1
Although science has begun to note the facts of
spiritual healing, it has not really begun to explain the facts. Nor will it
ever, unless it becomes utterly humble before the great power of God.
2
The therapeutic side of meditation practices can be
competently studied only by one who both practises them from the inside as well
as observes them from the outside. The scientist and the medical physician, who
can do the latter only, are not even half-competent: they miss the essence of
the subject in missing the power at work. Their intellects may logically
theorize or imaginatively guess at it but that does not bring them into touch
with the reality of it. The very scepticism with which they usually confront the
record of these unorthodox healings and often reject their genuineness, unfits
them for such investigation. The proper openness of mind, neither credulous nor
cynical, is hard for them to establish.
3
Spiritual healing must be separated from mental
healing, as the former works by a descent of divine grace but the latter by a
power-concentration of mind. A cure in the first case will not only be permanent
but also affect the character of the patient, whereas in the second case a cure
may be and often is (especially when hypnotic methods are used) transient whilst
the character remains untouched. In this connection there are some statements in
the chapter on "Errors of the Spiritual Seeker" in my book The Inner
Reality.
4
A genuine spiritual healing of the physical body
will always produce spiritual results. That is, it will produce an inner change
in the character of the person healed. But when this happens it means that some
kind of wrong thinking or wrong feeling is the real cause of his physical
sickness. For instance, thoughts of bitterness, resentment, criticism, and
condemnation strongly held and long sustained against other persons can and very
often do easily produce liver trouble. So long as that kind of thinking and
feeling continues, so long will the liver trouble continue. The proper way to
heal it, therefore, is to get at the psychological seat of the trouble - that
is, effect an inner change. Where spiritual healing treatment influences a man
to give up the wrong thinking, so that it leaves him utterly, the physical
effects of the change may show themselves suddenly and miraculously or slowly
and gradually. Although they show themselves as a cure of a physical malady,
note that it first beg an as a mental malady or as an emotional malady. And if
the inner change is an enduring one, the following cure will be an enduring one
too. This is the only type of healing which can truly be called spiritual. All
other kinds of so-called spiritual healing are merely mental healing or hypnotic
healing, and the cure can never be equal in quality or durability. Quite often,
they have only temporary results and the sickness reappears because the inner
man has been left with all his psychological neuroses uncured. Mental healing
and hypnotic healing are not, strictly speaking, healing at all. They are
suppression of symptoms, and at the cost of retention of the hidden causes of
these symptoms.
5
In the case of mental healing there is not
necessarily any change at all in the character of the patient. His angers, his
hostilities, or his resentments may remain as active as before. His cure simply
illustrates the power of mind over body - his own or someone else's mind. It is
achieved by faith or concentration or suggestion. But in the case of spiritual
healing there is an inner change along with bodily cure.
6
Why is it wrong to seek the cure of physical
ailments by nonphysical remedies, and particularly by spiritual ones? To argue
that the inner healing of bad character is more important - which may be granted
- does not do away with the necessity of the outer healing.
7
It is not the true spiritual healing if it leaves
the character and outlook untouched, unimproved. There are other kinds of
healing which may relieve or cure one kind of ailment while leaving the person
still open to make the karma that later brings on another kind of ailment.
8
He who sees in everything only matter and beyond it
only nothing, who looks to physics and physiology for sufficient explanation of
our existence and to chemical actions for sufficient explanation of our loftiest
emotions, will be sceptical of mentalist principles and distrustful of spiritual
healing.
9
It is often argued that psychological treatment may
cure people suffering from nervous troubles or those whose sicknesses are
largely the result of their own imagination, but that such treatment is useless
for physically caused maladies. The only way to get at the truth about this
problem is to divide psychological treatment into mental and spiritual
categories. Mental treatment, which includes hypnotic treatment, is suitable
only for nervous troubles, for there alone can it effect a cure; but spiritual
treatment is suitable for both nervous and physical troubles because it involves
a higher power than the thinking or imagining one, a truly spiritual power which
is able to affect the physical body no less than the personal mentality. Mental
treatment includes a large part of so-called spiritual healing, which is not
genuine spiritual healing at all. Philosophy is able to make this
differentiation because it understands the psyche of man and his inner
constitution, because it has a deeper knowl edge than scientific observers
working from the outside or religious devotees working by faith alone can get.
10
Our knowledge of the laws which govern the
psychological causes of sickness and the spiritual healing of disease is still
incomplete and uncertain.
11
Before one talks of depending upon the Overself
one must first have established a relation with it, earned a title to its grace.
Otherwise, the talk is premature. Nor can such dependence ever annul the duty of
utilizing all ordinary means, all human channels.
12
The possibility of healing physical ailments by
spiritual means depends in the last analysis not upon the personal will of the
healer but upon the divine soul of the patient. By Its grace, which is a
definite force, the soul can assist both mind and body, as I have explained in
Chapter 9 of my book The Wisdom of the Overself.
13
Those critics who deny the reality of Grace as
well as those who deny the possibility of spiritual healing are tersely answered
by the writer of Psalms 103:3: "Who forgiveth all thine iniquities; who healeth
all thy diseases."
14
Such healing does not contradict the natural laws;
it co-operates with them. Thus, to expect an old man to be turned into a young
man by its aid, is unrealizable. To demand a new leg to replace an amputated
one, is unreasonable.
15
The mere removal of pain, healing of lesions,
elimination of tumours, or restoration of functions without any physical agent
being used in the cure is itself really a miracle. But such an achievement
started and completely finished within only a few hours or a few minutes is even
more miraculous. It compels us to redefine the word "miracle." No longer should
we regard its meaning as a suspension of natural law, a deliberate intervention
by God to thwart His own creation, but rather as a natural fact arising out of
still unknown laws.
16
Because I foresee that many more years of
continued research are needed before I shall have any conclusions of permanent
value to offer, I venture to set down here only the most elementary of my
findings. Even these would have been held back for some years were it not that
the pressure of our times gives them an importance and urgency that brooks no
delay.
17
If only a few sufferers have left the healers'
presence restored to health, this should still render it an imperative duty to
find out what little we can about how or why the healing happened.
18
We are still in the process of putting together
into a single inclusive pattern of Healing and Truth the oddly assorted pieces
of a jigsaw puzzle. And it is only the beginning of this process!
19
Out of this world suffering, you may learn the
greater lessons which Buddha learned but which Mrs. Eddy tried to evade. Life on
earth is not intended to be an eternal bed of roses; it will forever be a
mixture of pleasure and pain; the wheel of fate will forever keep turning up now
one and then the other. True healing is primarily the healing of spiritual
ignorance, never the gaining of prosperity, and only occasionally the getting of
good health. It is to win an unbreakable peace and a perfect knowledge which
neither death nor man can steal or impair.
20
Are we to follow the example of some holy men,
both in medieval Europe and in the modern Orient, who equate the acceptance of
illness with the will of God? Are we to cherish our diseases in resignation to
God rather than try to cure them by spiritual means? Is such pious fatalism
better than turning to spiritual healing?
21
To the extent that Christian Science instruction
will make clearer to his mind and fix more deeply within it those several great
truths which Christian Science shares in common with philosophy, he will benefit
by it. But to the extent that he absorbs, along with them, those errors,
fallacies, and confusions which are also part of Christian Science, he will not.
Therefore in its study he should keep vigilance close to him and not throw away
his right to use critical judgement. One fallacy is not to see that physical
means may also be used by God to cure, even if it be granted that they are
indirect as well as on a lower plane. They need not be rejected but merely
valued for the inferior things they are. But they have their place. Another
fallacy is not to see that mental means may also be used. Psychology, change of
thought, is also inferior and indirect, but still has a useful place and
positive value.
Healings can be done without entering the kingdom. They are achieved by the power of concentration. This leaves the ego still there. The cure is wrought then by an occult, not a spiritual, power. It is personal to the practitioner, not impersonal. Every individual practitioner who makes progress will come to the point where either his power lapses or his understanding outgrows the imposed dogmas. If he accepts this opportunity or passes this test, he may come closer to God.
The Christian Scientist adherent needs to purify his motive. His need of better health or more money may be satisfied in the proper way but must be kept in the proper place. He should not seek to exploit higher powers for lower ends. He should carefully study the meaning of Jesus' words: "Seek ye first the Kingdom of Heaven and all these things shall be added unto you."
22
The body has its own laws of well-being. The man
who persistently infringes them but relies on the protective shelter of
spiritual healing "demonstration" to take care of his infringements is following
a risky, unreasonable, and uncertain course. All observation, experience,
biography, and philosophy unite to warn him that the chances of succeeding are
less than those of failing.
23
Only after he has extracted and applied its lesson
may he turn his back on experience and deny its reality. Only after he has
learned what law of physical, emotional, or mental hygiene he has violated, and
corrected the transgression, may he declare his sickness an illusion of the
senses and an error of the mind. Any other course is self-deceiving.
24
The New Thought mental healing cults do not
understand the difference between those occult powers (healing is one of them)
performed by the ego deliberately and those occult powers performed
through the ego spontaneously at the Overself's bidding. The first kind
are on an inferior level and keep the practitioner still enchained within
egoism. But of course, by contrast to the orthodox church teaching, this New
Thought teaching is certainly broader.(P)
25
No unqualified person - that is, no unintegrated
and unpurified person - has the right to audit another. Here is the error of
Dianetics: it explains the disappointment of some disciples and the
disillusionment of others.
26
The danger to those who seek such healing is one
of falling into the materialism which exalts the body at the expense of the
soul. The danger to those who practise it is one of falling into vanity, feeling
more important or more powerful than others.
27
The group of powers manifesting themselves in the
phenomena which have been variously named - according to the theoretical
interpretation given them by various cults - as spirit healing, Christian
Science, mesmeric healing, hypnotic treatment, and suggestive therapeutics, may,
with one group of exceptions, conveniently be classified under the heading of
"mental healing." These exceptions occur through the unconscious stimulation of
physical vital force (prana) and usually lead to cures which are such in
name only for they do not last long and are followed by a relapse into illness.
28
With the Short Path are allied all healing
techniques, like Christian Science, which affirm the actual existence of God as
perfect, disease-free, and all-providing. Sometimes they really do draw on the
Overself's power but at other times they use a queer mixture of black magic,
hypnotic suggestion, and fallacious religion.
29
If a mental healer should be interested in, or be
a practitioner of, black magic, he is far more likely to do serious harm to his
patients than good. It is always better to avoid meeting such people. Even the
"cures" which they perform are either only temporary, or else bought at a
heavily disproportionate price.
30
A teaching which seeks the chief good for human
beings, but ignores robust health and freedom from pain as a necessary part of
that good, is an incomplete one.
31
The old notion that mental healing is only useful
to, and possible in, cases where the patient only imagines that he is sick, is
outdated.
32
A doctrine which denies the body's existence while
hypocritically trying to cure the body's ailments, contradicts itself. In any
case, the body remains there, a hard unavoidable fact which must be accepted in
the end, however much anyone believes he has thought it away.
33
The fallacy in Christian Science theory is the
pretense that problems and pains, diseases and malfunctions, cancer and crime do
not exist among us here in this physical world. If we turn only to pure Spirit
and leave out the world in time and space and form, then, undeniably, they do
not exist. But we may not leave them out of practical reckoning while we have to
live in this body, much as some of us would like to. If the theory floats in
mists of fatuous optimism, the art of Christian Science healing does in some
cases bring very successful results. Why?
34
It is never the truly spiritual healer who
temporarily feels the pain or shows the symptoms of his patient's disease, but
only the physical-magnetic healer.
35
Uncritical believers in so-called metaphysical
healing and in faith-cure theories are sooner or later subjected to the
discipline of facts. The intensity of their pains and the gravity of their ills
are intended to, and do, bring them to a truer view of actualities. Instead of
blaming themselves for failure to demonstrate good health, they ought to blame
these theories for having misled them. Such failure is a chance to revise
imperfect beliefs, to cast out errors and start again. This surely is to the
good and something to be satisfied about. The problem of bodily healing is a
complicated one and often depends on more than a single factor.
36
Those who are likely to decry this proviso are
always those who tell us only of the successes of mental or "spiritual" healing,
but not of its failures. The comparative figures of the two sets of results are
tremendously disproportionate. To open one's eyes to the flaunted successes of
this system and to shut them to its aching failures, is not the way to
understand it aright. To exaggerate what it has achieved and to minimize or deny
what it has been unable to achieve - as is done by its ardent partisans -
represents a falling away from intellectual integrity. To take a typical
example, consider the famous healing sanctuary at Lourdes, France. It was
established in 1860. During recent years the attendance of sick and crippled
patients has been no less than six hundred thousand annually. Yet during the
first seventy years of the sanctuary's existence, a total of only five thousand
cures was reported. This should represent, on a conservative estimate, about one
percent of successfu l treatments. The number of those pilgrim-patients who
failed to benefit must therefore run into millions! We dwell on this example not
to decry Lourdes, which is doing a blessed and benign work which everyone should
respect, and certainly not to derogate its religious aspect, but to point out
that the failures in every school of healing, whether materialistic, mental, or
religious, must exist. That the inspiration which brought Lourdes into being was
truly divine and that the most amazing cures have been achieved there in a
manner only to be described as miraculous, we fully accept. But that there are
limitations and disappointments inherently present in this kind of healing must
also be accepted.
37
Do they not remind us of those medieval alchemists
who talked glibly of transmuting brass into gold, the while their tattered
sleeves and torn garments betrayed their shame-faced poverty! Facts are stern
and can't be laughed off. Exaggerated expectations are inevitably disappointing.
These failures are not held against such systems. No healing system, no healer,
certainly not even the most orthodox, could have a record consisting only of
triumphs. But no movement which boasts of its successes and ignores its failures
has the right to call itself scientific. For only by studying its failures could
it ever learn not only that there are errors mixed up with its truths,
but also exactly what errors they are.
38
The mere giving of an auto-suggestion, such as "I
am perfect health," which is belied by facts and made untrue by the body's
condition, cannot bring about a cure. Such a fictitious statement can only bring
about a fictitious result. To deny an illness' existence while refraining from
denying the body's existence, is illogical.
39
In all this Christian Science teaching it is
essential to note that the healer can utter these healing formulae, think these
healing truths, either out of his intellect or out of his insight. In the first
case his words and thoughts are merely like the map of a country. In the second
case they are like an actual visit to the country. The first healer makes an
unwarranted claim, does not see that his statements could be truly made only if
he attained the stature and purity of Jesus. It is not enough that the patient
should have faith; the healer himself must have the requisite higher
consciousness. For the divine power which actually effects the healing will not
come from his ordinary self but out of this higher one.
40
Since other cults holding contradictory theories
are also able to claim cures, and since there is a natural healing force in the
body itself, the Christian Scientists should be cautious and realize that their
own theory may be only partially and not wholly correct.
41
Whereas Christian Science denies the reality of
the body and hence of the body's ills, most other spiritual healing schools
admit it. Whereas Christian Science nowhere speaks of man struggling upward
through constant reincarnations on earth to realize his highest possibilities,
its most powerful rival - the Unity school of Christianity - proclaims this
doctrine.
42
Rudolf Steiner opposed psychic healing because, he
said, it did not cure but merely drove the disease deeper inside, to reappear
later in some other part of the body.
43
If the patient recovers, the system of healing -
whether it be orthodox or unorthodox - gets the credit; but if he fails to
recover, the system does not get the debit.
44
The Vedantist and Christian Scientist who are
determined to exclude the idea of world-existence from their view, are
nevertheless forced to yield and re-admit the exile when a simple toothache
instructs them to the contrary.
45
A cautious attitude to these cures may well find
them to be the result of natural healing processes; they would have happened
anyway.
46
Unbiased investigation shows that there are
disproportionately more cases of failure than of success by mental and religious
healers. It is unfortunate for the claims made and misleading to the uncritical
following that while the successes are highly advertised, the failures are
buried in silence. Moreover, even among the alleged healings, not all are actual
or durable ones. Thus the subject easily lends itself to deception, sometimes to
imposture.
47
The therapy of spiritual healing yields results
similar to those of other therapies. It has been known to cure one man of a
chronic complaint yet fail to even help another man suffering from the same
complaint.
48
If the published testimony to the cures by the
methods of the best known of these cults is carefully and cautiously examined in
the scientific manner, it will be obvious that in the first place some of the
sufferers never had the particular ailment they name, but only some minor one.
49
The religious revivals which are carried on during
intense excitement, with much dancing and jumping, and at which dramatic healing
of the sick occurs, are too often mere displays of emotionalism. The Spirit-fire
current rushes upward temporarily but soon falls down and with its return to
quiescence there is the usual bodily reaction. Religious fervour abates and the
cure vanishes.
50
The proportion of failures to healings is never
known, and so long as the religious approach continues and a religious
organization's power, wealth, and prestige are at stake, will never be known.
51
When Christian Science states profound mentalist
truths it becomes elevating, but when it mixes them up with refutable
conjectures, it becomes misleading. In the first case it is supported by the
facts of life, whereas in the second it conflicts with them.
52
My attitude towards Christian Science-Aurobindo
theory of physical immortality: continue to deny that abolition of death is
possible, but admit that prolongation of physical life may well be possible. In
the case of good individuals admit also its desirability.
53
The Christian Science practitioners apparently use
their formulas, their statements of being, their treatments, in the form of
uttered incantations. This is much like the use of mantrams in India.
54
A comparative study of the history of mental
healing shows how universal and ancient are its origins; nor are its principles
new.
55
Mental Moral and Spiritual Hygiene seeks to
establish a proper way of living and thus prevent sickness. The healing art
steps in where sickness already exists and a cure is sought.
56
Another extremely fanatical attitude of which we
must beware is the belief that mental healing displaces all other systems and
agencies for curing disease or keeping health; that its advocates may totally
discard every branch of medicine and surgery, hygiene, and physical treatment.
Sanity and balance call for the acceptance in its proper place of whatever
Nature and man can contribute. With these preliminary warnings, we venture to
predict that as the principles and practices of mental healing come to be
better, namely more rationally understood, it will establish for itself a firm
place in therapeutics which will have to be conceded - however grudgingly - by
the most materialistic and most sceptical of medicos.(P)
57
We must remember that mental healing is only a
single aspect of the art of healing. All the others must be brought in to make a
balanced system. God has given us valuable herbs, for instance, which possess
remedial virtues. We should accept the gift.
58
The error of Christian Science would appear to be
that it confuses theory and wrongly applies practice. Its principles are
half-right, half-wrong; its technique is the same. The injunction to "cast thy
burden on Me," which it seems to apply, is misunderstood to advise neglecting
practical means of healing troubles and leaving all to God. But the correct way
is not to neglect them but to do them while at the same time leaving results to
God and being indifferent to them.
59
Even if Christian Science and New Thought sects
produce healings, they are still not truly "divine." They use some lower force -
some vital force, as the Indians say. For they are all attached to the ego,
which is itself a consequence of their unconscious belief in its reality. The
ego has cunningly inserted itself even into these highly spiritual teachings and
is still the hidden source behind both their prophets and their followers. This
explains Mary B. Eddy's and so many New Thought teachers' commercialism as well
as the errors which are contained in the teachings of Emmet Fox, which led to
his own mental-physical breakdown and death.(P)
60
Christian Science can deny the existence of ill
health only at the cost of logically denying the existence of good health also.
Both are differing conditions of the same thing - the body. Christian Science
calls sickness a lie. Then it should likewise call its opposite a lie. But not
only does it not: it actually affirms that good health is a truth and a reality
even while it denounces matter - the body - as a lie and an illusion! If, in
spite of its deformed logic, Christian Science still gets healing done - as it
does - this result must be attributed to the fact that the infinite Life-Power
does take cognizance of the body's disease and does not deny its
being there.
61
It is not only fallacious to deny the existence of
a disease but also, if the attempt is made to secure healing, insincere.
62
The Christian Science attempt to deny existence to
sickness as an error of mortal mind is itself an error. It is more philosophic,
first, to take it as an existent fact, but to understand that the body's reality
is only a limited and temporary one, and, second, to couple it with the other
fact that there are healing forces and recuperative energies in the higher self
of man which may dispel it.
63
If right thinking alone could sustain life and
support health irrespective of every other factor, then human beings could
immure themselves where sunlight, air, water, and food could not reach them and
still live actively. But the only cases known to history are of a few
hibernating inactive yogis. Such theorizing is self-deceptive.
64
Mary Baker Eddy, from the safe distance of the
study, conveniently denied the existence of disease. Meanwhile the gods have
smiled cynically as millions in Asia have picked up cholera and passed to their
doom.
65
The mental peace obtained by denying facts like
sickness may be welcome to the sufferer. But it may also turn out to be a false
peace.
66
Although the theory of these cults is in part
quite fallacious, the practice of them brings striking results at times. This is
because the healing power really comes forth from the patient's own higher self,
to which the cults do - although somewhat unconsciously - direct him.
One of the yoga paths is the creative use of imagination and thought for self-improvement, and so far as it embodies such a technique, Christian Science is a yoga path too. It instructs its disciples to see themselves as perfect, as the Universal Mind sees them, to concentrate on the concept of, and hold to the belief in, the divine in man. These meditations and attitudes draw forth higher resources, which may effect results where ordinary ones fail.
This thinking runs somewhat as follows. The entire universe is but an idea. Therefore the human body is also an idea. Therefore the human being, as the thinker of this idea, possesses complete power to alter, improve, and even change the body. Therefore he can abolish disease, annul sickness, restore health, and perform miraculous environmental betterments at will, provided he can suitably re-adjust and control his thoughts. All this sounds plausible and attractive, but there is a fallacy in it. And this is that the human being is the sole thinker of the World-Idea. He is not. He only participates in it along with the World Mind. His power over the body is a limited one. By his thoughts he can influence its functioning and sometimes modify its mechanism.
67
Some persons have wonderful healing gifts, but
they will need to keep the ego out of their use of these gifts if the quest is
not to be obstructed.
68
Those who are born with healing skills, probably
brought over from former births, function on different levels. The commonest is
that which radiates life-force and energizes the cells of the sick person. This
kind of healer must first put himself into a passive mood and then, when he
feels the vibratory force of the life-force active within him, let it pass, with
or without touching the patient, into the latter. The vibrations of the
life-force are universal; they are not the healer's own personal property. He
simply possesses a skill in letting himself be used as a channel, and it is
usually concentrated in his hands. A healer like Saswitha, who says he is merely
drawing the therapeutic power from his patient and redirecting it or returning
it back to the patient, forgets that if this is so the patient himself gets it
from the cosmic forces. It is not his own personal property.(P)
69
Jesus healed the sick, cured the diseased. Why
decry the feat (when others do the same) as "merely" using an occult power, and
as a deviation from the highest path of attainment, becoming an obstacle to it?
For this is the criticism by Advaitic Vedantins. This criticism is unfair. If it
is right to cure a man by physical means - medicine, for example - then it is
right to cure him by mental means, and drawing on still deeper powers is in the
same line of progression. The Advaitins grant that a physician may attain the
highest truth. Is a physician like Paracelsus, using both physical and mental
remedies, plus his own spiritual power, and therefore capable of helping more
people more effectively, to be denied this possibility?
70
The professional in other lines can often give a
reasonable assurance of the efficacy of his work, but the genuine spiritual
healer cannot. For not only is his own gift involved but also both the patient's
self-made destiny and his evolutionary need.
71
Apollonius tells us that Pythagoras regarded
healing as "the most divine art." Why should anyone reject the views of the
Greek sage, not to speak of Jesus' own confirmation by his works? Why should the
Indian sages regard healing as a merely occult art, hence as a practice to be
avoided?
72
Why should it be right for a spiritual master to
minister to diseased minds but wrong to minister to diseased bodies? To label
one as white magic and the other as black magic, or to neglect and ignore the
flesh in the interest of whole-time devotion to the spirit, is unfair.
73
Too many Indian, and a few Western, gurus and
cults reject the development and use of healing power. It is, they argue, an
obstruction in the spiritual path because it keeps its practitioner captive to
the ego, which may even become stronger through conceit. There is the historic
case of Ramakrishna. He went to his prayer shrine in his temple three times to
request a healing for the throat cancer which troubled him, but each time failed
to utter the words. The merit of argument based on increased egotism and vanity,
the danger of being sidetracked from seeking the highest goal, is admitted. But
is this enough ground to ban spiritual healing completely and always? Must it be
denied to all people at all times, universally, because some healers may be
obstructed spiritually by its practice? The answer of common sense agrees with
the example of Jesus.
74
The healing of disease was well identified with
Jesus' work, with Aesculapian Greek sanctuaries, with Egyptian exorcism, with
many a mystic throughout the Orient, and even with a number in the modern world,
Eastern and Western. How, then, with such a religious background, can it be fair
to deny divine inspiration to the man who performs healing, while allowing such
inspiration to the man who only preaches?
75
Vedantic thought usually regards the
siddhis - occult powers - as obstacles to attaining truth. Among them the
healing of the body's sicknesses and the mind's disorders is included.
76
That some persons are unusual in being born with
the gift of healing the sick is a historic fact. Why reject the talent or power
as being unworthy of a true sage or of those who seek to become such a one? In
what way is this form of serving humanity unethical, unsafe, inconsistent with
the highest?
77
Remember that Jesus started his work by an act of
healing a sick person.
78
The results of their use of healing powers cannot
ordinarily be predicted, much less guaranteed, but must be left to the Higher
Power.
79
Spiritual healing is drawing much attention but
the subject is involved in much confusion. Even the healers themselves hold
contradictory theories about it. Some use prayer to get their cures; others deny
that prayer is of any avail. Some practise meditation alone; others combine
meditation with the laying-on of hands. Some deny that there is anything more
than the power of suggestion behind the healings; others find in them an
evidence of God's presence. Are there any spiritual laws which will
scientifically explain the healings?
80
Is the Hindu wisdom always wise? There is the
warning of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras against the occult powers that might
be acquired by yoga: they are to be shunned because they obstruct further
advance towards a higher plane. Healing is one of these listed powers. Must we
accept such an attitude and reject the gift of healing, if it comes? Is good
health so great an evil that disease is to be accepted dutifully? On this point
a Westerner might rebel.
81
In ancient and orthodox Hinduism the profession of
healer was regarded unfavourably, for the strange reason that it brought the
healer and the sick together!
82
Rosa Bailly was known in France as a poetess.
Quite late in life she became aware of certain radiations and found herself
capable of healing sick people by using these radiations. Out of these
experiences with patients she wrote a booklet entitled La Survie du
Cancer (Victory over Cancer), but it is no longer in print and has
never been translated. She died in the Pyrenees where she lived during this last
phase of her life, devoted to healing work until she finally gave that up,
saying that it exhausted her too much. What she regarded as her major
contribution to the healing art was the discovery from this experience of hers
that cancer has its seat "in the pithy marrow of the spine" no matter where its
tumour is. She could not find a publisher for this little book in France, but it
was published here in Switzerland and will not, it is said, be reprinted now
that she has passed. In fact she was her own publisher. At the time of her
retirement, she explained that vital energy w ould pass from her to the patient.
It is known that some of her cures were spectacular, and even in most of the
cases where she failed to save the life of the patient, she brought about a
passing without suffering.
83
The confusion of thought concerning spiritual
healing is tremendous. Swami Nikhilananda asserts that Ramakrishna's practice of
falling into spiritual trance aggravated the cancer which finally killed him.
Yet this is the very method and practice used by some healers to heal their
patients, because, they believe, it releases divine energies.
84
What the healer does is to release, stimulate, or
add energy to the sufferer's own natural recuperative forces.
85
The differences between healers are differences of
techniques, personal fitness, and spiritual degree.
86
The power to heal the sick is a latent gift
deliberately brought out by development or spontaneously released by
illumination.
87
Spiritual healing is a gift which is innate in
certain individuals and very difficult to acquire by others. It may, however,
exist latently, and could show itself only after a certain degree of spiritual
development has been attained.
88
Bernard of Clairvaux cured hundreds of the blind,
deaf, and paralysed during the twelfth century simply by making the sign of the
cross over the affected body part. Olcott in Ceylon, eight centuries later,
cured dozens of cases of scorpion bite and even snake bite by making the sign of
the pentagram over the part. Does this not show that the healing power lay in
the healer himself, even more than in his method?
89
There are many puzzling cases of healers, like
Saint Paul in ancient times, Saint Catherine of Siena in medieval times, and
Father Matthew of Ireland in modern times, who cured the ills of many people but
did not or could not cure their own. This is a paradox that is hard to resolve.
90
All healers lose their power after a time. This is
to lead them to a higher level.
91
Doctors who can keep us well, long-lived, and
capable of functioning properly are more needed than those who cure our
diseases.
92
If words have any meaning at all, Christ's words
have meant that personal sacrifice is the cost of spiritual growth. For eighteen
hundred years, men of every kind - scholars, mystics, priests, laymen, ascetics,
and saints - agreed on that. Then arose a new group of cults - faith-healers -
which not only gave a new meaning to those words but a directly opposite
meaning. Success and prosperity, they asserted, are outer signs of inner
spiritual growth. The end result was that they tried to use spiritual forces
solely for their own personal purposes and material benefits, instead of trying
to surrender to those forces and submit to higher purposes. They denied -
contrary to the experience of all religious history - that material loss and
personal failure could ever be the working of such purposes.
93
My basic conclusion is that healing exists on all
these different levels, which means its power comes from different sources. But
this said, I feel that all healers should know their limits, their limitations,
and I fear that many of them do not simply because they are carried away by
their enthusiasm. Secondly, I feel that all healers would not only be none the
worse for some knowledge of anatomy and physiology and the commoner maladies,
but they should even attempt to acquire some of this knowledge. Otherwise many
errors, many false or exaggerated claims, are made by the healers. I am not
questioning their honesty; I believe most of them are honest. But I am
questioning their lack of knowledge - I mean accurate knowledge and fuller
knowledge. On the other hand, I criticize the medical profession for failing to
enter into dialogue with the healers, for they would learn much to their own
profit and to the improvement of their professional help if they adopted a
humbler attitude towards t he unorthodox healers.(P)
94
Before the healing processes can come into
operation, the patient must be brought into a receptive state; otherwise he will
unconsciously obstruct them. Faith is the first requisite.
95
Those who approach him with their wish to be
healed and their faith in his power to bring it to realization, have still not
approached him aright. They must also be willing to have their own contribution
to the disease's existence pointed out. They must also agree to rectify wrong
habits of living and thinking. If they come only for pleasant words and a
successful cure, if they are not prepared to deny themselves or to discipline
themselves, he cannot heal them.
96
The first and least danger which besets the
possessor of occult healing power is the praise or fame it brings him from other
people, who are led by it to think him greater than he really is. He feels
flattered by the praise and elated by the fame, with the result that his ship
runs aground on the reef of vanity. His further progress gets stopped. Few can
withstand the temptation as Gandhi once withstood it. One day an old Bengali man
prostrated before Mahatma Gandhi and expressed gratitude for his having cured
him of chronic paralysis. The man had tried other remedies without success and
finally resorted to the repeated utterance of Gandhi's name, and was completely
cured. When replying, the great liberator of India showed the selfless humility
of his character: "Will you oblige me by taking my photograph off your neck? It
was not I but God who cured you."
97
Deep down within the heart there is a stillness
which is healing, a trust in the universal laws which is unwavering, and a
strength which is rock-like. But because it is so deep we need both patience and
perseverance when digging for it.(P)
98
To pray for a bodily cure and nothing more is a
limited and limiting procedure. Pray also to be enlightened as to why
this sickness fell upon you. Ask also what you can do to remove its
cause. And above all, ask for the Water of Life, as Jesus bade the woman at the
well to ask.(P)
99
If he can apply this teaching now, if he
can put his faith in and make his contact with the higher power from this very
moment, if he can forget himself for an instant, he can receive healing
instantaneously.(P)
100
When Jesus told the sick person, "Thy faith has
brought thee recovery," he did not mean, as many now think, faith that the cure
will be effected. No - he meant faith in the healing power - God. The first kind
keeps the mind still centered in ego, whereas the second kind of faith lifts the
mind away from ego. Another translation: "Your faith has made you well."
101
Because the Overself is not outside a man but is
his own innermost nature, full faith in its presence and power is essential to
experience its healing and help.
102
When the pursuit or practice of healing powers
diverts him from the higher work of knowing who it is that is seeking or using
them, when they no longer serve but make him their servant, he must pause and
beware.
103
When he realizes how much is given by the higher
power through him, and how little is really done by himself, the healer or
teacher may well become careless of his fame, efface his own personality, and
keep it humbly in the background. Whoever else achieves the same good results
will arouse his generous joy, not his egoistic jealousy.
104
Francis Schlatter replied to a query as to the
secret of his successful healings: "I am nothing, but the Father is everything.
Have faith in the Father and all will be well. The Father can grow a pair of
lungs just as easily as He can cure a cold."
105
The secret of exercising spiritual power is to
turn towards the other and higher being which is the soul. The price of
exercising it is self-abandonment. This is as true of spiritual healing as it is
of spiritual initiation.
106
An honest healer can say only that his healing
depends on two conditions being fulfilled: the faith of the patient and the
permission of the higher powers.
107
A monk who attained great renown and reputation
in Rumania for his selfless character, inspired preaching, and miraculous
healing said that he asked all patients to make a confession privately to him of
their wrong attitudes and wrong-doing before the work of healing could begin, as
this opened the door.
108
This healing quality present in his highly
developed being passes into others, although only into those who can absorb it
through devotion or receive it through faith.
109
It is risky for him to forget what he primarily
still is - a layman, not a medical man. He ought not attempt to occupy a
position which does not belong to him.
110
Whoever wishes to experiment in healing himself
or others need not be deterred by these provisos from trying to do so. He does
not need to be an adept in yoga or a sage in philosophy to receive the power of
grace. Technically, even a slight realization of the principle involved may
suffice to bring success. For the result is not in his hands but God's. And
partly because of this but partly because many physical ailments can be traced
to their psychological equivalents in defective character, deep repentance is an
additional factor of definite importance in such self-treatment.
111
No man in himself, his ordinary self, is a real
spiritual healer in the way another man could be a medical, herbal, magnetic,
homeopathic, or psychotherapeutic healer. Spiritual healing belongs only in the
providence of the Overself.
112
The truth that it is not the ego which is
instrumental in the higher forms of healing is made evident to every practising
healer throughout his career. When Saint Augustine was dying, a sick man came to
him and begged to be cured. Augustine replied that if he possessed any powers he
would have used them upon himself. However, the visitor said he had been told in
a dream to ask Augustine to cure him by the laying on of hands. The saint
yielded and followed the instruction. The man was healed.
113
Unless a genuinely scientific and metaphysical
basis is found, it will be discovered, as one famous healing cult has already
discovered, that although cures are effected which cannot be doubted, many of
these cures are not permanent. The principle which is the key to such healing -
if it is to be real healing and not a temporary suppression of symptoms - and
which overrides all others, was pointed out in an earlier book (The Inner
Reality, also published as Discover Yourself). It is the surrender of
the conscious will, the personal will, to a higher power. It is the giving up of
ego by offering of your body-problem to the power behind all bodies. The cure is
not effected and cannot be effected by the patient himself or by any
professional healer who may be employed. It is done only by the Overself itself,
which means that it is essentially a bestowal of grace. Now grace is an active
force, not a mere intellectual thought or emotional attitude. It is the cosmic
willp ower, or what Indians call kundalini. This bestowal in turn requires that
not merely the body alone be touched, but also the mind. Hence a cure which is
genuine and permanent will always involve to some extent a mental re-adjustment,
a correction of outlook, even an ethical conversion.
114
Those who do not understand the Overself's
workings expect it always to manifest - if it manifests at all - in all its
naked purity. If they desire healing, they think that the Overself's help can
show itself only in a direct spiritual healing, for instance. The truth is that
they may get the cure from a purely physical medium, like a fast, a diet, or a
drug; yet that which roused them to seek this particular medium or gave it its
successful result was the Overself.(P)
115
Jesus' primary intention was to heal the inner
man, to promote a directional change in his thought and feeling, to divert him
from a sinful to a righteous attitude towards life, and to convert him from
spiritual indifference to spiritual enthusiasm. The healing of the body was but
a by-product and took place only after these inner processes had been
successfully carried out. When the higher elements in a man's character got the
better of his lower ones, the victory was followed by, and symbolized in, a
return of health to the sick body. It was a visible sign of the reality of the
invisible healing. Jesus could not have cured the physical sicknesses if the
sufferers had not previously felt his greatness, repented of their former way of
life, asked forgiveness, and resolved to become righteous. The Gospels record
the cases of those who were able to do this; they do not record the cases of the
far larger number who could not and whose bodily maladies therefore remained
uncured. Most readers erron eously believe that Jesus could heal any and every
person. Nobody can do that because nobody can force faith, conversion,
penitence, moral evolution, and spiritual aspiration into a stubborn man's
heart. There is a further factor in Jesus' healings. They were often accompanied
by the proclamation that the patient's sins were forgiven him. This means first,
that the aforesaid prerequisite conditions had been established and second, that
the man's Overself had intimated its gracious cancellation of the particular bad
destiny which had expressed itself in the sickness. The forgiveness came through
Jesus as a medium; it did not originate in him. Those who believe that Jesus
personally could unburden all men's evil fate, err. He could do it only in those
cases where a man's own higher self willed it. Jesus then became a medium for
its grace.(P)
116
The healing does not come from the healer
himself; it comes through him. What he does is to prepare conditions
rendering it possible for this to happen. But this is no guarantee that the
Overself will necessarily make use of them every time.
117
We eagerly seek to be relieved of sickness or
trouble, but where relief is followed by a feeling of relationship to the
Overself, we have gained something far more valuable than we originally sought.
118
When every form of available or affordable
physical treatment - the unorthodox as well as the orthodox - has been exhausted
without success, it is time to try spiritual healing. For the desperate it is
the last hope.
119
The actual cure is so swift in time and so
untechnical in method that he may be seized with the most exhilarating
astonishment.
120
Genuine cures are quite possible and valid. The
person responsible for it may have been used by the higher self of the sufferer
as an actual instrument of spiritual healing.
121
So powerful is the force of suggestions
implanted from outside that a man may be exercising the gift of healing direct
from his own Soul yet he will believe, and believe firmly, that he is exercising
and deriving it from the spirit of a dead man.
122
Spiritual healing cannot be successfully
practised by anybody who has merely picked up its jargon and intellectually
familiarized himself with its ideology. It can be successfully practised only by
one who has entered into the consciousness of, and surrendered his ego to, the
divine spirit within himself.
123
If, when the processes of the quest are not
definitely directed towards the eradication of disease, they are still
successful in contributing to such eradication, how much more successful can
they be when they are quite definitely directed towards it!
124
This presence whose contact is directly felt has
healing values emotionally. It frees him from frustrations and alienations.
125
"I am not a healer. Jesus is the healer. I am
only the little office girl who opens the door and says, 'Come in.' " - Aimee
McPherson, in explanation of her hundreds of miraculous cures
126
The spirit can operate to ameliorate bodily ills
directly and internally or indirectly through an external agent or medium. The
latter does not replace but only co-operates with or is used by the spirit.
127
As this Spirit-Energy passes through the man, he
feels dynamized, empowered in some direction, inwardly or physically or both
together.
128
He understands well enough that this power is
not his own, that it must be ascribed to the Overself, and that practising
humility while using it is his best protection against the sin of pride.
129
That which is heavenly is also healing.
130
The divine self cannot be aristocratically
ordered by its lowly offspring to do this or that, although it may be humbly
implored to do so. The ego cannot impose its will.
131
The attunement of man's mind to the Universal
Mind, of his heart to the fundamental love behind things, is capable of
producing various effects. One of them may be the healing of bodily ills.(P)
132
The basis of higher healing work is the
realization of man as Mind. But the latter is a dimensionless
unindividuated unconditioned entity. It is not my individual mind. The
field of Mind is a common one whereas the field of consciousness is divided up
into individual and separate holdings. This is a difference with vast
implications, for whoever can cross from the second field to the first, crosses
at the same time from an absurdly limited world into a supremely vital one.
Consequently, genuine and permanent healing is carried on without one's
conscious association and can be effected by dropping the ego-mind and with it
all egoistic desires. Hence the first effort should be to ignore the disease and
gain the realization. Only after the latter has been won should the
thoughts be allowed to descend again to the disease, with the serene trust that
the bodily condition may safely be left in the hands of the World-Mind for final
disposal as It decides. There should not be t he slightest attempt to
dictate a cure to the higher power nor the slightest attempt to introduce
personal will into the treatment. Such attempts will only defeat their purpose.
The issues will partly be decided on the balance of the karmic and evolutionary
factors concerned in the individual case. And yet there are cults which do not
find it at all incongruous to suggest to the Infinite Mind what should thus be
showered upon one, or to dictate to karma what exactly it should do! Once
surrender is truly made, the desires of the self go with it and peace reigns in
the inner life whether illness still reigns in the external life or not. Thus
there is a false easy yielding of the will which deceives no higher power than
the personal self, and there is an honest yielding which may really invoke the
divine grace.(P)
133
It is a mistake, however, to turn the higher
self into a mere convenience to be used chiefly for obtaining healing or getting
guidance, for healing the sicknesses of the physical body, or guiding the
activities of the physical ego. It should be sought for its own sake, and these
other things should be sought only occasionally or incidentally, as and when
needed. They should not be made habitual. In his periodic meditations, for
instance, the aspirant should seek the divine source of his being because it is
right, necessary, and good for him to do so and he should forget every other
desire. Only after he has done that and found the source, and only on his
backward journey to the day's activities, may he remember these lesser desires
and utilize the serenity and power thus gained for attending to them.
134
Your assertion that Jesus primarily wished to
free men of disease, or to teach them how to become so, is untenable. Whoever
has entered into the consciousness of his divine soul - which Jesus had in such
fullness - has his whole scale of values turned over. It is then that he sees
that the physical is ephemeral by nature, whereas the reality whence it is
derived is eternal by nature; that what happens inside a man's heart and head is
fundamentally more important than what happens inside his body; and that the
divine consciousness may and can be enjoyed even though the fleshly tenement is
sick.
135
The sufferer should use whatever physical
medical means are available - both orthodox and unorthodox ones. At the same
time he should practise daily prayer. But he should not directly ask for the
physical healing for its own sake. He should ask first for spiritual qualities
and then only for the physical healing with the expressed intention of utilizing
his opportunity of bodily incarnation to improve himself spiritually.
136
Healing is but a mere incident in the work of a
sage. Such a one will always keep as his foremost purpose the opening of the
spiritual heart of man.(P)
137
A modern mystic, the late Sister Marie of the
Order of Poor Clares of Jerusalem, was told from within, "Because I love you I
have given you bad health since the beginning of your life, so that you would
feel how dependent you are on Me."
138
The Overself knows what you are, what you seek,
and what you need.
139
"Ask not for healing, or longevity, or
prosperity; ask only to be free!" exclaimed Vivekananda.
140
The Overself does have the power to heal the
diseases of the body by its Grace, but whether that Grace will be thus exercised
or not is unpredictable. It will do what is best for the individual in the
ultimate sense, not what the ego desires. For the Divine Wisdom is back of
everything every time.
141
Spiritual healing does not necessarily follow
automatically upon the giving of complete faith. Nor does it necessarily follow
upon the voluntary cleansing of the emotional nature. There are other factors
involved in it. The place of suffering and sickness in the World-Idea is one of
them. For those aspirants who will be satisfied with nothing short of achieving
the Highest, the need of transcending the ego takes precedence over everything
else, even over the body's healing.
142
It is impossible either to guarantee or to
predict what would happen in any individual case. The difficulty is that if one
tries to get at the Truth simply as a means to achieve the healing, the Truth
eludes him. One has therefore to seek Truth and leave his fate to it, which will
always work out for the best, materially or otherwise.
143
Continued ill health is a great trial. The very
fact that an individual has been forced to endure a life of endless suffering
will surely lead him to realize that worldly life yields little - if any - real
satisfaction or happiness, and that it is necessary to seek it in something
Higher, in the Quest of the true Spiritual Life, or in God. Somewhere, sometime,
this need of his will call forth an answer.
144
People are attracted towards these cults either
because they are in desperate need of physical healing or because they are in
need of spiritual healing, or because they see in these doctrines an opportunity
to satisfy both spiritual aspiration and material needs by a single faith and
effort. They are trying to make the best of both worlds. To be able to attain
the Kingdom of Heaven and to gain prosperity or cure disease along with it is
certainly a most attractive benefit. But unfortunately it is also a little too
good to be true. We would all like to have it, but can we have it? What did
Jesus himself say about this point? He said, "Seek ye first the Kingdom of
Heaven and all these things shall be added unto you." The word of greatest
importance in this sentence is the word "first." If you wish to employ the help
of a higher power and feeling, then you must give your first thought, your first
devotion, your first reverence, your first love to that higher power and not to
any lesser thing, s uch as material gain or even physical cure, as the price of
your worship.
145
New Thought and Christian Science should correct
their errors, for some of the things which they label as "negative" may not be
so at all. It is divine love which sanctions losses, sicknesses, poverty, and
adversities. They are not to be regarded as enemies to be shunned but rather as
tutors to be heeded. Through such blows the ego may be crushed and thus allow
truer thoughts to fill the emptied space. Even pleasure and prosperity may deal
a man worse blows than the so-called negatives can deal him if their end effect
is to close the mind's door to light.
146
All inner healing depends ultimately upon the
operations of grace for its effectiveness. For grace is guided by wisdom and it
is not always wise for a man to be healed quickly or even at all. In the case of
certain characters, good health may be but a gate to dubious activities leading
to worse ills that would befall them.
147
There are times when the Overself's grace may
manifest even in the ugly form of illness! If its entry into the everyday
consciousness is blocked or twisted by materialistic scepticism, animalistic
obsessions, inherited complexes, or excessive extroversion, it may forcibly make
its way through them. The body may then be stricken down with sickness until
such time as the blockage or distortion is removed.
148
Ramana Maharshi once told us the story of a man
whom he had seen when he himself was a young man. This man was crippled, could
not use his legs, and had to crawl. An old man suddenly appeared before him and
commanded,"Get up and walk!" The cripple was so excited that he automatically
rose up and found himself able to walk properly. When he looked round to see
this strange benefactor, the man had vanished. The healing was permanent. The
point here is first, not whether the vision was subjective or objective, but
that the healer did not even have a familiar identity, was not recognized as a
Christian saint or Hindu god, and second, that the sufferer was stimulated into
having enough faith to obey the command to believe he was healed already; it was
not a matter of time.
149
A woman came for an interview who had exhausted
all patience with her husband and announced that she was about to leave him. He
was an alcoholic of the worst kind. I asked her to be patient with him, not to
leave him, but to give him a further chance. Then I went into the silence for
her. An hour or two after her return home, her husband made his first and last
attempt at suicide. It failed and he was stopped before he could do any serious
harm to his body. Then he fell into a deep sleep for a very long time. He awoke
feeling better in every way but still despondent. A few weeks later the desire
to drink left him completely and never returned. He was cured. "A miracle has
happened," was his wife's comment in a letter.
150
Dorothy Kerin was almost instantaneously
restored to health and freed from diabetes and tuberculosis. Moreover, her
wasted flesh filled out and a gastric ulcer vanished within an hour. At the same
time she saw a vision of Jesus, Mary, and the angels.
151
It is perfectly true that the divinity within
man will shelter, feed, and clothe him materially, as it will also do
spiritually, provided he looks for it, submits himself to its guidance, and
obeys its promptings. But it is also true that the selfsame divinity may strip
prosperity and possessions from a man's shoulders and lead him into the cold
waters of destitution, and this because it has begun to make its presence felt
in his life. It may do this or it may not, depending on individual circumstances
and the man's degree of attachment to material possessions, but whatever it does
will be wise and needful.
152
The healing power issues from an infinite
source. There is no kind of disease which it may not cure; but it can do so only
within the conditions imposed by the nature of the human body itself.
153
Dismayed by the failure of my physicians' last
resort, I was sitting up in bed reading a passage from an old journal of John
Wesley about spiritual healing. It quoted a friend as saying: "I could not move
from place to place, but on crutches. In this state I continued about six years.
At Bath I sent for a physician but before he came, as I sat reading the Bible, I
thought, 'Asa sought to the physicians, and not to God; but God can do more for
me than any physician'; soon after rising up, I found I could stand. From that
time I have been perfectly well."
As soon as I finished this passage I thought it should be applied to my own case, and laid the book aside. A great mental stillness and inner indrawing came over me at the same time. I saw that all the methods hitherto used to eliminate the disease were futile precisely because they were the ego's own methods, whether physical, magical, mental, or mechanical. I had exhausted them all. So the ego had to confess its total failure and cast itself on the mercy of the higher power in humiliation and prayer. I realized that instead of thinking that I or my physicians were competent to cure the disease, the correct way was to disbelieve that and to look to the Overself alone for healing. I saw that the stillness was its grace, that this quietness was its power. It could best cure me, if only I would relax and let it enter. So I surrendered to it and within a few weeks was healed.