678
The teacher has an immense task when he is asked
by the ordinary seeker to accept him as a personal pupil. For the latter
unconsciously seeks confirmation of what he already believes and therefore has
come to teach the teacher! Consequently the master is compelled to refuse him.
For the seeker comes to him filled with his own ideas of what constitutes truth
and in what direction the path leads, what the teacher ought to say and how
behave. All these modes of thought are mere encumbrances from the teacher's
standpoint, and all these prejudices are heavy shackles. To ask the seeker to
abandon these obsessions with the past immediately will meet with failure in
almost every case - only in the rarest type of seeker is there likely to be an
immediate obedience. With others there is not even the desire for release from
these intellectual and emotional patterns which imprison the man, these
habit-mechanisms in which he has allowed himself to be caught.
679
While waiting to find a trustworthy spiritual
guide, the best thing to do in the meantime is to constantly discipline his
character and endeavour to gain inner tranquillity so as to provide improved
conditions for the reception of Grace. Let him search out the defects of
character and exert himself to get rid of them. Let him examine his life every
day and see where he has done well and where he has failed in this matter.
680
Too many aspirants waste their time in trying to
follow the path of discipleship when they possess too little qualification even
to permit their entry. They are unprepared. It would be more profitable for them
to bestow upon the improvement of their own psyche the thought they bestow upon
the quest of a master.
681
If a man insists on asking for the attentions of
a personal teacher before he is sufficiently prepared to benefit by them, then
his rash importunity will be punished. For he will find a false teacher, a guide
to untruth and darkness rather than to reality and light. Enough work should
have been done on himself and by himself in mental and emotional discipline, in
moral striving, in intellectual preparation, and in meditational practice to
justify his request for instruction. Otherwise he may be really actuated by
egoistic ambitions which are secretly hiding beneath his spiritual aspirations,
or he may be too unbalanced emotionally to accept in his heart the serene
impersonal wisdom even when it is proffered him.
682
Even if there are no adepts who could give the
necessary inner assistance to quicker progress on the Path, this need not deter
him from continuing efforts towards spiritual realization and thus making
himself ready for a guide when Destiny permits him to have one. The inner work
which he alone can perform consists in the unremitting efforts to develop a high
moral character, together with religious aspiration and mystical contemplation.
The ideal of altruistic service should also be held in mind, combined with
intelligent judgement and practicality.
683
Despite the absence of a teacher, it is still
possible to intensify his efforts. His surroundings offer part of the material
for study; his personal history can be explored for a greater awareness of the
meanings of his past and present experiences; and every situation offers an
opportunity for a more objective observation of himself.
684
Continuous and honest effort in self-study and
self-observation, an objective analysis of past and present experiences when
subjected to the light of higher understanding, daily practice in meditation,
and an ever-present attitude of faith and devotion certainly will improve the
student's possibilities for the opportunity of meeting with the Master.
685
Instead of searching vainly for a teacher or
waiting idly for one, he should take the teaching he already has, follow the
injunctions already laid down, use the knowledge already available.
686
Students who fail to do the work on themselves
yet look for a master, waste their time.
687
Work on oneself is most important. When one has
purified his character, cultivated discrimination, achieved some measure of
balance, finally understood the lessons of past experience, acquired a certain
degree of self-control - mental, moral, and physical - and developed the
necessary aspiration to lead a truly spiritual life, then, and then only, will
he be in a position to benefit from instruction from a Master.
688
It would be well if young aspirants would take a
sufficiently long time in a general survey course in comparative religion and
metaphysics before they settle down to some kind of a choice. They should first
come to such a clearness.
689
The badly balanced, the wildly hysterical, the
unadjusted and unintegrated personality, the neurotically self-centered, should
not trouble a teacher for higher development when they have yet to attend to,
and finish, their ordinary development as human beings. They have not the right
to claim entry on a path which demands so much character and capacity from its
very beginning.
690
Most of the aspirants who want to associate
themselves with a master do so prematurely. Consequently they fail to find him
or else find only pseudo-masters. What they really need is to associate
themselves with a psychological counsellor or with a broad-minded wise
clergyman, with someone who has effected a good solution of his own personal,
emotional, and relational problems and is competent to help them solve theirs.
Only after his work is done, only after he has cleared the way for a higher
activity, only after he has prepared them to respond readily to the guidance of
a master, should they seek such a one.
691
It is needful at times to remind a man that he -
and not those to whom he has entrusted his soul and spiritual destiny - is
responsible for it. The belief that he has passed on its care is illusory.
692
It is not the teacher who can sever the
disciple's attachment to worldly life, for a man's heart is his own most
intimate, most private possession. The disciple must do it for himself. It is
he who must realize the necessity of renunciation and it is he alone who
must change his feelings accordingly. Such a change requires constant thinking
about values and incessant disciplining of tendencies. Who else but the disciple
is to think these thoughts and exercise this will if the result is to be shown
in his character? The teacher cannot really help him in any vicarious sense,
cannot save him from the stern task of working upon himself.
693
The reason why the master cannot remake another
man miraculously is because no man can think for another one. Each can do it for
himself alone.
694
We must gain our advancement through our own
personal efforts and by our own merits. No master can do our walking for us nor
hide our weaknesses from the inexorable laws which govern the quest. Flattery
helps little. It is the duty of the guide clearly to perceive and frankly to
expose to the disciple the evil parts of his character and the weak places of
his consciousness.
695
He may give the correct technique but he cannot
give its ineffable result. That, you must earn for and by yourself. He cannot
even promise you a successful outcome of your own endeavours. That is bestowed
only by the grace of God.
696
"No one can purify another," asserted the Buddha.
697
No master can or will do for a man what he is
quite unwilling to do for himself.
698
No master can take away from a disciple his
failings and weaknesses.
699
No man can really be responsible for another man:
each makes, and must accept, his own karma.
700
Even in the ancient Egyptian mysteries, the
disciple who attended the college temple after having successfully passed the
initial test which gave him entry had to learn this same lesson of
self-reliance. Edouard Schure, the French writer on this subject, says: "He was
left much to himself, so that he might become rather than merely know,
and so he was often surprised at his teacher's coldness and indifference. To his
anxious queries came the reply: 'Wait and work.' Doubts came to him at times,
frightful suspicions of his teachers, but they would pass."
701
It is impossible for any proclaimed master to
give lasting illumination to any disciple, however fervent, since it is
impossible for the latter to establish completeness of development and the
balance which follows it automatically, except by his own inner activity.
702
Despite all delusions to the contrary, no master
can pick up a disciple and transfer him at a jump to the goal - permanently.
703
In the presence of an illumined man, we have the
chance to become different for a while, to reflect some of his light into
ourselves. But the reflected light, being borrowed, will fade away. We cannot
find exemption from the labours necessary to generate our own merely because we
have found association with someone whose own labours are finished.
704
No one can teach you how to realize your own true
being, that is, no one except yourself, for the realization has to be yours. The
revelation leading to it will have to be yours, too, and the understanding which
will lead up to the revelation comes from your own effort. This is why I often
say that it is an exaggeration on the part of the Indians to say that salvation
is impossible without a master. He may help us to correct our thinking,
encourage and inspire us, but the work has to be done by ourselves. No master
can give the full realization to another person - impossible.
705
Spiritual awareness is not like a landed estate
which can be handed down as an heirloom to another. Those who want it must
create it for themselves.
706
This consciousness cannot be got from another man
by transfer (although its presence in him may be felt by sensitivity) but only
by one's own hard toil.
707
The right action done in the wrong way becomes
wrong in itself. Although it is right to look towards a teacher for guidance and
inspiration throughout the course of his quest, it is wrong to become
over-dependent on that teacher.
708
People approach the saint-type primarily to get
what is called in India a darshan. This may be variously translated as a
glimpse, a spoken blessing, a sight, a view, an initiation, or a silent
benediction. He is a phenomenon and they stand at a distance to gaze at him, to
admire him, or to be overwhelmed with awe by him. The few minutes or days or
weeks or months or years taken up - the duration is immaterial for extension in
time does not change the nature of the happening - leave the devotee with the
same character, the same consciousness that he had before the meeting. Its
service is to portray the goal, not to bring him nearer to perfection in any
way. The delusion that the longer they stay with him the farther they travel on
the road to perfection remains a delusion still. The darshan leaves them
with their weaknesses and faults, their egoism and animality untouched. The work
of getting rid of these things is theirs to undertake and no
darshan-magic can be a substitute for it.
709
The belief that a guru will do for him once and
for all what in the end he has to do for himself belongs to the untutored masses
and the sectarian mystic circles.
710
Only the self-deceived or the charlatanic will
offer to save you. All others will offer only to guide you. "You must labour for
yourselves," warned the Buddha. "The Buddhas are only teachers."
711
It is the common way to demand entry into
enlightenment through someone else. This renders it needful to make clear that
nobody, not even the best of gurus, can bestow final and lasting realization - a
glimpse is the most he can possibly pass on and there are not many with that
capacity. Even in such cases, his disciples must work diligently and win it
themselves.
712
The services of a spiritual director in
correcting errors, providing instruction, stimulating aspiration, and fostering
intuition are immense; but they are only a prelude to the services a student
must render to himself.
713
Those who leave their spiritual future totally in
the hands of their guide, lose the years which could be spent in developing
themselves.
714
It is not enough to receive a teaching from
someone else. The truth of the teaching must be tested by personal experience,
the worth of it should be measured by personal knowledge.
715
It is the guide's duty to hold up a lamp on a
dark path but the disciple must decide for himself the speed and distance of the
journey along that path. No command is laid upon him, for it is he who must
estimate the strength within him and the opportunity without. He is given full
freedom in making his decision. It is unfortunately the case that many
emotionally unstable persons are attracted to mysticism, with the result that
they spend years with their dreams of mystical achievements but do nothing to
convert those dreams into realities, or else flit from one dream to another.
716
If the student responds sufficiently to the hints
given him or the counsel bestowed on him, the teacher will be encouraged to go
farther.
717
The teacher can only help one to help himself.
Ultimately it will be by his own efforts alone that the student uncovers
the wisdom and beauty he is seeking - and which are even now within him. Such
efforts, in order to be successful, must be courageous and continuous: repeated
failures should serve only to stimulate deeper determination.
718
In the end each seeker has to become his own
teacher by putting all his experience, his beliefs, his ideas, to the test.
719
It is possible to bring this truth within the
mind's sight but not within the will's reach; in this matter each man must do
his own work. Whoever offers him a free redemption plays God.
720
The disciple will learn in the end, by
experience, that he must look to himself alone for salvation. The last words of
the dying Buddha, addressed though they were to his own disciples, have been a
useful guide to me: "Look not for refuge to anyone besides yourselves."
721
Do not be satisfied with being a disciple. Try to
become like the master.
722
If you wish, call it self-making - this process
of using one's own mental powers, one's own emotional energies, to actualize the
new being that is his best self. It does not seek like a mendicant for free
transformation by another person, a guru. It makes use of the highest kind of
imagination, a deeply relaxed suggestive visualization. Whatever is called for
to bring on enlightenment exists within himself already, but it is latent and
undeveloped. By study, exercise, and practice the aspirant can be his own
teacher. Sooner or later he will have to take this work into his own hands. The
notion that someone else can or will do it all for him is delusory, the belief
that a guru can absolve his duty is adolescent wishful thinking. If the result
is to have any lasting value, it must be self-wrought or in the end the aspirant
will have to start again, use this approach, and throw away the negative thought
that he is helpless without someone else who must be sought and found. The kind
of teacher who is really useful will put no emphasis upon himself but upon the
aspirant's own work, and then see him at intervals only. Once the materials
needed are pointed out, the student should teach himself; and this he can do
only through self-practice.
723
You must play the teacher to yourself. He cannot
tread the path for you: you must walk and work by your own effort. The mother
cannot grow up on behalf of the child, no matter how greatly she loves it. The
adept cannot do your growing-up for you. Nature's laws must prevail. He has
shown you the way: use your will to follow it. But devote a little time each day
to keeping open the channel of communication with him and thus receive his
impetus, his inspiration to help you. So although you must strive by your own
use of free will, do not imagine that you need strive unaided.
724
Working along the line that the teacher found
suitable for himself, slavishly and artificially trying to produce a copy of
him, will in the end not even produce that but a caricature instead. For only
the teacher's bodily acts will be imitated; his Spirit is invisible and
therefore cannot be imitated.
725
Why should any one copy another's artwork? Why
should Whistler paint pictures in the same way that Gainsborough did? Whistler
remained loyal to his own conceptions. Why then, going further, copy another's
lifestyle? We may honour a master's inspiration but yet express our own in our
individual way.
726
It is true that followers have no right to burden
the teacher with their personal problems, that they should learn manfully to
shoulder their difficulties and not pass them on to him. Yet human nature is
weak, the teacher kindly. What they may do without taxing his strength is to
place the problem before him in a prayer, thought, or meditation silently, and
not in letter or interview. If they will keep their distresses, troubles, or
indecisions to themselves in this way, such reticence will not be to
their loss. It is indeed a sign of neuroticism when an aspirant plagues a
teacher too frequently or on too trivial matters. Such conduct is quite suited
to children but not to adults. It reveals too egocentric a person, one who is
unwilling to bring the stage of novice to an end because the dependence on
another person is more comforting and much easier than endeavouring to settle
his own little problems.
727
Too many disciples commit the fault of being too
demanding and too possessive in their attitude towards the teacher. In the end
they become a burden, a liability, or even a nuisance to him. They ought to give
him devotion, yes; they ought to think often of him for inspiration and
guidance; but they ought not to turn themselves into emotional parasites who are
unable to live on their own vitality at all.
728
The eagerness to surrender every responsibility,
every decision, every care to a spiritual guide - which is so prominent in India
- is only praiseworthy in some cases. In others, it is neurotic and infantile,
an attempt to secure indulgent pity, protection, and gregarious support despite
the fact that childhood has been physically outgrown. To take it as a sign of
advancement, and to use it as an excuse to evade pressing work of self-reform
and self-discipline, is deplorable.
729
A calm trust in the man's leadership is one
thing, but a hysterical clinging devotion to his personalipy is another.
730
He who turns himself into a burden to his teacher
by shirking his own responsibilities and throwing them on his teacher, is being
selfish as well as weak.
731
Whoever does not understand that the guide must
lead him to where he will seek his own way, will go on endlessly looking for
teachers, one after the other, or else become a spiritual hypochondriac, a
semi-invalid needing the guru-doctor to dance constantly in attendance on his
ego-centered symptoms.
732
It may be that the effort to imitate his master
will enable the disciple to excel himself.
733
If you are willing to accept the gift of Grace,
which a true teacher is forever bearing, through your prior willingness to give
him your faith and devotion, and to give it not because he wants it or anything
else for himself but because he is a purified channel for your own Overself's
power, then you may expect to see the past wiped out as sins are forgiven and
the future made brighter as new energies are born in you.
734
The way of discipleship means that there is to be
constant endeavour to live in the master's mental atmosphere. Of course this can
be done very feebly and only occasionally at first. Success depends not only on
the pressure of perseverance but also on the sensitivity to
thought-transference.
735
The aspirant who comes into the presence of
someone who functions on a high moral and mystical or philosophical level - and
feels the attraction, charm, spell, influence, or force of his personality -
can, after a sufficient time or association, be stimulated in development quite
markedly. It is the case not only of benefiting by the other man's words and
copying his example, but also of directly experiencing the telepathic working of
mind upon mind.
736
If they believe in the genuineness and reality of
telepathy - as they must if they believe in philosophy at all - then they must
accept our declaration that inner communion renders unnecessary the outer
communion, that the sense of inner presence of the guide renders unnecessary his
letters, visits, and other external signs.
737
We know that the mind can both project and
receive thoughts. Telepathy becomes more and more a scientifically recognized
fact. Where affinity harmony and preparation exist, the spiritual guide can
project calming, uplifting, and spiritualizing mental waves to the spiritual
aspirant.
738
The silent wordless and unprepared hypnosis of a
subject is a factual pointer to the understanding of the silent wordless and
telepathic influence of a disciple by his guide. As the power of suggestion
becomes dynamic in the hypnotist, so its higher octave, the power of grace,
becomes dynamic in the spiritual guide.
739
That mental waves can be transmitted from master
to disciple, that spiritual peace can be reflected from the mind of one to the
mind of the other, is not merely a new theory but really an old practice. It has
been known and done in the Orient for thousands of years.
740
The master's work is carried on by word-of-mouth,
by written statement, and by personal example. But it cannot end with these
methods, for they are all external ones. So it is continued by telepathic
impulses, by inspirational impact, and by mental osmosis. These are internal
ones.
741
Such communication between the teacher and
student might be called "Telementation."
742
The Master may add his spiritual vitality or
inspiration temporarily to the disciple's by merely wishing him well. If this is
done during the Master's prayer or meditation, the disciple's subconscious will
spontaneously pick up the telepathically projected flow and sooner or later
bring it into consciousness. If, however, something more precise and more
positive is required, he may consciously will and focus it to the disciple while
both are in a state of meditation at the same time.
743
The projected ideas and concentrated thoughts of
a man who has made a permanent connection with his Overself are powerful enough
to affect beneficently the inner life of other men. But even here nature
requires the latter to establish their own inner connection with him in turn.
And this can be done only by the right mental attitude of trust and devotion.
744
The conscious personal mind of the teacher may
know nothing of the help that is radiating from him to one who silently calls on
him from a long distance, yet the reality of that help remains.
745
This internal quickening and intense telepathy
between the master and the disciple can only occur if the requisite conditions
exist.
746
Even at the beginning of probation the seeker
will often be given a hint of what awaits him later through mystical experience
resulting out of the contact with the teacher. But whether he gets it or not,
from the moment of acceptance there will come to every student a sense of peace,
and above all, an inner stability and certitude which will become one of the
greatest assets in his life.
747
Again and again the novice falls into mistakes
about the telepathic communications which he feels he is receiving from the
master. He regards them as such when they are nothing of the sort, or he
interprets them in too material or too egoistic a manner. The master sends a
thought-current to him which is intended to lift him up to a diviner, hence more
impersonal level. He, however, drags it down to a lower, more egocentric level.
748
The telepathic impulses which he sends out to
others during these times of prayer or meditation are most often received quite
subconsciously. Only later is their effect felt or their origin suspected. His
disciples may not be aware of any new reception of truth or beatitude at the
time. But increasing clarification or growing liberation may slowly change their
course.
749
It is also possible to take any revered person as
a master and, in one's own mind, make him the teacher. Even though no meeting on
the physical level may occur, one's attitude of attention and devotion in
meditation will draw from him a reaction which will telepathically give whatever
guidance is needed at the time.
750
Just as the glance, the touch, or the spoken word
may carry the ardour of mutual desire from man to woman so may it also carry the
initiatory blessing or the spiritual gift from master to disciple.
751
Like the message of the Overself to a meditating
mystic, the help which comes from such a teacher is above thinking but it
translates itself into terms of thinking. In this process of translation, it is
seized on by the ego and interfered with.
752
The guide may send his blessing telepathically
only once but if it is powerful enough it may work itself out through a hundred
different experiences extending over several years. Because he identifies
himself with the timeless spaceless soul, his blessing may express itself
anywhere in space and anywhen in time. Moreover he may formulate it in a general
way but it may take precise shapes unconsciously fashioned by and suited to the
recipient's own mentality and degree of development.
753
Some critics reject the idea of Grace and declare
its impossibility in a world governed by strict cause and effect. The meaning of
the word suggests something or anything of an immaterial moral or material
nature that is given to man. Why should not the Master who has attained a higher
strength wisdom and moral character than that which is common to the human race,
give aid freely out of his beneficent compassion for others struggling to climb
the peak he has surmounted? He certainly cannot transmit his own inner life to
another person in its fullness. But he can certainly impart something of its
quality and flavour to one who is receptive, sensitive, and in inward affinity
with him. If this too is denied then let the objector explain why both the
feeling of and the sense of the Master's presence pervade the disciple's
existence for many years after his initiation, if not for the rest of his life.
754
The master, by a process of telepathic transfer,
enables the disciple to get a glimpse of what the realization of his own
spiritual possibilities can lead to.
755
The pupil who has been allowed to sit in
meditation with a master should be able to carry on with this impetus, even
though it happened only once. It is really an initiation.
756
During this initiation meditation, the disciple
may actually feel a stream of power flowing out to him from the master, but it
is not essential that he do so.
757
What the master reflects and radiates into the
disciple's deeper mind at this sitting, will necessarily incubate for a period
of time which may be measurable in minutes, days, months, or even years. No one
can predict how long it will be, for not only are the disciple's readiness,
capacity, and affinity determining factors but also his destiny. Nor can anyone
predict whether the result will appear slowly, gently, little by little, or
suddenly, with violent jolting force.
758
The master is forever after present in the
disciple's heart, whether the disciple sees him again or not.
759
From the hour of this initiation the master will
be much in his thoughts and the sense of affinity will be often in his heart.
760
The experience which the candidate has at the
initiatory meditation with the master is often (but not always) a herald and
token of his possibilities of later attainment under this particular master.
761
He must work harder than ever on his character
and, by crushing his ego, sensitize his mind for the reception of the spiritual
Grace that is to come during initiation.
762
It seems as if the Master has come into his
consciousness and thereby changed its quality and area. If the change is
necessarily for a brief while only, it is still a memorable one.
763
The number of meetings needed with the initiator
into meditation will naturally differ in different cases.
764
When he tells the candidate of some great truth,
looking straight into his face, something may happen over and behind the mere
words.
765
A look from Jesus was enough to make some men
renounce their worldly lives and follow him. Such is initiation through the
glance.
766
The power which lies in a pen is only
intellectual, thought carried from one mind to another. But the power which
shone out of his eyes was spiritual, beyond thought. Gaze met gaze throughout
that period; mine blinking and flickering often, the rishee's never once
faltering. There are some lines of an American Seer which I would like to wind
around this evening of which I am writing. They occur in the essay on "Behavior"
by the inspired American optimist. Emerson's words run: "The eyes indicate the
antiquity of the soul. What inundation of life and thought is discharged from
one soul into another, through them. The glance is natural magic. The mysterious
communication established across a house between two entire strangers, moves all
the springs of wonder.... The eyes will not lie but make faithful confession
what inhabitant is there." I verified the truth of these sage words to the full.
And since mine was a feeble and stunted growth, it gave way and was overpowered
by that of the other man.
767
The aspirant who wishes to become the student of
a particular teacher must remember that, should he be accepted, he will receive
no formal outward acknowledgment of the fact. This is because the way to
find a Master is invariably an inner process. When the student has
developed the necessary moral qualifications and mental receptivity, the
Master's presence will be inwardly felt and recognized. Once this has been
experienced, he will find that simple devotion and adherence to the path the
Master points out - and to himself as a symbol of that path - is all that is
needed to ensure progress. Thus, the student finally realizes that all outer
teachers, all paths and initiations are mere theatrics compared with this.
768
The true master does not call disciples to reside
in any ashram but to unite with himself. And he is, in his own sight, a mental
and not a physical being. Hence they can find and meet him in thought anywhere.
The necessity of living in an ashram with him is an illusory one. All that is
requisite is a single meeting between him and the disciple. Physically such a
meeting can achieve its purpose in a few minutes. Thereafter both may remain
permanently apart physically and yet the inner work can continue to develop all
the same. For the relation between them is primarily a mental, not a physical
one. Even in ordinary life we see that true friendship and true love is mental
affinity and not a mere neighbourhood of fleshly bodies. The disciple's intense
faith in and emotional veneration for the master, however far distant they may
be from each other, plus the necessary mystical ripeness, will telepathically
create true association. But without them, his grace is like a spark falling on
stone, not on tinder. Furthermore, by the higher powers of his mind, the adept
can really help devotees at a distance even though they may never attend his
ashram. Those who live in an ashram can get from him only what they can absorb
in their inner being. But precisely the same can be done by those who do not
live in one. His thought-presence will be found by them to be just as effectual
as his bodily presence.
769
As the disciple is slowly led onwards along this
difficult path, confidence in the teacher is replaced by consciousness of the
teacher, that is, he finds as an inner presence the mental atmosphere of the
teacher and thus comes to know him much better.
770
The tie with such a master sustains him in many a
dark experience.
771
A wise teacher imposes no dogmas upon his pupils;
the latter may believe or doubt as they wish, so long as they follow the path he
has pointed out. Discipleship is really spiritual union. It is not academic
remembrance of words. It is a placing of oneself in such a receptive attitude
that the spirit of the master may enter in. No speech is necessary to effect
this and in silence it is more readily achieved; anything else is only giving
instruction, which is not the same as proffering discipleship.
772
In the end, the only way the earnest seeker can
find a teacher is to find himself. The deeper he penetrates into the mysterious
recesses of his own spiritual being, the closer he comes to the ever-present
master within - the higher self. The longer he looks, the more powerful will be
its attraction, the more magnetic its spell over him. This is true for all
students generally, but it is especially true for those students who have had
the good fortune of coming into personal contact with a living teacher. It is
not by their physically seeing him or personally speaking to him or
corresponding with him that they enter into real contact with such a teacher,
but rather by finding his presence within their hearts in thought, feeling, and
imagination, by responding passively to the intuition of such a presence, and by
accepting the guidance of its prompting to a more spiritual existence. Thus not
only is man's soul within him and must be found there, but even his living
embodied teacher is within him, too, and must be found there likewise. It is not
by living in the same house with a teacher that discipleship becomes a fact. It
is not by sitting year after year in the same ashram with him that devotion is
shown or the path is followed, but by seeking him intuitively and obeying his
inward leading away from the surface of the ego to the deep centre of the soul.
When this is realized, it will be realized that a distance of seven or seven
thousand miles will not be long enough to separate a pupil from his master. An
absence of seven years will not be enough to weaken the sense of his presence
and of inner contact with him. The sooner the aspirant recognizes this truth,
the quicker will he make progress.
773
Once both the meeting, however brief, with the
master and the parting from him have taken place, the candidate's next and
hardest task will be set him. And this is to learn to accept the Idea of
the master as being not less real than the body of the master. The disciple must
learn to dwell mentally in the sacred presence as satisfyingly as if he were
dwelling physically in it.
774
To take these great masters into one's life
merely to worship them outwardly and not to worship them deep in one's heart as
the Ideal to be faithfully imitated, is to fail in becoming their disciple.
775
It is not merely that knowledge is passed on or
instruction is memorized. The student is required to do something more. He has
to introvert his attention earnestly and keep himself passive to the subtler
feelings which now tend to form themselves within him, to submit resignedly to
their sway and to merge into union with them.
776
The Master is always there, behind the disciple,
always ready to give him stability, guidance, inspiration, peace, and strength.
If the disciple does not find these things coming to him from the Master, the
fault is in himself, the blockage is self-created, is somewhere between the two,
and only he alone can remove it.
777
If the disciple becomes responsive enough, if his
mind is harmonized with the master's, there will be a feeling of his presence
even though a continent's width separates them. The master's nearness will
sometimes seem quite uncanny.
778
Yet the deeper we travel, the less need have we
of thoughts and words, for all multiplicity collapses in this marvelous unity.
We can neither think nor talk of this sublime state with any accuracy. Hence the
only medium whereby we can properly represent it is - silence!
779
Hence the competent teacher gives his best
teaching not through lectures, talks, or books but through this magical,
mysterious, yet effective silence wherein the higher initiations are wrapped.
780
To sit with such a teacher in the right receptive
attitude for a single hour of meditation may bring more than ten years of
previous self-effort could bring. For he can telepathically carry the other's
power of attention to a depth in the stillness which is habitual with him but
which is rare or unknown to most. Thereafter one of the veils is torn aside and
one can more easily penetrate to the same depth alone.
781
He should ask himself whether he is attracted by
the teacher's mind or body, whether he is devoted to the teacher's thought or
flesh. If he can answer correctly he should grant that real discipleship exists
only when the sense of the teacher's physical form is absent and his spiritual
being is present. And this indeed is the case. The outer relation is only a
beginning, a slight foretaste of the richness possible in this inner relation,
this union of heart and soul. Then the disciple finds that the teacher's
nearness to or distance from him is not to be measured in miles, is not an
affair of what can be seen sensorily, but of what can be felt mentally.
782
Sat-sang, or inner affiliation with the
master, is regarded as more important than outer association with him.
783
Just as the proximity of an electrified wire coil
can induce a current of magnetism in a bar of soft iron, so the proximity of
such a man can induce some of his own inner stillness to appear in a disciple.
784
There are two ways whereby help is given by a
master to his disciples. The first is a conscious one whereas the second is not.
And it is the second, the apparently less important way, which is really the
commonest one. Just as the sun does not need to be aware of every individual
plant upon which it sheds its beneficent life-giving growth-stimulating rays, so
the master does not need to be aware of every individual disciple who uses him
as a focus for his meditations or as a symbol for his worship. Yet each disciple
will soon realize that he is receiving from such activities a vital inward
stimulus, a real guidance and definite assistance. This result will develop the
power unconsciously drawn from the disciple's own higher self, which in turn
will utilize the mental image of the master as a channel through which to shed
its grace.
785
What the master gives by way of personal example
and verbal precept is only the beginning and not the end of what he can give.
The silent inward transmission is even more important.
786
To the extent that a teacher helps in the growth
of a disciple's inner life, he shares in it.
787
Teacher and student share each other's world.
788
When the impact of his physical presence is
absent, the power of his spiritual presence may become plainly evident.
789
The gracious image of the master will reappear
constantly before his eyes. And he would rather have its magical presence,
together with the rebuke that may come with it, than not have it at all.
790
He feels vividly at some moments, but only
faintly at other moments, that the master is in the background of his life.
791
He will not only feel the master's personality as
if it were somewhere near or close together with him, but will also absorb
inspiration from it and add some of its peace to his own.
792
He draws into his very being these noble
influences emanating from the master.
793
Wherever he may be, the intelligent disciple can
create inner contact with his master by finding the latter's mental image within
himself as a deep vivid and actual presence.
794
Mystic Union of Master and Pupil: The best way to
follow a teacher is to possess yourself of his spirit. The rest will take care
of itself. When the disciple's maturity meets the teacher's grace, the path to
spiritual attainment is really opened up.
795
The disciple is bound to the guide with a tie of
inner attraction which, without the consent of destiny or the guide himself, he
cannot break!
796
The soul will lead him by stages to itself. Hence
it may lead him to reverence for some scriptural personage or to devotion toward
some living master and then, when these have fulfilled their purpose, away and
beyond them. For the quest is from the world of things and men to the world of
Mind's void; from thoughts and forms to the thought-free formless Divine.
797
The attraction to a teacher, which often happens
involuntarily, is due in part to the fact that the seeker does not know God and
has never seen God. But he can know and see this human being, the teacher who
does know God.
798
To the groping aspirant, a true Master must ever
be both the symbol of the divine existence and the channel of its power.
799
The notion of pure spirit or even of the higher
self is too vague for most aspirants, and hence too difficult as a theme for
concentration. The mental image of an inspired man gives their thoughts
something concrete to fasten on and their aspirations something immediately
recognizable to turn towards. Here, then, is a prime value of having a human
ideal.
800
The Infinite Power seems too inaccessible and too
exalted to be mindful of human needs, whereas the Messenger or Prophet or
Master, being human himself, seems much nearer and more approachable, more
likely and more willing to take an interest in those needs.
801
The master is a visible and manifested presence
and therefore one that he can more easily recognize, more quickly get help from,
than the invisible and unmanifested higher self within him.
802
Here arises the need of a Symbol, to which his
heart can yield loving devotion and on which his mind can practise intense
concentration.
803
Because so few can even detect their true self,
or hear its voice in conscience, or sense its presence in intuition, the
infinite wisdom of God personifies it in the body of another man for their
convenience, inspiration, and aid.
804
The master is the symbol of the Higher Power for
everyone who feels affinity with him.
805
The vivid actuality, the personal freshness of a
living and once-met Symbol can never be equalled, for most people, by the
historic actuality of a dead one or the mental freshness of a distant but never
seen one.
806
The Master embodies the disciple's conscience.
807
Jesus described himself as the Door; the Bab of
Persia referred to himself as the Gate. What did these prophets mean? The
average seeker needs a symbol, a form through which he can pass to the formless.
Such a form then becomes a door or gate for him. The mental image of the prophet
who most attracts him provides him with it.
808
Although there is no need to follow the herd into
fanatical guru-adulation there is a need to regard him properly for what he is -
a channel for higher forces, an instrument for the higher power - and so
deserving homage and reverence.
809
To see what such a man is in bearing and conduct
is itself a silent form of instruction.
810
The fact that the spiritual guide has a human
form gives something for the disciple's imagination to take hold of and keep
firmly concentrated on. A properly controlled, wisely directed imagination can
be a powerful aid in mystical exercises.
811
Another value of a master is that in his person
we can verify under everyday conditions the fact of a superior state of his and
the practical importance of the philosophic ideal.
812
If he has such faith in and devotion to his
teacher, he should make use of this attitude not to rest until he himself is all
that his teacher is. The latter can be used as an example of what can be done by
the human being who is determined to live as he is meant to live, and to be as
he is meant to be.
813
He is to keep the Ideal ever before his eyes, and
to recognize that it over-limns the personality of his master.
814
The picture of the Ideal is held in his
subconscious mind all the time and becomes the pattern to be imitated, the
invisible Master to be followed with faith and with love.
815
It is affiliation to the master's mind, not
propinquity to his body, that will bring these benefits. But where both are
possible, the result will be better.
816
It will not be until a late stage that he will
wake up to the realization that the real giver of Grace, the real helper along
this path, the real master is not the incarnated master outside but the Overself
inside his own heart. What the living master does for him is only to arouse his
sleeping intuition and awaken his latent aspiration, to give him the initial
impetus and starting guidance on the new quest, to point out the obstructions to
advancement in his individual character and to help him deal with them.
817
What he feels about the Master's power may be
true but it is a sign of his elementary state that he places it outside himself.
818
The true meaning of a master to the disciple's
understanding should be as the presence and force, the revelation and voice of
his own inmost spiritual being.
819
Let us be more concerned with the quest of right
principles rather than impressive persons, for this will put our attitudes to
all events on the right plane. Because this simple truism was forgotten most of
the religious and mystical movements have gone astray.
820
The proper attitude is to regard the Master as a
symbol of the higher power, so that the veneration and devotion proffered are
directed towards that power. To look upon him as an intermediary, between the
disciple and God, is to fall into the error of looking outside his own self for
that which, when he finds it, will be within him and nowhere else.
821
Think more deeply than the conventional mass of
guru-followers dare to do and you will come to perceive that in the end there is
only one Teacher for each man, his own Overself; that all other and outer gurus
are merely channels which IT uses. "It is He who lives inside and speaks through
the outer guru's voice," declares a Tibetan text. Why not go direct to the
source?
822
The higher self is the ultimate spiritual guide
whom he is to revere and the real spiritual helper on whom he is to rely.
823
When disciples follow a teacher, what is it that
they really follow? Suppose the master advocated cruelty and preached
selfishness - would the disciples still continue to follow him? Obviously, they
would not. This is because their own inward feeling would reject the
teaching. It shows that they are really following the teacher within themselves,
the voice of their own Higher Self. It is this Higher Self within them which
makes them seek out and respond to a true teacher, for he is really an outward
embodiment of this Self.
824
The outer objectified master is not the real one
but only a shadow cast by the sun inside. His disciples too often make the
mistake of relating themselves to his body, and placing overmuch emphasis on
that visible relationship, when what really matters is relating their mind to
his mind. This can be done only within themselves. Only in their own higher self
can they meet and know their master.
825
Those who interest themselves in personalities
take the wrong path. A master's ideas are the best part of him. Let students
take them and not trouble themselves about his appearance, career,
traits, and habits.
826
We must make a distinction between a doctrinal
principle and the human personality who serves as the vehicle for such a
principle. The principle will live when the personality is dead. Our absolute
loyalty, therefore, must be bestowed on what is immortal, not on what is mortal.
The human disseminator of the principle should receive only a conditional
allegiance. The pure Idea may incarnate itself in the man but he may sully,
betray, or pollute it with his human error, prejudice, or selfishness.
827
The embodied master, being human, will have some
or other of the human imperfections. Sooner or later the disciple will note and
become critical of them or disturbed by them. But the inner Light is perfect and
will rouse only admiration, devotion, and satisfaction.
828
I have never said that the disciple should not
feel love for the teacher, for that inevitably arises of itself and is indeed
the basic force that draws the one to the other. Without it there could be no
discipleship. But it is necessary to understand that the love is really felt for
the divine presence which is using the teacher. It is not felt for the guru
(teacher) as a person. That is the correct condition. If, however, it is
diverted to the guru's person, then it is spoilt, rendered impure, and the true
relationship is broken. In fact, idolatry sets in. The emotions of attraction
and reverence which are felt need not be given up, but they should be directed
to the true source, the higher power which is using the teacher, and not towards
his personality at all.
829
The human symbol under which the devotee receives
his inspirations and illuminations in vision or feeling is, after all, personal
to him. It is not a universal one, not for all mankind at all times and in all
places. Consequently his onward progress will one day demand of him that he
transcend it. However useful and even indispensable it has been, it will best
fulfil itself when he is able to forget it.
830
It is rarely and reluctantly that a true master
will give personal interviews. He finds that so many enquirers come either with
an idealized preconceived picture of what he looks like (or ought to look like)
or with certain prejudices which are activated when they see him, that in many
cases the good work done by his writings may be nullified by the disappointment
consequent on the meeting. This is because few persons are sufficiently
nonmaterialistic to look behind physical appearances for the mental reality of
the man interviewed. Most come carrying a preconceived picture of some perfectly
wonderful, perfectly handsome, perfectly saintlike Perfect Friend. The ideal is
not realized. They leave the meeting disillusioned. It is better for their sakes
that he remain behind the barrier of written words and not let them meet him
face to face. How many prefer pigmentation to proficiency as a standard of
spiritual wisdom, as shown by the numbers who cannot accept a dark-skinned
Indian for teacher! How many are held prisoners by their preconceptions! How
many reject both a teacher and his truth merely because they dislike the shape
of his nose! What hope could a bandy-legged master have to find any disciples?
Of course, the seeker who confounds him with his body is really still unfit for
philosophy and ought not be given any interview until life and reflection have
prepared him to take proper advantage of it. It is unfortunate that this human
weakness is so common. This is one of the lesser reasons why the philosophic
discipline has to be imposed on candidates for philosophy as a preliminary to be
undergone before its threshold can be crossed. The real teacher is hard to
behold. For he can be seen partly with the heart, partly with the mind, but
rarely with the eye of flesh. He is the invisible man, whom they can recognize
only by sensing, not by seeing him.
831
The duty is laid upon a master to show the value
of his virtue by his conduct and to attract men towards it by his example. It is
not the man that we are to reverence but his noble attributes and his inspired
mind.
832
In the final reckoning we are not the disciple of
this or that man but rather the disciple of the Overself.
833
Gautama saw much evidence among the Hindus of
their traditions of guru-worship and their cults of personal adulation. To
prevent this arising among those who accepted his teaching, he commanded that
his own person was to remain unpictured in art, ungraven in image. But this was
too much to ask of sentimental, devotional, and emotional humanity.
834
Jesus tried to turn the minds of his followers
from the man to Spirit, from the body to Overself but, like Muhammed, Buddha,
and Krishna, failed. He told them not even to call anyone Master, nor even to
call him Rabbi. But history shows how greatly they disobeyed his instruction.
835
Even if the Symbol were a man devoid of spiritual
power and light, its effects would still appear beneficially within his life.
This is because he has imagined it to be powerful and enlightening and
the creative power of his own thought produces some benefit. If however the
Symbol were an evil and living man, then the effects would be more or less
harmful. This is because a subconscious telepathic working exists between the
two minds through the intense devotion and passive submission of one to the
other. But if the Symbol were a genuine living mystic, then the devotee's
thought could draw from him - and without his conscious will or knowledge
- benefits greater than in the first case. It is possible to get still greater
benefits if the seeker attaches himself to and becomes the disciple of a living
genuine sage. For to the above-mentioned effects will be added the latter's
deliberately given help and blessing.
836
Despite popular superstition and wishful thinking
it is true that no master can bestow his own enlightenment on others as a
permanent gift. But does this make his attainment valueless to them? No, for it
proves to them both that the Overself is and that man may commune with
it. The few who are more sensitive or more perceptive gain more from personal
contact with him - either inspiration for their quest or, if more fortunate, a
momentary glimpse of the far-off goal.
837
The Master as Symbol: All this talk of master and
disciple is vain and futile. You yourself, when attracted to a certain man in
whom you have faith, set him up as a master in your own mind, keep him there for
a number of years, and eventually drop him when you no longer feel the need of a
human symbol of the Infinite. All this time it is your own higher self which is
guiding you, even when it is using the mental image of the guide you may have
selected for the purpose. All this time you were moving in the direction of the
discovery of your Overself inwardly even when you seemed to be moving towards an
external master. If you find ABC a helpful symbol, use him as your master, but
do not ask him to confirm this usage for the choice was yours. No
confirmation from him is called for. Why doubt the guidance of your Overself? If
you accept the master in full faith, by that very act you are showing faith in
the leading given you by the Overself. Your obedience to it is enough. It has
accepted you or it would not be drawing you inwards, as it is. ABC is one with
it. Therefore how could the master refuse you? But do not lose sight of the
inwardness of the whole process by going to him for an outward sign. Do not
materialize it. Make use of him if you wish to, and if he is what you believe
him to be, your faith will not be wasted. Your act of mental creation will not
lead to hallucination so long as you know that the true ABC is not his body but
his mind.
838
The humble appeal of the seeking soul direct to
God (or one's own Overself) will in time bring direct help without the
intermediary of any human being. If anyone believes that he has entered into
realization solely through the blessing of a master, then there will surely be a
disillusionment one day. The real duty of a master is to point out the correct
path at each different stage of the aspirant's life, to keep up his faith until
he knows the truth for himself and not through somebody else's words, to inspire
him by his own example and encouragement never to desert the quest and to show
that its benefits are worthwhile, to give his grace in the sense of taking a
personal interest in the student's progress and telepathically to keep the
student within his own consciousness.
839
If discovery of Truth is the discovery of the
answer to "Who Am I?" then what better Master can there be than the "I" itself -
the unknown Knower rather than the familiar, known ego? Yet so few seekers have
taken it on trust: nearly all venture it in dependence on some other man. And
what can that Master do in the end better than teach his disciple to see
his own divine face?
840
"A visible Murshid (Master) is a gateway unto the
Unseen Master and a portal unto God, the Unknown. But yet, in the end, neither
God, Master, nor Murshid appear in the 'I Am'" - Mayat Khan.
841
The argument as to whether a living master alone
can "save" men or whether a dead one can also do so, is a fallacious one. No man
is saved by another man. His own soul is his real saviour. When he believes that
a master, living or dead, is saving him, his own soul is actually at work within
him at the time but is using the mental image of the master to serve as a
focus-point for his side - that is, the self-effort side - of the process.
Thousands who never knew the living Jesus have felt the real presence and
dynamic power of Jesus enough to convert them from sinful to Godly lives. It was
the idea of Jesus which they really knew, not the man himself, as it was
grace of their Overselves which was the true presence and power they admittedly
felt. They concentrated their faith on the idea but the reality behind it was
the unknown Overself. They needed the idea - any idea - as a point in their own
form-time-and-space personal consciousness where the formless, timeless,
placeless, impersonal soul could manifest itself to them.
842
There are hands in every country, among every
people, outstretched to God for inward help. The responsibility to answer these
prayers rests therefore primarily with God. Any man who apparently gives the
needed help is only an intermediary. Neither the power nor the wisdom which he
manifests is his own. If he perceives that fact, he will be humbled by it.
843
The true teacher acts by proxy, as it were, for
the aspirant's Overself until such time as the aspirant himself is strong enough
to find his own way. Until that moment the teacher is a shining lamp, but after
it he will withdraw because he does not want to stand between the seeker and the
latter's own self-light which gradually leads the disciple to dispense with him!
844
With the thought of the higher power, an image
will spontaneously spring up in his mind. It will be the image of that man who
manifests or represents it to him.
845
The philosophically correct attitude is to
cherish the deepest reverence for him, to remember and commune often with his
kindling interior presence, and to control the lower self by the ideal pattern
he affords.
846
If he rejects praise it is because he wants it
bestowed where it really belongs, and not upon himself to the denial of that
source. It belongs to his master or to the Overself; the power behind all his
praised activities is not the ego's. For by such properly placed credit, the
world may come to know, or believe, there is that higher power.
847
"He who sees the Teaching, sees me." - Buddha
848
Much emotion-born fallacious writing and
consequent belief prevails in Western and Oriental mystical circles. The
question must be asked: if a dead master is just as good or, as one South Indian
ashram now claims, even better than a living one, why do any masters trouble to
reincarnate at all if they can exert their influence or give their training just
as effectively by staying where they are? And this question applies not only to
the minor lesser-known teachers of small groups but with equal force to the
major prophets like Buddha and Jesus.
Here is the point at which part of the confusion and much of the fallacy arise. People generally have been led by society, including their parents, to adopt and follow one of these major Prophets. This is done partly in the belief that he is still in touch with them from a heaven-world, partly out of unquestioning acceptance of his revelation, and partly because of the social necessity of belonging to the membership of some organized church. The revelation and the church continue to survive the prophet's death and thus continue to be available for the help of followers born in later centuries. But the vehicle through which he himself was able to communicate directly, the intellect and body - that is, the ego - have ceased to exist. There is no further possibility of such communication. Where it seems to occur, the mental image of the prophet has been assumed by the Higher Self of the devotee to satisfy his demand and need. The usefulness of a living teacher to those who have no such experience or to those who are uncommitted to a deceased one, is obvious.
849
When the master dies, the disciple will find that
there is no one to take his place. Such an affinity cannot be duplicated. But
what he gave the disciple will live on inside him. How can he be like the
unthinking hordes who yield to their passions without compunction?
850
When a master is no longer living in flesh and
blood, what will be the effect upon his relations with others? Those who are
willing to use their reason rather than their sentimentality upon the matter can
fall upon the fact itself. For those who are still in the elementary stages -
which usually means the mass of his followers - he is no longer operative.
851
Some persons, deprived of their guru by a sudden
change of circumstance, or by death, have found themselves bewildered, at a
loss, or even have collapsed with a nervous breakdown.
852
What he leaves behind is not himself but the
revelations he received, the instructions he gave, and the techniques he
favoured.
853
If the life of Jesus be viewed symbolically - as
the lives of such divine men often are in part - the same necessity, at a
certain time, of physical separation from disciples to bring them into mental
nearness, appears. Jesus told them: "I tell you the truth, it is expedient for
you that I go away; for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you.
When He, the Spirit of Truth, is come, He will guide you into all truth."
854
If there is a genuine inner relationship between
them, then he will feel that a part of the master has never left him, even
though the master is himself long dead.
855
If he is still alive, the personal help of a
master is certainly valuable. If he ordinary aspirant in any other than a
general impersonal way. His influe the ordinary aspirant in any other than a
general impersonal way. His influence is then carried by writings left behind,
by the thought-forms he left during his lifetime in the mental atmosphere here,
and by the few disciples closest to him in the inner sense. Otherwise, only an
advanced yogi, able to raise his consciousness by meditation to the same plane
as the master's, could get any contact at all. It is as necessary to his
disciples that he leave them deprived of his guidance as well as of the
consolation of his presence as it was earlier necessary for them to have them
while he was still on earth. After all, it is their own Overself that they are
seeking. They must begin to seek it just where it is - within themselves and not
in someone else. The time has then come when, if they are to grow at all, they
must cease drawing on his light and strength and begin drawing on their own. The
very hour of his departure from them is appointed in their destiny by the
infinite intelligence, which has sufficient reasons for making it then, and not
earlier or later. If they must henceforth strive for direct touch with the
Infinite and no longer lean on the encouragement of an intermediary, this is
because they are at the stage to make better progress that way, whatever their
personal emotions may argue to the contrary.
856
Whether it is really those who publicly and
loudly proclaim how close they were to the Master who were so, or those who
silently and secretly practised what he taught, the world is often in no
position to judge.
857
The question whether a rejection of the guru is a
necessary stage in order to find the Truth for oneself can be immediately
answered. It is not at all necessary for anyone to reject the guru at any stage.
But - at a certain stage it may be advisable to withdraw physically from
him. That is a matter for guru or disciple to decide, and also the length of
time for such an absence.
858
"In time when the relationship is sufficiently
established between master and pupil the pupil has to continue on his own,"
wrote the Sufi Master Insar-I-Kamil. This is important but insufficiently
known.
859
The teacher is a support needed by the disciple
to help him progress through successive stages of the quest, as they are stages
of thinning illusion. When he stands on the threshold of reality, then the last
and thinnest illusion of all must be left behind, the support of any being
outside himself, apart from himself, for within him is the infinite life-power.
860
It is written in the Hindu texts that by living
in the company of a guru, saint, or sage one acquires a measure of his
enlightenment, holiness, or wisdom. How widely different this measure can be,
how ever little and how very large, only exceptional personal experience or a
long, comparative study of the records can tell. Side by side with this text, to
amplify or correct it, ought to be put, and well mused over, a little incident I
once observed in South India, in which the principal character was a very
earnest young monk, Swami Dandapani. He had lived for five years, on and off, as
an office assistant in the ashram and as a devoted follower of Ramana Maharshi.
One day he was expelled forthwith and ordered to leave within twenty-four hours.
At night, when everyone had retired to sleep, he went to his guru to inform him
of the expulsion and to take farewell. At the end of this occasion he wept. The
Maharishee restrained him: "Don't be a fool! You should know that this physical
Sat-sang [personal company in an ashram is only for beginners. When one
advances to a certain stage it is better to go away if further and real
advancement is to be made. For then one is compelled to seek, and find, the
inner guru, within the mind and heart. Even the little birds have to get away
from their parents' nest when they have grown wings: they cannot stay always in
it. So too the disciples have to practise away from the ashram what they have
learnt here, and find there the peace they found here." I followed the Swami's
further history as he was a good friend. Years later he became a guru in his own
turn, acquired a number of disciples, and settled in his own native village in
his own ashram. My own observation, farther afield, is that some seem to acquire
nothing at all, whereas others acquire a great deal, from Sat-sang.
Whether this acquisition comes about by a kind of osmosis, or by instruction and
discussion, or, more likely, by a resultant arising from all three, the
necessity of looking within oneself, working with oneself, and depending on
oneself cannot be evaded.
861
Sri Ramakrishna told seeking newcomers: "Keep on
visiting this place." But he also told them: "It is necessary in the
beginning to come here off and on." I once heard Sri Ramana Maharshi tell a
young Indian disciple who wept at being forced to leave him: "Living in ashrams
is only for beginners. The more advanced have to go away and develop from there.
You have been here five years. If you want to progress you can now do so best by
going away from here."
862
The animal which at a certain age deserts its
offspring to force them into self-reliance is like the rare guru who tells the
overstayed learner it is time to leave.
863
But the law of life is growth. Is he to remain a
passive receiver of someone else's teaching in perpetuity? Can he stand still
under another man's shadow or is he to emerge out of pupilage into the light?
864
The true teacher so develops his disciples that
they can come closer and closer to the time when they can find their way without
him. All his service is intended to lead them toward graduation, when he himself
will no longer be needed.
865
No disciple does his master adequate honour until
he himself is able to stand and walk alone.
866
The man in whom intuition is well-developed or
who is able to practise meditation sufficiently to hear the Interior Word, can
manage without a master.
867
If he has found the correct path and has
travelled with a teacher as far as this stage, thenceforth he may travel by
himself. He is now free for he is now able to guide himself.
868
In the end he must free himself inwardly from all
things and, finally, both from whatever teacher he has and from the quest
itself. Then only can he stand alone within and one with God.
869
Whether or not it is historically true that there
was the battle mentioned in the Bhagavad Gita is unimportant to us of the
twentieth century. But the psychological interpretation of it as meaning that
Arjuna was ordered to fight not his parents and relatives but his
attachment to them, is important. It is the same teaching as that of
Jesus' hard saying about the necessity of taking up the cross and denying father
and mother. All this we can understand even where we cannot follow it into
practice. But it is bewildering to be told that a time comes in the disciple's
development when attachment to the teacher must also be broken. He must free
himself from the very man who has shown him the path to liberation from every
other form of attachment. His liberation is to become total and absolute.
870
In the last verse spoken by Arjuna in the
Gita, he declares that all his doubts are gone and that he has gained
recognition of the true Self. Hence all his questions cease. His enquiry into
Truth has come to an end. Nothing more is said either by him or his teacher.
Both enter into a state of silence and this silence is revealed as the highest,
because the spirit is beyond both the agitations of intellect and the babble of
speech. It is best felt and known, understood and communicated, through such
inner stillness.
871
Do not stray into waters that are too deep for
you. Do not try to grasp the mystery of your master. You cannot do it and you
will never do it, for if ever you came to the very edge of succeeding in doing
it both you and he would disappear from your ken. Do not seek to touch the
untouchable. It is better to accept him for what he is and let it go at that
than to indulge in useless speculations and erroneous fancies. It is not that
your are to repress the faculty of enquiry, but that you are to exercise it in
the right place and at the right time. Your task now is to understand yourself
and to understand the world. When you have come near the close of completing
those two tasks, you will then be faced with the further task of comprehending
the true character of your master but not till then. For then only will you be
able to comprehend him correctly; before then you will only get a wrong notion,
which is far worse than no notion at all. The last lesson of these words is:
trust him where you cannot understand; believe in him where yours.