1
The criticism of religious truths arises not only
out of its confusion of pure religion with ecclesiastical religion, but, in the
case of other persons, out of a low character rather than a lofty ideal. It is
then destructive and unscrupulous, taking meanings and deliberately distorting
them to suit its own purposes. It is then sincere only in its selfishness and
adequate only in its materialism, not only seeking all the defects of the
attitude it proposes to replace but also inventing many imaginary ones. It lives
by criticism and feeds on conflict. It cunningly entraps those who are so
troubled by present world conditions as to have lost hope, enthusiasm, courage,
and faith on the one hand, and on the other those who are so troubled by these
conditions as to have become unbalanced, violent, irrational, and cruel. To
both, the phraseology of conventional religion, politics, society, and economics
has become hollow. To both, the feebleness and foolishness of our entire social
structure have become apparent. But both are wrong.
2
Unfair and untrue criticism by sceptics may well be
ignored, but too often in the past religions have failed to benefit themselves
by looking into justifiable criticism from believers. This failure has
strengthened superstition and weakened real religion.
3
Instead of being vexed over the rise of scepticism
and indifference or grieved over the fall of religious influence, they should
seek the causes and adjust faith to reason and truth.
4
If a teaching can make a man more hopeful when
accepted, more peaceful when studied, and more intuitive when applied, then it
deserves respect, not scorn.
5
When we speak here of the dangers of atheism and the
darkness of materialism, we do not refer to those brave, intelligent men who
have protested against superstitious religions and pious exploitation. That
which they opposed was not genuine religion at all, but the satanic pretense of
it. It is an historic and unfortunate fact that such pretense is too often
successful.
6
Every man who receives the Life-Force from his inner
being yet denies its existence, who is sustained by the Overself's power yet
decries those who bear witness to it, sins against the Holy Ghost. This is the
real meaning of that mysterious sentence in the New Testament which refers to
such a sin.
7
Each person has some kind of faith; this includes
the person whose faith reposes in scepticism.(P)
8
In making unfaith their faith, the scoffing have
taken the first step forward out of superstition on a long road whose course
will be spiral and whose end will be religious once again. But because the
impulse behind this step is so largely selfish and passionate, so negative in
emotional feelings and erroneous in intellectual convictions, it is a dangerous
one. In getting rid of the evil of superstition, they have invited other evils,
equally bad and even worse, to replace it.
9
Whether religion itself be totally eclipsed or newly
revived, the fundamental truth from which it rises is always hidden deep in the
subconscious mind of man. Life itself, the very drive behind the whole universe,
will force the atheist one day to seek it and will give him no rest until he
finds it.
10
It would be true to say that the materialism of
our time is an agnostic rather than an atheistic one. People are indifferent to
the question of whether there is or is not a higher power, rather than being
deliberate deniers of its existence.
11
The atheists who see only the weaknesses of
religion and not its services denounce it as false and injurious. They seize on
the undoubted harm done by religious exploitation and religious superstition as
a pretext for themselves doing infinitely greater harm by proclaiming all
religious feeling to be mere illusion. They point also to the mental aberrations
of individual mystics to denounce all mysticism as an even greater illusion. But
to stamp out every manifestation of religious life and mystical enlightenment
would reduce man to the level of the brute, albeit a cunning intellectual brute.
12
How pitiful the suggestion of Marx that religion
is an invention of human imagination to enable one class - the sacerdotal - to
prey on the people, and another class - the upper - to exploit the people, or
the assertion of Polybius that it is an invention of society for its own
protection to maintain order among men and prevent them from running amok into
anarchy by following their own individual wills entirely. That it has been used
for such purposes historically is correct, but the religious instinct is a very
real thing and rises from a very real source.
13
The theory, based on economics, according to which
religion was invented to help despoil the working class is unscientific: it is
also unworthy of those who boast that they are led by reason. The very adherence
to such a theory proves that they are led much more by strong emotion.
14
He alone can be an atheist who has never
experienced a glimpse, or who has been caught and become embedded in a hard dry
intellectualism, or in whom ethics and conscience have withered.
15
The egoistic fool, with his intellect puffed up by
a little learning, sets out to criticize everything, including the belief in
God. Let us be humbler, awed by the thought of the World-Mind's unchanging
identity and unbroken infinity.
16
Too often a man thinks that his problem is solely
personal, whereas it is most probably common to all mankind. Most men and women
have or will have to face it at some time; for the basic problems of the human
situation are really few, and part of the work of a religious prophet is to give
guidance in a general way as to how rightly to deal with these problems. Those
atheistic Communists who reject pure religion along with their rejection of
sectarian religion, reject also a hand stretched out to help them. In their
madness they ignore every prophet's warning against violence and hatred, against
unscrupulousness and greed, and set out consciously to create sorrow for
themselves.
17
The spread of atheistic movements is something to
be sadly deplored. But if they are the inevitable reaction against sham religion
we are forced to accept them as historical necessity. This necessity is,
however, quite temporary and if atheism is put forward or permitted to remain as
ultimate truth, then it becomes as morally disastrous to humanity as the falsity
against which it is unconsciously opposed by the dialectic movement of racial
destiny.
18
Those psychoanalysts who would stamp all religious
instinct as a sexual derivation and those materialists who would stamp all
religious belief as a social exploitation exhibit neither a profound psychology
in the one case nor an accurate realism in the other. What they assert is only
sometimes and somewhere true, not always and everywhere true.
19
The atheistic leaders of our time have tried to
banish the concept of God. They have succeeded in doing so for large numbers of
people, especially young people. But what is true in the concept will reappear
in men's minds again, for it is eternal. It cannot be banished although it can
be covered over for a time.
20
A time comes when he outgrows the elementary
doctrines and popular observances, when prayer and ceremonial, scripture and
asceticism have no further usefulness for him. But this does not entitle him to
denounce them to the world, to destroy their place in life, or to dissuade
others from using them.
21
It is wrong of those who feel they receive no
blessing, no spiritual gain of peace, from a church sacrament to scorn as
superstitious others who feel with joy that they do receive it.
22
"You snivelling priest," exclaimed Voltaire, "you
are imposing delusions upon society for your own aggrandizement."
23
If a man believes he is nothing else than a human
electrical machine, why should he pay any attention to moral character?
24
It is enough to make two statements about the
Russians - first, the government in all its departments officially opposes
religion; second, the highly influential Communist Party makes atheism an
article of belief before membership is granted - to understand why and predict
that either self-reaction or self-destruction awaits them. There may be no
future also for the Russian Orthodox Church - narrow, intolerant, and
materialistic as it was - but religion in a larger, purer, and truer
sense must one day return because of the innate need for it.
25
Sceptics find one religion as untrustworthy as
another because all religions are founded on belief in the existence of an
Unknown and - to them - unknowable Entity.
26
The atheist who believes that morality is
supported by religion to help keep the populace obedient may be partly right and
partly wrong. But he falls into error if he believes that religion was invented
solely for this purpose.
27
The illusionist religions, which reject all values
and virtues in the world in which we humans have to live, give us little to hope
for or live for. It is not surprising that most of the masses under their
influence have lived a half-animal existence.
28
In Germany and Austria there were in 1933 over a
million members of Freethought organizations; in Czechoslovakia in 1938 there
were a million persons who declared themselves to belong to no religious body.
29
The outdated scepticism of earlier science and the
moral ineffectualness of the later Church have helped those Communists who brand
religion as an instrument of intellectual domination and indirectly of economic
exploitation.
30
God is invoked on every side but there is no sign
that he has ever been involved in our affairs, say the sceptics. If he reigns,
he does not rule!
31
All too many have shaken themselves free from
religious superstition without having replaced it by religious truth.
32
The history of most religious organizations is a
history of pure motives mixed with impure ones, of spiritual aspiration mixed
with human exploitation, of reverence mixed with selfishness, intuition with
superstition, and prayerful petition with arrogant exclusiveness.
33
History shows that nearly every religion moves
through the same time-worn cycle of phases - from purity and reality and
fellowship through organization and literalness and external expansion to
hypocrisy and exploitation and tyranny. All religious influence historically
passes through these stages of rise and fall. It begins by expressing an
elementary portion of divine truth and by promoting a simple standard of human
morality. It ends by opposing the truth and defending immorality. In its purity
and vitality, it suffuses the hearts of its votaries with goodwill towards other
men and hence draws them closer together. But in its degradation and
devitalization it poisons the hearts of its slaves with intolerance towards
other men and thus sets them farther apart. The declension of a religious
movement begins at the point where the external organization of it begins to
replace the internal feeling of it. The intuition is then gradually forgotten
and the importance of funds, buildings, officials, prestige, and power rises
egoistically and ambitiously in its stead. In the end the inner reality is all
but lost, only its mocking shadow remains. It might be said that in its early
unformed state, the movement spiritually exhilarates men but in its later
institutional state it materially exploits them. It is therefore necessary to
make a clear-cut distinction between a religion in its original pure form and in
its later corrupt form. Time corrupts every religion. The history of
Christianity confirms this cyclic nature of religion. It arose outwardly amidst
bitter suffering and violent death; it began to fall inwardly amidst gilded
prosperity and exaggerated pomp.
34
By "religion" is meant here not any particular one
but the entire cluster of authentic sacred revelations throughout the world. No
particular world-religion is referred to in our criticism. What is to be said is
true of them all, although more true of some and less of others.
35
The vitality of a religion is most apparent in its
primitive unorganized form, as the purity of a religion is most apparent in its
apostolic phase.
36
As the inward sense of being dedicated followers
of a Way, a Truth and Life, fades away with the efflux of time, so religious
vision narrows, moral aspiration slackens, declarations of rigid dogma are
insisted on, the abidance by a group of outward customs and rules is enforced,
individuality is crushed as heresy, the zeal for self-improvement is replaced by
the zeal for meddling with the affairs of others, petty differences are
exaggerated, and pure creative spirituality is killed. Every established
religion seems historically to pass down through such a degenerative process to
a dry sterile condition. It seems not possible to keep the movement on the high
level at which the prophet started it.
37
Neither the minds that gather around a prophet nor
those who diffuse his influence and teaching in later centuries are likely to be
equal to his own. To that extent, therefore, their understanding of him and his
teaching is likely to be inferior to his own. This distance from him has the one
advantage, however, that it brings them more on a level with the multitude whom
they themselves wish to influence or convert.
38
Dull followers in the generations soon to come
falsify his ideas, and selfish ones degrade them. Such is the disagreeable truth
about every prophet's fate. Receiving the pure teaching is a sacrament but
upholding its degenerated forms is a sacrilege.
39
If you realize the extraordinary length of time of
the real history of man, and not merely the history which is taught in schools,
you will realize also that many religions have come and completely disappeared.
Why should we think that these religions which we now know must continue to
exist permanently? They are only tools which are used by God so long as they are
effective but thrown aside when they are worn out.
40
Time is like a river which is forever flowing
onwards, which can never turn back, and which sweeps religions and races before
it. This is why those who look for a triumphant and lasting revival of any
particular religion deceive themselves. Revivals have occurred and will occur,
but history shows how transient they are and philosophy shows why this must be
so.
41
People are being deceived by the renewed vitality
of some old religions, by their conversions, activities, and literature, into
believing that they are witnessing a veritable and durable renaissance with a
long bright future before it. This is particularly true of Christians, Hindus,
and Muslims. But what are they really witnessing? It is nothing more than the
dying flicker of sunset, the sudden blaze before darkness falls.
42
History teaches the same story about all the
religions. They begin as faiths, freely held in the heart; they culminate as
creeds, imposed like shackles upon the mind. The myth of an almost
ecclesiastical infallibility is maintained by the church leaders in their own
interests.
43
There comes a time in the life of each traditional
religion when it becomes the enemy of true religion. History tells us this;
psychology predicts its inevitability.
44
Although atheism appears when religion makes much
more fuss over the appearance of virtue than over its reality, mysticism also
appears when sufficient time has elapsed to demonstrate the intuitive barrenness
of such decadent religion as well as the moral danger to its followers.
45
After the death of the guru, we see the hard
outlines of a new sect in the making, the forming of an ecclesiastic hierarchy
with new episcopate and new priesthood, the increasing disposition to detect
heresy or schism and shut out those who exhibit the capacity, if not the
courage, to think for themselves, the rise of personal ambitions and the seeking
of private advantage. The honest, let alone passionate, pursuit of truth
gradually vanishes.
46
When men transfer their faith to another religion,
cult, or system of thought, it not only shows that the force behind the new one
is greater than that behind the old one, but may also show that the World-Idea,
which includes karma, is itself the force promoting the successful rival.
47
In those first few centuries when Christianity was
a pure and vital religion, the name Christian meant one who believed in the
existence of this higher power and surrendered his heart to its loving presence.
The name Muslim (our western "Muhammedan") had much the same meaning in the
early days of Islam's history. It signified one who had submitted his lower self
to the Divine, resigned his personal will to the higher will of God. Such
submission was not regarded as being only moral; it was also psychological. That
is, it was to rule consciousness as well as conduct. Hence it was a difficult
achievement following a long endeavour rather than a mere verbal assent made in
a single moment.
48
When convention becomes stagnant and kills the
living element in custom or religion, it suffocates the growing element in man's
soul.
49
Creeds will come and go, being at their best the
results of the working of human minds striving to comprehend divine glimpses.
They are necessarily imperfect.
50
Most religions were constructed gradually, shaped
by time and history. This is most true of Judaism and Christianity, least true
of Hinduism and Buddhism.
51
The corruptions of religious doctrine and the
conventions of religious society keep out the true spirit of the prophet behind
the religion itself.
52
Little sects may become large churches. The
movement towards truth may become an institution which hinders truth. The
persecuted Christians of the fourth century became the persecuting Inquisition
of the fourteenth. Given enough time white may turn black.
53
There are two chief justifications for the
existence of a religion: (a) its influence upon the character and actions of
people for the better; (b) its dim intimation of world meaning. But when a
religion fails to prevent wickedness or to convince men that their existence has
a higher purpose, it deserves to decline - and does.
54
The impulse which originated each existing
religion has largely worked itself out, leaving stark error and pseudo-religion
as its current offering. Even the error has come in the end to assume the form
of an authentic tradition!
55
The visible difference between religion in its
primitive purity and in its aged decadence is the best argument for the
periodical need of a new religion.
56
Not only Buddhism but also Islam and Judaism
originally banned the artistic representation of man's form in religious
symbolism. Why? Because it commonly led to worship of idols, of the form of the
human formulator of that particular religion.
57
If during a prophet's lifetime legends spring up
which are only half-true or even wholly untrue, what is likely to happen after
his death? This is one reason why religions are said to be based on faith.
58
The debasement of a religion usually runs parallel
to the increment of its organization.
59
A study of religious origins will reveal that much
which today passes as established religion is merely accretion: it was added in
the course of time. Tradition - now regarded as sacrosanct - was once
innovation. It is often the opinion of later men overlaid on the Master's words.
60
The farther we get from the Prophet's time, the
more difficult it becomes to discover exactly what he taught. Sects multiply in
his name, each with a different doctrine. Imaginations and interpolations,
distortions and caricatures become part of the received teaching. As if this
were not enough, personal ambitions and institutional exploitations add to the
confusion.
61
The defect in human nature which makes it stress
the person rather than the power using him, the letter rather than the spirit,
is responsible in part for the deterioration of religion. Let men beware of a
personality worship which is carried blindly to idolatrous extremes. Let them
beware, also, of unquestionably receiving ideas about religion which have been
propagated by its ministers and missionaries. It is not group effort but
individual effort that counts on the quest. The prophets and teachers helped
people in groups and churches only because of the need of economizing their own
time and energy, not because this was more efficacious. Those who quote Jesus:
"Where two or three are gathered in my name, there shall I be in the midst of
them" in rebuttal, are self-deceived. Words like these were never spoken by
Jesus. They were interpolated by cunning priests. The populace, a term in which
from the standpoint of intelligence we must include different members from all
social strata from lowest to highest, is led to accept contradictions and
obscurities out of a regard for religious authority which paralyses all
independent thinking.
62
It is a tragedy of all history that the names of
Men like Jesus, who came only to do good, are invariably exploited by those who
fail to catch their spirit and do more harm than good. Formal entry into any
religious organization relates a man only to that organization, not at all to
the Prophet whose name it claims. No religious institution in history has
remained utterly true to the Prophet whose name it takes, whose word it
preaches, whose ethic it inculcates. A religious prophet is mocked, not
honoured, when men mouth his name and avoid his example. No church is a mystical
body of any prophet. All churches are, after all, only human societies, and
suffer from the weaknesses and selfishnesses, the errors and mistakes,
inseparable from such societies. It is a historical fact that where religious
influence upon society has bred the evils of fanaticism, narrow-mindedness,
intolerance, superstition, and backwardness, their presence may be traced back
to the professional members and monkish institutions of that religion.
Priestcraft, as I have seen it in certain Oriental and Occidental lands, is
often ignorant and generally arrogant. Throughout the world you may divide
clergymen and priests into two categories - those who are merely the holders of
jobs and those who are truly ministers of religion.(P)
63
If you want the truth as it was really taught,
remember that you will get from the historic official teaching of the later
followers a tampered, interpolated, excised, weighted, and moulded doctrine.
64
When the truth of recompense is perverted, it
becomes fatalism. Then the aspirations to evolve personally and improve
environmentally are arrested, while responsibility for inaction or action is
placed outside oneself.
65
More and more as I came to understand religion, to
separate its truths from its fables, I discovered how the Master's teaching had
been corrupted or distorted, truncated, or stressed in the wrong places. This
happened more in some faiths than in others, and differently in one from the
other. It happened in Judaism and Buddhism, in Islam and Christianity.
66
The theologians must take their share of
responsibility for the enormous extent and power of materialism today, for their
absurd squabbles about unreal or remote issues and their silly dogmatics about
matters of which they can know nothing have repelled large numbers who
seek to use their God-given faculty of reason and their capacity to observe
facts.
67
There is a long distance from the rhetorical urges
intended to create religious frenzy to the calm statement intended to evoke
religious intuition.
68
Worse than the degeneration of doctrine has been
the degeneration of ethics. A man best proves what he is by his conduct, an
institution or society by its deeds. For verbal preaching may be mocked by
contradictory practice. The expounders and hierarchs of religion are rightly
expected to set good standards for the supposedly weaker masses, but sacerdotal
cupidity and ecclesiastical intolerance, the ignoble lust for power and the
ignorant hatred of other faiths, have far too often disappointed expectation.
69
The institutions, the credos, the scriptural
documents even, of a religion are man-made. Even if and where they are made
under divine inspiration, it may not have been present all the time.
70
What is left of a religion after thousands of
years of man-handling by biased or prejudiced parties should be received with
critical, independent judgement.
71
The temples and churches, the synagogues and
mosques of old established religions have become empty of true spirituality,
their thresholds profaned by lack of genuine interest, true faith, or real
obedience to religion's dictates. The basic commandments of the founders of
religion, simple though they be, are seldom given the importance they deserve.
In short, the sacred name of religion is violated daily, year after year,
century after century.
72
The only way to retain Faith is to regenerate it.
Churchianity must become Christianity. Its failure became plain during the War,
when a situation existed where the Japanese nominal followers of the
peace-bringing Buddha spread murder and pillage across Asia and where the German
nominal followers of the love-bringing Jesus spread hatred and aggression across
Europe, in some cases with the sanction and under the blessing of their local
priests and national High Priests and in all cases without a firm protest and
resolute opposition by the whole weight of their organizational influence
against such betrayal of what both Buddha and Jesus stood for. Here history but
repeats itself. It was not the atheists who crucified Jesus but the priests. It
was not the atheists who drove Buddhism right out of India but the priests.
73
People are easily deceived by the stature to which
religions have grown into thinking that they have achieved assured stability. An
institution which has reached great size has not necessarily reached great
success. It is necessary to look beneath the illusion of numbers and the skin of
popularity. Spiritual degeneration and decrepitude are still what they are even
if they are spread among millions of people. When we try to understand the
causes of such disintegration, we are inevitably led to the conclusion that
religion wrongly understood and wrongly expounded breeds distrust, exploits
ignorance, and disrupts society. How do ordinary people arrive at their
understanding of a religion, then? They arrive at it through the guidance of
official exponents. Therefore the latter bear a larger responsibility for the
downfall of their own faith than they usually realize. They have often invoked
judgement of God on others; have they ever observed how history has invoked the
judgement of God on them? So far as the mission of an institution consists in
assuming the austere role of a prophet and making the glowing message of such a
man freely available to simple toiling folk, so far as its presence in society
acts as a check on human character, which would otherwise degenerate and permit
evils more serious than existing ones to spring up, it possesses something which
the people profoundly need; it has a most valuable service to render for which
it must live, and it can face its critics as indifferently as Jesus faced his
persecutors. But so far as the institution has come to mean something glaringly
different or has come to constitute a professional means of livelihood for
certain individuals, merely by seating them on the chair of sanctity, or has
associated itself with pointless dogmas which outrage human intelligence, it has
certainly become something so unchristian and useless that the continued fall of
its influence need surprise none.
74
An organization is required to transmit the
services of religion whether it be an elaborate Church with three continents
under its wing or an obscure sect with a single preacher located in a small
room. The personnel of this organization constitute its living value, for theirs
is the duty of giving right guidance to its followers. If prelates and priests
understand the higher purport of religion they will slowly uplift their flock
and deem it their duty to serve rather than to enslave them. For instance, they
will gradually replace the notion of an angry or cruel God to be propitiated
through devotional communion. If however they fail to understand this purport,
they will misunderstand it. And as they are notoriously and tenaciously
conservative, they will apply this quality - so admirable when it bespeaks
loyalty to true and virtuous things - in wrong directions such as the
dissemination of outworn, unimportant dogmas or the support of barbarous
customs, untenable doctrines, false history, and worthless rites - nearly all of
which do not belong to the faith in its primitive purity but are mutilations or
accretions originating from the mediocre minds of ignorant interpolators or the
selfish hearts of greedy interpreters. This will lead slowly to the next step,
which is to use the organization primarily for their selfish benefit. When this
happens the people naturally lose their faith in them as well as in the rites
and dogmas, the ethical value of their religion wanes, and enemies arise both
inside and outside its frontiers to bring it crumbling to the ground in the long
course of time.
75
Religion as shaped by history is not the same as
religion as propagated by the prophet.
76
If religions lose their original inspiration, if
their texts get corrupted and their priests get worldly, it is relevant to
enquire whether such deteriorations can be avoided. The imperfections of human
nature warn us that total avoidance is impossible.
77
How many a prophet has been crucified afresh by
his alleged followers who persecuted and oppressed in his name! How often has
his teaching been caricatured by giving it a false application to serve personal
interests or support emotional hatreds!
78
Religion is supposed to raise a man's moral
quality, diminish his hatred, and curb his selfishness, but too often in history
it has failed to do so. But it is not only religion that is at fault: it is also
the stubbornness of man himself.
79
When a religion, suffering from decay and inertia,
asks us to give reverence to tradition more than we give it to God, it fails in
its own mission.
80
When the ceremonies and forms of religion have
become a tangled network, when the primal simplicity of its sanctities has been
lost underneath the fussy elaborations of its dogmas, it becomes sterile and
unhelpful: from the highest point of view, such religion becomes irreligion.
81
If the immature are taught nothing better than the
incredible and half-credible assertions, the foolish tales they have hitherto
been told, why wonder that religious faith and church attendance turn into
religious hypocrisy?
82
It is right and proper to continue a good
tradition, to keep a spiritual inheritance from the past which has intrinsic
worth; but it is not right to demand enslavement to such tradition and
inheritance so that nothing new may enter or be said.
83
The atmosphere of pure religion is as different
from the atmosphere of sectarian organization as a natural flower is different
from an artificial one.
84
Religion which wills to lead mankind into
spiritual consciousness has failed to do so. Why? Because it has led him into
organizations, groups, divisions, monasteries, ashrams, sectarianism, and
centres. These have become the important things, not the spiritual
consciousness.
85
We may honour, even revere, a place in this world,
an epoch in spiritual history, a man who has been graced by enlightenment; but
to depend on any particular one only is both unwise and sectarian.
86
He only has the fullest right to talk of God who
knows God, not his idea, fancy, belief, or imagination about God. He only
should write of the soul, its power, peace, and wisdom, who lives in it every
moment of every day. But since such men are all too rare and hard to find,
mankind has had to accept substitutes for them. These substitutes are frail and
fallible mortals, clutching at shadows. This is why religionists disagree,
quarrel, fight, and persecute both inside and outside their own groups.(P)
87
Since truth can be looked at from different
standpoints, since it has different aspects, it is desirable that there should
exist a variety of doctrines and views. Where the attempt is made to congeal it
into a fixed creed, for all time, a sect is created and sectarian prejudices are
introduced.
88
A sect is not open to truth: it closes the door
upon what it has, will not scrutinize whether it be truth or not, will not admit
new formulations. And by sects I mean groups with many millions of adherents or
a few hundreds. The larger they are, the more accustomed to power they are, and
the less open they are when traditional formulations no longer meet contemporary
needs.
89
No membership of any church, temple, or ashram
will save you if it becomes a cause of narrowing down ideas, relationships, mind
- of sectarianism.
90
It is the wrong idea they have of the sect which
constitutes their enslavement, not necessarily the sect itself. With a free mind
they can use its organization safely.
91
Why has every historic religion divided itself
into sects, why has no religious and no mystical organization yet escaped being
severed by sectarianism or cut by schism? The answer can be found partly in the
different needs of different types of human individuals, and partly in the
imperfections and weaknesses of human character. It is because men have not
risen into the full truth, because their understanding has not been freed from
egoism nor their feelings from bias, that they fall into mean and petty
sectarianism. In this pitiful condition, they imagine God to care only for
members of their own sect and no other! The work of adverse forces seeking to
pervert, materialize, or nullify the original inspired teaching must also be
taken into account.
92
Those who look for an earthly heaven and spiritual
millennium round the corner of the widespread adoption of some cult are sure to
be disappointed. Their credulity shows they understand neither why nor how cults
are formed, nor what human nature still is. That people will shed overnight
their conventional forms of religious subservience on the one hand, and their
selfishness and violence, their ignorance and uncontrol on the other hand, is a
naïve belief which only naïve unphilosophic cults could foster.
93
It was a seventeenth-century clergyman, Christian
Hoburg, who dared to publish a pamphlet, albeit pseudonymously, which contained
such statements as "All Churches are sectarian" and "Christ is unknown to all
the Churches."
94
All the revolts against orthodoxy, against
organization, against dogma, acquire an enthusiastic following which ultimately
ends up with another orthodoxy, another organization, another set of dogmas.
95
My plaint against them is that they are parrots,
endlessly repeating and babbling the answers which original minds gave thousands
of years ago. They are quite noncreative, and too often quite sectarian under
their pretense of non-sectarianism.
96
Not only do organized religions split off into
sects, but there are further splits of sects within sects.
97
There are benefits and disadvantages in old,
established, traditional religions. But if the disadvantages stay too long or
become too strong, they obstruct the basic purpose of religion. If their
doctrines hamper religious aspiration or tyrannize over men, they are rendering
a disservice. If symbols are taken too literally they may bind men to
idol-worship and they may become substitutes for reality. Even an effort to
propagate non-sectarian views, to cull what is good or essential from various
quarters - as theosophy was to a large extent an attempt - even such a movement
is likely, in the end, to become itself sectarian.
98
Schisms are found inside most religions: they are
not less free from the ego's activity than politics and commerce.
99
Most blind followers of a sect do not attempt to
understand the metaphysical and practical problems involved but simply take
sides against the one who is being personally vilified.
100
The earnest pleas of Saint Paul could not stop
dissensions among the faithful during his own lifetime: "I beg of you, brethren,
be perfectly united in the same mind and in the same judgement." It has not
stopped them dividing into bickering sects and contending cliques during the
many centuries since his lifetime. Only when we understand the limitations of
religion shall we understand why his plea was a utopian dream.
101
A religion might possibly gain universal support
one day, but unless its devotees had touched and kept the philosophic level,
sects would eventually appear within it to break the uniformity and disturb the
harmony.
102
None save Mind Itself can know what Mind is. No
person can form an idea of Mind which is at all adequate. No one can create a
mental picture which is correct. No one can formulate a concept which
corresponds to the actuality of Mind. All results suffer from human limitations.
If accepted by any religious creed they become idols worshipped in vain. If this
be so it becomes clear that religious intolerance and religious persecution are
evil human failings masquerading as virtues exercised on behalf of faith in the
true God!
103
The notion that some sect, some people, or some
race has been chosen to fulfil a special mission upon earth is a notion which is
to be found in every nation that a philosopher can visit and in every epoch of
history that he can study. It is a foolish notion and a recurring fallacy. It is
such teaching which has kept false ideas and foolish emotions stubbornly alive.
But it will persist and go on persisting because it appeals to peoples' vanity,
not because it is based on any facts. Josephus lengthily argued that Plato
derived his wisdom from Hebrew lore. Nowadays the Hindu Swamis tell us that
Plato borrowed it from Indian lore. 'Tis all opinion, mere opinion - the truth
is that the light of wisdom can shine everywhere, on any race and at any time.
No single nation or land possesses primal inspiration.
104
The devotee believes that his God is the only
true God, and other people's Gods are inferior or false. His ego is thus still
in the way, despite high experiences.
105
So long as each institutional religion asserts
that it alone has the truth, or has more truth, or more closeness to God, or
that it is the most important vehicle used by God, so long will it continue to
divide men, foster prejudice and ill will, even create hate, along with whatever
good it is, or is capable of, doing.
106
Every man is entitled to his own personal
opinion. It is his private possession. But when he wants to communicate it to
others as a universal dogma or, worse, to impose it upon them as a universal
faith received from God, we are entitled to remind him that he ought to keep his
affairs to himself.
107
In the end the powers of karma fall crushingly
upon those who, for selfish motives, have suppressed truth and supported
falsehood.
108
Jesus would have been the first to realize that
the love which he enjoined on his followers was essentially the same as the
compassion which Buddha enjoined on his own. Yet, uninformed, or informed but
biased, religionists seek to decry the Oriental teachings by proving the alleged
superiority of the Occidental - as if Jesus was not Himself an Oriental! The
real secret of this attempt to classify Jesus among the Occidental races is that
they happen to be Occidental: in short, it is the dominance of their egos which
leads to the confusion in their concepts.
109
If prejudice favouring an inherited creed denies
the full truth, bias against it blocks the path to such truth.
110
All such denigration of other spiritual paths or
of other spiritual tribes is as unnecessary as it is inexcusable.
111
The history of religious bigotry is associated
with the history of religious persecution. If the first is denied entry, the
second cannot appear.
112
The higher power bears no labels but men invent
them and, later, their descendants begin to worship the labels instead of the
power. Hence religious conflicts and wars: hence, too, religious ideas and
atheistic movements.
113
Wherever there is persecution within a
religion of those who differ from the ruling authority of the period, it usually
covers the fact that the persecutors are greater heretics than their victims.
For the Founder did not come to preach hatred and cruelty - there is enough of
that in the world for God not to need to send someone to increase it - but
virtue and goodwill. So the persecutors, even if successfully established and
long established, are not preaching his message, but their own, which
contradicts it.
114
The overleaping of these sectarian labels can
only help the dissolving of the sectarian frictions, quarrels, persecutions, and
intolerances which in the end turn into tortures, inquisitions, hatreds, and
wars.
115
If we study the history of established state
religions, too often we find that the priests or clergy of the religion have
been able to stir up the fanaticism of ignorant crowds to persecute or to
eliminate those who dare to believe otherwise and are foolish enough to state
their beliefs publicly. It must be pointed out that this tendency is most
pronounced among those who follow the three Semitic religions: Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam, in the order of their historic appearance. It is all to
the credit of Buddhism and Hinduism that tolerance is almost a tenet of their
religions.
116
When the acceptance of religious faith stirs up
animosity, creates hatred, and fosters persecution, it is then no better but
even worse than its rejection.
117
Criticism is the inevitable karma of
superstitious credulity as hatred is the inevitable karma of unjust persecution.
We heard much of the persecutions of the Russian Orthodox Church by the
Bolsheviks after their revolution but little of the persecutions by the same
Church before the revolution. Those who understand how karmic retribution works
unerringly will find the following little paragraph, taken from a leading St.
Petersburg newspaper, Novoye Vremya, during the year 1892, very
significant. Dealing with accounts given by Prince Mestcherski of certain
suffering endured by the Christian sect called "Old Believers" at the hands of
the Orthodox State Church, in Siberia, the paper writes: "The treatment of the
Buddhists is still harsher. Says the Prince, 'They are literally forced by the
police, at the instance of the local clergy, to embrace Christianity. All kinds
of means are resorted to; they are captured in the woods, hunted like beasts and
beaten, force even being employed with pregnant women.' "
118
What strikes us most poignantly is the absence
of sympathy, of love in the widest Christian sense, for all those outside each
little sect. For the incompatible difference between the lofty kindness enjoined
by Jesus and the petty meanness practised by the sectarians in his name is
heart-saddening.
119
Religion has hardly been successful in bringing
men to the most elementary and merely negative duty of refraining from killing
one another. At Ayuthia, the former capital of Siam but now overgrown by jungle,
I saw a lone large statue of Gautama the Buddha sadly looking out at the ruins
of the city destroyed by a Burmese army two centuries ago. And both antagonists
claimed to be Buddhists! At Shanghai, I saw another Buddha statue amid the
debris of a wrecked temple in the suburban district of Chapei, the scene of
battle in 1937, yet both the Chinese and Japanese antagonists here were partly
Buddhist, and the Buddha made non-killing a prominent tenet of the ethical code
which he laid down for all his followers, for monks and laymen alike.
120
Too many men have used the word God to cover
their cruelties, or their follies, or their own selfishnesses!
121
The absurdity of insisting on name-labels, the
narrowness of joining religious groups, attains its summit when immortal life is
proclaimed as our destiny only if we belong to a particular group!
122
The journey from the narrowness of dogma to the
arrogance of infallibility may take time for a religious institution to finish,
but when it is finished a further journey may begin. And that is to intolerance,
totalitarianism, and finally persecution.
123
The religious temperament has its puzzling
contradictions. The Holy Inquisitors would have been hurt if told that they had
repudiated Christ, would insistently have asserted their devotion to him. Yet
for religious reasons they broke men's bodies on the torture wheel, tied them to
the stake for burning. The gentle inhabitants of Tahiti shed tears copiously
when Captain Cook flogged a thief on his ship, yet for religious reasons they
practised human sacrifice while their priests killed their own children. A
Jewish king in the early pre-Islamic Arabia persecuted those among his subjects
who were Christians. Later Christian kings in Europe persecuted their Jewish
subjects, while Muhammedan kings in the Middle East persecuted Jews and
Christians alike! - all in the name of religion.
124
If the Bhagavad Gita's statement means
anything at all, it means that we ought to be tolerant to other people's
worship, to the form in which they symbolize God. Pliny understood this very
well when he wrote: "You are going to Athens. Respect their gods."
125
When conversion is followed by enthusiasm, this
is natural, often inevitable. But when it is followed by fanaticism, the convert
is put in danger and others even more so.
126
It must be remembered as a mark against
exaggerated valuation of, and trust in, religious institutions and religious
authority, that the Holy Inquisition not only burned or tortured infidels but
even the Franciscan Brothers, good Christian Catholics who happened to become
victims of the prejudice of one particular medieval Pope.
127
It is very difficult to find any organized form
of religion which does not exaggerate its own value, or denigrate other forms.
128
A truly universal outlook would be free from the
subtle possessiveness which wants to draw others into one's own particular fixed
cult or creed and keep them there forever chained. This kind of religious
attachment is not less binding, not less shutting-in to horizons, than those
other, and more obvious, forms of personal, material, or emotional attachment.
129
Fanaticism is often allied with superstition
using the authority of religious texts, customs, or traditions. So it passes
unscrutinized and self-deluded, too often preoccupied with externals and
trivialities.
130
They hold their opinions too ferociously to hold
them on a basis of reason.
131
The sacred foolishness of those teachers of the
path of religious devotion who reject all the other paths is still better than
worldly foolishness, but it cannot form part of the philosophic ideal.
132
Where doctrine is elevated above life, it
inevitably leads by a series of fatal downward steps to guarding itself by
persecuting those who hold opposing views. This happened in medieval Catholic
history. It happened in early Reformation history, and it happened even in
American Presbyterian history.
133
The Romans, who brutally slaughtered the
assembled Druids in Britain, were symbolic of the retribution which eventually
punishes priestly fanaticism and of the challenge which inevitably comes to
priestly superstition.
134
They are fools who do not know that though they
burn ten thousand heretics this day, God will implant the same idea, if it be a
true one, in ten thousand minds tomorrow.
135
So long as ecclesiastical leaders falsely teach
their flocks that their own particular religion is the only one acceptable in
God's eyes and that all other religions are bereft of His grace and light, so
long will religion continue to give birth to strife instead of peace, prejudice
instead of tolerance, hatred instead of love.
136
The Israelites did not have a monopoly of the
"God's Chosen Race" belief. Milton, in his "Aeropagitica," proclaimed that "God
reveals Himself first to His Englishmen." Hegel, however, asserted that it was
the divine decree for the Germans to lead the world. And, until Hitler's hordes
smashed through their land, not a few of the mystically inclined Poles
passionately believed that theirs was to be "the Messianic race." In the Far
East, the Japanese cherished similar beliefs until American bombs initiated a
process of revisionary thinking.
Naïve sentimentalists or distorted thinkers manufacture romantic impressions about their race religion history or country. Some dream golden-age, Eden-idyllic fantasies about the past or future that have no basis in fact. Perverted wishful thinking asks for illusion - and gets it!
False theory breaks down before personal experience of the present fact as it actually is. This is often quite painful but how else is the real truth to be established when the sayer of it is disregarded or disbelieved?
137
We need religion, yes assuredly, but we need it
freed from superstition.(P)
138
When the faculty of reverence is diverted from
its proper object - the divine Power - and perverted to a base one, it becomes
superstition.
139
Theological arguments which use empty words
without mental substance, sacred names of non-existent entities, can be
classified as superstitious.
140
Do not lose your wits over religious fables
which were intended to help ungrown minds - that is, most minds - or to soothe
and comfort half-grown ones needing new interpretations and better explanations.
There never was a "Golden Age" where all people lived happily together, nor is
there now an "Iron Age" where they all live miserably together.
141
Every superstition is a truth corrupted.
Therefore when we say that religion ought to purify itself, it need in many
cases only turn its superstitions inside-out to set itself right!
142
Superstition is a costly luxury which the mood
of this age cannot afford to set up; it is harmful to genuine religion and
useless to genuine devotees. False thoughts are so plentiful that they lie ready
to the hand of man; hence he finds it easier to pick them up without effort,
rather than to exert his own mind to independent thinking. In the absence of the
inspiration of true religion men will accept the degradation of untrue
materialism, though it is noteworthy that the younger clergy have abandoned the
teaching about the creation of the universe and the origin of man which they had
inherited.
143
There is no excuse for such unthinking
complacency. If the powerful suggestions of tradition and environment persuade
us to believe certain things heedlessly, to go on believing them throughout a
lifetime is to shame and deny our thinking power. Much of what passes for
religion is mere superstition. Religion raises us whereas superstition degrades
us. We must seek the true face of religion under the false mask of mere
spiritual legalism and hollow theological casuistry. We must cast away the
accretions and have no use for what is sectarian and self-seeking and
superstitious in religion.
144
Scepticism is the inevitable swing from
superstition. The moral code that comes with the superstition goes with it, too.
This is the worst danger of false religion.
145
There is a very real difference between right
faith and superstitious faith.
146
Where religion lets itself support the
superstition which, if allowed, grows like a parasite upon it, it begins to
practise deception upon itself and imposture upon society. It lets go of Truth
at its own peril and to its followers' harm.
147
Because millions of people share a superstition
does not make it a truth.
148
The perversions of truth have been numerous. But
the materializations of truth have been even more numerous. In Japan the guru of
a certain Zen sect gave thirty blows with a wooden stick to an unfortunate
disciple. This beating was considered to be a precious opportunity for the
disciple to gain Satori (Enlightenment)! In India many a pious person or holy
man who arrives on pilgrimage in Benares is told by the priests there that by
bathing in the River Ganges and putting his head under the surface of the water,
he will then gain spiritual enlightenment!
149
When a religious dogma prevents people from
searching for the true cause of their distressed condition - whether it be
personal trouble or physical disease - and hence from searching for its true
remedy, it is nothing more than a superstitious belief masquerading as a
religious one.
150
Puerile superstitions have intertwined
themselves with every religion, or even taken their place along with golden
wisdom.
151
We have only to study history, true history,
which requires a wider reference than is customary, to discover how religious
dogmas develop, how private imagination and personal opinion go into their
creation. They are human, not divine.
152
There are religious dogmas which are quite
unreal, others which are quite inane; yet, this said, the general residue of
religious teaching is solidly and substantially true. Some of it may be wrapped
in mystery, which those who want to go farther can unravel with the help of
mysticism or philosophy. All of it contains a perceptible message of uplift, of
hope, of comfort and of guidance.
153
In the old days metaphysics fell asleep through
too much reclining in the arms of my lady Church; if it woke up with the
Renaissance that is because this theological flirtation was stopped.
154
False doctrines promulgated in logical form
under the title of theology, false beliefs bequeathed from generation to
generation and holding crude superstition: these we can well do without, but
when getting rid of them, exercise discrimination, take care not to get rid of
the true doctrines which theology contains and the worthy beliefs which
tradition passes down.
155
It is more prudent to assert that you have some
of the truth than to assert that you have the fullness of it.
156
Every organized religion must have dogmas. It
could not be what it is without them. Even its first basic assumption - that
there is a God - is a dogma. There is nothing wrong in its adherence to dogmas.
What is wrong is adherence to false dogmas, to those whose truth is denied by
the realities of existence and life.
157
Where any of the doctrines of a religion are
unable to survive the tests of reason, examination, factuality, and evidence,
they hide away in a part of the mind where the tests cannot get at them. This is
called "resting on faith." It is a way of defending them from certain defeat.
Instead of permeating the whole outlook, they are compartmentalized.
158
It is a more truly religious man who does not
put his religion in fetters, manacled to hard dogma, cruel canon law, and
intolerant practice.
159
These creeds and systems are interesting as
records of human faith and thought, imagination and invention, but they are
useless as paths to salvation. They may give comfortable hopes to their devotees
but they do not repudiate the ego which fosters illusions and creates
sufferings.
160
All these mystical symbolisms and metaphysical
allegories become in the end obstructions which get in the way of a clear
understanding of the truth.
161
It is possible that the minister of an orthodox
church may be a truly enlightened individual. How, then, it will be asked, can
such a person coordinate the abstract Truth of Philosophy with the popular
belief of the divinity of Jesus Christ? One answer might be that he privately
interprets "divinity" in a special way but publicly follows the orthodox
interpretation, because of what he believes to be the necessity of making use of
the best available means for leading mankind nearer to Spiritual Reality.
Outwardly he might elect to appear as a representative of, say, the Church of
England.
162
If the metaphysical foundations are unsound, we
need not expect the moral superstructure to be safe from criticism.
163
Where faith has a false basis and a wrong
direction, it may one day weaken or even collapse.
164
Those who have the heroism to turn away from
outworn creedal dogmas are the real followers of their Redeemer or prophet, the
real believers in God.
165
When petty quibbles about surface details and
trivial idiosyncrasies of behaviour are placed on a level with the highest
ethical standards in importance, we must assert our critical judgement. When
external formalities are made to matter just as much as internal virtues of
character, we must use our sense of discrimination.
166
When religious faith is inculcated as an
attitude towards the unknown and unseen, it is rightly inculcated. But when it
is advanced as the right attitude towards the irrational and impossible, it is
wrongly advanced.
167
To teach the masses one thing publicly but to
believe something very different privately is an attitude which has a great and
grave danger - it tends to obliterate the distinction between a truth and a lie.
168
Religious teaching will be all the better when
it is freed from life-prisoning and mind-fettering dogmas.
169
A belief for which there is supporting evidence
ought not be put in the same category as an unfounded belief.
170
Some religious doctrines are stiflingly narrow
and create a desire for the fresh air of reason and science, humanitarianism and
compassion.
171
The doctrine of relativity may be applied
anywhere and shows that there are no unquestionable creeds, no indisputable
dogmas.
172
We can absorb the religious spirit, its
emotional reverence for and intellectual fidelity to the Higher Power, without
absorbing its commitments to crystallized dogma.
173
I do not know of any organization or institution
which attempts to work for mankind in a religious or mystical way which has not
its weaknesses, its limitations, and its evils, for remember, every organization
and every institution is in the end composed of human beings and in them there
is always this dual age-old conflict of good and evil.
174
In the beginning an organization is "pure," that
is, seeks earnestly and sincerely to perform its proper function. In the end,
its original ambition realized, its success established, it deviates into other
purposes. It becomes power-hungry, tyrannical, selfish, more interested in its
own perpetuation than in serving the early ideal, more eager for membership and
money than in the common welfare. And this is as true of religious as of
political organizations, trade unions, and commercial associations.
175
Without some organization there may result
intellectual anarchy, moral indiscipline, and emotional chaos. It is also true
that the man who accepts a traditional form, joins an organized group, or enters
an established church benefits by the help of the tradition or institution.
Hence, we are not against teachers and groups which fulfil or even only
sincerely strive to fulfil these legitimate expectations. But neither in past
history nor present experience are absolutely sincere institutions ever found on
earth, although they may be found on paper. It would seem that to set up an
organization is to introduce fresh sectarian limitations; that to
institutionalize a revelation is to render null and void its spiritual
inspiration; and that to totally submit faith, reason, and will to one man is
eventually to invite exploitation and accept superstition.
176
The degradation, falsification,
commercialization, and exploitation which men, making use of institutional
religion, have made of a prophet's mission, speaks clearly of what these men
themselves are made. The fact is that they are not fit to be trusted with the
power which institutionalism gives them. Religion is safer and healthier and
will make more genuine progress if left free and unorganized, to be the
spontaneous expression of inspired individuals. It is a personal and private
matter and always degenerates into hyprocrisy when turned into a public matter.
The fact is, you cannot successfully organize spirituality. It is an independent
personal thing, a private discovery and not a mass emotion.(P)
177
When religion identifies itself with an
ecclesiastical organization and forgets itself as an individual experience, it
becomes its own enemy. History proves again and again that institutionalism
enters only to corrupt the purity of a religion.(P)
178
No religion will keep its original purity or
inspiration if it fails to keep out its organization's own ambitions and thirst
for power or wealth.
179
In religion inspiration dwindles as organization
grows. Men come to worship the visible organization itself instead of the
Invisible Spirit - that is to say, to worship themselves.
180
Institutional forms render their service by
helping a body of teaching to survive, by giving permanence to a tradition, by
enshrining and preserving valued memories.
181
Any ecclesiastical organization or any prophetic
person who claims exclusive knowledge of higher things, exclusive
communication with heavenly spheres, goes beyond whatever real mandate of
authority it possesses. None has the right to make such a claim. Instead of
honouring the organization, the latter is dishonoured by it, by its arrogance
and falsity.
182
Beware of religious institutions. They are
dogmatic, self-loving, unable to transcend their limitations.
183
How would old established ecclesiastical
circles, of whatever creed, receive their prophet today? A little knowledge of
history, of human organized society, with a little practice of imagination would
soon supply an answer.
184
The true Church is an invisible one. It exists
only in the hearts of men.
185
The true Church is an interior and invisible
Idea, not an exterior and tangible institution.
186
Every attempt to organize religion harms it. It
must be spontaneous if it is to keep its purity, personal if it is to keep its
reality.
187
No system, no doctrine, and no organization can
hold truth without squeezing out much of its life.
188
A religion must be transmitted from generation
to generation, so its ministers and scriptures come into being. The purity of
its doctrines must be maintained: so sects heresies divergencies reforms and
dissents are resisted.
189
It is somewhat sad to observe, in the study of
history, that the very purpose of creating an organization to preserve, to
guard, and to keep pure a new religion too often becomes with time the very
cause of the opposite condition. Additions are made to texts, truths are cut out
from them, while the organization regards its own preservation and power as more
important than anything else.
190
If there is any lesson which history can teach
us, it is that absolute power always corrupts. Such unchecked domination proves
in the end, and in the religious world, as bad for the dominator as for those
dominated. It breeds weaknesses in him and retards the spiritual growth of his
victims. This is not less but even more true when it is exercised by a group,
for the risk with the creation of all institutions and organizations is that
everything is thereafter done more for the sake of the institution or the
organization than of the principle it was embodied to spread. That this risk is
very real and almost unavoidable is proved by all history, whether in the Orient
or the Occident, whether in ancient times or in modern. It is not long before a
time comes when an organization defeats its own ends, when it does as much harm
as good, or even more, when its proclaimed purposes become deceptive; external
attacks and internal disputes increase with the increase of the organization. No
religious organization is so all-wise and so all-selfless that, being entrusted
with totalitarian power, it will not yield in time to the temptation of abusing
that power. It will practise intolerance and paralyse free thought. The history
of every religious monopoly proves this. Thus the individual's need to follow
whatever faith he pleases, to think and act for himself, to find the sect that
suits him best, is endangered by the monopoly's demand for blind obedience and
blinder service. The organization which begins by seeking to spread truth ends
by obstructing it. The inheritors of a message of peace and goodwill themselves
bequeath hate and bitterness.
191
We do not need to be much learned in the
chronicles of both Asiatic and European history to note the unfortunate fact
that as religious institutionalism spreads and strengthens itself, religious
inspiration shrinks and weakens itself. The original impulse to authentic
communication with God becomes gradually changed into an impulse to selfish
exploitation of man. The climax comes when the ecclesiastical organization which
was intended to give effect to the sacred injunctions of a seer or prophet not
only fails to do so, but actually tries to prevent its members from trying to do
so themselves. His purpose is perverted. His teaching is degraded. Thus
religion, which should be a potent help to mankind's evolution, tends to become
and does become a potent hindrance to mankind's evolution. For such a
degradation the karmic responsibility lies heavily on its paid professionals.
192
History has shown that a monopolistic religious
institutionalism invariably falls into spiritual degeneracy and inevitably ends
in intellectual tyranny. The setting up of autocratic government, episcopal
authority, and professional clergy is sooner or later followed by a train of
corruptions and abuses. Jesus denounced the religious institutions and religious
hierarchy of his time, and drew his followers out of them. Yet hardly had he
passed from this earth when they began, in their atavistic reversion to
traditional ideas, to recreate new institutions and new hierarchy. If it be
asked why the spiritual teacher who knows the harmfulness of these ideas is not
heeded by those who believe in him, the answer is first, that belief may be
present yet understanding may be absent and, secondly, that the innate
selfishness of men finds too easy an opportunity for exploitation through such
ideas to miss falling into the temptation of propagating them. Were the truth of
any religion really clear to people, all the bitter controversies and bloody
persecutions of history would not have happened, and all the innumerable
commentaries of theology would never have been written to prove what was so
plainly evident.
193
While religion is intimately associated with
ecclesiastical organization, it will be intimately associated with money and
power needs also. In such a situation it can no longer remain true to its purer
self but must inevitably deteriorate.
194
The harmony among religions is a fact, but
unfortunately it is not a fact easily seen nor frequently supported by religious
organizations in whose interest it is to oppose it.
195
If you wish to know one sign of the difference
between a true religion and a half-true or untrue one, remember that the latter
seeks power over men whereas the former never does.
196
Institutions are necessary to society; it is
only when they become tyrannical or dictatorial that they serve evil purposes.
197
Where religions have failed it is through their
institutionalism; where they have succeeded it is through whatever individualism
still remained in them. Romantic illusions may keep these institutions alive,
but the darkening gloom of our times shows that human welfare cannot be
preserved by illusions.
198
"Thou shalt have no other God before Me!" warns
the Biblical Commandment. Yet the ignorant still give to the Limited - an
organization or a man - the worship which they ought to reserve for the
Unlimited - God - alone.
199
For those who have little time and less
inclination for the work of study, reflection, meditation, and aesthetic
appreciation - namely, for the toiling masses - an attempt is made to
accommodate their needs and limitations by providing them with popular religion.
But human nature being what it is, sooner or later the institutions and
organizations associated with religion become either semi-commercialized or
turned into instruments of power. A modern Japanese thinker even went so far as
to criticize them by accusing them of "stealing Heaven's Way."
200
An institution or organization is only a
background for the men who work in it. It helps or hinders them, elevates or
degrades them, but they are the more important factor.
201
We must separate, in our minds, institutional
religion from personal religion, the outward structures they have built up
historically from the inward atmosphere they have created individually.
Persecutions and pogroms come more often from the first, yet without these
institutions how would the texts, the teachings, and the reminders be passed
down?
202
To give religion a merely institutional
significance is to take the incidental for the essential. The churches and sects
of religion are its least part; the influence on character and intuition is its
greatest.
203
The doctrine of an apostolic transmission of
divine authoritative power through human ministry and episcopates is one
instance of such false but widely accepted belief. Man will never be saved by
any official church.
204
When an organized religion places power over
humanity before service to humanity, it loses its way; and when it becomes an
instrument of persecution, it prepares its own eventual doom.
205
The sects seeking to get adherents, to commit
new members to their dogmas or opinions, are not for him. For nineteen hundred
years priests, captive clergymen, and pale theologians have been deliberately
endeavouring to persuade people that the kingdom of heaven is to be reached
within a professional organization called the Church, and nowhere else,
as though they could be saved in a mass. Had the ecclesiastics honestly said
that their organization existed to help people find the kingdom within
themselves and therefore had a perfect right to receive support, nobody could
cavil at them. But they have deliberately transplanted the emphasis in their own
interests, and followed their master only from the safe distance of a sermon.
206
The organization which gathers round such a
prophet, especially after he has left his body and cannot control them, may
become an obstacle and, to some extent, even a traitor to his real value and
true message.
207
When a religion organizes itself to conquer the
world, the world instead conquers the religion. History tells us this time and
again.