One of the Commandments warns men not to take the name of God in vain. The
simple and obvious and usually accepted meaning of this is not to utter the word
"God" without seriousness and reverence. But the truer meaning is not to talk of
religion - and especially of attending places of religious worship - while
avoiding the effort involved in seeking a truly religious experience.
ORIGIN, PURPOSE OF RELIGIONS
Introductory
1
Religion should provide a passage along the journey
to reality and not a prison for the aspiring soul.
2
Although religion is only the beginning of the quest
- the first form which a recognition of the existence of a higher power takes -
it would be an error to believe that it is only for the simpler types of person,
that worship of this power, that the attitude of reverential devotion which it
engenders, is not for more developed and also more educated minds. It is for
all.
3
It would be a mistake to believe that because his
search will lead him beyond religion, therefore religion is to be thrown aside.
It would be more than a mistake: it would imperil his whole quest.
4
Men seek for God because they cannot help
themselves. They endure tribulations and make sacrifices in this search because
they love God. And the source of this driving urge lies in the tremendous
contradiction between what they pathetically are and what they intuitively feel
they ought to be.
5
The strength of religion does not come from the
strength of popular ignorance or popular superstition. It comes from the innate
need of every human creature to worship its source. The religious instinct
cannot be killed.
6
Whether in the mosques of Islam or the tabernacles
of Israel, the instinct which makes man acknowledge that there is some
Power behind it all is an authentic instinct.
7
The external observances and visible signs of a
formal religion are its least valuable features. More important is the living
impulse which gave it birth. It must be sought in the heart's most delicate
intuitions and the mind's deepest place, not in the symbolic theatrical shows.
8
The quality of religious veneration is needed by
all, from the child in school to the philosopher in the world.
9
Just as the human embryo is nourished and kept alive
in complete dependence upon the mother inside whose body it is carried, its
consciousness being in dreamless slumber like a hibernating animal, so the human
adult is in reality just as dependent for his own existence on the Overself. His
spiritual yearnings are a kind of nostalgia for the direct, free,
unimpeded-by-the-ego consciousness of that dependence, which is blessfully
similar to the embryo's. The womb is a great symbol in several ways.
10
A quester necessarily becomes a pilgrim seeking
his destination in a Holy City. He may be a metaphysician or mystic, a profound
thinker or connoisseur of Orientalisms, but he may not leave out the simple
humble reverences of religious feeling.(P)
11
A human being without the feeling of reverence for
the higher power is an uncompleted being.
12
Religiosity as a quality is to be practised rather
than religion as a creed, dogma, or sect.
13
It is essential that the religious man should
believe in the existence of this power beyond himself, that he should seek to
establish some kind of communion with it, and that he should practise virtue and
abstain from injuring others.
14
The longing for a worthier kind of life, the
aspiration for some sort of linkage or communion with Divine Power, is a sign of
the transition from a purely animal consciousness to the animal-human phase of
today. To be destitute of these urges quite entirely is uncommon. In the
rotation of body-mind cycles - Shakespeare's "seven ages of man" - they appear
or vanish briefly or durably in most persons. But because suppressions exist,
substitutes often replace them.
15
Too many millions stop with their religion as a
cult of worship, and do not go on to extend it into being a way of life also.
16
One day the modern world will wake up to the fact
that the four fundamental tenets which the inspired religious prophets taught
the old world are as literally true as that two times two is four. That there is
an indefinable Power - God - which was never born and will never die. That
evil-doing brings a punitive result. That man is called to practise regularly
the moral duty of self-control and the spiritual duty of prayer or meditation.
The prophets may have erred in some of their other teachings; they may have
introduced personal opinion or inherited suggestion or imagined heavens: but
they generally agreed on these four things. Why? Because these truths have
always been present, outside human opinion, suggestion, or imagination, inherent
in Life itself.
17
One who gives the first dynamic impulse to a
spiritualizing movement inevitably creates a religion if the emotions of the
masses are touched, a metaphysic if the intellect of the elite is touched, a
mysticism if the intuition of individuals is touched.
18
We are like flowers torn from our natural soil and
suffering the misery of separation. Our fervid mystical yearnings represent the
recognition of our need to reunite with our Source.
19
If he were not already rooted in spiritual
being - yes, here and now! - he would not be able to feel the longing to find
that being.
20
All things and all creatures are within the
World-Mind, draw their current of life and intelligence from this source. This
is why, in the end, they come to feel nostalgic for it; this is why
religions arise and mystics seek.
21
It is this absence of Spiritual consciousness from
man which, when his experience of taking on body after body is sufficiently
ripe, drives him to seek its presence.
22
Until the heart is deeply touched, religion
remains a mere external form with little value to the individual and less to
society.
23
Religion's value arises from its function of
morally regulating the common people, teaching them elementary spiritual truths,
and repeatedly reminding them of the higher purpose of their life on earth.
24
The first purpose of religion is an individual
one. It is to inculcate belief in a higher power and an immaterial reality -
God. The second purpose is a social one. It is to teach a code of morals to
govern human relations.
25
We must face facts as they are, not as they are
imagined to be, and the fact remains that the only kind of religion with which
millions of its myriad adherents are acquainted is the kind which takes puerile
rituals for communions with the Absolute, and degenerate priests for true
vessels of It.
26
To know why he is here and what he has to do is
the destiny of every man. Religion should keep pace with his mental growth and
feed him this knowledge as his capacity for blind faith decreases. Where it does
not do so, he either remains religious in name only and not in reality or turns
away altogether from it to destructive atheistic and totalitarian movements.
27
The Light of the Overself impinging on the
intellect from behind, or from a realized man, impels it to move upward. This
creates a response that appears as a restless mental state, an obscure longing
to know what is beyond itself, a blind aspiration. It does not know the real
origin of this impulse.
28
In its original purity, before men got hold of it
and turned it into organizations and institutions, a religion was a faith beyond
such things, in spirit born of felt experience, or an experience born of faith.
29
The religious feeling itself is irradicable but it
may get covered up by materialistic feelings or thickly overgrown by animalistic
ones.
30
The spiritual instinct may appear to be totally
dormant in a man but it is never killed. In another birth, and after other
experiences, it will return.
31
What is true in the old religions that have
vanished and in the existing ones that have survived can never become outdated,
outworn. Even when the religion itself passes on, the truth in it stays among
us, reincarnated into a new form, perhaps.
32
The need for religion is a need that most men have
for holding on to something higher than themselves.
33
Why did the aspiration toward a higher kind of
life appear in human beings? Why does the instinct to worship get felt? Why do
men seek the truth about their inner being? Because their Source draws them
secretly and presses them outwardly.
34
It is an urge which is felt more often than it is
understood.
35
The urge to know our deeper being and the
aspiration towards the Perfect lead to one and the same result, for God -
perfect being - is within ourselves.
36
Religious fervour is needed but it ought not to
lapse into religious fanaticism.
37
True religion would not suffer if a little
intelligence were mixed with it.
38
Despite the imperfections and impostures which
religions have sometimes practised, despite the superstitions which have been
mingled sometimes with their official teachings, there still remains a large
residue of basic truth.
39
Multitudes believe they can live without religion,
which is possible, and without God, which is not. The very mind which makes this
assertion and thinks it has turned its back on such a superstition as God is
itself a projection from God.
40
All such turning to religion and mysticism is
really due to a sense of nostalgia, a yearning for our true Home.
41
A religious revelation is also a carrier of good
news, the gospel that there is a higher power, that we are all in
relation with it, and that because of this relationship we can have access to
truth, goodness, beauty, reality, and peace.
42
The reference of religion is to the unknown. Its
means of reference is the incomprehensible.
43
We are moving towards a more reasonable
presentation of religion and mysticism, not towards the extinction of both. Yet
at times the latter possibility has seemed very real. There has been a passage
in several lands from decaying religion to dynamic atheism. It is a change that
is inevitable. Out of its present evil there will eventually come forth future
good. If the guardians of religion have the foresight and courage to handle this
transition by self-reform and self-purification they might avoid its horrors and
evils. Alas! history does not support such a likelihood.
44
A groping for his godly source is instinctive in
man, although it may take camouflaged forms such as absurd superstition or
truth-seeking rationalism.
45
Religion includes all religions. It is a feeling
rather than a form of ecclesiasticism.
46
We may accept the fact that great contributions to
human welfare have been made by traditional religion while denying its claim to
represent the highest truth.
47
The race has not evolved out of true religious
ideas because it has not even practised them yet.
48
Those who try to make a religion out of ethics
alone miss the point. They are well-intentioned but are mixing up two things
which belong to different levels.
49
Those foolish men who would remove all
ecclesiasticism and priesthood, all rite and dogma, do not understand in what
danger they put mankind. For along with the abuses and impostures, the untruths
and intolerances which have gathered around these things, there have also been
precious moral guidance and precepts, valuable spiritual testimonies and
reminders, benevolent philanthropies of a personal and corporate kind. This is
the legacy handed down by every religion, every Church. Ought this too to be
attacked and destroyed? Is it not better to purify the religion, to reform the
Church, than totally to throw it to the dogs?
50
We can get a just view of religion only by placing
its defects in parallel with its merits. To get at the truth about religion, and
by "religion" is meant here not any particular one but the entire cluster of
authentic sacred revelations throughout the world, it is quite insufficient to
consider it only in decay and corruption. We must also consider its early purity
and original concepts. It is quite unfair to examine only the superstitions that
degrade it. We must also examine the truths that inspire it. A balanced view
would recognize that underneath all its evils which atheists point out, religion
holds much that is good and beneficent.
51
What is it that leads humans to seek satisfaction
in religion or in mysticism? The materialists may tell us that biological or
personal frustration drives many spinster women to do so, that decaying
intellect drives many ageing men to do so, that the natural need of consolation
drives many widows and widowers to do so. Marxists call the idea of God "the
opium of the masses." That there is some basis of truth in all these criticisms
must be admitted, but that there is an immeasurably broader basis of truth in
the time-old declaration that man is really related to God and must fulfil the
responsibilities of such a relation must be more emphatically affirmed.
52
After we have made our worst criticism of religion
we have still to recognize the fact that a world left without any religion at
all is a world left in grave peril. For the vacuum left by the disappearance of
an outworn religion must be filled with something else. If it should be
atheistic immorality, then the belief that evil-doing, selfish aggression, and
injury to others are justifiable and unpunished will be rampant.
53
The shameful facts in the history of religious
organizations should not be allowed to obscure the basic need of religion
itself, nor to detract from the greatness of religious ideals.
54
It is only when religion divides people into
hostile hating groups - those who belong to a particular denomination and those
who do not - or when it keeps them from becoming acquainted with mystical and
philosophic truths, that it becomes a failure, in the first case, and a traitor
to itself, in the second one.
55
The history of religion is too often a history of
bigotry and fanaticism. But it also shines with the record of divinely inspired,
reverence-deserving men and women.
56
Without falling into harsh stricture or bitter
criticism, without minimizing the unquestioned services of religion to humanity,
it is still needful to be guarded against its disservices.
57
He may consider someone else's religious belief to
be idiotic, but this does not mean that he should therefore be disrespectful to
it. Men come to God eventually through curious ways and through various ways.
Their starting points may be completely different, but their lines of movement
will necessarily converge upon the same point.
58
For the karma yogi, all his activity takes on
something of the nature of a ritual. Even where religions have become empty,
hollow, and hypocritical, we need not be too eager to welcome their destruction.
For even then they preserve a teaching, a message, a memory, and a tradition of
a holier and better time in that religion's history.
59
The right answer to these questions can never be
got so long as the origin, nature, place, and purpose of religion remain
misunderstood by its leaders no less than by its adherents. It is this
misunderstanding which accounts for its contemporary failures and historic
deficiencies. The proponents of religion exaggerate its consolations and
services, while the opponents exaggerate its persecutions and crimes. In the
upper ground above both, we may hope to discover a truer view, for every
institution can be properly appraised only by justly noting both its
merits and demerits. We may meditate on these questions and unfold a profounder
analysis not only if we collect and collate the primitive cultures in a spirit
of critical pitying superiority, but also if we listen in tentative,
intellectual sympathy to what these cultures have to tell us about themselves.
Then only may we learn that modern critics who concentrate only on the fabular
side of religion are ill-balanced judges: its significance will be found to be
much larger than that.
60
It is ironical indeed that although so much of
religion is mere superstitious nonsense, the portion that remains is
tremendously worthwhile to humanity.
61
It is needful to weigh the services of religion
against its disservices. Nor will it be useful to over-emphasize what it once
was historically, whether good or evil. We must consider what it is now, in our
own time.
62
The absence of such virtues as kindliness,
justice, and sincerity in human relations is testimony to the absence of true
religion.
63
The ecclesiastical structure and sacerdotal
services of a church are useful to those who believe in them. Those who lack
this faith should be tolerant, and not seek to destroy things which still help
others. They have their place. The error starts when they are given the
only place, or when the emphasis is so heavy upon the outer forms
that the greater need of correcting and shaping the character is missed.
64
Perhaps Emerson was premature when he wrote, "The
day of formal religion is past."
65
While the force of inward attraction and the
working of evolution through outward experience are the best guarantees of the
triumph of ideals, man is not left to these vast impersonal processes alone,
without visible help and visible guidance. Prophets, teachers, sages, and saints
appear at his side from time to time, like beacons in the darkness.
66
It was not fear of human ghosts which gave birth
to early religions, as so many anthropologists believe, but faith in the Holy
Ghost. It was not negative emotion that first gave moral guidance and spiritual
hope and cosmic meaning to our race, but positive revelation.
67
Buried underneath the contemporary form of every
religion there exists the original and authentic gospel, that which was
transmitted by its Seer to his living followers, but which is too subtle or too
spiritual for his present-day ones. The truths of religion and the intuitions of
mysticism have nothing at all to fear from reason, but the superstitions of
religion and the simulations of mysticism may well shrink from the cold contact.
68
The religious teachers of mankind are forced to
make concessions to the mental aridity and the emotional coarseness of their
followers. They have secrets which they are unable to share with those who lack
the power to comprehend such secrets. They have touched levels of consciousness
unknown to, and unknowable by, the earthly, the gross, and the complacently
self-centered.
69
If a man asks himself the question, "How did I
first come to think of the soul?" he will probably have to answer, "Its
existence was suggested to me by others." From where did they in their turn get
the idea? At some point in the line it must have originally come from a prophet,
seer, or mystic.
70
Religion has taken sublime forms but it has also
taken grotesque ones. The first happens when men let themselves be led aright by
inspired far-seeing prophets; the other happens when they let themselves be
misled by blind ones.
71
It is the great individual, and not the great
institutions which come after him, who most advances mankind's spiritual
progress.
72
Countless men - both laymen and clergymen - have
sought to deceive God at some time by their hypocrisy, but God has never yet
deceived a single man. The promises given through every inspired prophet have
always been fulfilled. If any think otherwise, it is because the prophet's own
mind transmitted the message faultily, or because those who sought fulfilment
failed themselves to live and think according to that pattern of a higher life
which was a prerequisite condition to it.
73
Mystical experience will not be nullified and
philosophical truth will not be falsified even if it could be conclusively
proved that men like Jesus and Krishna were mythological constructions of the
human mind and never had any historical existence. Nevertheless, we insist that
they did once live in a fleshly garb, whatever fancies and fairy tales may have
been embroidered around their stories by unphilosophical devotees or priestly
cunning in later times. Scientific criticism may easily dispose of these fancies
and tales, but it cannot so easily dispose of the fact that only a Jesus-like
mind or a Krishna-like character could have invented their existence and forged
their teachings - which amounts to much the same as the actual existence of
Jesus or Krishna themselves. Their wisdom comes from a source that transcends
the common reach.
74
If Jesus and Gautama never existed, some other men
with the same deep insights must have existed to have voiced such thoughts and
conveyed such inspirations. If the traditions concerning them are scanty,
uncertain, and mixed with fable, this need not diminish the belief in their
actual existence on the part of any just-minded person. And whatever he may
think of the Churches which claim to represent them, of their contradictory
teachings and all-too-human history, he ought to give his unhesitating
admiration and reverence to this pair of Lights, who themselves gave
three-quarters of the human race such sorely needed ideals.
75
The Incarnation-myth, which rests on the
possibility of a being who is half-God and half-man, covers a partial truth. The
real nature of such a being differs from the ordinary in this, that although
still human, he has incarnated on this earth from a higher sphere or a more
advanced planet. And he has made this great sacrifice - nearly as great indeed
as a human entity's voluntary and altruistic incarnation among a group of
gorillas would be - to guide, uplift, and spiritualize his less-grown fellows at
a grave crisis of their existence.
76
The philosophical teaching is that the return of
every prophet is an inward event and not a physical one. The common people, with
their more materialist and less subtle apprehension, expect to see his body
again. The initiates expect only to find his mental presence in themselves.(P)
77
If Jesus could have met Buddha, the differences in
their teaching would not have prevented their delighted recognition of one
another for what each was.
78
Jesus called men to life more abundant, Buddha
called them to cessation of desire, Krishna to a training of the thoughts and
feelings, Confucius to proper courteous and moral behaviour, while Lao Tzu
gently reminded them of their higher allegiance.
79
It is quite proper to give homage and show esteem
to a great soul. But it is quite another thing to deify him, to worship him, to
forget utterly that he is still a human being, with human fallibility and
imperfection.
80
The prophets of God are the servants of God. To
deify them is to destroy this truth about their relationship. Such a false
attitude must lead to false situations, priestly innovations, sectarianism and
intolerance.
81
A prophet is primarily one who brings a
revelation to mankind, who gives out what has been given to him from on
high, not reasoned out by him from available facts.
82
By measuring the degree of enlightenment attained
by a prophet we are able to measure the extent of reliance to be placed upon his
revelation.
83
Whatever there is of abiding truth in these
revelations comes from the prophet's Overself, the rest from the man's own
opinion.
84
If the inspiration is received from a superhuman
source, its expression goes out as a human activity. This puts all statements
about God within the limitations and under the colouring of human beings: that
is to say, all religions are imperfect, may at some points be at fault, or even
in error. The truly educated man can only accept them as such, if he is to
continue as a religious person also. Otherwise he must keep to himself and
silently adore the godlike in his own heart.
85
There is room for both - a divine revelation from
a personal God and a teaching from an inspired man.
86
Most professors cannot light the mystical fire,
but a prophet may. For where they are served only by intellect, he is served by
intuition.
87
Only after severe investigation or after severe
calamity do men awaken to the dismal fact that their spiritual guides are
unreliable, their religious beliefs invalid, their clichés of prayer naïve and
useless. Whichever way leads them to be confronted by these unpleasant
realities, they cannot go on living in doubt and discouragement for the rest of
their years. So they either cast the subject of religion out of their minds
altogether or, in the efflux of time, search for a more reliable guide, a better
set of beliefs, and a more effective form of worship. But because the ignorant
masses are incapable of finding this for themselves, someone must arise as a
prophet to guide, teach and help them. He may be quite minor and quite local but
if he shows them the next step ahead, he is to that extent a messenger of God.
88
Because in the past it was invariably men who
appeared as prophets or founded religions while women became their followers,
since the nineteenth century we have witnessed the beginnings of a reversal of
this situation. That became evident when a number of minor sects arose in
England, all started by women, and when Mrs. Eddy, in America, founded Christian
Science, a religion to which many men have attached themselves.
89
Christ and Krishna were actualities in their
lifetimes and became felt Presences after their deaths. But with time they were
only symbols to remember for most people. Today they can still be found by
penetrating heart and mind deeply enough. Its reality is then drawn from their
own Overself.
90
When the Koran was imparted to Muhammed and
the Upanishads to the Rishees of those early times, something more than a
momentary glimpse was experienced by the recipients. They were destined to play
a historic role in the spiritual education of sections of mankind.
91
All religions are the outgrowth of various men's
different statements about their glimpse, discovery, realization, or
messenger-ship.
92
Buddha swore an oath under the sacred banyan tree,
where he came to know himself, that he would not pass from our sphere of
evolution until he had been reborn again and again, to help laggard humanity
reach what he himself had reached. So Jesus keeps ever in inner contact with
those who need him - and that means millions. He is not dead, cannot die. And
the love which brought him here from afar keeps him here.
93
There are two kinds of religious founders - the
Prophets and the Messengers. Jesus was a Prophet but Muhammed was a Messenger.
94
He who descends into the crowd to serve some
amongst it, and to help many more to come in the generations after it, may know
in advance that the crowd will persecute or kill him and yet not falter from
making his appearance. If he thought only of his body and not of his purpose, or
even more of the one than the other, he would surely desist from such a
dangerous mission.
95
If he strives to make the public movement his own
in the sense that a man strives to make his own career, he is working for the
ego rather than mankind, he is serving professional ambition rather than
spiritual aspiration.
96
Jesus and Gautama did not speak to mankind from
different levels of being. They spoke from different levels of intellect. Their
realization of the truth was one and the same. For there is only one truth. But
they could only communicate it to others according to the intellectual
equipment, degree, and background of its receivers.
97
Men and women were being enlightened before
Gautama arose and after Jesus went. And they are being enlightened today as they
will still be in ages yet unborn. Inspired teachers may come and go but the Soul
in every man is eternal.
98
The mesmerized members of long-established
Churches do not know, cannot comprehend, and will not be persuaded that a man
can write revelation even in our own times, that the history of human
inspiration has not come to an end. It is true to say that men who could report
to us some news of celestial import were always rare and that they are just as
rare, even rarer, today. But it is not true to assert that they became long ago
extinct. If that were so, if life today, this very moment, did not still hold
its possibility of delivering its divine message to some listening mind, then it
would be worthless and meaningless. God would be absent from this world, the
soul eviscerated from man's Being.
99
That one man could pay by his own suffering for
the wrong-doing of all men is not only illogical and unfair but also impossible.
It would be a claim that guilt is transferable. Such a transfer is morally wrong
and karmically impossible. This is the answer to those in the West who put
forward the tenet of the vicarious suffering of Jesus as the price of God's
forgiveness of man, as well as to those in India who assert that substitutionary
suffering of Ramana Maharshi and Ramakrishna is the result of lifting the burden
of karma off their disciples' shoulders.
100
When established religions no longer reflect the
pure light which their prophet originally received and radiated to his
followers, and reflect only its discolourations by men's own mental creations,
then the operation of the cyclic law of evolution begins to bring new prophets
into incarnation. They will either purify the old corrupted religions or else
establish new ones.
101
There is a wide difference in the styles of two
men who meant so much to aspirants. Consider the style of Jesus' sayings and
contrast it with Gautama's. The first moves directly to the idea in a pithy, if
poetic, announcement, and then leaves it almost immediately. The second seeks to
persuade, circles round and round it, and leaves only after its meaning is
abundantly clear, only after its logic is sufficiently acceptable. That each man
puts a value upon style cannot be gainsaid.
102
Had any sage who later became known as the
begetter of a great religion been born in another land at another time, we may
be sure that his doctrine would have been different, that both the extent and
content of his teaching would have been adjusted to the altered circumstances.
For he would not have revealed too much, and thus sailed over people's heads,
nor spoken metaphysically where they could comprehend only physically at the
most.
103
The sage who ventures forth into public with a
message to deliver or a work to perform must shape both message and work to suit
the circumstances that surround him.
104
Unless the message is couched in terms with
which his contemporaries are familiar they cannot understand it. The prophet who
is wise will adjust himself to this fact.
105
Fifteenth-century Kabir, who as a young disciple
sometimes taught his own guru, said: "The saints and prophets are all dead. Only
the Everliving God lives forever" - which is a hint on what to worship.
106
Why was mention of Jesus' name omitted by all
contemporary historians, which could not have been the case if he had secured a
really wide following? Why did the Buddha, when speaking of the Messianic
teacher Metteya who would come in the far-off future, say: "He shall gather
round him a following of brethren that numbers many thousands, just as I have
gathered round me a following of brethren that numbers many hundreds"? How
relatively disproportionate were such hundreds when compared with the millions
of his contemporaries!
107
Who that reads these divine proclamations of a
Jesus, these inexorably logical analyses of a Gautama, can fail to recognize
that he is in the presence of uncompromising sincerity and unbending truth?
108
Old or new religions which have been established
and organized soon lose much of their moral force, to the extent that their
teachings become stale through excessive repetition and their tenets become
meaningless through constant familiarity. This is why they must produce inspired
preachers among themselves or, failing to do so, give way to inspired prophets
who can restate the Message in fresh terms.
109
No one has been in the past the only recipient
of divine illumination, and no one is so today.
110
Buddha knew, Jesus knew, that what was true for
himself was true for all other men.
111
Revelation must precede redemption.
112
It is to be expected that primitive people in
most parts of the world are more easily impressed by rituals and ceremonials
than educated intellectuals are. They will more readily follow a religious
preacher if he shows miracles. Whatever he then tells or teaches them receives
assent and evokes faith more quickly. Even the masses of the modern
industrialized world, fractionally educated as they mostly are, will to a lesser
extent show the same psychological reaction. Even if he only promises a miracle
but never shows one, a following will still gather around him and linger on for
years, sometimes even imagining that something magical has happened: it will not
be long before their invention will pass into history for the benefit of later
generations! Philosophers, not desiring to impress anyone nor to acquire a
following, do not generally attempt to produce a miracle, even if they might
have developed some unusual powers.
113
Not a single word was ever written by Jesus. And
yet others collected his spoken words and wrote them down for us. The same is
true of Gautama the Buddha.
114
He "inquired of the Lord and was given the
answer that any man who forbids the use of meat is not ordained of the Lord."
This happened when he, the founder of a religion, was asked by a follower to
adopt vegetarianism. So is human opinion delivered as God's command and human
activity taken for divine working.
115
A contemporary prophet, Antonio di Nunzio,
wrote: "We are only advocates of our Father, God."
116
Is it not worth noting that among those who left
their spiritual mark on mankind it is the young rebels who are foremost? Both
Buddha and Jesus broke with their traditions.
117
He feels sincerely that he has been entrusted
with a revelation, that he has a message to deliver which is valuable and
important to thousands of people, and that the task of delivering it is an
exalted service, a holy privilege that needs no other reward than the moral
satisfaction it brings him. Nor will it make any difference if there be only one
man to listen to him during his own lifetime. The need to bear witness has
become a matter of inexorable conscience. The result of bearing witness, whether
it be worldly honour or worldly persecution, is a matter to which his ego has
become emotionally indifferent.
118
Jesus and Buddha tried to purify great religions
from the selfishness and sinfulness and commercialism which had destroyed so
much of their value to humanity.
119
The message which a prophet gives to his own
generation will usually hold elements of value to those of all other
generations.
120
Wisdom did not stop appearing among men with any
particular century for the simple reason that men did not stop appearing. Nor
was it confined to any particular land. Despite that, it is correct to say there
were certain great periods when it flourished most and widest. These can be
found across the world and across time.
121
It might be too much to ask for an angelic or
other transcendental contact, but something visible in space and present in
time, some human being who is aware of his link with divinity, would - if he
were to make himself known, or to be discovered - be one of the rarest of
persons.
122
We do right to turn worthy traits of the
character or mystical grades of the achievement of such a man into an ideal to
follow. But we do wrong to turn his whole personality into an idol to worship.
123
To mistake the bearer of God's message for God
is to fall into idolatry.
124
Such a man, although not a God, is still
superior to all other men. For he was born to serve the highest purpose and
fulfil the divinest mission.
125
It would be a mistake in philosophy or mysticism
to glorify men instead of truths, but it would not be so in religion.
126
Those whose feeling is moved and whose mind is
impressed by the beauty, antiquity, mystery, and dignity of religious ceremonial
must find here their proper path.
127
Religion is the earliest, the easiest, the
least-demanding response of the masses to the inner call.
128
Where there is no particular yearning for truth,
no particular willingness to work on oneself, to practise discipline, and
especially to learn to stand aside from the ego - which refers to the multitude
of people - religion provides ideas and goals that can more easily be accepted
and followed.
129
All popular religions are intended to help the
larger number of people who are not ready for the deeper truth of mysticism, let
alone the still deeper truths of Philosophy.
130
Those who do violence to their reason by finally
accepting the dogmas of a religious authority because they have become
intellectually tired, unable to arrive at firm conclusions, do so because they
feel the need of some Power to lean against, to depend on, to check the activity
of their own brain. This authority provides what they need, if only because it
claims to represent the Higher Power.
131
Religions offer a medium for reaching the
masses, who might otherwise be left by the wayside - untutored in higher values,
unaware of the idea of God, the very basis of their being, unable to draw on it
as the associated source of peace, comfort, healing, and hope.
132
The millions who are wrapped up from the first
moment of awakening until sleepfall in their small affairs, who do not know any
kind of life other than the personal ego's, need help as well as the questers.
It is religion's business to give this help.
133
Most people, and certainly most uneducated
people, have not developed the capacity for metaphysical thought or psychic
exploration. They cannot mentally deal with invisible realities. They need the
simplicities and personalizations of religion, its forms which can be seen or
touched or pictured rather than abstract principles, its music which can be
heard, and its rites which can be shared. They are necessarily concerned with
the little matters of domestic and working life, not with the larger issues
requiring leisure, interest, patience, and aspiration beyond the personal self.
134
Philosophy agrees that the bulk of mankind must
be furnished with a religion and that religious doctrine must be simplified for
their benefit into a few comprehensible dogmas. It is consequently a necessity
for human nature at its present evolutionary stage that organized religions
should take on a dogmatic character and a creedal form.
135
Whereas philosophy can be brought only to the
few qualified to receive it, religion can be brought to a whole people - nay, to
the whole of mankind.
136
Sacrament and symbol, rite and image belong to
forms of worship intended chiefly for the populace, being outward and touchable.
137
Sorrow-laden men and disappointed women are as
much entitled to the services of philosophy as those who are happier and more
successful. But religion is more suited to afford them emotional solace, just as
they are more likely to seek it in religion.
138
They are too much absorbed by the toil for
existence and by the few pleasures that enable them to relax from this toil, to
trouble themselves about the higher meaning of that existence. Nor do they
possess the means - intuitional or intellectual - of solving the problems
connected with the search for such a meaning.
139
Those who can give complete faith to childish
dogmas, who can thrust all reason aside and throw themselves blindfolded into
the arms of the religious organization sponsoring such dogmas, may certainly
find a full peace of mind by doing so. They are persons who have either too
little intellect or too much.
140
The masses would not listen to the truth because
they could not comprehend the truth. It is practical wisdom to let them keep
their myth.
141
The subtle metaphysical truths may be
unintelligible to untutored minds whereas the simple religious ones may gain
quick belief.
142
It is inevitable too that the poorer and
unsuccessful classes should need and seek the consolations of religion much more
than the wealthy or successful ones. Despite all the truth and nonsense talked
about this matter, it is a fact that the latter are more contented than the
former. Their spiritual yearnings are less urgent and less strong, whereas the
others have to find internal or over-worldly compensations for their external
and this-worldly frustrations.
143
The general mass of people cannot help but stop
short of the more developed forms which spiritual seeking takes. Their inward
receptivity and outward circumstances usually fix limits for them. Orthodox
religion operates within these limits.
144
It is better that people should take a few steps
along the Quest than none at all, better that they should rise to their higher
manhood than remain in its animal phase only. Therefore mass religion - popular
religion - was first created. It was better to have churches and priests so as
to remind the people periodically of their religion than none at all; it was
better that some priests should be allowed to marry, and others should undertake
not to marry, so that both kinds could be helped. All these stages are merely
provisional, for the time being, and as the lay folk and the priests progress,
they can undertake further commitments.
145
Most of the religious lawgivers - but not all -
were also social hygienists, like Moses and Manu. For the multitude, born to be
followers, such instruction by advanced individuals was necessary.
146
The poor, having little, come to religion for
relief from their burdensome lives; the rich, having satiated themselves, come
to it out of curiosity about its mystery.
147
Religion must be simple in form and doctrine
because it has to appeal to the unthinking masses. Alone, it is not enough to
guarantee the advancement of man. It needs psychology also.
148
If men feel the need of formal religion let them
have it. Let them have their churches and temples, attend their masses or mutter
their creeds. But let them also be told of what is beyond these things.
149
The popular religion is usually an adjustment to
the popular mentality. It is not for searchers after absolute truth. The planet
is not peopled by the few searchers but by the multitude.
150
The religious viewpoint is excellent for those
who cannot rise to a higher one. Like love and art it provides them with one of
their supreme emotional experiences. It brings them a faith in God, hope for and
love among themselves. The moral restraints which religion provides for the
masses are its practical contribution to social and individual welfare, while
its provision of ethical standards to limit the baser actions of men would alone
justify its existence. So far as any religion succeeds in imposing moral
restraint upon millions of ignorant and simple people and prevents wholesale
crime among them, it succeeds in justifying its existence. But of course that is
not the primary purpose of religion. It is only one-third part of that primary
purpose. Therefore, we may accept the fact that great contributions to human
welfare have been made by traditional religion while denying its claims to act
as sole intermediary with God, as well as its exaggerated promises and
apparently profound assertions which turn out to be the wildest guesses.
Asseveration is hardly a suitable substitute for proof.
151
The assertion that religion has failed was often
heard in World War I and sometimes heard in World War II. But the fact is that
real religion has never failed and never could fail. What have failed are the
false ideas and foolish dogmas, the caricatures of God that have got mixed up
with what is true in religion. And not less than these, the ecclesiastical
hierarchies themselves have failed, sacrificing the proper mission of religion
for the selfish preservation of their institution, privilege, power, and income.
152
Until about the turn of the previous century,
the truth about religion was never published frankly and plainly. This was
because those who wrote about it were either one-sidedly biased in its favour
and so refused to see the undesirable aspects, or else they were hostile in
their personal standpoint which stopped them from mentioning the deeper merits.
Those who really knew what religion was in theory and practice, what were its
goods and bads, kept silent. This was because they did not wish to disturb the
established faith of the simple masses or else because the latter, being
uneducated, were unprepared to receive subtleties which required sufficient
mental development to comprehend.(P)
153
Is it strange or is it reasonable that among
every people on this planet the idea of this higher power has existed in every
epoch? Whence did this idea come? To answer that priests implanted it in simple
mentalities for their own selfish benefit does not answer the question but only
puts it farther back. Who implanted it into the minds of the priests? No - it is
one of those concepts which are absolutely necessary to human existence, whether
it takes the most superstitious form or the most developed one. Its absences
have always been temporary because their causes can only be temporary.
154
Judge the degree of a faith by its power to make
men sacrifice their attachments, whether to things or habits - which is the same
as its power to make them sacrifice themselves.
155
Behind the cruellest persecutions of misguided
religious organizations and the worst impostures of faithless ones, there hides
that which transcends all rituals, dogmas, priests, morality, persecution, and
impostures. There is something higher than man in this cosmos. Religion is
historically the most widespread way in which he marks his relation to this
higher Power.
156
Whether it be a religion of impressive
ceremonial and organized priesthood, or one of utter simplicity and without
intermediaries, it will serve men only to the extent that it helps each
individual follower to come closer to the Overself.
157
The following of moral principles is evidence of
having reached a higher evolutionary stage than that of worshipping human
leaders. Yet neither faith alone nor morality alone can constitute a religion.
It is not enough to believe sincerely in the existence of a higher power. It is
not enough to practise righteousness. The two must combine and co-operate if man
is to live what may truly be called a religious life. For he is here both to
exalt his consciousness above material things and to abase the selfishness of
his conduct. A religion which does not inspire him to follow this twofold aim is
only a half-religion. This is why a merely ethical humanitarianism can never by
itself take the place of any divinely inspired religion.
158
Sceptics, whose spiritual intuition lies
dormant, whose religious veneration remains inactivated, are sometimes willing
to concede that religious ethics may keep mankind's wickedness within certain
bounds, preventing it from being worse than it is, and may be useful for social
purposes by providing charities, medical service, educational help. In short,
they make religion's purpose more concerned with the community than with the
individual. But this is quite imperceptive. It misses the central message of
every scripture, that man must establish some sort of a connection with his
Maker, be it the blindest faith or the most mystical communion. His is the
responsibility to do so; it is a personal matter: for even if he attends church,
participates in sacraments, listens to sermons, or accepts an imposed dogma, he
has unwittingly given his own sanction to the transaction, pronounced his own
judgement upon it. The accepted morality or service merely follows from this.
159
Some kind of worthy religious belief is
indispensable to the true well-being of a nation. Without it existence is still
possible, but it will be an existence morally flawed to an extent that will in
the end, through vice, crime, and selfishness, endanger the nation.
160
The rigours of ego-crushing must be mitigated,
the truths of mentalism must be diluted, if the multitude is to be reached. This
is why popular religions are born.
161
The multitude need to be consoled and comforted:
they need celestial messages of hope, the promise of help. The bare truth is too
harsh on the ego, too impersonal to be welcome.
162
In days of anguish men turn to something,
someone, some belief, or some idea to help endure them.
163
In the moment of his greatest trial, in the hour
of his greatest danger, man looks to the Infinite for his last resource as a
babe looks to its mother.
164
We have only to read recent or distant history
to see how foolish it would be to expect the average person to accept the
ethical ideals of philosophy, let alone live up to them. This is why some sort
of accommodation must be made towards his moral limitations by giving him a code
which he can accept and to some extent try to live up to. Here is the usefulness
of popular religions which do contain such codes.
165
If everything was not told to the masses, it was
largely because everything would not be acceptable to the masses, or "the simple
ones," as Origen, a Church Father himself, called them. Or it was too
metaphysical for them, as the history of Alexandria, with its violent riots
against the schools of Philosophy, showed. Origen staunchly included
reincarnation and meatless diet in his teachings there, but how far has either
of these two been taken hold of by the masses then or since?
166
For most people the history of our time has put
a strain upon belief - not the belief that a higher power exists, but that it
protects man against his own viciousness. It helps a little at weakening moments
to turn to the seers, prophets, and illumined poets to regain some strength.
167
There are many people to whom the ceremonies,
the Masses, and the symbols of their religion mean life itself. By these things
they are sustained to bear the troubles of human existence or are inspired to
rise above them.
168
Religious beliefs, metaphysical conclusions, and
mystical experiences are good and necessary in themselves; but they are more
valuable still as vehicles to instigate, in those who accept them, the practice
of noble virtues.
169
The sincere acceptance of any religious or
mystical belief is really one response to the human need of security. Such
belief offers inner security, however vaguely, as a bank balance offers outer
security, for it puts the believer into favourable relation with the
all-pervading mind and force behind the Universe's life and consequently behind
his personal life too.
170
The first social utility of religion is to curb
the passions and instincts, the hatreds and greeds of the multitude.
171
Even the worship of an imagined God is not all
waste of energy. The good in it develops the worshipper himself even when no
useful result is directly developed in his life outside.
172
It is not a Church's business to meddle in
politics. That is the business of other kinds of organizations which desire to
make social reforms or economic changes or administrative betterments. A Church
has to try to change men because that is where the roots of such troubles lie.
173
If no truth at all is given the masses, they are
left defenseless as soon as any great calamity falls upon them and they dare not
think about it.
174
Those malefactors who cannot be deterred from
evil-doing by awe of the law and its penalties might yet be put in awe of the
invisible powers and their post-mortem penalties. This was in the mind of those
who in classical Greek and Roman times formulated worship of the gods. This was
their pragmatic and practical conclusion whether they themselves personally
believed or disbelieved in the gods' existence at all. Their inheritors among
statesmen, priests, and leaders supported popular religion as good for the
masses, even when their own education made them sceptical of it.
175
Such people could not be at home in philosophy
and would soon find that it is not what they want at all. It is better that they
should not experience the discomfort of trying to be. The consolations of
religion will help them more.
176
Religion carries with it certain commandments
and injunctions of a moral nature. Whoever accepts a particular religion
theoretically accepts these obligations with it.
177
The moral restraints which religion imposes upon
its believers are a social necessity. Religion cannot be injured without
injuring those restraints. But when it is no longer able to impose them, it
loses much of its social value.
178
After many years of propaganda work in Europe,
Miss Lounsberry, Secretary of the "Friends of Buddhism Society" of Paris, had
ruefully to confess (in the Maha Bodhi Journal in the middle of World War
II): "How can we help now, how can we bring the truth forcibly to bear on men's
minds? Surely not by just saying there is no God and no Soul? For God in the
West means many things, among others an inherent justice, which is to us
Buddhists - Karma." This confession based on experience justifies our own
attitude that religion is needed in the sense that belief in a higher Being is
needed.
179
Much as we may deplore the weaknesses and
failures of religion, we have to admit that without it men abolish all ethical
standards and begin to act like wild beasts.
180
Without the religious faith in a higher power,
without the religious organizations, buildings, and bibles which keep up and
channel this faith, the mass of people might have fallen into a dense
materialism devoid of any moral content.
181
Let us be perfectly clear on the matter when its
critics say that Christianity (or, equally, Buddhism or Hinduism) has failed.
This noble teaching has never failed anyone who has tried to live up to it, but
the organizations and institutions which have taken advantage of its name too
often, only to betray it, have failed.
182
Truth needs to be expressed again and again,
each time differently, because it must be expressed each time in the idiom of
its period.
183
In its present half-developed state, human
nature would soon turn universal religion into an instrument of tyrannous
repression of all ideas not held by it and into an agency for totalitarian
persecution of all exponents of such ideas. The healthy, free competition of
sects and creeds tends to prevent this and to compel tolerance.
184
There is a teaching to meet the need of each
type of mind. Because there is such a variety of types in the world, there is
room for a variety of teachings. But this said, and in practising our tolerance,
we need not blind ourselves to the fact that just as there is a progression of
levels of quality among these minds, so there is among the teachings.
185
The differences between men will not vanish,
although they may alter as time slowly alters the men themselves. Not only are
no two individuals alike but they will never become alike. What is true of their
bodies is also true of their minds. All attempts to bring about a uniformity of
ideas, a sameness in thinking, in character, and in behaviour, are doomed to
fail in the end. Such oneness, whether coerced or suggestioned, would be
artificial and unnatural, boring and undesirable.
186
The unequal development of human minds and the
wide variation in human temperaments render it as undesirable as it is
impossible to impose a single universal religion upon all mankind to the
exclusion of all others or to unify all these varieties of belief.
187
A contemporary Indian master, Sitaramdas
Omkarnath, was invited to become one of the leaders in a movement organized to
unify different religions and establish co-operation among them. In his reply he
wrote: "I cannot even believe that a co-ordination of the sects may ever be
practicable. The sacred texts differ and the views of their writers clash. They
all contributed to the good of the world, but each in his own way. I do not
understand how these vast and numerous differences may be reconciled.... My
rules come from God. Will it be possible for me to conform to rules framed by
you and your associates in the proposal for unification? This is of secondary
value. What is wanted is direct vision of God."
188
There is no single approach which is the only
true one, the only true religion. God is waiting at the end of all roads. But
some suit us better than others.
189
Each man is strongly influenced by his inborn
tendencies and past experiences, including pre-reincarnational ones, to remain
in, or attach himself to, some particular form of spiritual approach. It will be
one most suited to his moral, intellectual, and intuitive levels at the
time.
190
So long as there is variety among human minds
and feelings, so long will there be variety among human views. Groups, parties,
sects, factions, and schisms will continue to appear in religion as in politics.
Given enough time this is unavoidable but not reprehensible. If in one sense it
hinders a beginner's search for truth and ideals, in another sense it helps by
offering more choices.
191
There are no lost souls, no individuals doomed
to everlasting perdition. Nor are there saved souls, a favoured group of God's
elect. There are only ignorant or well-informed individuals, immature or mature
beings, unevolved or evolved persons.
192
Salvation is for all, the atheist and the
devotee, the wicked and good, the ignorant and learned, the indifferent and
earnest. It is only the time of its realization that is far off or near at hand
but realization itself is certain. "Let no one of Thy boundless Grace despair" -
thus Abu Said, an eleventh-century Persian mystic of high degree, holds out the
prayerful hope to all men of their impending or eventual liberation. The New
Testament parallels the Bhagavad Gita's promise of ultimate salvation for
all, sinners and good alike. It says: "God willeth that all men should be saved
and come to the knowledge of the truth." - 1 Tim. 2:4.
193
A religion which would gather into itself the
common truths of all existing religions would be an artificial one. It might
satisfy the academic intellects. It could not satisfy the intuitive hearts.
Religion is real only when it is the spontaneous flowering of one man's
communion with the Divine. All attempts to invent a synthetic universal religion
based on doctrines common to the existing principal ones are merely academic and
bound to end in sterile futility, if not failure. For every religion worth the
name must issue forth from one man, one inspired prophet, who gives it life,
spirit, reality.
194
We do not say that one faith is as good as
another. We acknowledge that divisions in doctrine are significant of grades in
development.
195
That form of religion which will suit one
temperament will not necessarily suit another. What would benefit one man might
not benefit another. There is no universal religion which could profitably be
adopted by everyone. The belief that a single religious form will suit all the
different peoples throughout the world is naïve and just the kind of mechanical
doctrine likely to spring up in the minds of materialistic believers. Each type
will have to find the form suited to its own special temperament and special
mentality. Each will and ought to continue following the different spiritual
path dictated by its particular evolutionary grade. All this said, there exist
certain fundamental principles which are common to all the varying forms of
religion. There still remains a certain minimum foundation upon which all these
different forms rest because they have to fit both human needs and divine
revelations.
196
Several years ago my much esteemed friend, Sir
Francis Younghusband, asked me to join the Council of the World Congress of
Faiths. I reluctantly refused to do so, because although I sympathized greatly
with his noble motives in forming the Congress I could not help regarding such
well-intentioned efforts as being unlikely to lead to any practical result.
Tolerance between the members of different faiths is something greatly needed in
the world today as much as it ever has been. However, I believe it is a purely
personal matter which can only come with the development of individual character
and not by any organized efforts as such. I am disinclined to give active
support to the World Congress of Faiths and the Fellowship of Faiths partly
because it will never be more than a drop in the ocean, so far as effectiveness
is concerned, and partly because the old religions have had their chance and
decayed. A mere mixture of such decaying religions will not renew their vitality
or render them more serviceable to mankind. It is wiser for me to devote
energies to a new faith, which will have the vigour of youthfulness and
do something, than to support a stew of stale faiths.
197
Not only are there intellectual differences
between people; there are also emotional and even aesthetic differences. Most
are natural, some are developed. The preferences for bare cold services in one
group are caused by personality traits as much as the preferences for
ritualistic incense-filled services in another group. Why not accept their
existence as we accept other divergences, other variations in nature or life?
Why use them as reasons for contention and competition instead of friendship and
co-operation?
198
Wherever we look in the four kingdoms of Nature,
we find that she is perpetually striving to achieve diversity. She rejects and
abhors a monotonous uniformity. And if we restrict our gaze to the human
kingdom, we find that the differences in thought and the divergencies in feeling
are the expressions not only of variations in evolutionary growth, but also of
this innate striving of Nature herself.
We live in a world where every entity is formed as an individual one. Each is unique. If people have different ideas about the same thing, this is the inevitable result of the differences in their own capacities and perceptions. Why, then, should they not be themselves and therefore different?
It is useless to regret the unavoidable, to pine for the unattainable, and to strive for the undesirable. We should not waste time seeking for unity of thought or creating unity of outlook. These aims are unfeasible; these endeavours are impracticable. Even amongst the very proponents of unity, unity - whether of association or doctrine - has been non-existent. During the course of their short history, they have periodically separated themselves into factions under rival leaders. The ladder of incarnated life stretches all the way through progressively different levels of intelligence and character. It is to be expected, therefore, that there should be inequality, disagreement, and disunity. Men can arrive at the same views when they arrive at the same standpoint, when they all attain an identical level. But this is prevented from happening by the ever-active operations of re-embodiment which, by the special influences brought to bear upon particular groups and by evolution, which admits new entrants to the human kingdom and lets out old inhabitants, differentiate their various evolutionary stages, environments and conditions. A monotonous uniformity of thought and solidarity of aspiration - could they ever be obtained - would be signs of totalitarian compulsion, intellectual paralysis, or moral inactivity. They would not be a social advance, but a social calamity. What is the use of pursuing such an artificial ideal?
It is impossible for all the men and women in the world to think and feel alike. What is repugnantly intricate to one is fascinating and intriguing to another. Consequently it is impossible to persuade them to accept a single ideal, a single religion, a single metaphysic, or a single form of mysticism. This planet is not a nursing ground for the mass production of souls. Each human being represents a divine thought and is consequently working out a divine end. He may be a mere thought of God, but he is nevertheless an important thought to God. We are individuals and have each an individual purpose to fulfil even though the One abides in us all. It is better to be more realistic and less ambitious than to play Don Quixote and tilt at windmills.
199
The existence of so many sects, religions,
creeds, and churches is to be traced not only to historical causes - such as
rebellion against corruption - but also to psychological ones. Each corresponds
to the moral level, mental quality, and intuitive refinement of its members
generally.
200
Each man will understand religion in his own
way, according to the grade of his intelligence and character. The more ways of
approaching God that there are to be found among us, the more opportunity will
there be for us to make this approach. A single way might suit one type, but
will not suit others. With the offerings of several ways, these too are served.
Let us therefore welcome variety and not try to destroy it.
201
The fact that so many different religious sects
exist all around us indicates that where choice is free and personal, not
reached under social pressure or by family tradition, response to truth shapes
itself according to the capacity-level.
202
Salvation is as open to those who adhere to some
church or sect as it is to those of no church at all.
203
A single teaching could suit persons at widely
different degrees of advancement only by lowering its quality to suit the lowest
degree. But it would then no longer be itself.
204
The anti-materialistic teaching will find more
response if it suits the needs of the country, the people, and the epoch in
which he lives.
205
A union of many religions is a naïve idea, but a
tolerant attitude among many religions is an excellent one.
206
The different religions expressed different
kinds of temperaments, and different sects within a single religion express
different mentalities.
207
The Qualities of a man's character are much more
important than the tenets of his formal creed.
208
The protagonists of a world federation of faiths
or of a reunion of all Christian sects or of a federation of all rival
theosophical societies do not grasp the fact that a marriage of two or more
half-corpses cannot produce a living body.
209
The capacity to receive truth is variable from
person to person; it is not present equally in all.
210
In this area of religious belief there is, for
most people with faith, mere obedience to tradition. Either they do what is
correctly anticipated from them, or they do some original thinking for
themselves. Thus their religious outlook depends either on surrender to
circumstances and environment or on their intellectual capacity. The first group
seeks comfort and ease; the second has begun, but only begun, the search for
truth.
211
Real thought is rare. How few follow a religion
because they have chosen it after independent investigation and reflection, how
many slavishly refuse to examine it impartially only because it happens to be
popular at the time and in the place where they are born or live! As if
popularity were a test of truth!
212
Formal religion does not give enough
satisfaction to large numbers of people. Yet open atheism leaves them without
hope, in despair at the futility of individual life. Then there are large
numbers of others who, unquestioning and complacent, do not trouble their heads
beyond their personal and family selfish interests, who observe the forms of
their inherited religion in a superficial conventional way and are inwardly
unaffected by them.
213
I know that most men depend - and must depend -
upon some religious revelation to which they were introduced by their family. In
this way a higher faith was ready to hand from birth. But he who awakens to a
still higher need, his own revelation, has the right to seek for it.
214
Most people have had no revelation, no vision,
no soul-shaking inner experience. They must perforce accept the word of someone
who has. But unless they are content to remain in the religious denomination
acquired by heredity, not by the search for truth, they will be confronted by
the difficulty of how to choose among teachers, preachers, and prophets who all
contradict one another.
215
There is something radically wrong in rating men
quantitatively instead of qualitatively. There is something grotesque in the
spectacle of ill-informed conclusions and impulsive judgements on an equality
with the broad-based conclusions and well-matured judgements of a trained
intelligence and disciplined character. Therefore I do not believe in the fetish
of counting the number of followers of a doctrine, and using its largeness as an
indicator of its truth.
216
People who belong by birth or choice to any
particular cult, religion, or group usually believe that theirs is the highest
in theory and the best in practice. This belief usually becomes a mechanical
one, so that mere membership in the organization tends to make for less
endeavour to find God than if they were thrown on their own individual
resources.
217
The irony is that in religion most people
distrust the new, and underestimate the unorganized. They feel that in the old,
the traditional, and the established religious group they can take hold of what
is solid and firm, reliable and safe.
218
Although huge established organizations command
respect and claim authority in religion there is a real need of detached
independents in this same field.
219
Adherence to any religion may be either a
personal convenience or a flaming conviction. It is reckoned enough to be
labelled a member of some conventional orthodox and organized religious
community to be regarded as having fulfilled religious duty. Because men measure
human spirituality by human conformity, history mocks them and punishes their
error with evils and crimes, with sordid happenings and brutal deeds. Whatever
faith a man attaches himself to, outside the faith of his forefathers, will
depend partly on his intellectual level and partly on his personal inclinations.
If he is sincere, he will illustrate the difference between the social
inheritance and profound conviction motives, as well as demonstrate the
superiority of the conscious adoption of a faith after wide search and
comparative examination over the mere inheritance of a faith after geographical
accident or chance of birth. For the source and form of religious belief have
usually been the parents of the believer. Men accept their faith from their
fathers and never question it. Yet is what his forefathers happened to believe
in religion a valid standard of what is true in religion? What shall it profit a
man if he enters a religious building merely because his neighbours expect him
to go, or if he takes part in a religious gathering for the same reason that
soldiers take part in military drill? It is impossible for those held in creedal
chains or organizational straitjackets to keep their judgement free and their
thinking unconditional. A respect for the human personality cannot submit
entirely to the extremism which would impose a rigid straitjacket of total
authoritarianism. Indeed, a man is likely to be harmed by it. This happens as
soon as he allows his leaders to imprison him in the tradition or enslave him in
the institution. He is then no longer able to benefit by, and is instead robbed
of, all the other knowledge or inspiration available outside the little space in
which he is shut. The men of this era have to be led closer to the freedom of
their higher self. No organization can do this because all organizations
necessarily demand fealty and impose bondage.
220
There is a wide difference between people who
come by their religion through inward private conviction and those who come by
it through outward social convenience.
221
The self-deception into which the masses fall is
to start their thought about religion with the presumption that it must
necessarily be organized, institutionalized, traditional, and professionalized
if it is to be genuine religion at all.
222
People are easily impressed by size, tradition,
wealth, prestige. They are overawed by a "great" religion with many fine
churches, a long past history, and a well-organized structure. They will follow
such a religion even though its ministers are spiritually dead whereas they will
not even look twice at a man who is shining with the Overself's light and
permeated through and through with the consciousness of God's presence.
223
It is one thing to accept a religion through
traditional authority and another to accept it through a search for truth.
224
What faith a man chooses for himself, if he goes
so far as to reject his ancestral faith, is partly a matter of temperament,
partly of past experience and present opportunity, partly of moral character and
intellectual development.
225
The real trouble is that many mistake tradition
for religion. When they can learn the profound difference between these two
things, when they can appreciate that a social relic is not a spiritual force,
they will become truly religious.
226
A worship which is daily, and not weekly, is
required of him who is really religious.
227
Freedom from the limitations of membership in
organized religion may be good but anchorage in its harbour is in another way
also good. Each man decides for himself.
228
At some point down the line of being born by
family into a particular religious persuasion, the first ancestor to have the
courage - unless he was forced by ruling tyranny or bribed by social ambition -
to become a convert must be applauded. He may have been mistaken, his mind weak
enough to let itself be misguided, but he did have the faith that he was moving
from an inferior religious form to a superior one.
229
It is he who has chosen to remain in the church
into which he was brought by birth or to join the one which pleases him better.
It is he who must answer for the decision, bear the responsibility. The
institution has its own but that is separate.
230
Too often we meet men holding at the same time
beliefs which are contradictory. This is mostly pertaining to their respect for
science and their reliance on intellect in professional matters being kept from
colliding with their religious dogmas and prejudices.
231
In most cases people stay with their inherited
creed but in others they seek and find one which reflects their own
inclinations, character, or limitations.
232
Where a religion is organized and codified,
validated by long tradition, and spread by a large number of people, the
question of its truth is not a pressing one to its followers.
233
To keep one's religious affiliation through
heredity or habit but to live without daily reverence or active faith - this is
not true religion; it is pseudo-religion. Yet this is precisely what
conventional hypocrisy so lazily accepts.
234
The herd of men and women are so hypnotized by
the prestige of an institution that they never stop to question the truth of the
institution. This is why Jesus was persecuted and Socrates was poisoned.
235
The largest followings of religious groups
belong to the least rational and least inspired ones. And the followers are
there usually because their parents were there, not because they have thought
their way into these groups.
236
A wide experience of men shows up the strange
fact that they may be well-talented, brilliantly executive, or acute reasoners,
yet their religious beliefs will often be kept in closed compartments,
unaffected by their mental powers, undisturbed by their excellent judgement, and
hence quite primitive and quite irrational.
237
Some men, all too many men, are as stupid in
their religious belief and practice as they are clever in their business ideas
and activity. If they were to manage their businesses in the same credulous
unreasoning and superstitious way in which they follow their religion, they
would go bankrupt.
238
Why did primitive races bring a highly spiritual
wisdom to rest on the same pillow as barbaric superstition? The question is
easily answered by asserting "the need of grading teaching to capacity."
239
Instruction in religion and all other subjects
must be adapted to the level of the learner, or time and energy will be wasted,
while the desired result will not be obtained.
240
Let us not deny the need of so many millions for
a personal relationship with their God merely because we have found truth and
satisfaction in an impersonal one. Are they to have nothing to look up to
because they are unable to stretch their minds into that rarefied atmosphere? Is
it not better that they do the more essential thing and acknowledge the
existence of a Higher Power rather than fail to worship It at all?
241
The first work of religion is to bring the
highest mystical ideas within the reach of the lowest mental capacity. It does
this by symbolizing the ideas or by turning them into myths.
242
Unless there is an equal level between the
understanding of a student and the communication of a teacher, there can be no
complete success in the teaching. Hence a competent teacher first puts himself
en rapport with the mind of the student. It is because the sages did this
that they found it necessary to set up personal gods, priestly guides, and
organized sacred institutions for the benefit of the masses. But this must not
be taken to mean that the sages themselves believed in such gods, revered such
guides, honoured such churches, or regarded them as eternally useful or always
necessary and their dogmas valid for all future ages.
243
The simple masses can understand better that
there is a God who answers prayers or responds to ceremonial invocations than
that God is impersonal and transcendent.
244
The physical and mental images of religion exist
because men need, and must necessarily make, symbols of That which they cannot
conceive directly.
245
Is it not better to give to those who are unable
to comprehend that there is a divine reality - which is anyway beyond human
grasp - a symbol which stands for it and which can be grasped by ordinary human
faculty or human sense? At the least it will remind them of it, at the most it
will help to lead them to acknowledge its factuality.
246
The mass of people who believe in a transcendent
power seek for more than a symbol or form to express it. They seek also for a
channel, an embodiment, something or someone seeable and touchable through which
it can find an outlet.
247
Those who are unable to formulate any concept of
the formless Power in which they are rooted, and therefore unable to worship it,
must worship a man instead. Hence the saviours and gurus, their religions and
scriptures, the churches and temples.
248
In religious myth and legend, in sacred ritual
and ceremony, there are symbols and allegories which are useful for meeting the
mass-mentality but which offer much more to the educated one.
249
The masses are susceptible to, and impressed by,
the colourful pageantry of religious processions, religious symbols, and kindred
outward suggestions which awaken pious feeling.
250
The man of developed reason will feel its need
less, or even not at all, but the unevolved multitude is moved emotionally and
impressed mentally by ceremony. It preserves tradition, satisfies
gregariousness.
251
The fact is that orthodox religion is usually a
compromise between the truth and the lie, a concession to human weakness to
which the truth must be offered wrapped up in the lie.
252
It would be cruel to tell the uninstructed many
that the God they worship exists only in their imagination and superstition. But
it would be equally cruel to let them always remain as children and keep the
truth from them.
253
He should be sparing with his ideas for
spiritually elevating the masses. The first aim must be not to sail over
people's heads into the clouds. Otherwise he becomes a mere dreamer, while
nothing tangible is achieved. It is better to give the masses one ounce of
idealism in a pound of realism, and thus ensure its being swallowed
successfully, than to give them a full pound's worth and have it totally
rejected. No doubt they are spiritually sick, but they must be treated with
homeopathic doses where teaching is concerned. This approach illustrates one of
the practical differences between mysticism and philosophy. Indeed, it is often
possible to tell from the character of its practical proposals for dealing with
a deplorable social problem or reforming an unsatisfactory public situation, how
far any theory of life is true to the facts of life.
254
Just as young children are more influenced by
the world of the five senses than by the conclusions of reason, so many whose
adulthood is still largely physical rather than mental are more influenced by
what they see, hear, and feel, rather than by reason or intuition. Such persons
are far from being ready for philosophy and could never give assent to its
teachings. They lack discrimination and are led by appearances. They are
impressed by "signs," that is, physical miracles, cures, and demonstrations, as
proof of God-given power. Few of them would be willing to forsake their
ego-directed lives and take to the way of living which Jesus - in
contradistinction from his Church - really preached. But all of them may make
excellent followers of an inwardly devitalized mass religion.
255
If, in the past, the truth has been dressed up
in ecclesiastical myths, that could not be helped. It was in the nature of
things and in the nature of man. It was also in the conditions of communication
in bygone ages when most men could neither read nor write. Symbols and fables
were useful in the intellectual childhood of the race.
256
Religions which have invented myths to suit the
mentality of the multitude, who put up symbols to which they can attach
meanings, are behaving quite logically. But man cannot live by invention and
symbolism alone. As he grows up, evolves, gets more educated, his need is for
the Reality behind them.
257
Many of the Gods worshipped in ancient cultures
- Western or Eastern - are simply states of being. They are not to be regarded
as living personages but as symbols of that higher state of being. For the
masses, their picture and form may represent a useful object of worship, since
it is difficult to form abstract conceptions of such states. For us who study
philosophy, they represent conditions superior to our present one and to whose
attainment we should aspire.
258
The sage could not transmit his knowledge to the
masses except by presenting a remote symbol of it, a picturesque reflection. But
this caused it to lose its vivid immediacy and its personal actuality. Yet so
only could religion be born.
259
The sages had to face the fact that the masses
under their or their pupils' care were inferior in mentality to themselves, and
that their knowledge of the significance of the universe could only be
communicated effectively through the use of symbols, suggestions, and images
rather than through plain statements of fact. Hence the whole content of
folklore and religion was invested in those days with its sacred character not
because of what it said but because of what it did not say.
260
Those who cling to tribal legends and magical
rites as essentials of religion, who put them on the same level as theological
affirmations and moral injunctions, have never understood religion.
261
We can hope to understand folklore, myth, early
religion, and savage beliefs only when we understand that these are the first,
faint foreshadowings of philosophic truth created for the benefit of primitive
minds by better informed ones. The savage was taught to think in terms of what
he could easily visualize; consequently, he was taught to see the invisible in
the visible, to feel the presence of spirits (that is, shadowy human or animal
forms) as lurking in trees in order to explain their growth and life, as
escaping from dead bodies in order to explain that the dead man continued to
survive, or gigantically sized and placed in the sky in order to explain the
processes and movements of Nature. How else could the intelligent leader teach
these ungrown minds the truths that the mind of a man did not die with his body,
or that mind was forever producing thoughts of the universe? Thus, these
primitive "superstitions" are semi-symbolical and they rest on a philosophical
foundation.
262
Religion as we usually know it touches
only the periphery of the spiritual life. It is truth brought to bed with mental
incapacity. It is a presentation to the gross senses of man of what is by its
very nature entirely supersensual. Its exposition is not only elementary and
narrow but necessarily incomplete.
263
It is a sign of the primitive mentality to
believe in the personal actuality of a purely mythical and symbolic figure. Yet
such faith is not to be despised and rejected as valueless, since it is a fact
that the imagination can take hold of such a personal and pictorial
representation much more easily than it can of an impersonal and abstract
concept.
264
The easiest way for religion to account for the
various forces of nature and laws of the cosmos to simple minds was to personify
them. When it came to the Supreme force and Supreme mind, it had to personify
that too. Thus, its limited and human conception of God is easier for the masses
to grasp than the higher and truer one.
265
The savage mind bases its religion on fear, the
cultured mind on faith. This proves the position taken by philosophy, that there
is an evolutionary movement in religious concepts as there is in social customs.
266
It cannot be said that these truths have been
kept from the masses. Rather, the masses' own limitations have kept them from
these truths.
267
Emerson's scorn of the "mummery" of Catholic
pageants and processions which he saw in Italy is intellectually understandable
but spiritually unwarranted. Such festival shows have this effect, that in the
mentally unevolved masses they keep alive the remembrance of historic figures
and values in their religion, while in the mentally evolved they provide
satisfaction for aesthetic needs or symbolic ones. Whatever promotes a mood of
reverence is to be welcomed.
268
The mentality which has not been developed to
perceive anything beyond the touchable and seeable, which cannot itself
comprehend the abstract and metaphysical, this - the mentality of the masses -
has to receive a simpler form of spiritual food. For it there must be the more
palatable and easier digested food of dogmatic religious revelation. If from the
standpoint of the sage such a religious form is a concession to popular
prejudice and kindergarten minds, it is not at all a hollow valueless
concession. He will always regard it as most essential to the welfare of the
world, provided it is kept within proper limits.
269
Primitive peoples feel and act in response to
the feelings aroused in them. Civilized peoples behave in the same way
but with this addition, that feeling now combines with immature reason and to
that extent is controlled by it. This explains why it was easy for the leaders
of early races to get them to submit to religion. For religion is an appeal to
feeling excited through the imagination.
270
To put the masses in a lower category of
development may find supporting reasons - at least in past centuries - but to
try to keep them there permanently is unjust. To feed them on myth, symbol,
allegory, keeping back the higher truths and not telling them the facts about
their existence, is also unjust.
271
Some readers have taken exception to my
statement in the eleventh chapter of The Wisdom of the Overself that the
aborigine should be left alone to worship God in his own way. They point out the
great uplift of religious conceptions which has followed the work of Christian
missionaries amongst aborigines. My own observations as a traveller would
endorse this claim as true in some cases but false in others. There has been
welcome advance in some countries but definite deterioration in others. This is
apart from social, medical, and educational work of the missionaries, for which
I would bestow the highest praise. However, the point I tried to make is
evidently not quite understood. I hold only that, just as philosophy should not
disturb the advanced religionist's faith but yet should make a higher teaching
available to him as and when his faith weakens of its own accord, so the
advanced religionist should not disturb the primitive religionist's faith but
should make his own higher creed available as and when it might be helpful to do
so. This would still leave a clear field for Christian missionary activity in
distant lands but it would regulate and limit such activity within wiser
borders. When I wrote about the advisability of letting the aborigine alone,
this applies only if he is satisfied with his religion. It is not wrong to
interfere when he begins to find fault with it. I did not mean to cause doubts
about the value of propagating higher and more spiritual types of religion
amongst primitive peoples. On the contrary, such propaganda should certainly
continue, although it ought to be less offensively, less ignorantly, and less
dishonestly practised than it has been in the past. It should be there, on the
spot, available for those primitives who are nearing the level where they can
begin to profit by it. Between the primitive tribesman, blindly obeying his
patriarchal leaders and unthinkingly following his traditional customs, and the
modern city-dweller, the difference is unmistakable. It is a difference on the
one hand of more liberated individuality and on the other of more developed
intelligence. Hence, the kind of teaching which historically suited the one is
unsuited to the other. The missionary has his place in the world of religions,
and especially s o when he is the bearer of a more developed religion, but that
place is not, as he thinks, an unrestricted one.
272
We need not accept a primitive form of religious
revelation if our own intellect has developed too far beyond such a level. But
we ought not despise those who do accept it, who find in it an answer to their
need of belief in the higher power. However imperfect and unevolved, it is at
base an affirmation that God is.
273
The man whose idea of himself is strictly
limited to his little ego, and who is excessively attached to it, will naturally
tend to form an idea of God as being a kind of gigantic person.
274
It is not true religion but rather impious
irreligion to present the formless, limitless, sense- and thought-transcending
infinitude of the Deity as a capricious tyrant and angry giant. To make It into
an exaggerated human entity is to minify and slander It.
275
But most people, certainly the common folk, want
a human God, one who shows emotion and responds to theirs.
276
It satisfies the demand on the part of the
populace for a powerful supernatural being only if God is made masculine in
gender, just as it satisfies their demand for a magnified father only if God is
made humanly personal. They must have an anthropomorphic deity.
277
The Myth, given out to the populace, to the
human mind at a simple naïve and unevolved level, is not intended for nor
acceptable to the human mind at a high-cultured level. For this, nothing less
than the Fact will do. For the others the Myth is, as a high Tibetan lama said
recently (and privately), "like a sweet given to children because they like it
so much."
278
Religion of the popular, mass kind makes its
demand upon belief, not upon intellect. The priest or clergyman is not concerned
with the question whether his offering is true: it is simply a dogma to be
blindly accepted, an arrangement which suited the simple illiterate masses of
earlier times and still suits those of our times in backward lands.
279
The truth could not be expressed in all its
fullness to those whose cultural level was so different from today's. If they
were given less, it is because they could not comprehend more.
280
It was perfectly correct for primitive peoples
to feel and obey this deep longing to glorify their hereditary rulers and to
worship their high priests.
281
We find that not a little in popular religion is
nothing more than a thinned-down materialism.
282
The masses are not sensitive to the mystical,
nor comprehensive of the philosophical. They must be reached through the
physical senses. Hence religion is their path.
283
School the immature to enjoy and appreciate
truth, prepare them for it, give them a chance to learn its elementary phases:
this is a better way to stop their estrangement from religion.