1
In the end we have no choice. The head must bend,
consentingly, to the higher power. Acceptance must be made. Some kind of
communion must be established.
2
When we can fully accept the truth that God is the
governor and manager of the universe, that the World-Mind is behind and
controlling the World-Idea, then we begin to accept the parallel truths that all
things and creatures are being taken due care of and that all events are
happening under the divine will. This leads in time to the understanding that
the ego is not the actual doer, although it has the illusion of doing, working,
and acting. The practical application of this metaphysical understanding is to
put down our burdens of personal living on the floor and let Providence carry
them for us: this is a surrender of the ego to the divine.
3
If you identify with the little ego alone,
you may believe and feel that you have to solve your problems alone. In
that case, the burden will be heavier than it need be. But if you recognize that
this planet has its own governor, the World-Mind, you need not feel forlorn,
since you are included in the world.
4
Every problem that worldly men solve in a strictly
worldly way leads to new ones. On this plane it has always been so. There is
only one way to gain a final solution - transfer the problem to the celestial
plane.
5
The ego does not give itself up without undergoing
extreme pain and extreme suffering. It is placed upon a cross whence it can
never be resurrected again, if it is truly to be merged in the Overself. Inner
crucifixion is therefore a terrible and tremendous actuality in the life of
every attained mystic. His destiny may not call for outer martyrdom but it
cannot prevent his inner martyrdom. Hence the Christ-self speaking through Jesus
told his disciples, "If any man will come after me let him deny himself and take
up his cross daily and follow me."
6
Are we to wander with all our burdens from a hapless
birth to a hopeless death? Or shall we surrender them?
7
It is when a man breaks down and finally admits that
he cannot go on, that both he and his life must change - it is at such a moment
that he is close to the guidance and help of the Overself, if only he can
recognize them and is willing to accept them.
8
When life in the world becomes so formidable or so
frightening that in desperation or bewilderment, panic or mental unbalance, the
idea of suicide seems the only way out, then the time has come for a man to cast
his burden on the Higher Power.
9
There is a panacea for all troubles. It is to turn
them over to the Overself. This is a daring act; it will demand all your faith
and all your understanding, but its results are proven. They are not available,
however, for the lazy drifters and idle dreamers, for the insincere would-be
cheaters of the Overself, and for the superstitious seekers of
something-for-nothing.
10
Blessed are those who can find or keep this faith
that, in spite of all unpleasant contradictory appearances, the course of human
life will in the end be upward and the goal of human life will be spiritual
self-fulfilment.
11
To try solving his problems by himself, without
resort to a higher power, is to bring to bear upon them all his ignorance and
unwisdom, all his faults and deficiencies, all his incapacities and
maladjustments. How, using such imperfect tools, can he bring about a perfect
result? How, for instance, can a muddled confused mind bring about any other
than a muddled confused result of the efforts to solve his problems? How can his
own unaided efforts be other than antagonistic to a correct solution?
12
He will come to the point where he will give up
the burden of always trying to do something for his spiritual
development, the burden of believing that it rests entirely upon his own
shoulders.
13
The higher guidance may not be recognized or felt
until after all efforts end in frustration, until the intellect retreats and
obeys, until planning ends and surrender begins.
14
If you cannot see the proper way to deal with your
problem, if making a right decision or coping with a difficult situation seems
too much for you, if all the usual guides to action prove insufficient or
unhelpful, then it is time to hand the trouble over to the Superior Power.
15
When a sensitive man loses faith in his own
goodness, and even his own capacities, to the point of despairing hopelessness,
he is really ready to pray properly and practise utter dependence upon the
Higher Power's grace. When he realizes that the evil in himself and in other men
is so deep and so strong that there is nothing below the surface of things he
can do, he is forced to turn to this Power. When he abandons further trust in
his own nature and clings to no more personal hopes, he really lets go of the
ego. This gives him the possibility of being open to grace.
16
When a person is converted from one religion to
another which is more ancient, more grandiose, or when a sceptic turns religious
before dying, it is because he has reached a point when he feels helpless and
his defenses have broken down. He must depend on other men, on other powers than
his own, for now he has none. He is like a man lost in the desert, eager to
accept anyone, any living thing, as a rescuer. What has happened? The profounder
answer is that his ego has been completely crushed and he is ready to surrender.
17
The surrender of every problem as it arises to the
higher self, the renouncing of personal will in the matter, and the readiness to
accept intuitive guidance as and when it comes provide a superior technique and
yield better results than the old ways of intellectual handling and personal
planning alone.
18
So long as he is more afraid of giving up the ego
than he is desirous of gaining the consciousness beyond it, so long will he
dwell in its gloom.
19
He who has not learned to lower his head before
the higher power, to surrender his personal aims to the World-Idea, to submit
his desires to the need for self-governance, will suffer in the end.
20
Having worked to the utmost upon himself, but
finding that a stable spiritual consciousness still eludes him, he has no
recourse except to submit his further development to a higher power than his own
will and then wait and let it work upon him.
21
Submit to the World-Idea - or suffer. Resign
yourself to the higher course of things: go along with it - and be at peace!
22
When the ship on which the Muhammedan mystic
Ibrahim ibn Adham was travelling was endangered by a storm, his companions
begged him to pray for help. He retorted: "This is not the time to pray, it is
the moment to surrender."
23
What the Hindus call detachment and what the
Muhammedans call submission to God's will are really one and the same.
24
If we concentrate attention only on the miseries
and distresses which afflict us, then we have to depend on our own intellect to
find a way out of them. If, however, we turn concentration in the opposite
direction, that of the Overself, and deposit our troubles there, we gain a fresh
source of possible help in dealing with them.
25
When it seems humanly impossible to do more in a
difficult situation, surrender yourself to the inner silence and thereafter wait
for a sign of obvious guidance or for a renewal of inner strength.
26
In the end, after many a rebellion, he learns to
trust God and accept his lot, like a tired old man.
27
To surrender is to know one's own incompetence and
to put one's life in wiser hands.
28
No one finds that the pattern of his experience of
life conforms to what he wished for in the past or wishes for now, so everyone
in the end must learn acceptance.
29
The passage from black despair to healing peace
begins with learning to "let go." This can refer to the past's crippling
pictures, the present's harsh conditions, or the future's grim anticipations. To
what then can the sufferer turn? To the Overself and its divine power.
30
The resignation which is advisable when
circumstances are unalterable need not be a grim and hopeless one.
31
He has tried to manage his life by himself through
all these years, but the results have been too deplorable too frequently. Is it
not time to let the Overself take over?
32
When he has exhausted every means of finding a
right and reasonable solution to his problem, it is time to hand it over to the
higher self. Let him not indulge in self-pity under the delusion that he is
indulging in self-abasement. There is a total difference between the two
emotional attitudes, for the first will only weaken his capacity for the
spiritual quest whereas the second will only strengthen it.
33
There are great dangers in falling into a supine
attitude of supposed submission of our will, an attitude into which so
many mystics and religionists often fall. There is a profound difference between
the pseudo-surrendered life and the genuine surrendered life. It is easy enough
to misinterpret the saying "Thy will be done." Jesus, by his own example, gave
this phrase a firm and positive meaning. Hence this is better understood as
meaning "Thy will be done by me." A wide experience has revealed how many
are those who have degenerated into a degrading fatalism under the illusion that
they were thereby co-operating with the will of God; how many are those who
have, through their own stupidity, negligence, weakness, and wrong-doing, made
no effort to remedy the consequences of their own acts and thus have had to bear
the suffering involved to the full; how many are those who have failed to seize
the opportunity presented by these sufferings to recognize that they arose out
of their own defects or faults and to examine themselves in time to become aware
of them and thus avoid making the same mistake twice. The importance of heeding
this counsel is immense. For example, many an aspirant has felt that fate has
compelled him to work at useless tasks amid uncongenial surroundings, but when
his philosophic understanding matures, he begins to see what was before
invisible - the inner karmic significance of these tasks, the ultimate educative
or punitive meaning of those environments. Once this is done he may rightly, and
should for his own self-respect, set to work to free himself from them. Every
time he patiently crushes a wrong or foolish thought, he adds to his inner
strength. Every time he bravely faces up to a misfortune with calm impersonal
appraisal of its lesson, he adds to his inner wisdom. The man who has thus
wisely and self-critically surrendered himself may then go forward with a sense
of outward security and inward assurance, hopeful and unafraid, because he is
now aware of the benign protection of his Overself. If he has taken the trouble
to understand intelligently the educative or punitive lessons they hold for him,
he may then - and only then - conquer the evils of life, if at the same time of
their onset, he turns inward at once and persistently realizes that the divinity
within offers him refuge and harmony. This twofold process is always needful and
the failures of Christian Science are partially the consequence of its failure
to comprehend this.(P)
34
Most people who state that they have submitted
their financial affairs to a higher power find things going from bad to worse.
This point must be clarified. There is not actual surrender, but only
self-deception, if it is made before reason, will, and self-reliance have been
exhausted. There is no such easy escape out of difficulties, financial or
otherwise, as mere verbal assertion of surrender. Education comes by negotiating
difficulties, not by running away from them in the name of surrender. True
surrender can only be made when one is mature enough. Life is a struggle for
all; only the wise struggle ego-lessly, but they struggle all the same. They
have to because the adverse element in Nature is forever at war, tearing down
where they build, stimulating strife where they give peace, and enslaving minds
where they lead to freedom.
35
There are those who believe that the mystical
surrender to God's will means that they are to sit with folded hands, inert and
lethargic. They believe also that to co-operate with Nature, to alter or to
interfere with it, is blasphemous. It is not for them to try to make other men
better, although they do try to make themselves better. Because they see that
they can do little in every direction, they decide to do nothing. The humility
behind this view must be appreciated, but the lack of rationality may not.
36
Giving up the ego does not require us to give in
always to other people. That would be weakness.
37
This surrender of the future does not imply
idleness and lethargy. It does imply the giving up of useless worry, the
abandonment of needless anxiety.
38
If anyone refrains from using his own initiative
and depends on the Overself for answers to his questions, for solutions to his
practical problems before he is psychologically ready for such dependence, then
he invites trouble.
39
The intuitive sensitivity of the artist and the
discriminating intellect of a scientist are needed to keep that delicate balance
which knows when to assume responsibility for one's own decision, action, and
life and when to shift this responsibility to a higher power. The novice's
statement that he commits his life into God's hands is not enough, for obviously
if he continues to repeat the same foolish judgements and the same guilty
conduct as before this commitment, his life still remains in the personal ego's
hands. If his commitment is to be effective, it must be accompanied by the duty
of self-improvement. Surrender to a higher power does not relieve him of this
duty; on the contrary, it compels him more than ever before to its carrying out.
The shifting of personal responsibility is achieved only when the awakening of
consciousness to the higher self is itself achieved. The mere desire and
consequent say-so of the aspirant does not and cannot become factual until then.
He may seek to relieve himself of the pressure of obligation and the irritation
of obstacles by this device, but the relief will be merely fictional and not
factual.(P)
40
Such a prudent aspirant will surrender himself to
no exterior organization but only to the interior Overself. He will permit no
human group to annex his will and direct his thought, for they are to serve the
Divine alone.
41
Surrender to the Higher Self is one thing;
apathetic resignation to life is another. The one act gives birth to, or is the
consequence of, mystical intuition. The other merely shuts out or prevents the
arisal of such intuitions.
42
All talk of doing God's will becomes meaningful
only if we are ourselves aware of God's existence. All talk of trust in God is
meaningless if we are ourselves unaware of God's presence.
43
This practice must not be abused. It is premature
and wrong to try to hand over a problem to the higher power before it has been
thoroughly analysed and impersonally related to the causative factors within
oneself.
44
We render much lip service to the theme of doing
God's will; hundreds of writers, speakers, and clergymen utter its praise; but
how few take a practical opportunity of giving it real expression by giving up
the ego.
45
It is correct that we may trust absolutely to the
higher power. But mystics should first be sure that they have found it and are
not merely trusting some subconscious aspect of their ego. Otherwise they will
be abusing the principle of inner guidance, falsifying the doctrine of inner
light, even though they feel they are acting correctly in their own judgement.
46
It is a bias of certain religious persons to
attribute to the will of God what is plainly the work of ego, or weather, or
circumstances.
47
We must look within ourselves for the deliverance
of ourselves. Nowhere else can we find it and no one else can effect it.
48
If the problem is really handed over to the Higher
Power he is released from it. This lifts the feeling of being burdened with it.
But if the feeling still remains, then he has deceived himself, has not truly
committed it except outwardly in mumbled words.
49
If he is to surrender the conscious will, it
should be only to the divine will.
50
The surrender to the Overself must not be
misinterpreted as surrender to lethargy, to lack of initiative, or to absence of
effort. It means that before initiative rises and before effort is made, a man
will first look to the Overself for inspiration. When such inner guidance and
rational thinking speak with united voice, then he can go forward with a plan, a
faith, or a deed, sure and unafraid and confident.
51
To cast our ultimate reliance on the universal
mind which, supporting all things as it does, can well support us, is a rule
that works unfailingly. Only it must not be practised prematurely, for then the
man will have the mere show of the thing instead of the real thing itself. He
must first prepare for such a relation by developing himself sufficiently.
52
Such resignation does not mean that he shall let
himself be always put upon, that he shall uphold truth, principle, justice, and
goodness for others but deny them to himself.
53
This turning of a problem or a situation over to
God may be real humility but it may also be a cowardly evasion of an unpleasant
decision or difficult act.
54
Why do these religio-mystics worry about anything
happening against God's will? Do they not believe that, regardless of what they
or others may do, everything will happen in conformity with that will anyway?
55
This blind abject apathy of many fatalistic
Orientals is based, not on real spirituality, but on fallacious thinking.
"Because the whole universe is an expression of God's will, and because every
event happens within the universe, therefore every calamity must be accepted as
expressing God's will." So runs the logic. The best way to expose the fallacy
lurking in it is to place it by the side of a countersyllogism: "Because the
whole universe is an expression of God's will, and because every individual
resistance of calamity happens within the universe, therefore such resistance is
the expression of God's will!"
56
There is a right and a wrong way of surrendering
the outer life. To surrender it to one's own sorry foolishnesses or
hallucinations, and call them God, leads to disaster. Yet this is precisely what
many beginners in mysticism do.
57
Self-surrender does not mean surrender to someone
else's ego, but rather to the Overself. Merely giving up one's own will to
perform the will of somebody else is personal weakness and not spiritual
strength; it is to serve the fault and negative qualities of other persons
rather than to serve their spiritual life.
58
He is to turn it over to the higher power. He may
do this for wrong motives to evade harsh facts and escape unpleasant
consequences. In this case there will be no contact and no success.
59
Self-surrender should not signify merely letting
others do what they wish with him or to him, but rather letting the higher
nature work within and through him.
60
It is easy to ignore the fact that the cause of
one's failure is one's own shortcoming, to cover incompetence in the management
of earthly life by loud reiteration of trust in Providence - in short, to
deceive oneself.
61
When dependence upon grace becomes total, when all
effort is believed to be useless, when personal striving is renounced entirely,
then the very belief which should have been fortifying becomes paralysing.
62
"It never consists in a sluggish kind of doing
nothing so that God might do all," dryly wrote John Smith, seventeenth-century
English philosophical mystic, about this struggle for truth and goodness within
men's souls.
63
It is not a slavish and sentimental putting up
with all that happens which is required.
64
Let no one confuse the calm delightful
irresponsibility of such a planless life with the vague indolent
irresponsibility of selfish or unbalanced men. There is a wide chasm between
them.
65
"Trust your life to God" is an excellent maxim.
But it does not mean, as some seem to believe, "Think foolishly or behave
wickedly and trust to God to enable you to escape the painful karmic
consequences of your wrong thought or action." If that were true the educative
value of experience would be lost and we would go on repeating the same sins,
the same errors. If that were true we would not grow up morally or mentally.
66
The ordinary mystic who has surrendered his will
to the Overself is like a man floating downstream in a boat with his eyes turned
up to the sky and his hands folded in his lap. The philosophic mystic who has
surrendered his will to the Divine is like a man floating downstream with his
eyes gazing ahead, on the look-out, and his hands keeping firm hold of the
rudder to steer the boat. The first man's boat may crash into another one or
even into the riverbank at any moment. The second man's boat will safely and
successfully navigate its way through these dangers. Yet both men are being
supported and propelled by the same waters, both mystic and philosopher have
given their self and life to the Divine. Nevertheless, the consequences are not
and cannot be the same. For the first despises and refuses to use his God-given
intelligence.
67
To be truly resigned to the will of God - a demand
made on the Muhammedan, the Hindu, and the Christian alike - does not
necessarily mean blindly accepting all that happens as perfect, unquestionable,
or best. According to the occasion, it may mean one or another of these things.
But it may also mean looking with open eyes and intelligent mind at the course
of events in order to understand them impersonally and then, this achieved,
comprehending that given the factors and persons involved, only this could have
happened.
68
It is for him to do whatever practical wisdom
calls for in each situation but, having done that, to relinquish the results to
the higher power for better or for worse.
69
It is true that every happening in the outer life
can be accepted as being good for the inner life, that the most calamitous
situation can be taken as God's will for us. But it is also true that unless we
ask - and correctly answer - in what sense it is good and why it is God's will,
we may fail to seek out and strive to correct the fault in us which makes it
good and providential. For each situation presents not only the need and
opportunity of recognizing a higher power at work in our life, but also a
problem in self-examination and self-improvement.
70
The indispensable prerequisite to mystical
illumination is self-surrender. No man can receive it without paying this price.
Any man in any degree of development may pay it - he has to turn around, change
his attitude, and accept the Christ, the higher self, as his sovereign. But once
this happens and the Grace of illumination descends, it can affect the self only
as it finds the self. An unbalanced ego will not suddenly become balanced. An
unintellectual one will not suddenly become learned. His imperfections remain
though the light shines through them.(P)
71
There is surely room for both surrender and
self-reliance in a healthy life.
72
Where is the evidence that this trial, this
suffering, was really the divine intention towards him, and not the consequences
of his own stupidity or his own weakness?
73
If a man can give up his fears and anxieties to
the higher self, because he is convinced that it is better able to manage his
problems than the egoistic self, because he believes in trusting to its wisdom
rather than to his own foolishness, yet does not evade the lessons implicit in
those problems, his surrender becomes an act of strength, not of weakness.
74
It is right to say resignedly that it is God's
will when we find ourselves in misfortune. But to content ourselves with such a
half-truth is dangerous. It blinds our present perceptivity and bars our future
advancement. Without perceptivity, we cannot accurately read the situation.
Without advancement, we repeat mistakes and duplicate sufferings. A wiser
statement would add the second half-truth, whose absence imperils us: that we
ourselves often are largely the cause of our misfortune, that God's will is only
the universal law of consequences bringing us the results of our own thinking or
doing, our own tendencies or nature. Yes, let us submit to the divine will, let
us surrender in acquiescence to what it sends us. But what will it profit us if
we do so blindly, dumbly, and without comprehension? Is it not better to
remember that it sends us what we have earned or what we need, either for
self-perfection or self-purification? And, remembering, should we not seek out
the lesson behind what is sent us and thus be able to co-operate intelligently
with it? Then the Overself's will truly becomes our own. Are we not as aspirants
to be distinguished from the multitude in several ways and not least in this,
that we must try to learn from our experiences instead of letting them be
useless and futile?
75
Swami Ramdas states in his autobiography: "It is
beyond Thy humble slave to know the reason. Every move Thou givest to the
situation of Thy servant is considered by him to be for the best." There are two
statements here which are questionable and arguable. Every move? For how
many of them arise as a direct result of his own character or capacities or
tendencies or of those he associates with? How many situations are of his own
direct personal making? If any particular situation in which he finds himself is
caused by karma out of a previous birth, it is an inevitable one, not
necessarily the best one from a practical viewpoint. It just had to
happen. Of course, he could turn it to good by adopting the philosophical
attitude toward it, but then that is true of every possible situation without
exception. Where all of them may be regarded as the best, none is. The word then
loses its meaning.
What are the correct facts behind Ramdas' claim? Because he surrendered his life to God, and sincerely renounced the world in doing so, God certainly guided or helped him in return at certain times, and brought about situations on other occasions. To this extent Ramdas' faith was fully justified. But because Ramdas' human self was still the channel through which he had to express himself, the individual temperament, characteristics, and intellect contributed also to giving a shape to the other situations or developments. His unfamiliarity with Western civilization led quite directly to certain results of his world tour. Had he been more familiar with it, these results would have been markedly different. Yet Ramdas told me personally that God had arranged every step of his way on this tour! This is not, of course, a personal criticism of Ramdas, who is one of my beloved friends, but a brotherly discussion of a topic on which he has often written or spoken and always in this manner. His conclusions seem to me, in the light of both the philosophic instruction I have received and the observations of mystical circles I have made, to be confused. It is not beyond us to know the reason for some situations; indeed, it is part of our development to learn the reason. And it is not God who intervenes in every petty incident or trivial circumstance of His devotee's life.
Those who refuse to exercise the reasoning faculty with which the divine World-Idea has endowed them will certainly believe that it is "God's will" for mishaps, disappointments, frustrations, or ill health to happen to them which, by proper thought or care, could have been avoided or diverted. They have been confused about the fact that outside of limited free will, God's will is inescapably and compulsively acting upon them, but within that limited freedom their own will may reign as it chooses.
76
"Trust in God but keep your powder dry" was as
useful a maxim in a recent century as "Trust in God but keep your arrows sharp"
might well have been in an earlier one.
77
We ought not to expect man to give what he is not
yet ready to give. Only in the measure that he recognizes a higher purpose to be
fulfilled will he renounce the ego which hinders that fulfilment.
78
Insofar as the whole of his future must be
surrendered to his Higher Self, the planning of it through his ego-mind cannot
be allowed. He resigns himself to God's will in this matter because he realizes
that it will bring him only what is best for him or only what is needed by him
or only what has been earned by him. He believes that God's will is a just will.
Yet within the frame of reference of the intuition which may come to him as a
result of this self-surrender, he may allow the intellect to plan his course and
to chalk out his path. The intellect may function in the arrangement of his
personal life, but it must function in full obedience to the intuition, not to
the ego. Hence if he makes any plans for the future, he does so only at the
Higher Self's bidding.
79
Where, despite his best efforts, he finds that he
cannot control the course of events, he should accept it as being the higher
will, the ordained destiny. Where he can control it, he should seek to learn
from and obey the inner voice in what he does.
80
Before we can do God's will we have to find out
what it is.
81
Where he depends on things events or persons too
excessively, they may take an unfavourable turn and he will be thrown back on
himself again and again. This kind of experience, taken to heart rightly, may
quicken his spiritual progress; but taken wrongly, it may only arouse personal
bitterness. If he intelligently accepts the suffering that the Overself, under
the law of recompense, brings him, the evil will be transmuted into good. If he
blindly clings to a completely egoistic attitude, he fails to show his
discipleship.
82
That is true willpower which acts from the deepest
part of our being, which sets the ego aside instead of expressing it. Not only
can it thrust heredity aside and master surroundings, but then only is "Thy
will" done by us.
83
Both ordinary mysticism and philosophic mysticism
teach surrender to God's will, in any situation. But whereas the first is
content to do so blindly, the second adds clear sight to its surrender. The
first is satisfied with ignorance because it is so happy, so peaceful as a
direct result of surrendering the ego's will. The second likewise enjoys the
happiness and peace but uses its intelligence to understand the situation.
84
Having handed his life over to the higher power,
he has handed his future over, too. But although much that will happen to him
will not be of his own planning, he need not paralyse his will and negate his
reason. They have their place and may be used, especially to work out the
details of what he is led to do by intuition, or by inner guidance.
85
His destination is also his origin. But if you say
that he was born in the eternal Spirit, the question arises how can time, which
is placed outside eternity, bring him to eternity. The answer is that it does
not bring him there, it only educates him to look for, and prepares him to pass
through, the opening through which he can escape. Need it be said that this lies
at the point where ego surrenders wholly to Overself?
86
So few seem to know that surrender of the ego -
what Jesus called denying self and also losing life - must be absolute. It does
not stop with the more obvious and grosser weaknesses, the so-called sins. It
must include surrendering the clinging to religious organizations and beliefs,
religious dogmas, and groups. The attachments which hold us to the self are not
only concerned with material possessions and material things. They are also
concerned with social conventions and prejudices, with inherited habits and
traditions. We remain deluded by the self until we are denuded of the self.
87
He is to sacrifice all the lower emotions on the
altar of this quest. He is to place upon it anger, greed, lust, and aggressive
egoism as and when each situation arises when one or another of them shows its
ugly self. All are to be burnt up steadily, if little by little, at such
opportunities. This is the first meaning of surrender to the higher self.(P)
88
No candidate could enter the King's Chamber and be
initiated therein into the Greater Mysteries without stooping in emblematic
submission beneath the low doorway at its entrance. For no man may attain
adeptship without surrender of his personal egoism and his animal nature.
89
From the day that he abandons the egoistic
attitude, he seeks no credit, assumes no merit. Hence Lao Tzu says: "Those most
advanced in Tao are the least conspicuous of men."
90
Attempt to use no personal power. Rather get into
meditation and quiet the person more and more until you can get away from
yourself altogether. Turn the matter over to the Overself in the perfect faith
that it has all the power needed to handle the situation in the best way. Having
done that, do nothing further yourself, refrain from the slightest interference.
Simply be the quiet spectator of the Overself's activity, which you will know to
be occurring by its visible results, for its processes are mysterious and beyond
all human sight.
91
Do not let the ego try to manage your worldly
life. Do not let it even manage your search for truth! It is faulty and
fallible. Better to cast the burden on the higher self and walk by faith, not
knowing where you are going, not seeing what the future is.
92
Release your problems. Work in the Silence - until
the Silence rules. The Infinite Intelligence will then take over your problems -
to the extent that you release them to it.
93
When the ego is truly given up, the old
calculating life will go with it. He will keep nothing back but will trust
everything to the Overself. A higher power will arrange his days and plan his
years.
94
But before he can even attempt to surrender the
underself, he must first begin to feel, however feebly and however
intermittently, that there is an Overself and that it is living there
deep within his own heart. Such a feeling, however, must arise spontaneously and
cannot be manufactured by any effort of his own. It does not depend on his
personal choice whether he experience it or not. It is therefore an
unpredictable factor; he cannot know when it is likely to come to him. This
indeed is what makes this quest so mysterious. For such a feeling is nothing
else than a manifestation of grace. Hence an old Sanskrit text, the
Tripura, says: "Of all requisites Divine Grace is the most important. He
who has entirely surrendered to his larger self is sure to attain readily. This
is the best method." Without the divine grace (Faiz Ullah), the Sufis say, man
cannot attain spiritual union with Him, but they add that this grace is not
withheld from those who fervently yearn for it.
95
The more he becomes conscious of that thing in
himself which links him with the World-Mind, the more he becomes conscious of a
higher power back of the world's life, a supreme intelligence back of the
world's destiny. It is consequently back of his personal destiny, too, and
bringing him what he really needs to fulfil the true purpose of his earthly
existence. With this realization he becomes content to surrender it to God's
will, to abandon all anxiety for the future, all brooding over the past, all
agitation over the present.
96
No man can penetrate into the being of the
Overself and remain an ego-centered individual. On the threshold he must lay
down the ego in full surrender.
97
The moth which throws itself into the candle's
flame has practised self-annihilation. The man who lets himself be used by the
Overself does the same, but only to the extent that he lets go.
98
You will have turned over the matter or problem if
certain signs appear: first, no more anxiety or fretting about it; second, no
more stress or tension over it; third, no more deliberating and thinking
concerning it.
99
The extraordinary thing is that when, putting
aside the ego-desires, we selflessly seek to know the divine will for us in any
given circumstances, the answer brings with it the strength necessary to obey
it.
100
If he wants the full Grace he must make the full
surrender. He should ask for nothing else than to be taken up wholly into, and
by, the Overself. To ask for occult powers of any kind, even the kind which are
called spiritual healing powers, is to ask for something less than this.
101
Whatever happens in the world around him, he
will so train his thoughts and feelings as to keep his knowledge of the
World-Idea, and his vision of its harmony, ever with him.
102
The student should not habitually think that the
problems with which he believes himself beset are really as grave as they
appear. If he can let go, relax, and surrender his entire life with all its
circumstances, and even all its aspirations, to the Higher Power, he should then
patiently await the outcome of this surrender, in whatever form it manifests
itself.
103
If he really surrenders his life to the Higher
Power and turns over his sense of responsibility to It, he will be unable to act
selfishly in his relationship with others, but will consider their welfare along
with his own.
104
If he turns his problem over to the Overself in
unreserved trust, he must admit no thoughts thereafter of doubt or fear. If they
still knock at his door he must respond by remembering his surrender.
105
He will learn to live by faith where he cannot
live by sight, to accept happenings against which the ego rebels and to endure
situations which reason denounces.
106
Jesus said, "Take no thought of the morrow."
What did Jesus mean? If we know to whom Jesus was speaking and the path along
which he was trying to lead his hearers, we shall know also what he meant. It
was certainly not that they should do nothing at all for the morrow; it was not
that they should give no attention to it. It was that they should not fret and
worry over the morrow; they should accept the duty imposed upon them to take
care of the morrow, but reject all anxiety as to its outcome. They should not
think that their little egos must manage everything, but they should have some
faith also that the higher power can operate in their lives.
107
The real meaning of the injunction, so often
delivered by spiritual prophets, to give up self is not a humanitarian one and
does not concern social relations with other men. It is rather a psychological
one, a counsel to transfer attention from the surface self to the deeper one, to
give up the personal ego so as to step into the impersonal Overself.
108
"I tell you that the very holiest man in outward
conduct and inward life I ever saw had never heard more than five sermons in all
his days," was the testimony of old Dr. John Tauler. "When he saw how the matter
stood he thought that was enough, and set to work to die to that to which he
ought to die, and live to that to which he ought to live."
109
The real meaning of these constant injunctions
to practise selflessness is not moral but metaphysical and mystical. It is to
give up the lower order of living and thinking so as to be able to climb to a
higher one.
110
Humbly recognizing our dependence on it, we must
open our minds and offer our hearts to God.
111
He renounces the possession of his own thoughts
and the performance of his own deeds. Henceforth they belong to the higher self.
112
It is the poor ego which worries and struggles
to come closer to perfection. But how can the imperfect ever transform itself
into the perfect? Let it cease its worry and simply surrender itself to the
ever-perfect Overself.
113
The shoulders of the aspirant must be strong
enough to bear the bitter blows of destiny without getting bowed down. He has
placed his life utterly in the hands of the gods, and he must be ready to suffer
with a sublime fortitude.
114
Whether in the artist's adoration of beauty or
the mystic's aspiration toward the Glimpse, there must be willingness to turn
from the present state to a fresh one. This is behind that denial of the ego, to
which Jesus referred.
115
If the ego is led into surrender to the
Overself, must it also be led to the guillotine? Can it not continue to live
upon this earth, purified and humbled as it now must be, sharing a new inner
life with the Overself?
116
All that he seems to be must dissolve to let the
new self arise.
117
We achieve a total surrender of the ego only
when we cease to identify ourselves with it. In this aspiration is the key to a
practical method of achievement.
118
We may know God only by losing self, we may not
lose self without experiencing pain. This is the inner meaning of the
crucifixion.
119
If a problem or a life is to be handed over to
the Higher Power for management or guidance, this can only be done if the faith
is there to force a real turning-around from ego to counter-ego, from intellect
or passion to inner quiet.
120
He is to receive passively what Grace bestows
positively. Hence the need of a surrendered attitude.
121
Practise referral of doubts, questions, needs,
requests to the Higher Power. Do not depend on the ego alone.
122
To surrender life to TRUTH is to desert the
baser standards of conduct which have hitherto held us. It means that henceforth
we will no longer consult our own comfort and convenience, but will accept the
leading of the inner Master, no matter into how hard a path he may direct us.
123
"There is a principle which is the basis of
things, which all speech aims to say, and all action to evolve, a simple, quiet,
undescribed, undescribable presence, dwelling very peacefully in us, our
rightful lord; we are not to do, but to let do; not to work, but to be worked
upon; and to this homage there is a consent of all thoughtful and just men in
all ages and conditions." - Emerson
124
To turn to the Higher Power and to wait
patiently for its direction or support is a good practice but it must be
remembered that one can only turn to a Higher Power by turning away from the
ego.
125
He begins with turning his problems over to the
higher unseen Power: he ends by turning himself over to it. This is what is also
called "surrendering to God" and "taking refuge in Him alone."
126
The finite mind of man can not take possession
of the Infinite Power any more than the little circle can contain the large one.
At the point where the two come into contact there must be surrender,
self-surrender, a willingness to let go of its own self-centre, its own instinct
of self-preservation.
127
To die to one's self is to let go of all
attachments, including the attachment to one's own personal ego. In some ways it
is like the act of passing away from the fleshly body.
128
It happens by itself, this mysterious point
where his own activity stops, when he surrenders to the feeling of the grace
which suddenly comes within the glimpse of his horizon, when its presence is
unmistakable surrender, offered of its own accord at the bidding of thinking,
but gently and peacefully.
129
What it is necessary for him to do is really to
surrender his fears and anxieties, whether concerning himself or those near and
dear to him, or those who, he thinks, want to hurt him. He should surrender all
these to God and be himself rid of them. For this is what giving up the ego
truly means. He would then have no need to entertain such negative thoughts.
They would be replaced by a strong faith that all would be well with him. To the
extent that he can give up the little ego with its desires and fears, to that
extent he invites and attracts divine help in his life.
130
It may be helpful for him to try a new angle on
his spiritual problems. This is to stop striving and to wait with surrendered
will for the higher power. This power is there within him and without him and
knows his need. Let him stop being tense, stop working and striving. Let him
even stop studying for realization of this presence, but let him just ask
prayerfully for it to take hold of him.
131
The surrendering of his life to the Overself
does not depend wholly upon his own efforts. He cannot bring it about as and
when he wills. He can bring about the prerequisite conditions for this
manifestation. He can fervently yearn for it, but the last word depends upon the
Overself, upon Grace. The Grace comes in time if it is wanted strongly enough,
and then he steps out of the shadows into the sunshine and a benign assurance is
born in the heart. Of course this can never be the result of metaphysical
striving alone but only of a coordinated, integral effort of thought, feeling,
and action. But whoever can arrive at it will surely be able to endure life's
problems as well as, and perhaps much better than, he who has to endure and
struggle without it.
132
We struggle to find God, we long after what
seems unattainable, and we must hold nothing back, must yield all, surrender
all, until the ego melts with every fetter that belongs to it.
133
This humble self-surrender is not the same as
the supine resignation of the coward. On the contrary, it is an attitude of the
brave.
134
To believe in the powers of the Overself is to
believe rightly, but to suppose that those powers can be attained without
complete self-suppression is to believe superstitiously. Few are ever able to
exercise them because few are ever willing to pay the requisite price.
135
If we turn ourselves over to the higher power,
surrendering our personal spiritual future to it, we must also turn over the
personal physical future, with all its problems, at the same time.
136
"Whatever you do, offer it to Me," said Krishna.
This implies constant remembrance of the Higher Power, which in turn saves those
who obey this injunction from getting lost in their worldly life.
137
He who surrenders his future to the Higher Power
surrenders along with it the anxieties and cares which might otherwise have
infested the thought of his future. This is a pleasant result, but it can only
be got by surrendering at the same time the pleasurable anticipations and neatly
made plans which might also have accompanied this thought. "Everything has to be
paid for" is a saying which holds as true in the realm of the inner life as it
does in the marketplace. The surrender of his life to the Higher Power involves
the surrender of his ego. This is an almost impossible achievement if thought of
in terms of a complete and instant act, but not if thought of in terms of a
partial and gradual one. There are parts of the ego, such as the passions for
instance, which he may attempt to deny even before he has succeeded in denying
the ego itself. Anyway, he has to make clear to himself the fact that glib talk
of surrender to God is cancelled if he does not at the same time attempt to
surrender the obstructions to it.(P)
138
When a man consciously asks for union with the
Overself, he unconsciously accepts the condition that goes along with it, and
that is to give himself wholly up to the Overself. He should not complain
therefore when, looking forward to living happily ever after with a desired
object, that object is suddenly removed from him and his desire frustrated. He
has been taken at his word. Because another love stood between him and the
Overself, the obstruction had to be removed if the union were to be perfected;
he had to sacrifice the one in order to possess the other. The degree of his
attachment to the lesser love was shown by the measure of his suffering at its
being taken away; but if he accepts this suffering as an educator and does not
resent it, it will lead the way to true joy.
139
The Inner Being will rise and reveal Himself
just as soon as the ego becomes sufficiently humbled, subdued, surrendered. The
assurance of this is certain because we live forever within the Love of God.
140
Within his heart, he may call or keep nothing as
his own, not even his spirituality. If he really does not want to cling to the
ego, he must cling to nothing else. He is to have no sense of inner greatness,
no distinct feeling of having attained some high degree of holiness.(P)
141
Once he grasps that the higher part of his being
not only knows immeasurably more than he what is good for him, but also
possesses infinitely more power than he does to bring it about, he is ready to
enter upon the surrendered life. He will no longer complacently assume that his
imperfect mentality is wise enough to guide him or his faltering ego strong
enough to support him. He will no longer predetermine his decisions or his
doings. He realizes that other forces are now beginning to enter his life and
mind, and his part is not to obstruct them but to let them do their work.
The more his own passivity meets their activity, the better will this work be
done.
142
From the time when the Overself holds this ego
in its enfolding embrace, he sees how its divine power brings great changes in
his life, renders great service to others, and effects great workings in their
outlook without his own effort in such directions. Therefore he cannot help
concluding that it is competent to do all that is required to be done, that the
ego may remain utterly quiescent, the body utterly still, and the whole man
unemployed, and yet every need can be safely left to the Overself for attention.
Thus, without an attempt to render service, nevertheless service is mysteriously
rendered. It suffices if he leaves all activity to It, does nothing himself, and
plays the role of an unaffected spectator of life.
143
He who has the courage to put first things
first, to seek the inner reality which is changeless and enduring, finds with it
an ever-satisfying happiness from which nothing can dislodge him. This got, it
will not prevent him seeking and finding the lesser earthly happinesses. Only he
will put them in a subordinate and secondary place because they are necessarily
imperfect, liable to change and even to go altogether. And then if he fails to
find them or if he loses them after having found them, he will still remain
inwardly unaffected because he will still remain in his peace-fraught Overself.
This is as true of the love of man for fame as it is true of the love of man for
woman. The more he looks in things and to persons for his happiness, the less he
is likely to find it. The more he looks in Mind for it, the more he is likely to
find it. But as man needs things and persons to make his existence tolerable,
the mystery is that when he has found his happiness in Mind they both have a way
of coming to him of their own accord to complete it.
144
He who puts himself at the Overself's disposal
will find that the Overself will in turn put him where he may best fulfil his
own divine possibilities.
145
The unfulfilled future is not to be made an
object of anxious thought or joyous planning. The fact that he has taken the
tremendous step of offering his life in surrender to the Overself precludes it.
He must now and henceforth let that future take care of itself, and await the
higher will as it comes to him bit by bit. This is not to be confounded with the
idle drifting, the apathetic inertia of shiftless, weak people who lack the
qualities, the strength, and the ambition to cope with life successfully. The
two attitudes are in opposition.
The true aspirant who has made a positive turning-over of his personal and worldly life to the care of the impersonal and higher power in whose existence he fully believes, has done so out of intelligent purpose, self-denying strength of will, and correct appraisal of what constitutes happiness. What this intuitive guidance of taking or rejecting from the circumstances themselves means in lifting loads of anxiety from his mind only the actual experience can tell. It will mean also journeying through life by single degrees, not trying to carry the future in addition to the present. It will be like crossing a river on a series of stepping-stones, being content to reach one at a time in safety and to think of the others only when they are progressively reached, and not before. It will mean freedom from false anticipations and useless planning, from vainly trying to force a path different from that ordained by God. It will mean freedom from the torment of not knowing what to do, for every needed decision, every needed choice, will become plain and obvious to the mind just as the time for it nears. For the intuition will have its chance at last to supplant the ego in such matters. He will no longer be at the mercy of the latter's bad qualities and foolish conceit.(P)
146
He is fortunate who hears the summons from
within and obeys it. For despite its demands, it brings him ever closer to peace
of mind.
147
Johanna Brandt came with little money and no
friends to a strange land with a work of service to humanity's physical and
spiritual health. She said that within a short time, "When it became necessary
to have a secretary, a woman with great executive ability stepped forward and
offered her services. Her rooms were placed at my disposal for the reception of
visitors." This is an illustration of the truth that whoever is animated by the
quest ideal will find that whatever and whoever becomes necessary to this true
and best life will come into it at the right time.
148
When Jesus declared: "Whosoever shall say unto
this mountain be thou removed, it will be," he did not mean the word
mountain to be taken literally - surely that is perfectly obvious - but
symbolically or poetically. Here it signifies problems. Whoever adopts the right
attitude to them, the attitude explained in the heart-lifting words of this
wondrous message, will find them removed from troubling his mind.
149
Five hundred years before Jesus said, "Seek ye
first the kingdom of heaven and all these things shall be added unto you," Lao
Tzu, a Chinese sage, said: "If you have really attained wholeness, everything
will flock to you."
150
Emotional worry, whether it be worry about
worldly and personal affairs or even about the spiritual quest, will vanish if
one surrenders one's life to the Overself entirely. That is the only way to
enjoy real freedom from worry; that is inner peace.
151
The total acceptance of this higher will changes
life for us. It affects our relations with other people and brings some measure
of serenity into ourselves.
152
Once this direction from within, this reception
of the Overself's voice, is accepted, whatever comes to us from without falls
into intelligible pattern. It is for our good even when its face is forbidding:
it is helpful even when it is painful. For we no longer judge it egoistically
and therefore wrongly. We seek its true meaning, its hidden message, and its
place in the divine orderliness.
153
Anxieties subside and worries fall away when
this surrender to the Overself grows and develops in his heart. And such a
care-free attitude is not unjustified. For the measure of this surrender is also
the measure of active interference in his affairs by the Divine Power.
154
When he has made this surrender, done what he
could as a human being about it and turned the results over completely to the
higher self, analysed its lessons repeatedly and taken them deeply to heart, the
problem is no longer his own. He is set free from it, mentally released from its
karma, whatever the situation may be physically. He knows now that whatever
happens will happen for the best.
155
His confidence in the reality and beneficence of
the higher power will increase as his experience of its inner working and outer
manifestation grows.
156
There is a strikingly parallel thought in the
Bhagavad Gita which confirms the New Testament's injunction, "Seek ye
first the kingdom of heaven and all these things shall be added unto you." In
the Indian scripture, Krishna, the Indian Christ, enjoins his disciple Arjuna:
"Whoever worships Me and Me alone with no other thought than the worship of Me,
the care of his welfare I shall take upon myself."
157
We become free from aims and ambitions: we are
able to forgo all plans and projects.
158
He will feel all personal pride and claims ebb
out of his being as the higher self takes possession of him. An utter humility
will be the result. But this is not the same as a sense of inferiority; it will
be too serene, too noble, and too satisfying for that.
159
Such a surrender to the higher self brings with
it release from negative tendencies, liberation from personal weaknesses.
160
If he attains and maintains a harmony with the
Overself (for which he must pay the price of submission to it) then the Overself
will help him for it is being allowed to do so.
161
Courage in the face of a risky situation, an
uncertain future, a harassing present, comes easily and spontaneously to the man
who surrenders his self-will and submits to God's will.
162
The Overself - when you are fortunate enough to
find it - will provide for and protect you, comfort and support you.
163
He who places his mind in Me enjoys Joy!
164
Once we accept the soul's existence, faith in
its power and worship of its presence follow by deduction.
165
By escaping this common dependence on the ego,
he enters into a dependence on the Overself. This, in one way, is utterly blind,
because it may or may not show him even one centimetre of the path ahead; for he
is led, like a little child, by the mysterious No-thing that is the higher
power. But in another way, it confers greater freedom, openness, and
flexibility.
166
So long as he has entrusted his life to the
Overself wholeheartedly, on the practical as well as on the theoretical level,
why should he entertain anxious thoughts about it? Rather should he let the
Overself do whatever thinking about his welfare is needed, since he has handed
over responsibility.
167
He who is faithful to his inner call at all
times, whether in ideals, ego-sacrifice, meditation practice, or the like, loses
nothing of worldly advantage in the end - except what ought to be let go.
Providence is rightly named.
168
Saint John of the Cross: "If you fail not to
pray, God will take care of your affairs, for they belong to no other master
than God, nor can they do so.... God takes care of the affairs of those who love
Him truly without their being anxious concerning them."
169
The Higher Power has given us the intelligence
with which to solve these matters of practical daily life. When the human will
has been truly surrendered, this Power may be counted on to guide - and guide
aright.
170
The serenity of the Overself never varies and
consequently the man who accomplishes the complete surrender to it is
unvaryingly serene and unshakeably tranquil.
171
To the degree that he can surrender his mind to
the higher self, to that degree does he surrender the worries and fears that go
along with it.
172
Men love their egos more than anything else, or
those extensions of their egos which are their families. But if and when the
lesser self submits to the higher self, which is Egohood, this love is
harmonized with love for the Overself.
173
If he has really turned his life over to the
higher power, then he need not crease his brow trying to work out his own plans.
He can wait either for the inner urge to direct him or for new circumstances to
guide his actions.
174
The same power which has brought him so far will
surely carry him through the next phase of his life. He must trust it and
abandon anxieties, as a passenger in a railroad train should abandon his bag by
putting it down on the floor and letting the train carry it for him. The bag
represents personal attempts to plan, arrange, and mold the future in a spirit
of desire and attachment. This is like insisting on bearing the bag's weight
himself. The train represents the Higher Self to which the aspirant should
surrender that future. He should live in inner Peace, free from anticipations,
desires, cares, and worries.
175
He need no longer seek things essential to his
life or needful to his service; they themselves will come seeking him.
176
He has nothing more to do, at this stage, than
to give up the ego and give in to the Overself. This done, all that matters will
be done, for from that time his farther way will be shown to him, and his
subsequent acts guided, by the Overself.
177
The notion of making up an itinerary well in
advance appeals to the time-bound calculating intellect but not to the
spirit-led intuition.
178
He wastes no time on recovering the past or
looking into the future.
179
Only when a man has reached this harmony with
Nature's intent for himself can he unfailingly trust events as truly being what
God wills for him.
180
Now that Grace is at work within him in response
to his self-surrender, he may cease his struggles at self-improvement in the
sense that he need no longer feel fully responsible for it. This does not mean
at all that he is to become so careless as to throw away all the fruits of
previous efforts. If this were to happen it would be evidence of a weakening
setback rather than of a true surrender.
181
His life is no longer planned out meticulously
in advance; he begins to live by the day, and cannot say what he will do within
a month or a year, until the time actually nears or finally arrives.
182
A time comes when there is no longer any feeling
of control and resistance, and discipline and opposition, simply because there
is no longer any striving for an ideal to be attained. Having handed himself
over to the higher power, he has handed both struggle and ideal over too.
183
At this stage he will tend more and more to stop
counting on fixed, pre-thought plans for future movement, actions, or
arrangements, to let the guidance of the moment take over, through the silent
voice of intuition.
184
He finds that having attained this liberation of
his will from the ego's domination, his freedom has travelled so far that it
loses itself and ceases to be free. For it vanishes into the rule of his higher
self, which takes possession of him with a completeness and a fullness that
utterly hoop him around. Henceforth, its truth is his truth, its goodness is his
goodness, and its guidance his obedience.
185
He who has turned all problems over to the
Overself is no longer faced with the problem of solving each new problem that
arises. He is free.
186
Jesus had no where to lay his head. He wandered
from place to place, teaching without price as he wandered. Wherever he went he
was at home in the complete confidence that Providence was taking care of him.
187
With this serene acceptance of Life, this glad
co-operation with it and willing obedience to its laws, he begins to find that
henceforth Life is for him. Events begin to happen, circumstances so arrange
themselves, and contacts so develop themselves that what he really needs for his
further development or expression appears of its own accord.
188
When a man has reached this stage, where his
will and life are surrendered and his mind and heart are aware of divine
presences, he learns that it is practical wisdom not to decide his future in
advance but rather to let it grow out of itself like corn out of seed.
189
His struggle for survival has ended. Henceforth
his life has been entrusted to a higher power.
190
He knows, having aligned himself harmoniously
with the higher power that supports the universe, that it surely can and will
support the little fragment of the universe that is himself. A sublime
confidence that he will be taken care of in the proper way pervades him in
consequence.
191
Few know the quiet security of having this inner
anchorage, the secret power generated by this surrender of flesh to spirit.
192
Those who sincerely and intelligently live
according to the philosophical ideal as best they can, surrendering the ego to
the Overself continually, receive visible proof and wonderful demonstration of a
higher presence and power in their lives. They can afford to trust God, for it
is no blind trust.
193
He will be shown some way of dealing with his
problem whether it leads to overcoming or to submission, to amendment or to
sidestepping.
194
Either he will be inwardly directed to a certain
move with successful results, or without any effort of his own something will
happen of itself to bring them about. Whether he himself makes the right move at
the right moment or whether someone else does it for him, a higher cause will be
at work for the man who truly relies on the higher forces of the Spirit.
195
In that wonderful state the feeling of tension,
the troubling by fear, and the suffering from insecurity vanish away. Why?
Because the particular problems involved have been taken over by the Overself.
Also, because no negative thinking is possible in that peaceful atmosphere. From
this we may deduce an excellent practical rule for daily living: surrender
all problems to the Overself by turning them out of your mind and handing
them over (but not in the wrong way by refusing to face them. The Secret
Path and The Quest of the Overself show the right way). Jesus taught
the same method in simpler language: Psalm 55 holds out the promise "Cast thy
burden upon the Deity, and he shall sustain thee." And in the Bhagavad
Gita, among the final words addressed to the troubled Prince Arjuna, there
is almost identical counsel.
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The universal power will sustain him simply
because he has surrendered himself to it. Failure in the true sense, which,
however, is not always the apparent one, will then be impossible.