1
If we are to keep religion inspired; we must keep
its ministers and priests inspired; that is, we must keep their hearts
open to the sacred presence, their minds alive to the sacred Truth.
2
Who are the real bishops, priests, clergymen, and
preachers of God's church? They are those who show, by the way they live and
think, that they have found the spiritual self and follow the spiritual laws.
And this is true whether they wear a clerical garb or a layman's suit.
3
Let the churchless man follow his own way but let
him not deny the priest's path - it too is a service to those who are helped by
ceremony and chants.
4
The objection that no intermediary ought to come
between man and God needs to be kept in its place and confined to the limits of
reasonableness. That a section of the people should be specially ordained and
specially trained in religion and theology as a clergy is not in itself a bad
thing, even though it could be abused and turned into a bad thing. That another
section should be willing to live a disciplined, ascetic, and secluded life
devoted to meditation and study is also not necessarily bad and anti-social,
although again it also could become so if the purpose of all this is wrongly
understood.
5
To transmit thoughts which have come out of some
celestial plane, or feelings which hold a man by their delicate charm, to make
one's way into ever-deepening states of tranquillity or of revelation and later
return to point at life's higher possibilities - these also are forms of
religious attendance and, in some instances, even of priestly services.
6
Jesus, the first and best Christian, set an example
for all later professed Christians to follow. He did not preach in return for
payment. He did not turn religion into a profession. He even told those whom he
sent forth as apostles to carry no purse. If therefore we wish to understand one
reason why the Church does not represent him, here it is. The apostle Paul made
tents so that he could pay his own way while spreading the Christian message.
Modern spiritual teachers could not do better than follow this excellent
example. Their instruction should be given free. Hence they should either earn
their own living or have their own financial resources. Thus, the new clergy
will not labour for hire but for love. They will draw no salary for their
teaching and preaching, but will draw it from their worldly work. Having learned
how to earn their own living first, they will be beholden to no one, dependent
on no organization, but will have the freedom to speak as the Spirit of Truth
bids them speak. The old idea was to preach and serve at the cost of the
clergy's hearers. The new idea will impel the minister to preach and serve at
his own cost. When religion is pure, however, there will be no professional
clergy. Its ministers will then have to earn their livelihood from a different
source. Thus they may remain undefiled in motive and inspiration.
7
The mere title or position of priest, minister,
clergyman does not sanctify a man if he lacks the inner sanctity.
8
I have a distaste for "professional" spirituality.
It took some years to develop. It not only includes the teachers, guides, and
ministers but also the special kind of jargon they use in their communication.
9
By professional spirituality I mean that which is
labelled as a priesthood by an established organization, an authoritative
hierarchy, and accepted by the people as such. And I mean also that which is
self-labelled by members of the laity who take on a title like "Swami," who
stand before the public to preach and teach, who wear a special dress or uniform
or robe.
10
All priests should be instructed in the exercises
of meditation.
11
Only when meditation is officially restored among
the highest positions in spiritual life will religions be able to rise to their
most important level. Only when laymen can find available, whenever they wish to
accept it, both instruction in the art and retreats where it can be practised
with the least obstruction, will the religious organizations be able to render
their best service, their best fulfilment. For this it is which makes men
connected in the most intimate way possible - within human limitations, of
course - with the Overself.
12
It is not only those professional persons like
priests, clergy, and monks who minister to the religious needs of men and women,
but also the writers and artists, the rulers and leaders, the educators and the
authorities, who must teach them the necessity and importance of aspiration
towards spiritual goals.
13
Fate has put the priest in the position he holds;
the necessity of earning a livelihood doing work on which others depend is an
honourable one; and the Church as an influential organization has its definite
place in society, a space in which the minister can play a worthy part. If he
holds the ideal of service and seeks to infuse a little more light and life into
those entrusted to his spiritual care, and if he does this with wisdom and
discretion, he may do much good. He should grade his teaching to suit the minds
of hearers, reserving for the intelligent few those doctrines which the others
could not grasp or would resent emotionally. He must teach fables to
intellectual children but the more mature deserve better stuff.
14
Even the clergyman who is trying to reach simple
country folk would do well occasionally to drop a hint for the benefit of the
few who are ready to receive initiation into mystical practices.
15
Clergymen can render better service to their
flocks when they deepen their own inner life.
16
The minister who is able to instruct his flock
serves them, but the minister who is able to inspire them serves them better.
17
When religion becomes a professional job, when men
make their living by it, its reality vanishes, its hypocrisy appears.
18
It is not enough for a priest to have learning and
virtue; he needs also to have inspiration. It is not enough that he performs
correctly the outward gestures and ceremonial movements required of him or
chants the proper sentences prescribed for him.
19
The ecclesiastic too commonly suffers from
spiritual pride, too often makes empty pretense to superiority.
20
There are priests who lose their own faith and
become spiritually impotent, so that in the end they preach to empty churches.
They cannot help themselves, much less help others, cannot give consolation,
much less give truth.
21
Why should we not consider some of the great
writers like Plato and Thoreau as spiritual prophets, as holy in their way, and
as illuminative to their fellows, as Christ himself?
22
Exaggerated statements by enthusiastic devotees or
confused imaginations passed on by naïve ones come from the laymen. For
deliberate removals and even insertions responsibility lies with the
professional class.
23
Narrow-minded ecclesiastics look with horror at
any and every departure from rigid orthodoxy and insist on a mechanical
legalistic following of the form of every detail.
24
It is more important in their view to preserve the
institution of which they are a part than to serve the people.
25
If there is to be an institution or organization
and if it must have a head, experience leads the impartial observers to prefer
unhesitatingly the elective principle to that of hereditary succession.
26
The benediction of a bishop possesses grace and
power only if the bishop himself is an inspired man, not because he is a member
of the institutional hierarchy.
27
If the words of a priest or a clergyman contain
the message of true spirituality and carry comfort to suffering men, the latter
might walk many miles to hear him; but if they do not contain them, they might
probably walk miles to avoid him! How many clergymen have said all that they had
to say in their very first sermon, since which they have added nothing new? Yet
although they have had nothing further to preach, they continue to preach it
boringly for the remainder of their lifetime! The people of this hapless epoch
seek the bread of an inwardly-ravishing spiritual experience; they are offered
instead the stones of inwardly-dulling intellectual gabble.
28
There are doctrines which belong to the spiritual
infancy of the race, others to its spiritual adolescence. A prophet, a minister,
or a priest who offers them to spiritual adults makes himself ridiculous.
29
The finished product of the theological seminary
who takes his first pulpit with much education but little inspiration, may know
his dogmas but is unlikely to know "the peace which passeth understanding."
30
Religion has suffered from the impostures of wily
priests and the hollowness of boring services. But it has survived because of
the nobility of inspired priests and the truth of fundamental beliefs.
31
If the clergy are to free themselves from this
corruption of doctrines, this degeneration of mood, this hollowness of rite, the
first step is to free themselves of ignorance of the true meanings of religious
doctrine, the religious mood, and religious rites. Then only religion itself
becomes intelligent and its following become sincere. It then worships the One
Spirit, not any one person.
32
If the clergy are to be supported by anyone else
rather than by their own work, it should be by the worshippers themselves, and
not by the State.
33
No church can keep its primitive spirituality
unless it keeps its political independence. And this in turn it cannot have if
it accepts a preferred position above other churches as a state establishment.
It was not the leader of Russian atheism but the leader of the Russian Orthodox
Church itself, the late Patriarch Segius, Metropolitan of Moscow, who admitted
that the disestablishment of the State Church in his country by the Bolsheviks
was really "a return to apostolic times when the Church and its servants did not
deem their office a profession intended to earn their living." Such were his own
words.(P)
34
There is no way, opening, or gate to God through
the State, but only through the individual human being. The establishment and
entrenchment of a State Church is based on an illusion, but the Communist
disestablishment of religion in general is based on a much bigger
illusion.
35
Faith in any religious creed and the following of
any religious system should not be imposed by the State nor financed by it nor
identified with it, but should be left entirely to the individual conscience and
support. Even authorities, as history proves, are capable of making mistakes.
36
Protestants, Calvinists, and Muhammedans who
reject excessive symbolism, such as we find in Hinduism and Catholicism, make a
good point in refusing to attach too much importance to the symbol, to the
appeal to the senses of the body. But the fact remains that for the mass of
people who until lately were untutored, simple, and overworked, symbolism did
come within their mental reach and thus enabled them to get something from
religion which in higher forms they might be unable to approach.
37
True religion is often fostered in a man by the
use of a symbol. If a visible representation of the invisible God helps a man's
worship, he is entitled to use it. If he has need of a symbol of the Infinite
Spirit - be it man, angel, or Incarnation - to help him feel that It is
something more than an abstract conception, that It may become existent and
real, then its use is of assistance. If the symbol evokes a higher mood for the
worshipper, it is an effective and worthy and honourable device which is
unaffected by its failure to do this for others. It is one use of the symbol to
lead him from the familiar outer plane of awareness to the unfamiliar inner one,
to throw a bridge over which his mind can cross into perceptions beyond its
everyday zone. He has passed from the tyrannous rule of exterior attractions to
the gentle sway of interior ones. Until the time comes when the external symbol
is no longer needed, he would be as foolish to cast it aside prematurely as
another would be to refuse it altogether. But if he begins to believe that this
image is thereby permeated with divine power in its own right, he begins to go
astray. The worship of any false deity is the degradation of reason. Hindu
pilgrims make their threefold ceremonial perambulation around smug idols and
expect marvel and miracle in return. Reason denounces these futile propitiations
of an unheeding deity.
38
Unless he possesses enough intuitional and
metaphysical capacity, there is no way in which the believer may make contact
with the Real except indirectly through the use of a Symbol. This can mediate
between the limited degree his capacity has reached and the ineffable degree
that can alone make the contact. The mediation is indirect, however, because it
makes use of the senses, the imagination, the capacity to believe, or even of
the ego itself. Consequently the result is incomplete. There is no way of
completing it without passing first into mystical religion and, later, into
philosophical religion.
39
The symbols of a religion may mean much where
there is faith in them or else recognition of their true inner meaning. But they
may also mean little where there is neither. Yet in the end, one should not stop
with adoring them or with despising them, but move on to the reality they
represent. For the believer, this is something on the spiritual plane; for the
sceptic, it is a figment of the superstitious imagination. Only the actual,
firsthand, personal investigation of it will determine what it is, if properly
done. And this is what philosophy proposes - and does.
40
The same religious symbol which, at an early
stage, helps a man to advance spiritually may, at a later stage and after its
inner meaning has been well grasped, become a hindrance to further advance.
41
Beauty and Goodness, as we witness them on earth,
are symbols of the divine. The failure to recognize this is responsible for much
misery and suffering. The commandment "Thou shalt have no other God before me"
meant that the highest of all desires should not be sought among earthly things.
It did not mean especially the physical gold, bronze, or other metal images that
the unfaithful worshipped - these were only symbolic of those earthly things.
42
To take every descriptive statement in most
scriptures only literally betrays want of intelligence, but to take it only
allegorically betrays a want of balance. The gods and goddesses of scriptures
and mythologies are but popular explanatory principles of the one and only
Divine principle. They are more easily comprehended by the masses than abstract
metaphysical teachings.
43
In religion, metaphysical principles become
symbolized by mythological persons. Thus Adi Buddha, the primeval Force,
becomes the first historic Buddha, while Christos, the Higher Self, becomes the
man Jesus. Thus the universal gets shrunken into the local.(P)
44
The dangers and downfall of every religion begin
when its symbols are taken as substitutes for its realities, and when attendance
at its public services replaces efforts at individual development.(P)
45
Man worships through the particular form which
tradition and environment suggest to him. In his ignorance he gives the form
more importance than it deserves until it comes at last to stand between him and
God, a barrier to be broken down if he would find God.
46
In Christian symbolism the vertical line of the
cross stands for spiritual aspiration, and its horizontal line stands for
earthly desire.
47
If he is to use his religious symbol or spiritual
guide philosophically, he ought to direct his mind to the truth behind the one
and the reality behind the other. He should not leave it solely with the outer
form.
48
The symbolic meaning of so many religious, ritual
sacrifices involving the killing of animals on an altar was that the beholders
should slay the beast within themselves.
49
They are right in honouring the sacred symbols of
their religion, but wrong in letting those symbols extinguish knowledge of the
reality for which they stand.
50
As understood by the masses, the gods - whether of
India or Greece - never existed: but their figures were used to create
significant myths and helpful symbols.
51
The Symbol which has become overused and
devitalized, which is almost dead through being taken too much for granted, may
prove inadequate and even misleading.
52
Several antique religions make the Virgin Mother a
chief feature. Why stretch the credible so far to accept literally what is,
after all, only a symbolism? The pure in heart - that is, the ego-free - shall
see God - that is, shall give birth to the awareness of a new life within them.
53
The language used, the fables told as if they were
history, may not be acceptable to an honest well-educated mind. But it could
still, if it wished, accommodate them and remain within the fold of its
traditional religion by taking them allegorically, not literally.
54
The simple feeling of religious reverence which we
have on entering a church building, even though we may not believe in the
doctrines of the sect to which it pertains, if stretched to a farther extent
becomes the deep feeling of mystical communion which we have on entering the
advanced degree of meditation.
55
Every temple, ancient or Oriental, if built on a
philosophically traditional plan, acts also as a diagram of the human mind, with
the shrine representing the Overself.
56
The deep heavy clang of a temple bell reverberates
in the inner being of its hearers. The musical chimes of a church bell seek to
attract worshippers, and each sound works in its own way as a sacred reminder.
57
It is right that the principal cathedrals,
temples, and mosques of religion should be built on a majestic plan to impress
those who go there to worship and to express the faith of those who put the
buildings up. Such structures are not only symbolic of the importance of
religious faith, but also conducive to the humility with which worship should be
conducted.(P)
58
A building specifically planned and built for
religious purposes only, holding an assembly of people who meet there to direct
their minds and feelings towards the divine power, kept orderly and quiet so
that its atmosphere becomes saturated with worship, prayers, chants, and
meditations - such a building is inevitably more attractive to anyone who seeks
to use it for the same purposes.
59
It is right and proper that a building put to a
sacred use should be reserved for it and kept apart from profane activities.(P)
60
It is understandable that they would like to keep
the serene aura of such a place uncontaminated by negative thoughts and mean,
entirely self-enwrapped emotions.
61
In some rose-stained-glass-windowed church one may
sense the strong atmosphere of true devotion so acutely that one instinctively
falls on bended knee in humble prayer and in remembrance that self is nought,
God is all.(P)
62
God is Mind and they that would worship it in
truth must worship it mentally. The ostentatious ceremonies set up by paid
professionals enable men and women to obtain pleasing emotional effects but they
do not enable them to worship God. A building becomes a sacred temple when it
ceases to hear phonographic mumblings and when it ceases to witness theatrical
mimicries, and when it provides a fitting place where its visitors can engage in
undisturbed silent and inward-turned communion with their own deeper Mind.(p.
211)
63
A church's architectural form, a temple's sunward
orientation and rhythmic music, a mosque's geometric decoration, and a
synagogue's galleried arrangement are helps to each religion's expression of
itself.
64
The visual effect of those temples, with their
towers and carvings, upon the people is a successful reminder of sacred duties,
mental and physical.
65
Temples or churches where men babble of God (whom
they have not known) might be better used if men themselves kept silent therein.
Then, after a while and little by little, God might speak to them.
66
They too often forget that the temple is not
greater than the god.
67
The great height and grand interior of a cathedral
or an important church are intended to create a mental impression, on the
worshipper, of the importance of religion.
68
Although the mental impressions and emotional
reactions which follow entry into a Greek temple, a Christian church, or a
Muhammedan mosque are distinctly different, the architectural intention is the
same - uplift to a higher plane.
69
The church building should arouse or confirm or
strengthen religious aspiration when a man first beholds it and then enters it.
70
Temple: The rows of kneeling people, the chanting,
the choir, the painted pictures and figures, the robed priests, the dim coloured
lights - all contribute to set this place apart and produce an unearthly
atmosphere.
71
What is the use of these temples of traditional
religion when the gods have deserted them, when the only things in them are a
bit of stone or metal, an idol, when truth and compassion, honesty and
sincerity, spirituality and service are absent?
72
The symbolism that is built into the walls of
church or temple, that is enacted in its ceremonies and rites, may be translated
by a philosophical mind into philosophical meanings.
73
Thought, interest, attraction, wonder, and enquiry
concerning God are not necessarily stirred up only in the buildings specifically
planned for religious purposes; it may happen elsewhere.
74
One of the Indian seers actually prayed to God
asking to be forgiven for having gone to the temple so often, visits which by
their very nature seemed to reject the truth that God is everywhere.
75
These grave ceremonies and beautiful rituals,
which mean nothing at all to those practical men who feel no response to
religion, mean comfort, inspiration, hope, mystery, and wonder to those who do.
76
If sacramental worship helps to put you into a
reverent mind, take advantage of it. If ritual and ceremony seem hollow and
meaningless and powerless, turn aside. But do not condemn them. Others
may benefit.
77
The controversy between those who believe ritual
to be indispensable and those who believe it to be irrelevant nearly always
ignores four truths which, understood, dismiss the controversy itself - as
ordinarily carried on - as futile. The first is that any means that adapts the
truth to the limitation of intelligence which is present in the masses is useful
to those masses. The artistic symbolism of ritual is such a means. The
second is that the idolatry which the puritan objects to in ritual, reappears in
his own use of mental images and limiting attributes, or anthropomorphic terms
in thought, speech, and literature about God. The third truth is that the
puritan's means is obviously adapted to a higher grade of intellect than the
ritualist's and that one day the physical worship will have to give way through
evolution to metaphysical worship. The fourth truth is that since each means
helps different groups of men, its advocates should not attempt to impose it on
a group to whom it is unsuited and consequently unhelpful. The diverse levels of
human minds must be recognized. If it is wrong for the ritualist to interfere
with the non-ritualist who has outgrown this level, the latter needs to be
tolerant of the former who has something more to exploit in the lower Level.(P)
78
Both Jesus and Buddha sought to remove bloody
sacrifices from the institutional religion which surrounded them.
79
Any rite or ceremony which reminds men of their
spiritual duties, which instigates them to worship the higher power, which helps
them to concentrate on it, which creates the feeling of its presence, and which
excites them to love it, has justified its existence.
80
For the mass of mankind and for beginners on the
Way, any outer ritual or physical method which turns the mind away from earthly
things, which lifts it up from total immersion in the lower interests of the
personal ego to recognition of and aspiration toward its divine source, has its
place and value in human life. But its spiritual merit depends on the extent to
which it provokes a mental or emotional - that is, an inner - result. A
mechanical co-operation with the ritual, empty of such a heartfelt result, is
useless and, instead of being virtuous, may become harmful by creating a
complacency which deceives the worshipper and a hypocrisy which deceives
society.
81
Correct ideas of the place of asceticism and the
proper form it should take are too seldom held. This is just as true of
religious ritual.
82
Liturgical ceremonies which touch the deeper
feelings are not less useful than inspired texts which touch the deeper
thoughts.
83
The ceremonial observance of festival dates, the
ritualistic participation in church or temple services, and the following of
liturgical usages have their chief value in being first steps for the masses
towards faith in a higher power and fervour in devotional attitudes. If a truly
illumined priest is present during any of them and, more especially, if he
performs a leading role, this value is transcended.
84
It is not hard to surrender to the hypnotic and
repetitious choral chants, to the dim flickering lights, to the authoritatively
voiced liturgies. Whether the result be only a spectacular theatrical show
emotionally received or a vital communion spiritually uplifting depends largely
on the celebrant of the rite.
85
If cold intellectuality looks on these ancient
sacraments as mere outward shows, participated in as hypocritical routine,
fervent piety looks on them as foundations which have supported the established
religion and maintained its importance through the centuries.
86
Respectful ceremonials and huge buildings are not
in themselves hollow, empty, and hypocritical materialistic forms, although they
may become so with time. They are intended to impress the observer's mind,
kindle appropriate feelings, and overwhelm him into submission by the power of
suggestion.
87
Animal sacrifices do not belong in any way to the
worship of God but to the worship of demons. They come near to, and are even
used in, some forms of black magic. Whenever temples were turned into
slaughterhouses in the past, and in certain lands still today, religion takes
its lowest form, becomes pseudo-religion. Still lower were the rites of human
sacrifice. Both kinds are concessions to, or expressions of, the killing
instinct so marked in unevolved humans.
88
Have no use for a spirituality that only puts
itself on show.
89
If church bells remind people of the existence of
churches, and if churches remind them of the existence of religion, both serve a
useful purpose. But this is not to say that all must go to an external church.
Those who can find the spirit and practice of religion from within themselves do
not need to; they may, if they wish, but it is not a necessity for them.
90
No sacred performance, ceremony, or rite gives
anyone enlightenment, salvation, absolution, or inner strength without the real
presence of the higher power. But this can manifest itself anywhere, and when
one is completely solitary.
91
Insofar as a religious rite succeeds in arousing
the proper attitude of reverence, enchaining the thoughts to a loftier centre
than usual, and bringing the worshipper into contact with a genuinely inspired
priest, it deserves an honoured place.
92
No formal rite of circumcision, as in Judaism and
Islam, no mechanical baptism, as in sects of Christianity, can have the
slightest actual virtue in spiritually affecting a child. All that it can do is
to affect him post-suggestively by providing a remembrance in adult years of his
dedication to a Faith to be secretly held, an Ideal to be earnestly followed.
93
The real use of any physical ceremony in religion
can be only to help the worshipper who is not able to arrive at the same mood by
metaphysical understanding.
94
Within one and the same church there should be
place for such diverse expressions as those who can find stimulus only in
rituals as well as those who can find it only in non-ritualistic worship. There
should be place for mystics and thinkers as well as for the simple sense-bound
masses.
95
Why not be large enough to tolerate both the
ritualistic and the rationalistic in the same system, for each has its place and
does its service?
96
The liturgy and vestments are but a door to the
Real Presence.
97
We do not hear the voice of God in the priest's
voice. We can hear it only within the mind's stillness. We do not commune with
God through pageantry and ceremony. We commune through self-relaxation and
self-surrender.
98
The magical value of any sacrament lies not in
itself but in the faith it arouses, the reverence it suggests, and the reminder
it gives. If a man can believe, revere, and remember God by any other means,
such as reading, for instance, and if the sacrament has no effect upon him, he
is not obliged to participate in it. But if a sacramental form helps him to
either the remembrance or the aspiration of divine reality, why should he not
take advantage of it? It is true that ritual which helps man to concentrate on a
value higher than the material ones is certainly useful to him. But it is not
indispensable to him. At the last, no sacramental symbol, no external rite can
give what a man's Overself alone can give. Although the chief function of
external rites is to direct the mind towards internal ideas, a mechanical
ceremony of itself has no moral value. One may ask how far do the collective
incantations and public prayers of organized religion lead to any tangible
results? The mistake is not in creating or continuing these ceremonial systems
themselves, these processions and observances, but in forcing them upon people
who have no inner affinity with them, who feel no need for them and no help from
them. Liturgical symbolism and ecclesiastical rite may exalt and satisfy the
emotions but they do not go beyond this. They do not carry out their claim to
constitute for the participant a direct sacramental means of grace. Those who
administer such sacraments are invested with no higher authority than a merely
human one. We must not believe that any paid professional has a better right to
assume the status of intermediary between God and man than does an unpaid
amateur. In fact, it often is better to believe the opposite. The confusion of
clerical power with authentic spirituality is a common mistake. There is no real
relation between the two. This is because it is not the ethics of a holy man
which clerics seek to spread, but the power of a worldly institution. It is not
faith in an immaterial reality whose propagation is their prime aim, but faith
in a material hierarchy. When it has become outworn, the inner mental attitude
which gave it birth and the accompanying feeling which gave it justification are
no longer active. Consequently, its followers do not know why they are following
it and act mechanically or, quite often, hypocritically. A ceremonial observance
which carries no inner meaning and gives no mental uplift to those who partake
in it becomes even worse than useless. It becomes a deception. There is a
further danger when ceremonial symbolism becomes more important than moral
principle. It is then that a religion falls into risk of betraying itself.
Philosophy appreciates the services of organized religion and objects only when
it loses itself in mere externals, when it sets up its own ecclesiastical
organization and liturgical forms as all-important to man's salvation. The
greatest dangers to its purity are the corrupt forms that men give to it and the
selfish institutions that men set up in it. The seeds of destruction are
implanted by karma and germinated by time whenever a religious form fails to
serve humanity.
99
If anyone wants the processions and banners, the
lights and incense, the priestly robes and litanies of ritualism as essential to
his feelings for religion, let him have them. But if he insists on imposing
these things on others who do not share the same feeling, he acts wrongly.
100
The creed and doctrine of a religion, its rites
and sacraments, its communions and prayers, hold or lose their value according
to the inspiration with which they were created, the character and conduct which
they demand, the proportion of truth they contain.
101
If it is the business of religion to guide faith
and not to supply knowledge, to promote moral feeling and not to stimulate
rational intelligence, it would be well if those who are officially in charge of
religious institutions were occasionally to remind themselves and their flocks
not to become so immersed in its forms and customs as to forget the ultimate aim
of the institution. Ceremonies which become more and more mechanical as they
become more and more familiar, also arouse less and less inner response,
stimulate less and less true reverence, and are apt to turn religious services
into empty shows. To take a human ecclesiasticism for a divine religion or a
showy ritualism for divine worship is a sign of intellectual childhood. It is
perfectly proper in its own time. But systems and customs must grow up, like the
child itself. Formalized religion is too often dead religion. "In the opinion
that my body is completely extinct they pay worship in many ways to the relics,
but me they see not.... Repeatedly am I born in the world of the living,"
observes Buddha in Saddharma Pundarika. There is no nutriment here for
matured human minds or true human lives. This is why we neither support any
external organization nor encourage the following of any personal teacher. This
is why we practise, and counsel others to practise, a balanced individualism.
102
When people work themselves into too much
emotionalism in religious dancing or singing, there is departure from, or
inability to reach, that inner calm wherein alone the Spirit can visit us. These
orgies of religious zeal do not yield true insight.
103
The gorgeous ceremonials and censered
picturesque rituals of a religion appeal to those of aesthetic feeling, impress
those of simple unsceptical minds.
104
It is partly to prevent the doctrines and
teachings from fading out of men's minds and memories that they have been put
into ceremony and song, symbol and bible, ritual and record.
105
What is it but a few sounds heard in the ears of
men? Without the private experience of a glimpse - even only a single one in a
whole lifetime suffices - what kind of conception can they form of it that will
be accurate and trustworthy? What meaning can it carry to them at all?
106
For, after all, the really important factor is
what happens inside, what is felt and thought, and less what is being
done and said or sung under the imposed formula of the outside ritual.
107
Incense may be used for religious purposes in
ceremonies and worship, but less devout persons use it to help smoke out
mosquitoes, while more aesthetic ones find its fragrance and colour attractive.
108
All forms of external sacramental worship become
worthwhile if they are used as jumping-off steps into real devotion.
109
All gurus and disciples, ceremonials and
initiations belong to duality, relativity.
110
The services of aspiration expressed in song are
an excellent feature of some churches and chapels.
111
Throughout the Orient, at least, if not in other
parts of the world, rituals, sacrifices, and ceremonies have been a large source
of income for the priestly order.
112
It is inevitable that where people tend to
exaggerate the external, sacramental form so disproportionately, they will tend
to overlook the power within the form.
113
A rite, a ceremony, or an image is of worth to
anyone only insofar as it brings him, however slightly, closer to a sense of
holiness, a feeling of reverence, and a recognition of mystery.
114
The exhibition of relics, the erection of
shrines, or the creation of memorials, statues, paintings, and sects to record
the name of a saint or prophet or holy man is useful to impress his attainments
upon the minds of others living long after he has gone, and perhaps to inspire
them to do something for themselves in the same direction.(P)
115
They believe that in touching these objects left
by holy men or in visiting these places where such men resided, they touch
holiness itself. A few even believe that they commune with it.
116
"Spare me, and take your absurdities elsewhere!"
exclaimed Goethe a few days before he died in rejection of the belief in holy
relics - in this case an Apostolic thumb-bone.
117
If you study the history of religion, you will
find that prophets of the highest order, like Buddha, Krishna, and Jesus, did
not write their messages in books. Every writer of a religious revelation or
mystical inspiration belongs to spheres below that on which the great prophets
stood. Their work at best is incomplete and at times imperfect. Therefore we
should not look for perfection in it. Nevertheless, it is necessary to help lead
people in their journey towards the Ever-Perfect and the message reaches those
who are not yet ready for the final quest. To understand this situation, we must
understand first of all that the truth is beyond all intellectual formulation. A
book is the product of the intellect. The truth in its purity can be
communicated only in silence and only to the awakened intuition. Hence the great
prophets felt that the pen would be a limiting instrument to use. But why then
did they use the instrument of speech which also is a mental expression? The
answer is partly that in almost all cases their speech was directed to
individuals, whereas books are not, and partly because of their being able to
give some measure of help towards the understanding of truth through the impact
of auras. The spoken words became merely supplementary to the interior and
intuitive help.
118
Among the other chief purposes, it was the work
of a priestly class as in Hinduism or of a learned class as in Islam to study
and learn their scripture, thus preserving and protecting it. For in those days
there was no printing. The scripture itself was treated with the greatest
respect as containing the record and memorial of the prophet's revelation.
119
It is better to use the term "inspired book"
than the term "divine revelation." The one is more scientific, more in tune with
modern psychological knowledge; the other raises religious doubts and
theological arguments when the assertion is made that it never originated in a
human brain.
120
All scriptures are valuable as inspirers of
faith and uplifters of minds but none is essential as the absolute arbiter of
creed.
121
They do not understand that in setting up the
text of some scripture as the last authority, they are worshipping a graven
image as much as Moses' faithless followers did of old.
122
So much misinterpretation of sacred scriptures,
and especially of the Bible both in its Jewish and Christian parts, has been
rife in the past that it has been used to support contrary opinions. This shows
how much fancy and speculation go into these opinions.
123
The great variety of interpretations of
religious texts may reveal only the different capacities of the interpreters'
imaginative power in many cases but it may also attest their different levels of
awareness.
124
Sacred writings are not necessarily those alone
which conventional opinion labels as such. Any writing which uplifts the mind,
ennobles the character, and imparts a feeling of reverence for the higher power
is a sacred one.
125
From the philosophical standpoint, the entire
chapter of Genesis in the Old Testament is both an allegorical legend and a
divine revelation at remote remove.
126
The undeveloped mentality may be allowed to take
the Book of Genesis as historical fact, in the same way and for the same reasons
that children may be allowed to take any fairy tale as fact. But the developed
mentality ought to know better, ought to take Genesis as an allegory and its
scenes, personages, and events as symbolical.
127
There are several interpretative schools of
semi-mysticism which devote their energies and spend their time finding new
meaning in old texts. They lose themselves on some scripture and torture it into
agreement with their own particular teachings. They might be better employed in
finding reason first, rather than finding incorrect imaginary meanings in sacred
books.
128
There are mystically minded students who spend
much, too much, of their time juggling with esoteric interpretations of
scriptural texts or tortuously hatching out from these texts confirmations of
their own beliefs. My experience is that most passages of sacred scriptures and
most happenings in profane fortune are open to as many mystical interpretations
as there are mystically minded persons to make them. Such quotations of divine
writ and such ascriptions to divine intervention prove nothing.
129
It is easy to fall into the errors of so many
sectarian enthusiasts who see so much more in simple texts than the writers ever
dreamed of.
130
Such grave and great distortions,
interpolations, and eradications have some scriptures undergone in the course of
their history and manipulation, it is no wonder that sects compete in common
ignorance with one another.
131
A writing can be as much a piece of religious
work as one so labelled, even though it is not dealing with a religious subject.
It depends on the writer himself, his attitude and character, his knowledge and
grade of consciousness.
132
In these ancient scriptures the religious
babblings of primitive men are found strangely confounded with the philosophic
reflections of wise ones.
133
Those who find allegorical significances in
religio-mystical bibles, or who attach symbolical meanings to historical sacred
records, need to be especially balanced and discriminating in such activities.
134
Scriptural texts have accommodated so many
different interpretations in the past, and still do, that prudence should
precede acceptance, patience should attend suspense.
135
It is a grave error to found man's moral life on
the say-so of any tribal collection of outdated stories and maxims. A scripture
is acceptable not because it is a scripture, but because and to the extent of
the truth it contains. Also, not everyone who knows how to read can extract the
true meaning from holy scriptures. No scripture, no gospel ever fell from the
skies. Somewhere, some man took up a writing instrument and composed the one
with which his name is associated. And because he was a man, however divinely
inspired, the production was a human act and therefore a fallible one. A book is
not a sacred image. It is not something to be revered merely because its typeset
pages are printed in black ink on white paper. If we set it up as an authority,
we fall into the fallacy of authoritarianism. Medieval debates about angels
dancing on needle points or Mosaic cosmogonies are equally unreal today.
136
Those who think that because a statement appears
in sacred scripture such appearance terminates all further controversy upon a
question are deluding themselves. They base their unqualified assent upon the
undeniable fact that the ancient sages knew what they were talking about, but
they ignore the other fact that some of their followers did not. They do not
know that the scriptural texts have been peppered with later interpolations or
debased with superstitious additions and are consequently not always reliable.
But even if they were, still, the human mind must keep itself unfettered if it
would achieve truth.(P)
137
The biblical sages have told to all human races,
not only to the Hebrew race, truths which, being eternal, are as needed in the
twentieth century ;SCa.d. as they were in the twentieth century ;SCb.c. There is
no statement in the Book of Proverbs, for instance, which requires revising and
bringing up to date, or which can be dismissed as discarded religious
superstition.
138
The Authorized Version of the New Testament is
so clean-cut, so forthrightly spoken and yet picturesque, that it comes near to
being a work of poetic art. It never forgets its purpose - to tell us the story
of a man of God and to teach us what to do with our life.
139
Jesus spoke in Aramaic but the written texts of
his teaching came to us in Hebrew, Greek, and Latin. Buddha spoke in Pali but at
least half his followers got the written teaching in Sanskrit. The possibility
of mistranslation through symbolic, metaphorical, or allegorical expressions
being taken literally; or through esoteric-mystic experiences being only
half-understood; or through terms with two different meanings being used; or
through simple ignorance, is an ever-present peril.
140
The simply constructed, unforgettably inspired
sentences of Jesus may be picked out in the four Gospels from those which have
been interpolated by later men. Why this interpolation, it may be asked? Because
they wrote down the words, as we have them today, after original bearers
were themselves dead. Because with the passage of years and the passing down
from mouth to mouth, remembrance may be faulty. Because human mentality may
misinterpret the facts. Because human desire may exaggerate them. Because the
fatal influence of an ambitious emperor forced organization and institutionalism
on believers to serve his own ends and secured the necessary interpolations for
this purpose on the theory that the end - monopoly and stability of power
through the union of religion and State - justified the means.
141
Those who wish to understand their Christianity
better should make this experiment. Let them procure Doctor Moffatt's
translation of the Bible into modern English. It lacks the beauty of the King
James Version, and can never take its place, but it amply compensates for that
lack by the clearer expression and the fresher insights it gives. The two
versions are needed together, side by side.
142
Esoteric meanings of the Bible: "Jehovah" means
"Who is and who will be." "Israel" means "to see God."
143
The God a man believes in will reflect something
of his own moral character, mental capacity, upbringing, tendencies, and
education. There is no such person as an unbiased, unprejudiced believer. For
God being unknown, the man has to substitute his own idea for direct knowledge.
It makes no difference that this idea has been supplied to him by other men,
through tradition, authority, reading, or hearing. They projected their own
concept onto God and he has enough affinity with them to share their
limitations.
144
God has made man in His own image, says the
Bible. Man has made God in his own image, says the critical science of
comparative religion. Understanding this, we can understand why the African
savage imagines God in the form of a magnified tribal chief of terrifying
aspect. It is not easy, however, to proceed on a higher plane and understand
that it is for much the same reason that highly evolved civilized men have made
God a great Artist or a great Logician or a great Architect or a great
Mathematician. Yet it really is so. Such concepts represent the Supreme seen
under the limitations of the beholder's personality. Therefore they are only
partial and inadequate. The Infinite Power not only includes all these aspects
but necessarily transcends them. So far as the human intellect can form a
complete and correct idea of God it can form it only by bringing the whole
personality to the effort and not merely a fragment of it.
145
Whatever men may say or write about the divine
will always fall short of the actuality. This is so for three reasons. First,
the Real transcends thoughts and their clothes, words. Without personal
experience of it, and achieved insight into it, the intellect yields opinion
only. Second, each man sees and says from his own standpoint, gives his own
reaction to the divine. This is always an individual one. Third, there are many
aspects of the divine. Muhammed listed no less than one hundred, without
exhausting them. So far their totality has eluded description. Let no one insist
on his own picture of the divine as being the whole one. Let no one set
up his favoured symbol of it and exclude all the others from the right of
worship.
146
We do not mean that the concept of God is an
untenable one: we do not assert that it should be totally dropped. We mean only
that in the light of our latest knowledge, as gleaned from such sciences as
physics, astronomy, anthropology, archaeology, comparative religion, and
psychology, the hour has arrived to restate this concept in a modern way. The
concept itself remains, but the semantic content which is put into it must be
rectified and purified. The fictions about God which were fashionable in older
times have been largely exploded, but the fact of God's existence remains
what it always must be - the greatest and grandest in the universe.
147
However false a man's idea of God may be, the
basic instinct which is behind the idea's acceptance still remains a true one.
148
The God whom they worship may be a fiction of
their own brains, but It is not a baseless fiction. The essence of the concept
is true enough; only its form is false.
149
Whether he knows it or not (and if he is a sage
he will surely know but if he is a religionist he may not), the Christian
mystic, the Hindu pundit, the Buddhist monk, the Taoist priest, and the
Muhammedan theologian talk of one and the same Principle under different names.
150
Each group gives a different name to the Parent
of the universe, calls it Brahma or Jehovah, Allah or Tao, but all groups really
direct their worship to one and the same God.
151
The self-existent Principle of Life which is its
own source was given the same name by prophets of three different religions: "I
AM" is the appellation of God in Judaism, Zoroastrianism, and Hinduism.
152
No dogma is more utterly materialistic than that
which would compress the infinite unbounded Spirit into a physical human form, a
personal human self, and worship that as a God. Nor could any other dogma so
utterly falsify truth than that which would make a single religion, a single
church, or a single man be sole repository of God's revelation to the human
race. They are not religious truths, they are merely concessions to human
weakness and human egos. They are exhibitions of the infirmity of human
understanding.
153
The man who goes into a church because he
believes that all the other churches are wrong, is going to a kindergarten
school. When experience has schooled him through many births, he will learn the
first lesson - that God is no respecter of churches but comes to the threshold
of all, and nowadays too often to none.
154
The elementary religionist protests that he
cannot form a conception of an impersonal God and that It could not exist. The
philosophic religionist answers that he cannot form a conception of a personal
God and that no other than an impersonal one could exist.
155
When I feel the divine presence in my heart, I
acknowledge God as Personal; but when, going deeper in silent contemplation, I
vanish in the infinite immeasurable Void, I must afterwards call Him Impersonal.
156
The old theology invested God with the quality
of man. It belittled the Infinite power and imputed petty motives to the
motiveless. Such a theology really worshipped its own thought of God, not God in
reality, its own cruel and pitiful concept of the Inconceivable. Can we wonder
that it provoked atheism and led to agnosticism when the human race began to
outgrow its intellectual childhood? However fitted to that early stage of our
growth, such an idea is unfitted to this mid-twentieth century of our history.
We must and can face the truth that God is not a glorified man showing wilful
characteristics but a Principle of Being, of Life, and of Consciousness which
ever was and therefore ever shall be. There is only one Principle like that,
unique, alone, the origin of all things. The imagination cannot picture it, but
the intuition can receive some hint of its solitary grandeur. Such a hint it may
receive through its worship of its own source, the Overself which links man with
this ineffable power, the Divine Spirit within him which is his innermost Self.
The personal concept of Deity was intended to satisfy the race's childhood, not
to enlighten the race's adulthood. The time has come to do away with such a
false concept and to accept the purity of this philosophic truth.(P)
157
Let us not be misled by the wide-flung nature of
the theological belief in a personal god. For this single primal error
introduces a whole host of other errors in its train. (a) The error of the
observed Nature apart from the observer. This error is involved in the notion of
a separate Creator. (b) The error of teaching a beginning and ending to the
world. If matter ever existed in any form, its underlying essence would never
completely disappear, whatever the changes it underwent and however numerous
they were. (c) The error of the belief that something - the world - was created
out of nothing. (d) The error of the belief that time, space, and motion could
have been created, for the same reason. Their very existence implies that
infinite duration, infinite space, and perpetual motion must also exist - which
would negate their own supposed creation. (e) The error that God is
all-benevolent and merciful yet creates an immense multitude of living creatures
only for the sake of seeing them endure sorrows and tribulations of every kind,
finally crushing them with the bitterest blow of all - death. (f) The delusion
that we are entering into communion with this God (when we are only communing
with our own imaginings about Him).
158
Words or names like "OM," "Allah," and "Mana"
were never invented by ordinary men; they were +revealed to seers. They are the
true natural expressions forthe corresponding ideas of God.
159
The Bible's first commandment is "Thou shalt
have no other Gods before me." What is the meaning of a "god" here? It means
something which is the object of worship. That thing can be money, fame, or sex:
it is not at all necessarily an idol, a force, or a being.
160
What any religion, creed, or cult proclaims
about God is almost always true as to God's existence, but is not always true as
to God's nature.
161
The primitive man fears God. He seeks to
propitiate this distant and awful power by offering sacrifices. The positive
value of this view is the recognition that a power higher than himself does
exist and does affect the course of his life. The civilized man reverently
believes in, and gladly worships, God, who is felt to be much closer and like a
benevolent parent. The element of fear is still not eradicated but it is very
largely reduced.
162
If the arguments of atheism are studied, they
will all be found directed against the idea that God is a Person, the mental
image which has been set up and which presents God as an enlarged and glorified
semi-human being.
163
Religion worships a Personal God through symbols
but nondualism sees and seeks union with what is behind them, the Impersonal
Reality.
164
The discovery that God is may be beyond
our own experience, but it need not be beyond our faith.
165
The divine presence is outside time, and those
who seek it through ceremonies, practices, or methods measured inside time can
find looking-glass images but not the original presence.
166
Many people have so meditated upon their concept
of God, that they have become one with the concept and not one with God, as they
vainly delude themselves. The conceptis not reality.(P)
167
The idea of a personal God as a loving father
naturally appeals to, and greatly helps, the intellectually young. Children
everywhere feel acutely the need of, and depend upon, such a parent. But when
they grow up and become adult, they learn to practise a large measure of
self-reliance. In the same way, with the more advanced concept of Deity, the
love remains but the being is depersonalized.
168
It will not avail us to practise self-deception.
Let us think for a moment of how many millions of men and women implored God to
bring this bitter war to an end during its first year but found God deaf, how
many millions repeated this request during its second year with the same sad
result. Those who would force this narrow and petty picture of God upon others,
deny and blaspheme the true God in the very act. Whoever reflects upon this
unsatisfactory conception of a deity subject to racial bias, arbitrary
favouritism, and other limitations of human personality, must repudiate it. And
if it is not repudiated by millions it is only because they never pause to
reflect long enough nor deeply enough on such a matter.
169
They project their own mental picture of their
prophet or saviour, and it is this only that they see and worship. This
projection becomes a barrier between them and the reality, which is by its very
presence rendered inaccessible to them.
170
Tibetan texts admit frankly what other religious
documents fail to admit, that the crowds of gods whose forms fill temple altars
and wayside shrines are virtually "the play of one's own mind," that all the
pageantry of worship, chants, music, and prayers is directed to symbolic
figures.
171
We all worship God as best we can. But the
ignorant perceive and honour only the veils of liturgy, dogma, and ceremony
which enwrap Him, whereas the wise thrust the veils aside and worship Him as He
is.
172
It is necessary to remind the orthodox from time
to time of what one of the greatest and sincerest of orthodox Episcopalian
clergymen reminded his audience in a Philadelphia church. He himself dwelt in
the holy Presence and knew what he was talking about when he startled them by
exclaiming: "God is not an Episcopalian."
173
The concept of God as Father or Father-Mother is
a true one but still only an elementary one. The man who rises to the
understanding of God as that in which his own self is rooted holds a truer
concept.
174
Most people worship at an idol's shrine even
when they honestly believe they are worshipping God. For they accept the
imaginary personification of the Infinite Power which popular religion sets
before them, and bow before it.
175
The atheist asserts that God does not exist, the
religionist claims that He does, while the agnostic declares that both are
talking nonsense because it is utterly impossible for the human mind, with all
its limitations and conditioning, to get at the truth of this matter, since it
can know only its own states.
176
Those who feel they must apply a personal
pronoun to Deity should do so. But they in turn should accord equal liberty to
others who are unable to share this feeling, and not regard them as apostates or
heretics.
177
Those who can only believe in a God who has
taken up his abode in some institution, some established organization, are and
always have been in the majority.
178
The unconscious belief that there is a divine
power back of the universe prevails even in the materialist, the sceptic, and
the atheist. Only he conceives of it in his own deficient way, limits it to some
force issuing from it, and gives it a different name.
179
There are such wide differences among the ideas
about God which men, groping to get out of their ignorance, hold, that they
might find it more useful to start by examining their equipment for the task.
180
Whatever evidence in disproof of God's existence
is provided by thought can refer only to a personal God of popular religions
rather than to an impersonal God of an intellectual elite.