1
Grace is a cosmic fact. If it were not, then the
spiritual outlook for the human race, dependent entirely on its own efforts for
the possibility of spiritual progress, would be poor and disheartening.
2
Grace is the indrawing power, or inward pull, of
Overself, which, being itself ever-present, guarantees the ever-presence of
Grace.
3
There is either great ignorance or grave confusion
as regards grace, some serious errors and many smaller ambiguities. There is
need to understand exactly what it is, the principal forms it takes, how to
recognize its presence, and how its workings show themselves.
4
Grace is the benign effluence of the Overself, the
kindly radiation from it, ever-present in us. The theological use of this term
to mean particular help given by God to man to enable him to endure temptation
and act rightly is a serious and arbitrary narrowing down of its original
meaning. It may mean this sometimes, but it also means the loving mercy God
shows to man, which appears variously as enlightenment of the mind or relief of
the heart, as change of outward physical conditions or a dynamic
revolution-working energy acting on the aspirant or on his life.
5
Out of the grand mystery of the Overself, the first
communication we receive telling us of and making us feel its existence, is
Grace.
6
The rejection of the idea of Grace is based on a
misconception of what it is, and especially on the belief that it is an
arbitrary capricious gift derived from favouritism. It is, of course, nothing of
the kind, but rather the coming into play of a higher law. Grace is simply the
transforming power of the Overself which is ever-present but which is ordinarily
and lawfully unable to act in a man until he clears away the obstacles to this
activity. If its appearance is considered unpredictable, that is because the
karmic evil tendencies which hinder this appearance vary considerably from one
person to another in strength, volume, and length of life. When the karma which
generated them becomes weak enough, they can no longer impede its action.(P)
7
By grace I mean the manifestation of God's
friendliness.(P)
8
The Overself extends its grace to all men, but all
not men are able to get it. This may be due to different reasons, some physical
and others, the most numerous, emotional or mental.
9
There have been many objections to the introduction
of the idea of Grace in these writings. It is too closely associated with
theology for these objectors' liking, too much connected with a God who favours
some but neglects others. Grace was never taught by Buddha, they point out. And
to those who have plodded wearily year after year along what seems an
unrewarding spiritual quest, the idea either mocks their plight or is simply a
remnant of theological imagination - unfactual and untrue. These critics are
right in part, wrong in part. If Saint Paul used this term and concept "Grace"
several times but may be thought too religious to be considered authoritative by
modern seekers of a scientific bent, let them remember that Ramana Maharshi of
India also used it several times and yet his bent was quite mystical and
philosophic.
10
What I mean by Grace may easily be misunderstood,
or only half-understood. Its full meaning is only partly suggested by the Tamil
word arul - divine blessing - and the Greek word charis - free and
beautiful gift.
11
Grace is either a gift from above or a state
within, a help of some kind or an experience reverently felt.
12
It is a whisper which comes out of the utter
silence, a light which glimmers where all was sable night. It is the mysterious
herald of the Overself.
13
There are little graces, such as those which
produce the glimpse; but there is only one great Grace: this produces a lasting
transformation, a deep radical healing and permanent enlightenment.
14
Indian critics who reject my statements about
Grace are requested to consider the meaning of prasada - so often
associated with the greatest holy men. If it does not mean Grace of God or guru,
what does it mean? I refer them also to their own scriptural Svetasvatara
Upanishad which especially states that prasada is needed for
salvation.
15
To deny the reality of grace is to call into
question the presence, in nearly all religions, of an intercessory element -
Allah's mercy, God's pardon, Rama's help, or Buddha's compassion. This element
has been greatly exaggerated perhaps, or grossly materialized, but it is still
there under the superstition.
16
The wicked cannot always be judged by appearances.
Some illumination may suddenly be granted because of past good deeds or
intensity of suffering. The Higher Self is infinitely accommodating to human
weakness and, also, infinitely patient; compassion is its first attribute.
17
Grace is here for all. It cannot be here for one
special person and not for another. Only we do not know how to open our
tensioned hands and receive it, how to open our ego-tight hearts and let it
gently enter.
18
There is a power which inspires the heart,
enlightens the mind, and sanctifies the character of man. It is the power of
Grace.
19
The grace of an infinite being is itself infinite.
20
The doctrine of grace may easily lead to a supine
fatalism if unclearly understood, but it will lead to intense self-humbling
prayer if clearly understood.
21
The sceptical view that Grace is a superstition
prompted by our human self-regarding and self-favouring nature, that it could
have no place on the high altitude of truly divine attributes, is understandable
but erroneous.
22
"My Grace is sufficient for thee." What does this
sentence mean? For an answer we must enquire first, who pronounced it and
second, in what context it was spoken.
23
Those who reject the concept of grace will have to
explain why the Bhagavad Gita declares, "This Spiritual Self reveals
itself to whom it chooses," and why the New Testament asserts, "Neither doth
anyone know the Father but...he to whom it shall please the Son to reveal him."
24
Those Indian critics who have rejected my
inclusion of Grace and stamped it as an alien Christian idea do not belong, and
could not have belonged, to the great Southern region of their country, with its
far purer Brahmin knowledge (because less subject to admixture by repeated
Northern invasion). The mystical literature of that region is quite familiar
with arul, a Tamil word which has no other and no better equivalent than
"Grace."
25
The Grace is always present since the Infinite
Power, from which it originally comes, is always present.
26
Grace does not depend on God's intervention in any
favouritistic or arbitrary manner. It is not an effect of God's whim or caprice.
It falls like sunlight on all, the good and evil alike. Each individual can
receive it, according to the quantity of obstacles he removes from its path.
27
Grace comes from outside a man's own self although
it seems to manifest entirely within himself.
28
So hidden is the manifestation of Grace and so
mysterious is its operation, that we need not wonder why men often deny its very
existence.
29
R.W. Emerson put it pithily: "Into grace all our
goodness is resolved." These were his words, as far as I can remember them.
30
That is the real Grace which depends neither upon
any other person nor upon himself.
31
In the religious symbolism of the Islamic faith,
the crescent figure stands for the reception of Grace, as well as for the man
who is perpetually receiving grace - that is, the mystic who has perfected
himself.
32
I know that many dispute the existence of Grace,
especially those who are Buddhistically minded, strictly rational, and they have
much ground for their stand. My own knowledge may be illusory, but my experience
is not; from both knowledge and experience I must assert that through one
channel or another Grace may come: dutiful, compassionate, and magnanimous.
33
If he offers himself to the divine, the divine
will take him at his word, provided his word is sincerely meant. The response to
this offer when it comes is what we call Grace.
34
There has been some questioning about the idea of
Grace. It is accepted by the Christians and Hindus and denied by the Buddhists
and Jains. However, even those who accept it have confused and contradictory
ideas concerning it. In a broad general sense it could be defined as a
benevolent change brought about without the person's own willpower, but rather
by some power not commonly or normally his own. But because we have with us
residues of former reincarnations in the form of karma, it is impossible for
most persons to distinguish whether any happening is the result of karma or of
Grace. But sometimes they can, for instance, if they wake up in the morning or
even in the middle of the night remembering some difficulty, some situation or
problem, but along with it feeling a Higher Presence and then with this feeling
beginning to see light upon the difficulty or the problem and especially
beginning to lose whatever distress, inquietude, fear, or uncertainty may have
been caused by it. If they feel that the negative reactions vanish and a certain
peace of mind replaces them, and especially if the way to act rightly in the
situation becomes clear, then they are experiencing a Grace.
35
People have curious ideas about what grace really
is. So few, for instance, seem to see that in opening themselves up to the
beauties of nature or of music and art they would be inviting the attention of
grace too. Grace is not just an arbitrary religious factor.
36
It is grace which inspires our best moves, and
which enables us to make them.
37
If Grace does not exist, why does the Bhagavad
Gita contain the statement: "To him whom the Overself chooses, to him does
It reveal Itself"? And why did the early Christian Father Clement, whose
writings are considered authoritative, state: "It is said the Son will reveal
Himself to whom He wishes"? (The Homilies, Vol. xvii, p. 278, Ante-Nicene lib.)
38
Grace may be defined as the Overself's response to
the personal self's aspiration, sincerity, and faith, lifting up the man to a
level beyond his ordinary one. This working in us (as contrasted with the
working by us) begins in deep passive stillness and ends in mental,
emotional, and even physical activity.
It is true that grace is given, but we ourselves help to make its blessing possible by the opening of self to receive it, the silencing of self to feel it, and the purifying of self to be fit for it.
An unknown mysterious thing inside the self is drawing him to it. He is groping his way, but it constantly eludes him. There must be something very beautiful there, which the subconscious recognizes, for the feeling of being attracted will not leave him and only grows stronger if by remaining passive, meditative, he will let it.
39
If the existence of grace is granted, the question
of its means of transmission arises. Since it is a radiation issuing from the
Overself, it can be directly bestowed. But if there are internal blockages, as
in most cases there are, and insufficient force on the man's part to break
through them, then it cannot be directly received. Some thing or person outside
him will have then to be used as a means of indirect transmission.(P)
40
When a person is crushed by events and falls to
his knees in prayer, his ego is temporarily crushed at the same time. After the
prayer has been formulated, whether aloud or mentally, there are a few moments
of complete exhaustion, of complete rest, which follow it. There is then
temporary stillness and it is in this stillness that the Grace which is always
emanating from the inner Being is able to do its healing and helping work. At
the same time there may also be a corresponding external activity of a
beneficial character.
Ascending to a higher level and studying the case of the aspirant on the Quest who by the practice of meditation deliberately brings about such moments of stillness, we see that he too opens a door to Grace. At this point it is necessary to clear away some confusion which often makes its appearance in spiritual literature and most especially in Indian literature. There we find an insistent and reiterated declaration of the absolute necessity of finding a guru so that by his Grace the aspirant may be helped towards enlightenment. When I say Indian literature I mean of course Indian Hindu literature, because in the Buddhist literature this insistence is generally absent and the aspirant is told to do the necessary work and he will get the natural result. The aspirant who has silently called for help may find that his call is answered by the appearance of a book or a person or a circumstance from whom he receives the help needed at the time. In the case of the appearance of a person, this may or may not be his destined guru, but it will be someone sufficient for the moment. The point is that what is called the guru helps prepare the right conditions which allow the inner Presence to make itself felt or which let it do its gracious work. The real help comes from this Grace - from the aspirant's own spiritual being, from himself. Saswitha, the Dutch healer, once said that he used his patients' own healing energy in order to treat them. Where did this healing energy come from? It came from their own subtler bodies, that is, from themselves; but Saswitha created the necessary conditions which enabled it to be released - when he was successful.
41
Grace is not necessarily bestowed deliberately or
conferred personally. It may be received from someone who does not even know
that he is its source. It may manifest through nothing more than the physical
meeting between these two, or through a letter from one to the other, or even
through the mere thinking about one of them by the other person. But, however
obtained, Grace has its ultimate source in the mysterious Overself. This is why
no man, however saintly, exalted, or advanced, can really give it to anyone: he
can only be used by the higher power for this purpose, whether aware or unaware
in the surface part of his mind of what is happening.
42
Ask for your share of the divine nectar and it
shall not be withheld from you. Indeed, those who have turned from the peaceful
hearth that is their due, to move through the gloomy houses of men to dispense
it, have done so because of the dark flood of secret tears that break daily
through the banks of human life.
43
Grace flows in wavelengths from the mind of an
illuminated man to sensitive human receivers as if he were a transmitting
station. It is by their feeling of affinity with him and faith in him that they
are able to tunein to this grace.
44
No one but a man's own Being gives him grace. From
the moment when he lays his head prostrate before It, and returns again and
again to that posture, mentally always and physically if urged, grace is
invoked.(P)
45
He may receive grace directly from its source in
the infinite love, power, and wisdom of the Overself, or indirectly through
personal contact with some inspired man, or still more indirectly through such a
man's intellectual or artistic productions.
46
The philosophic concept of Grace is different
from, and not to be confounded with, the popular religio-theologic one. The
latter carries arbitrariness, caprice, and favouritism within it. The former has
nothing of the kind. Despite its mysteriousness, it often follows the fulfilment
of certain conditions by the seeker; but even when it does not appear to do so,
it is a legacy from causes set going in earlier lives on this earth. The notion
that it is dispensed in an arbitrary manner by the Higher Power is to
anthropomorphize that Power, to regard it as a glorified man. This is nonsense
to anyone who can reflect correctly and think deeply on the Power's real nature.
The notion of caprice is to make the manifestation of Grace an affair of mere
whimsy, an emotion of the moment, a passing mood. This simply could not be, for
grace descends from a plane which transcends such things. Lastly, the notion of
favouritism is usually applied in connection with a guru, a holy man, or a
godlike man. If such a man is really, fully, and profoundly illumined, he has
goodwill to all other people, wishes that all shall come to the Light, not just
those he favours or who favour him. His grace is always there, but men must be
able to recognize him and accept it. He is always ready to share his
experience of the divine ever-presence with everyone, but not everyone is ready
to receive it. In short, grace is what comes to you from an inspired book, or a
blessed letter, or a few moments of relaxation.
47
To expect help to come to us through God when it
should and could come to us only through man, is one fallacy. To expect it to
come through some "master" when it should and could come only from oneself, is
another.
48
It is possible for someone to make Grace a living
presence either through divine utterance or through extraordinary quietness.
49
Grace is not imparted by any sacrament of any
church, although sometimes the state of mind engendered by intense faith in such
a sacrament may open the believer to such impartation. The Quakers have several
instances in their history of having received grace, yet they have no
sacraments.
50
Whether he be a recipient of the Overself's
healing grace, or its teaching grace, or its protective grace, the source
remains one and the same.
51
Whatever and whoever an adept brings into the
Overself's light will eventually be conquered by that light.
52
Grace may be willed and yet not manifest; may not
even be thought of, and yet manifest. Someone hears the sound of a sage's voice,
and lo! he begins to feel an inner glow without the sage seeking to do anything
or knowing what is occurring.
53
No man has the right or capacity to dispense
grace, but some men may sometimes be used by the higher power in effecting its
own dispensations.
54
I do not use the term grace in the narrow
sense given it by one of the world religions, that it flows to recipients only
through the outward sacraments and ritualized communions of that Church, but in
the wide sense that philosophy gives it.
55
It was not Christ's death that brought his grace
into the human world, but his life.
56
It is not the teacher's business to impose his own
will on the other, but to help the introduction and working of Grace in the
other.
57
No words can re-create these moments of grace so
well as music. Think of the blessed gift which mankind has received through such
works as Handel's Messiah and Bach's Christmas Oratorio.
58
There has been too much abuse of the idea of
special channels of grace and too many claimants have made unwarranted
declarations.
59
Each time he deliberately holds loving thought
towards anyone - whether disciple or not - he extends grace to that person.
60
Although the glimpse is the chief form taken by
Grace, it would be a mistake to believe that it is the only form. There are
other and different ones.
61
The man who fervently believes that Christ has the
power to forgive his sins is not wrong. But his interpretation of his forgiver
is wrong. The Christ who can do this for him must be a living power, not a dead
historical personage. And that power is his own Christ-self, that is, Overself.
62
We do not mean by grace that lasting union with
the Overself can be given from without by the favour of another man.
63
A master must use words to impart his teaching but
he need not use them to impart his Grace.
64
The translator into German of The Wisdom of the
Overself went to Egypt for a three-week rest to avoid nervous collapse after
the death of a most beloved person, who she believed was her twin soul. While
she was staying at a hotel in Luxor, various shoeshine men came there and sat
outside, offering their services to guests. One day an elderly Arab appeared
among them, with a striking face and an even more striking radiation of
tranquillity. She was so drawn to him that she let him polish her shoes in
preference to the one who usually did them. When he finished she paid him four
piasters (which was double the normal payment), because she felt so comforted by
his presence. He immediately returned half the money to her, saying, "The Lord
will look after the needs of tomorrow. Two piasters are enough for today." He
never came again to the hotel, but she constantly thought of him and his peace,
to have something to save her from utter despair. After she had returned to
Europe still grieving and depressed, he appeared to her in a dream surrounded by
light and blessed her. When she awoke, his mental image still seemed there, but
it said, "This is the last time I shall come to you. From now on you must take
care of yourself." He never reappeared, but she slowly recovered thereafter.
65
That grace can come only through the benison of a
minister appointed by some church, and no other channel, is mere superstition.
It can come through any man who is inspired, or any book written by such a man,
even if he dwells outside all churches. If a parson or a priest has himself
entered into the source of Light, he can become a channel for it, but not
otherwise.
66
This belief in a master's grace appears in Moorish
countries of North Africa, where it is said in spiritual circles that the more
time spent in the company of one who is blessed with spiritual power, the more
do we absorb some of his power in the reflected form of "baraka."
67
Another channel for grace's manifestation is
through circumstances. These may provide the right surroundings, the right
persons, and the right happenings for it.
68
It is not for him to know in advance in what form
the revelation will come, whether it will be an intuition, a strong pressure, a
dream, or a particular happening, words read in a book, a phrase dropped from
someone's lips, a mood engendered by music, art, Nature.
69
No Maharishee, no Aurobindo, no Saint Francis can
save you. It is the Holy Spirit which saves man by its Grace. The ministrations
of these men may kindle faith and quiet the mind, may help you to prepare the
right conditions and offer a focus for your concentration, but they offer no
guarantee of salvation. It is highly important not to forget this, not to deify
man and neglect the true God who must come to you directly and act upon you
directly.(P)
70
Some have difficulty in understanding the exact
place in the scheme of things of Grace. If they believe in the law of
recompense, there seems to be no room left for the law of Grace. It is true that
man must amend his conduct and correct his faults; that no escape from these
necessary duties can be found. But they can be done alone or they can be done
with the thought, remembrance, and help of the Overself. This second course
introduces the possibility of Grace. It can enter only if the first has been
followed and only if the aspiration has succeeded in lifting the consciousness
to the Overself. A moment's contact will suffice for this purpose. What happens
then is that the inner change is then completed and the remaining, unfulfilled
karmic consequence is then annulled. There is no giving of "something for
nothing" here, no breakdown of the law of recompense. The ego must use its will
to repent and amend itself, in any case.
71
The forgiveness of sin is no myth, but it can
become a fact only after the sinner has done penance and sought purification.
72
He who has himself sinned and suffered for his
sin, who has attained inner understanding of it and made repentant atonement for
it, who has then felt in his heart the benign grace of being forgiven - such a
person can easily extend pardon to those who wrong him and compassion to those
who wrong themselves by wronging others.
73
There are three types of Grace: firstly, that
which has the appearance of Grace but which actually descends out of past good
karma and is entirely self-earned; secondly, that which a Master gives to
disciples or aspirants when the proper external and internal circumstances exist
- this is in the nature of a temporary glimpse only but is useful because it
gives a glimpse of the goal, a sense of the right direction, and inspiring
encouragement to continue on the Quest; thirdly, when a man attains the fullest
degree of realization, he is enabled in some cases to modify overhanging
negative karma or in others to negate it because he has mastered the particular
lessons that needed to be learned. This is particularly evident when the Hand of
God removes obstructions in the path of his work. The philosophic conception of
Grace shows it to be just and reasonable. It is indeed quite different from the
orthodox religious belief about it, a belief which regards it as an arbitrary
intervention by the Higher Power for the benefit of its human favourites.(P)
74
By this grace the past's errors may be forgotten
so that the present's healing may be accepted. In the joy of this grace, the
misery of old mistakes may be banished forever. Do not return to the past - live
only in the eternal Now - in its peace, love, wisdom, and strength.
75
We have the authority of Lao Tzu that there is
such a thing as pardon. He says: "For what did the ancients so much prize this
Tao? Was it not because by it those who had sinned might escape?"
76
Would forgiveness be an impossible nullification
of the law of karma? Is there no way out of one karmic consequence leading to
and creating a further one in an endless and hopeless series? I believe an
answer to the first question has been given by Jesus, and to the second by
Aeschylus. Matt. 12:31: "Therefore I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be
forgiven men," was Jesus' clear statement. As for the difficult problem
propounded by the second question, consider the solution suggested by Aeschylus:
"Only in the thought of Zeus, whatever Zeus may be." Karma must operate
automatically, but the Power behind karma knows all things, controls all things,
controls even karma itself, knows and understands when forgiveness is
desirable. No human mind can fathom that Power; hence Aeschylus adds the
qualifying phrase, "whatever Zeus may be." Forgiveness does not destroy the law
of karma; it complements the work of that law. "All of us mortals need
forgiveness. We live not as we would but as we can," wrote Menander nearly four
hundred years before Jesus' time.
77
The notion of grace as given out in popular
religion was helpful perhaps to the masses but needs a large revision for the
philosophic seekers. It is not granted at the whim of a Personal God nor solely
after deserving labours for it. It is rather more like a steady permanent
emanation from a man's own Overself, always available, but of which he must
partake by himself. If at times it seems to intervene specially on his behalf,
that is an appearance due to the immense wisdom in timing the release of a
particular good karma.
78
Just as this generation has lived to see the
experience of gravity upset by the weightlessness experiences of spacemen, so in
all the generations there have been those who have found the experience of karma
upset by grace and its forgiveness.
79
When the ego's total submission is rewarded by the
Overself's holy Grace, he is granted pardon for the blackest past and his sins
are truly forgiven him.
80
Grace will shatter the power of an evil past.
81
To make the result dependent on Grace alone would
be to deny the existence and power of the universal law of recompense. The need
of effort can only be ignored by those who fail to see that it plays an
indispensable part in all evolution, from the lowly physical to the lofty
spiritual.
82
Who can tell the miraculous power of the Overself?
Its Grace may lift the most degraded of men into the most exalted.
83
A man who has sinned, erred, or been mistaken much
and wakened up at last to what he has been doing, will instinctively seek first
for affectionate understanding and sympathetic forgiveness. The more he has
strayed, the more he needs them.
84
It is not possible to have the punishment of past
errors remitted until we ourselves let them go by taking their lessons fully and
fairly to heart.
85
Buddha found himself in a land where degenerate
priestcraft had cunningly persuaded the masses to believe that every sin could
be expiated, and its present or future effects in destiny circumvented, by some
paid-for ritual, sacrifice, or magic. He tried to raise the moral level of his
people by denying the pardon of sin and affirming the rigorous governance of
karmic law, the strict unalterability of unseen justice. Jesus, on the contrary,
found himself in a land where religion proclaimed harshly, "An eye for an eye, a
tooth for a tooth." He too tried to raise the moral level of his people. But a
wisdom not less than Buddha's made him meet the situation by stressing
forgiveness of sins and the mercy of God. "The law of recompense brings every
man his due and no external religious form can change its working" is, in
effect, the gist of much Buddhist teaching. "True," Jesus might have said, "but
there is also the law of love, God's love, for those who have the faith to
invoke it and the will to obey it." Let us grant that both the prophets were
right if we consider the different groups they were addressing, and that both
gave the kind of help that was most needed by each group. Let no one deny to
divinity a virtue which is possessed by humanity. The higher self's response to
the ego's penitence is certain. And such response may stretch all the way to
complete forgiveness of sins.
86
The failure to appreciate the role of grace
because of faith in the law of karma is as deplorable as the tendency to
exaggerate it because of faith in a personal deity.
87
Such is the wonder of grace that the worst sinner
who falls to the lowest depths may thereafter rise to the loftiest heights.
Jesus, Buddha, and Krishna have plainly said so.
88
Those who believe that the universe is governed by
law and that human life, as a part of it, must also be governed by law, find it
hard to believe in the forgiveness of sins, and the doctrine of Grace of which
it is a part. But let them consider this: that if the man fails to appropriate
the lesson and to amend his conduct, if he lapses back into the old sins again,
then their forgiveness automatically lapses too. The law of recompense is not
negated by his forgiveness but its own working is modified by the parallel
working of a higher law.
89
The Overself acts through inexorable law, yes, but
love is part of the law. Grace violates no principle but rather fulfils the
highest principle.
90
Grace can be a ripening of karma, or a response to
a direct appeal to a higher power, or can come through a saint's appeals. Faith
in the Power is rewarded by grace. If the appeal fails, adverse karma must be
too strong. Materialists do not make such appeals, so they receive no Grace
unless the accumulation of good deeds brings good karma.
91
Lift up your eyes from the ground to the sun of a
justified hope. We have it on the authority of Jesus that there is mercy or
forgiveness for the worst sinners if they set about obtaining it in the right
way. And as you do not come anywhere near that category, surely there is some
hope and some help for you too.
92
The notion that we must qualify for Grace before
we can receive it may not, apparently, hold true in some cases. But even there
the laws of reincarnation and recompense will supply the missing connections.
93
There is hope for all because there is Grace for
all. No man is so sinful that he cannot find forgiveness, cleansing, and
renewal.
94
Where is the hope for mankind if there is no
Grace, only karma? If it took so many ages to collect the karmic burden we now
carry, then it will take a similar period to disengage from it - the forbidding
task will continue throughout every reincarnation until the man dies again and
again - unless the individual collector, the ego, is no longer here to claim it.
But to cancel its own existence is impossible by its own efforts, yet possible
by its non-effort, its surrender, its letting in the Higher Power, by no longer
claiming its personal identity. The coming in, when actualized, is Grace
for it is not his doing.
95
The aspirant who depends solely on his own unaided
efforts at self-improvement will nevertheless one day feel the need of an
outside power to bestow what he cannot get by himself. The task he has
undertaken cannot be perfectly done or completely done by himself alone. He will
eventually have to go down on his knees and beg for Grace. The ego cannot save
itself. Why? Because secretly it does not want to do so, for that would mean its
own extinction. So unless he forces it to seek for Grace, all his endeavours
will bring him only a partial result, never a fully satisfactory one. Those who
say that the idea of Grace violates the concept of universal law do not look
into it deeply enough. For then they would see that, on the contrary, it fulfils
the law of the individual mind's effort, which they believe in, by complementing
it with the law of the Universal Mind's activity inside the individual, which
they ought also to believe in. God cannot be separated from man. The latter does
not live in a vacuum.
96
The destiny of the ego is to be lifted up into the
Overself, and there end itself or, more correctly, transcend itself. But because
it will not willingly bring its own life to a cessation, some power from outside
must intervene to effect the lifting up. That power is Grace and this is the
reason why the appearance of Grace is imperative. Despite all its aspirations
and prayers, its protestations and self-accusations, the ego does not want the
final ascension.
97
The case for Grace is that only the Overself can
tell us what the Overself is, can teach us about itself. The ego-intellect
cannot do so; the senses certainly cannot; and ordinary experience seems far
from it.
98
No man can render himself so independent of bodily
appetites and human desires that they cannot sway his judgements or decisions,
unless he is inwardly supported and strengthened by grace.
99
The "me" is in us, and attempts to destroy it and
to remove its existence from consciousness yield here and there only to reappear
later. Only grace can effectively overcome its tyranny. Surrender to the
Overself by constantly turning toward it ends the struggle and brings peace. The
ego then lies, obeisant, the victim and no longer the victor.
100
It does not lie within man's power to gain more
than a glimpse of this diviner life. If he is to be established firmly and
lastingly in it, then a descent of grace is absolutely necessary. Artificial
methods will never bring this about. Rites and sacrifices and magical
performances, puzzling over Zen koans or poring over the newest books, will
never bring it.
101
The closer he comes to the Overself, the more
actively is the Grace able to operate on him. The reason for this lies in the
very nature of Grace, since it is nothing other than a benign force emanating
from the Overself. It is always there but is prevented by the dominance of the
animal nature and the ego from entering his awareness. When this dominance is
sufficiently broken down, the Grace comes into play more and more frequently,
both through Glimpses and otherwise.(P)
102
The Holy Spirit's light alone can open his
understanding and that of those around him.
103
Grace acts as a catalytic agent. Where a man is
unable to liberate himself from the animal and the ego, it assists him to do so.
Where rule of the mechanical responses of his senses, his glands, and his
unconscious complexes holds him captive to an established pattern, it sets him
free.
104
Nothing that you do can bring about this
wonderful transformation, for it is not the result of effort. It does not depend
on the power of your will or the strength of your desire. It is something which
can only be done to you, not by you. It is the result of your absorption by
another and higher Force. It depends on Grace. It is more elusive yet more
satisfying than anything else in life.
105
Most things may be acquired by violent effort,
but not Grace.
106
It is the power of the Other which pulls him
upward out of his attachments to body and earth, cajoling him to do what he
cannot do of himself - let go. This power, when so felt, we call grace.
107
Let him leave some room in his calculations for
grace. The conquest of self, and certainly the negation of self, must in the end
be a gift of the Lord.
108
When the ego knows that it is beaten, when it
gives up its strivings, efforts, and goals, when it lies prostrate and calls out
to the higher Power in despair or surrender, there is then a chance that the
Grace will appear. However, lest there be any misunderstanding on this point, it
must be said that this is only one way for Grace to appear, and there are other
ways not so unhappy and much more joyous.
109
Where man fails, Grace succeeds. Where his ego
laughs at all his efforts to dislodge it, he has to surrender it in humility
before the guru or God, whose grace alone can do what his own act cannot do.
110
It is not within the power of man to finish
either the purificatory work or its illumination-sequel: his Overself, by its
action within his psyche, must bring that about. This activating power is grace.
111
Grace is not a fruit which can be artificially
forced. It must be left to ripen of itself.
112
What he is unable to attain by all his efforts
will, if he is blessed by Grace, be given him unexpectedly and suddenly when all
desire for it has lulled.
113
Grace is a necessity before the ego can go up in
the blaze of divine energy.
114
What Grace does is to draw the man's attention
away from himself, from his ego, to the Overself.
115
Since grace does not depend immediately and
directly on the man himself, on what he thinks and does, he cannot make a
glimpse happen by any act of will. At best he can draw nearer the source of this
experience.
116
Many have failed to disidentify themselves from
their thoughts, despite all attempts. This shows its difficulty, not its
impossibility. In such cases, grace alone will liberate them from their
thought-chains.
117
When the ego is sufficiently crushed by its
frustrations or failures - and sooner or later this may happen to most of us -
it will turn, either openly or secretly, to the admission that it needs outside
help. And what other help can it then find than Grace, whether mediated directly
from the Overself or indirectly through a master?
118
The ego, the personal limited self, cannot lift
itself into the Higher Self, and if the student at times has felt dismally
powerless to make progress by self-effort, he will have learned the priceless
lesson of the need of Grace.
119
He cannot take any virtue to himself because he
did not make the change by himself. It was a gift - the gift of Grace.
120
The supreme effect of Grace, its most valuable
benefit, is when its touch causes the man to forfeit his ego-dominance, when it
takes away the personal obstruction to the Overself.
121
Only when the ego, thwarted and disappointed,
hurt and suffering, finds that it cannot sufficiently change its own character,
is it ready to beg, out of its helplessness, for Grace. So long as it believed
that by its own power it could do so, it failed. And the way to ask for Grace is
to sit perfectly still, to do nothing at all, since all previous doing failed.
122
Since the very "I" which seeks the truth and
practises the meditation is itself so illusory, it cannot attain what it seeks
or even practise with success, unless it also receives help from a higher
source. Only two such sources are possible. The first and best is the Overself's
direct grace. This must be asked for, begged for, and wept for. The next best is
the grace of a master who has himself entered into truth-consciousness.
123
He may come at length to the disconcerting
conclusion that his spiritual hopes would never be fulfilled. But in doing this
he is not allowing for the unknown X-factor, the higher and mysterious Overself.
124
The revelation which brings one's own
consciousness into coincidence with the Overself comes only by Grace.
125
When a man's strivings mature, the insight dawns
of itself. Yet he cannot tell which day this is to be, cannot precipitate the
wondrous event by his own will. For this depends on grace.
126
We need the power it gives, the understanding it
bestows, and the solace it brings.
127
If he insists on clinging to the ego, he makes
it impossible to know truth, approach God, or experience the timelessness of
reality. Only an outer intervention can then help him, only the Grace coming
direct or through some human channel.
128
"By him is He realized to whom He is full of
grace," says the Katha Upanishad.
129
Just as we have to look at the world in the
twofold way of its immediate and ultimate understanding, so we have to find
enlightenment in a twofold way through our own self-creative efforts and through
the reception of Grace.
130
Grace is the hidden power at work along with his
spirit's aspiration and his efforts at discipline. This does not mean that it
will continue to work if he drops both aspiration and effort. It may, but more
often it will not.
131
It seems a tiring and endless task, this, of
tracking down the ego and struggling with it in its own lair. No sooner have we
given ourselves the satisfaction of believing that we have reached its last lair
and fought the last struggle than it reappears once again, and we have to begin
once more. Can we never hope to finish this task? Is the satisfaction of victory
always to be a premature one? When such a mood of powerlessness overwhelms us
utterly, we begin at last to cast all further hope for victory upon Grace alone.
We know that we cannot save ourselves and we look to the higher power. We
realize that self-effort is absolutely necessary to our salvation, but we
discover later that it is not enough for our salvation. We have to be humbled to
the ground in humility and helplessness before Grace will appear and itself
finish the work which we have started.
132
It is important to note that in the Bhagavad
Gita the introduction of the subject of Grace and its actual descent upon
the disciple Arjuna come only at the very end of the book - after Arjuna, by
patient discipleship, has really earned it. Without Grace there is no entry. We
may strive and weep, but unless the Grace falls on us we cannot enter into the
kingdom of Heaven. How and when it should come depends partly upon our karma,
partly upon our yearning, and partly upon the channel which God uses.
133
The passing over into higher consciousness
cannot be attained by the will of any man, yet it cannot be attained without the
will of man. Both grace and effort are needed.
134
If all his efforts are concentrated on
self-improvement, then the circle of his thinking will be a small and limited
one. The petty will become over-important in his own eyes and the insignificant
will become full of meaning. It is needful to balance the one attitude with
another - surrender to and faith in the power of Grace.
135
Constant self-effort can thin down the egoism
but not eliminate it. That final act is impossible because the ego will not
willingly slay itself. What self-effort does is to prepare the way for the
further force which can slay it and thus makes the operation timely and its
success possible. What it further does is to improve intelligence and intuition
and to ameliorate the character, which also prepares the individual and attracts
those forces. They are nothing else than the pardoning, healing, and,
especially, the transforming powers of Grace.
136
To make any spiritual venture explicitly
efficacious and to bring it to complete success, certain conditions must first
be fulfilled. Most of them can be provided by the venturer himself but a few of
them must come from outside himself. These are grace and favourable destiny.
137
However much he exerts his intellect he cannot
reach the final revelation, the clearest enlightenment, for this is a gift of
grace.
138
While he patiently waits with surrendered will
for the oncoming of divine Grace, he directs conscious effort to improve himself
and thus, incidentally, deserves it.
139
It is not by special intervention that the
divine grace appears in his life. For it was there all the time, and behind all
his struggles, as a constant unbroken radiation from the Overself. But those
struggles were like the hoisting of sails on a ship. Once up, they are able to
catch the wind and propulsion begins automatically.
140
Only the double viewpoint does justice to the
double truth that both personal effort and bestowed grace are needed, or that
both ego and Overself are present.
141
When your efforts have brought you to a certain
point, then only do they get pushed aside or slowly drawn away by another power
- your higher Self. What really happens is that the energy or power which you
are using spontaneously ignites. It is that which enables you to do, to get
done, to achieve. The all-important point is that the active power is not your
own will, but is really a direct visitation of what we must call Grace. It is
strongly felt, this experience of the higher power or higher Self.
142
A man can look to his own knowledge and his own
actions to carry him a long distance on this path, but in the end he must look
to grace for final results.
143
He cannot bring this enlightenment into being -
much less into permanent being - by his own willpower. It can only come to him.
But although striving for it may probably end in failure, the masses'
indifference to it is worse. For whereas he will at least be open to recognize
and accept it when it does happen to come, their doors of perception will be
shut to it, or, bewildered and frightened, they will run away from it.
144
Man has no power of his own to command Grace but
he does have the power to turn away from smug satisfaction with his own ego and
throw himself at the feet of the Overself - the source of Grace.
145
He who told us to note the lilies of the field
also told us the parable of the talents. Whatever the divine Grace brings us, it
brings it through our personal effort.
146
When he becomes acutely aware both of the sacred
duty of self-improvement and of the pitiful weakness which he brings to it, the
need of getting the redeeming and transforming power of Grace follows logically.
He is then psychologically ready to receive it. He cannot draw Grace to himself
but can only invoke and await it.
147
In the end, and after we have tried sufficiently
long and hard, we find that the knot of self cannot be untied. It is then that
we have to call on grace and let it work on us, doing nothing more than to give
our consent and to accept its methods.
148
It is a simple error to attribute to grace what
properly belongs to his own nature, but it is spiritual arrogance to attribute
to his own power what properly belongs to Grace.
149
If he fails but persists despite the failures,
one day he will find himself suddenly possessed of the power to win, the power
to achieve what had hitherto seemed impossible for his limited ability. This
gift - for it is nothing else - is Grace.
150
If grace had to depend solely on human merit, if
it had to be fully worked for and earned, it would no longer be grace. It really
depends on the mysterious will of the higher power. But this is not to say that
it comes by the caprice of the higher power. If a man puts himself into a
sufficiently receptive attitude, and if he applies the admonition "Be still and
know that I am God," he is doing something to attract grace.
151
When he has worked and worked upon himself as
well as he is able, but comes in the end to acknowledge that success in getting
rid of his weaknesses is beyond his power, he is ready to realize the need of
Grace. And if it comes - for which such realization is essential - he will
discover that final success is easy and, sometimes, even instantaneous with
Grace.
152
If he thinks that the result depends wholly upon
his personal endeavours after holiness, he is wrong. But if he does little or
nothing to control himself because he waits for the Grace of God or the help of
a master to come into his life, he is also wrong.
153
The idea of conquering his own lower nature
solely by his own efforts does not allow any room for Grace. It would be better
to find a more balanced approach. He needs to learn in his efforts that they
cannot of themselves bring all he seeks. The first step to attract Grace is to
humble himself in prayer and to confess his weakness.
154
When he has passed successfully through the last
trial, overcome the last temptation, and made the last sacrifice of his ego, the
reward will be near at hand. The Overself's Grace will become plain, tangible,
and wholly embracing.
155
Belief in the reality of Grace and hope of its
coming are excellent. But they are not to be turned into alibis for spiritual
sloth and moral sin.
156
The strength needed for sustained mystical
contemplation must come at first from his own ego's persistence but will come in
the end from the Overself's Grace.
157
Although personal effort and the will toward
self-mastery do much to advance him on this quest, it is grace, and grace alone,
which can advance him to the goal in the last stages or assist him out of an
impasse in the earlier ones.
158
First, he must attempt to lift himself upwards,
taking the needed time and making the needed effort. Then he will feel that some
other force is lifting him gratuitously - this is the reaction, Grace.
159
To come into the consciousness of the Overself
is an event which can happen only by grace. Yet there is a relation between it
and the effort which preceded it, even though it is not an exact, definite, and
universally valid relation.
160
We must exert our own will and strength to
prepare the way for, and make us receptive to, the divine grace. Thus the one
complements the other; both are necessary parts of the World-Idea.
161
Jesus has said that it is Grace which starts and
keeps a man on the way to God, even though his heart and will have to make their
effort also. Ramana Maharshi confirmed this statement.
162
How can the ego's self-effort bring about the
grand illumination? It can only clear the way for it, cleanse the vehicle of it,
and remove the weaknesses that shut it out. But the light of wisdom is a
property of the innermost being - the Soul - and therefore this alone can bring
it to a man. How can the ego give or attain something which belongs to the
Overself? It cannot. Only the divine can give the divine. That is to say, only
by grace can illumination be attained, no matter how ardently he labours for it.
163
No man is excluded from that first touch of
Grace which puts him upon the Quest. All may receive it and, in the end, all do.
But we see everywhere around us the abundant evidence that he will not be ready
for it until he has had enough experience of the world, enough frustration and
disappointment to make him pause and to make him humbler.
164
The aspirant who cries out in despair that he is
unable either to make progress or to get a mystical experience and that Grace
seems absent or indifferent does not understand that he has within himself, as
every man has, a place which is the abode of Grace. When I say every man, I mean
every human being - which includes the vast multitudes of non-aspirants too.
Just as the exhausted athlete may with some patience find what he calls his
second wind, so the man whose thought, feeling, will, and aspiration are
exhausted may find his interior deeper resource; but this requires patience and
passivity. The need to hope, to wait, and to be passive is the most important of
all.
165
Some Questers become depressed and discouraged
when they learn that grace is the final essential ingredient for success on the
Quest. This seems to put the issue out of their hands and to make it a matter of
luck. They are taking too negative an attitude. It is true that grace is not
subject to their command, but the atmosphere which attracts it, the conditions
in which it can most easily enter, are subject to him.
166
God's Grace is the spark which must fall into
human effort to make it finally effective.
167
We may wander about and wait for Grace to come
or we may follow a disciplined way of working for it.
168
If the Overself's Grace does not come to the
help of a man, all his exertions will be fruitless. But, on the other hand, if
he does not exert himself, it is unlikely that the Grace will come at all.
169
His part is to open a way, remove obstructions,
gain concentration, so that the Overself's grace can reach him. The union of
both activities produces the result.
170
He is not asked to free himself from all
feeling, nor to throw out all desire, but to attain a measure of calm. This can
come through a twofold source. First, he must learn and cultivate self-control.
Second, his aspiration and purification must succeed in attracting grace.
171
The fact of Grace being an unpredictable descent
from above does not mean that we are entirely helpless in the matter, that there
is nothing we can do about it. We can at least prepare ourselves both to attract
Grace and to respond aright when it does come. We can cleanse our hearts, train
our minds, discipline our bodies, and foster altruistic service even now. And
then every cry we send out to invoke grace will be supported and emphasized by
these preparations.
172
When his strongest passion is to make real the
presence of the Soul and when he demonstrates this by the strivings and
sacrifices of his whole life, he is not far from the visitation of Grace.
173
Let him feel even in the very heat of this
world's activity that his Guardian Angel is ever with him, that it is not
farther away than his own inmost heart. Let him nurture this unshakeable faith,
for it is true. Let him make it the basis of all his conduct, try to ennoble and
purify his character incessantly, and turn every failing into a stepping-stone
for a further rise. The quest winds through ups and downs, so he must make
despair a short-lived thing and hope an unkillable one. Success will not depend
on his own personal endeavours alone, although they are indispensable; it is
also a matter of Grace and this he can get by unremitting prayer, addressed to
whatever higher power he believes in most, and by the compassion of his guide.
174
If he wants the grace he must do something to
earn it, such as attend to the wastage of time on trivial or even harmful
(because negative) gossip and activities; purify his character; study the
revelations of sages; reflect on the course of his life; practise mind-stilling
and emotional discipline.
175
When the Quest becomes the most important
activity in a man's life, even more important than his worldly welfare, then is
Grace likely to become a reality rather than a theory in his life too.(P)
176
The commonest way, the most usual way, of
attracting grace was indicated by the Carthusian monk Guiges, more than eight
hundred years ago: "It would be a rare exception to gain [the degree of]
contemplation without prayer.... Prayer gains the grace of God."
177
Swami Ramdas gives the advice that the way to
get Grace is to pray for it. The philosophical point of view is that one must
both pray and pay for it.
178
It is said that grace is given only to a few
chosen persons and that no matter how hard a man works on himself, unless he is
fortunate enough to receive it, the illumination he wants will evade him. This
teaching sounds depressing because it seems to put us at the mercy of caprice,
favouritism, or arbitrariness. But the mystery of grace is not so mysterious as
that. We are all children of God: there are no special favourites. Grace
can come to all who seek it, but they must first make themselves ready to
receive it. If they thirst, hunger, and seek with their whole heart and body,
and if in addition they make the gestures of penance, self-denial, and
purification both to prove their sincerity and to help achieve this readiness,
it is inconceivable that the grace will not come to them in the end.
179
It is deeply sacred, yet could only have been
brought forth through the ardent seekings and intense sufferings of a very human
being.
180
A man must first recognize his weaknesses, admit
his deficiencies, and deplore his shortcomings if Grace is to come to him. By
that act and attitude of self-abasement he takes the first step to opening the
door of his inner being to its presence. This is a necessary procedure but it is
still only a first step. The second is to call out for help - whether to God or
man - and to keep on calling. The third step is to get to work upon himself
unremittingly and amend or elevate his character.
181
By forgiving those who have harmed us, we put
ourselves in the position of earning forgiveness for the harm we ourselves have
done.
182
The need for this purification arises from the
need to remove obstructions to the inflow of the blessed feeling of Grace, the
light of new understanding, and the current of higher will.
183
Those who are asking the Overself to give them
its greatest blessing, its grace, should ask themselves what they have
been willing to give the Overself - how much time, love, self-sacrifice, and
self-discipline.
184
These repeated prayers and constant aspirations,
these daily meditations and frequent studies, will in time generate a mental
atmosphere of receptivity to the light which is being shed upon him by the
Grace. The light may come from outside through a man or a book, or it may come
from inside through an intuition or an experience.
185
It is true that Grace is something which must be
given to a man from a source higher and other than himself. But it is also true
that certain efforts made by him may attract this gift sooner than it would
otherwise have come. Those efforts are: constant prayer, periodical fasting.
186
The man who has the courage to be his own
bitterest critic, who has the balance to be so without falling into paralysing
depression as a result, who uses his self-analysis so constructively that every
shortcoming is the object of constant remedial attention - he is the man who is
preparing a way for the advent of Grace.
187
Grace is always being offered, in a general way,
but we do not see the offer; we are blind and so pass it by. How can we reverse
this condition and acquire sight? By preparing proper conditions. First, mark
off a period of each day - a short period to begin with - for retreat from the
ordinary out-going way of living. Give up this period to in-going, to
meditation. Come out of the world for a few minutes.
188
The pursuit of virtue and the practice of
self-control, the acceptance of responsibility for one's inner life - these
things are as necessary as grace, and help to attract it.
189
Whoever invokes the Overself's Grace ought to be
informed that he is also invoking a long period of self-improving toil and
self-purifying affliction necessary to fit him to receive that Grace.
190
He may fall into dismay at times but should
never let it become despair. This helps grace to come.
191
The fact is that the higher power dispenses
grace to all, but not all are able, willing, or ready to receive it, not all can
recognize it and so many pass it by. This is why men must first work upon
themselves as a preparation.
192
What can anyone do to get Grace? He can do three
things: first, want it ardently; second, prepare within himself the conditions
which invite and do not obstruct it; third, meet a Master.
193
The conditions which help to make Grace possible
include first, a simpler life than that of modern thing-ridden civilization;
second, communion with, and veneration of, Nature.
194
The ultimate secret of Grace has never been
solved by those who do not know that previous reincarnations contribute to it.
Some men receive it only after years of burning aspiration and toil but others,
like Francis of Assisi, receive it while unprepared and unaspiring. The ordinary
candidate cannot afford to take any chance in this matter, cannot risk wasting a
lifetime waiting for the unlikely visitation of Grace. He had better offer his
all, dedicate his life, and surrender his loves to one all-consuming passion for
the Overself, if he wants the power of Grace to flow into him. If he is unable
to give himself so totally, let him do the next best thing, which is to find
someone who has himself been granted the divine Grace and who has become
inwardly transformed by it. Let him become such a man's disciple, and he will
then have a better chance of Grace descending on him than he would have had if
he walked alone.
195
The gift of grace is ever available - but on
terms - yet few care to benefit by it. This is for different reasons with each
person. However, it may be summarized by saying that the effort to lift self out
of self is too hard and so is not only not made, but also not desired.
196
The aspiration which mounts upward from his
heart is answered by the grace which descends downward into it.
197
If he makes himself worthy of grace, he need not
worry about whether he will ever receive it. His earnest strivings will sooner
or later merit it. And this is the best way to render its bestowal a likely
happening.
198
Grace needs a prepared mind to receive it, a
self-controlled life to accept it, an aspiring heart to attract it.
199
If he tries to fulfil these conditions of
sincere self-preparation, and if he tries to practise service, compassion, and
kindliness, Grace will come and its meaning will be found. For Grace holds a
significance that is very close to love, to unselfish love. What he has given to
others will be returned to him by the law of recompense.
200
Those who seek grace should do something to
deserve it. Let them practise forgiveness of others who have injured them; let
them extend mercy to anyone in their power or needing help from them; let them
stop slaughtering innocent animals. This will really be as if they were granting
grace themselves. What they give to others, they may expect to receive
themselves.
201
It has been said that the Short Path is
absolutely necessary because the ego on the Long Path cannot by all its own
efforts attain enlightenment. The higher individuality must come into play, and
that entry onto the scene is called grace. This does not mean an arbitrary
intervention, favouring one person and repulsing another. It comes by itself
when the proper conditions have been prepared for it, by the opening or
surrender of the self, by the turning of the whole being to its source. This
openness, surrender, or passivity to the Other is not to be attained by
quietening the thoughts alone. The mind is open then but it has to be opened to
the highest, directed to the highest, aspiring to the highest. Otherwise, there
is the mere passivity of the medium, or of the thought-reader, without the
divine presence.
202
If grace is tardy in coming, look to the ego's
willingness to follow the path chalked out for it, whether by outer guide or
inner voice. Has he been unwilling to obey the higher will when it conflicted
with his own?
203
The Grace comes into his mind when thoughts are
still and quiet, and into his life when ego is stilled and relinquished.
204
If he cannot compel or command grace, he can at
least ask, work, and prepare for it. For if he is not prepared properly by
understanding he may not be willing to submit when it does come, if the
form it takes is not to his liking.
205
Grace, from a source above and beyond himself,
is the last answer to all his questions, the last solvent of all his problems,
when his own intellect fails with the one and his own management cannot cope
with the other. And the first prayerful call for the gift must go forth by way
of silencing the confusion within himself and stilling the tumult within his
mind. The ego must recognize its own natural untrustworthiness and must pause,
stop its persistent activity, in passive meditation.
206
Two things are required of a man before Grace
will manifest itself in him. One is the capacity to receive it. The other is the
co-operation with it. For the first, he must humble the ego; for the second, he
must purify it.(P)
207
When a man feels the authentic urge to walk a
certain way, but cannot see how it will be possible either because of outer
circumstances or of inner emotions, let him trust and obey it. For if he does
so, the Grace of the Overself will manipulate these circumstances or alter his
feelings accordingly. But it will do this so as to lead to his further growth
and real need, not for satisfaction of his personal desires or his supposed
wants. Let him accept its leading, not the ego's blindness.(P)
208
The real bar to the entry of grace is simply the
preoccupation of his thoughts with himself. For then the Overself must leave him
to his cares.(P)
209
If there is any law connected with grace, it is
that as we give love to the Overself so do we get grace from it. But that love
must be so intense, so great, that we willingly sacrifice time and thought to it
in a measure which shows how much it means to us. In short, we must give more in
order to receive more. And love is the best thing we can give.(P)
210
The student may throw himself with full
assurance on the mercy of the Higher Power, ask for forgiveness of past error,
and pray for the descent of Grace. He will be knocking very loudly at the door
of the Overself, and gradually he will find that his own weakness was but the
shadow of coming strength, his own helplessness but the precursor of coming
Grace.
211
In all spiritual situations where some help,
light, or protection is sought, allow for the X-factor - grace. Try to invoke it
by entering the silence, keeping the entire self bodily and inwardly still.
212
Confession is a good practice when it is a
sincere honest recognition that certain actions of the past were wrong actions,
whether they were merely imprudent or wholly evil; that they ought never to have
been committed; and that if faced by similar situations again he will try his
utmost not to commit them. Remorse, penitence, and a desire to make amends are
the emotional feelings which ought to accompany the intellectual recognition if
it is to have effective value in the future. According to custom, there are
three ways in which confession can be made. There is the way of certain
religions, which enjoin the presence of an ordained priest. This is useful
mainly to adherents of these religions who can bring themselves to have faith in
both the dogmas and the priests. But whether done in a religious atmosphere or
not, confession to another person possesses worth only if that other is really
of a spiritual status superior to the sinner's own and not merely claiming or
pretending it. If this safeguard is present, then confession releases the
tension of secretly held sins. Secondly, there is the way of some sects and
cults, which enjoin the presence of a group. This too is useful only to fellow
believers, and useful in a very limited way. It offers emotional relief. But it
degenerates all too easily into egoistic exhibitionism. It is certainly much
less desirable than the first way. Private confession done in solitude and
directed toward one's own higher Self is the third way. If the sinner
experiences a feeling of being inwardly cleansed, and subsequently shows no
tendency to repeat the sin, he may know that his confession has been effective
and that the Overself's Grace has come to him in response to the act. It is a
mistake to believe, however, that a single act of confession is all that is
needed. It may be, but most often such response comes only as the climax of a
series of such acts. It is also a mistake to believe that any confession has any
value if the sinner's ego is not abjectly humiliated and made to feel not only
its foolishness and unworthiness but also its dependence on the higher power for
help in attaining wisdom and self-mastery.
213
He needs the humility to admit that it is only
as the Overself permits itself to be known that it is known at all. That is to
say, it is only by grace that this blessed event ever happens.
214
When Christ called his hearers to repentance, he
did not mean that they should leave their present state of "sin" and return to a
previous state supposedly virtuous. He meant that they should leave the old
altogether and go forward into something entirely new.
215
Few men find their way to the real prayer for
Grace before they find their hearts broken, their minds contrite.
216
In his reception of grace, whether during the
temporary mystic state or during an entire life period, he needs to be perfectly
passive, unresistant, if he is to absorb all the benefit. Nevertheless, a
certain kind of activity must be apparent in the early stage when he must take
part in the operation by putting down the ego and its desires, attitudes, or
clingings.
217
When a man begins to see the error of his ways,
to repent greatly and lament deeply about them, it is a sign that Grace is
beginning to work within him. But how far the Grace will go and whether it will
carry him into a religious conversion or still farther, into a mystical
experience, no one can predict.
218
Endorsement of the moral value of confession
should not be mistaken as an endorsement of the institutional value of
absolution. There are churches which require confession from their believers and
which give absolution in return. The kind of confession philosophy advocates is
secret, private, individual, and made in the depth of one's own heart, quite
silently. The kind of absolution philosophy recognizes is grace given by the
individual's own higher Self, just as silently and as secretly as the confession
itself should be made. No church and no man has the power to absolve him from
his sins, but only his higher self.
219
When the ego is willing to let its own tyranny
be cancelled - and it never does so unless it has been crushed to the ground by
the fates or by philosophy - when it comes to the end of its tether and gives
up, the grace of the Overself is the response.
220
We should not egotistically interfere with the
working of grace when it comes but should let ourselves be borne unresistingly
and, as it were, helplessly upon its gentle current.
221
Some Oriental mystics of the Near Eastern
Islamic faith often used a phrase in their talks with me that captured my
attention but evaded their definition. It is easy to see why this was so. The
phrase was "the opening of the heart." What this means can only be known by a
personal experience. The intellect may talk and write about it but the end
product will be hollow words unless the feelings talk or write about it
themselves. For the experience of opening a door to the entry of grace and love
must be felt personally.
222
Having done all he could do by his own
strivings, being aware that he has travelled so far by the power of
self-dependence, he now realizes that he can do no more except throw himself
humbly on the Grace. He must wait patiently for its coming to complete, by its
power transcending his own, what has thus been started.
223
Sorrow for a wrong course of life, the resolve
to abandon it, and the readiness to make definite amendments are prerequisites
to secure Grace.
224
As the desires depart, they leave the heart
vacant for tenancy by the Overself.
225
We must make way for the Overself if we desire
its presence. But we can do so only by pushing aside the objects, the
conditions, and the beings who block the path into our consciousness, through
our attachment to them. Removing them will not fulfil this purpose but severing
the attachments will fulfil it.
226
It is not the lack of grace that really accounts
for our situation, but the lack of our co-operation with the ever-existing
grace.
227
In the end Nature will respond to his
aspiration. Patience must be cultivated.
228
When he can come to this point and say, "Without
this inner life and light, I am nothing," when he reverses the world's values
and seeks the Value-less, he is ready for the initiation by Grace.
229
The internal work of Grace is only possible if
the aspirant assents to the direction it is taking and supports the
transformation it is effecting. If it is severing him from an attachment which
he is unwilling to abandon and if he withholds his consent, the Grace itself may
be forced to withdraw. The same may happen if he clings to a desire from which
it seeks to free him.
230
If no one in this world can achieve perfection
but only approach it, the personal realization of this fact at the proper time
and after many efforts will lead to a deep humility and surrender. This may open
the door of one's being to Grace, and thence to the beatific experience of the
Overself, the Ever-Perfect.
231
Let Grace in by responding positively to the
Teaching and by letting go of the ego.
232
Grace is not a one-way operation. It is not, as
a few erroneously believe, getting something free. There is nothing free
anywhere. For when the Grace starts to operate it will also start to dispel
those negative qualities which obstruct it. They will resist, but if you adopt
the correct attitude of self-surrender and are willing to let them go, they will
not be able to resist long. But if you hold on to them because they seem a part
of yourself, or because they seem "natural," then either the Grace will withdraw
or it will lead you into circumstances and situations that remove the
obstructions forcibly, and consequently painfully.
233
There is a point where self-effort must cease
and self-abasement must begin. Not to recognize it is to show conceit and hinder
Grace.
234
The highest object of worship, devotion,
reverence - what the Hindus name Bhakti - is that which is given to the
World-Mind - what Hindus call Ishvara. But remember always that you are
present within It and It is ever present within you. So the source of grace is
in you too. Silence the ego, be still, and glimpse the fact that grace is the
response to devotion that goes deep enough to approach the stillness, is sincere
enough to put ego aside. Help is no farther off than your own heart. Hope on!
235
The divine grace brings a man not what he asks
but what he needs. The two are sometimes the same but sometimes not. It is only
with the wise that they always coincide; with others they may stand in sharp
conflict.
236
Even if a man does not respond to it, the divine
presence in the world is itself a grace. Even if he is quite unaware of its
being in his heart, his centre, its guidance and the intuitive thoughts which
may arise are manifestations of grace.
237
There is a difference of opinion about the
alleged inaccessibility of the Overself. Among those who call themselves mystics
in the West and yogis in the East, some claim that every man may justifiably
hold the hope of penetrating to the transcendental realm of Overself, provided
he will give the necessary time and effort. But others claim that the certainty
which attends scientific processes is not found here, that a man may spend a
lifetime in searching after God and fail in the end. This uncertainty of result
is absent from standardized laboratory processes and present only in
experimental ones. There is a mystery here, both in the object and the operation
of the search. It cannot be solved by the intellect, for it is the mystery of
Grace.
238
In the early stages of spiritual progress, Grace
may show itself in the bestowal of ecstatic emotions. This encourages him to
pursue the Quest and to know that he is so far pursuing it rightly. But the
purpose gained, the blissful states will eventually pass away, as they must. He
will then falsely imagine that he has lost Grace, that he has left undone
something he should have done or done something he should not have done. The
true fact is that it is Grace itself which has brought this loss about, as
constituting his next stage of progress, even though it affords no pleasure to
his conscious mind, but only pain. His belief that he has lost the direct
contact with the higher power which he formerly enjoyed is wrong: his actual
contact was only an indirect one, for his emotions were then occupied with
themselves and with their pleasure in the experience. He is being separated from
them so that he may be emptied of every desire and utterly humbled in his ego,
and thus made ready for the time when joy, once regained, will never leave him
again. For he is now on the threshold of the soul's dark night. In that state
there is also a work being done for him by Grace, but it is deep in the
subconscious mind far beyond his sight and beyond his control.(P)
239
Indeed, the hour may come when, purified from
the ego's partiality, he will kiss the cross that brought him such agony and
when, healed of his blindness, he will see that it was a gift from loving hands,
not a curse from evil lips. He will see too that in his former insistence on
clinging to a lower standpoint, there was no other way of arousing him to the
need and value of a higher one than the way of unloosed suffering. But at last
the wound has healed perfectly leaving him, as a scar of remembrance, greatly
increased wisdom.
240
There is an incalculable factor in this game of
self with Overself, an unpredictable element in this quest - the Grace!
241
As he pores reminiscently over the book of his
past history, he will come to see how Grace entered into it by denying him some
thing that he then ardently desired but whose acquisition would later have been
a calamity or an affliction.
242
If outer events bring him to a position where he
can bear them no longer and force him to cry out to the higher power in
helplessness for relief, or if inner feelings bring humiliation and recognition
of his dependence on that power, this crushing of the ego may open the door to
grace.
243
The Overself's grace meets us just at the point
where our need is greatest, but not necessarily the one we acknowledge as such.
We must learn to let it do what it wants to do, not necessarily what we want it
to do.
244
When the Overself's Grace is the real activating
agent that is stirring up his petition, the coming event has cast its shadow
before. When this is the case, the meaning of Emerson's cryptic sentence, "What
we pray to ourselves for is always granted," becomes luminously revealed.
245
If he could penetrate into the so-called
unconscious levels of his mind, he might find, to his utter amazement, that his
enemies, critics, or domestic thorns-in-the-flesh are the very answer to his
prayer for Grace. They fully become so, however, only when he recognizes them as
such, when he perceives what duty or what self-discipline they give him the
chance to practise.
246
The grace is bestowed in spite of his negative
qualities, in spite of his ego's assertiveness: no one knows why or when it
first reaches him.
247
Rufus Jones, eminent Quaker, made such a study
and had to conclude, "There is a mystery about spiritual awakenings which will
always remain unexplained." Nevertheless those who have studied the working of
Grace with the added equipment of the philosophic and esoteric knowledge which
he lacked find it more explicable, although still somewhat unpredictable.
248
The connection between the manifestation of
grace and the kind of person to whom it comes is sometimes inexplicable. It
comes not at all, or it comes sporadically, or it comes so completely that he is
changed forever.
249
We dare not leave Grace out of our reckonings.
Yet, because it is such an incalculable factor, we cannot put it in!
250
The passage from an earthly attitude to a
spiritual one is accompanied either by intense suffering or by intense joy but
always by intense feeling.
251
The longer grace is withheld, the more is it
appreciated when finally vouchsafed.
252
It is not often easy to discern the why and
wherefore of its operations and manifestations. Grace does not conform to human
expectations, human reasonings, or human modes. It would not be divine if it
always did that.
253
The course of each individual quest, its
ecstasies and sufferings, is not easily predictable. The factors of karma and
Grace are always present and their operation in different life situations may
always be different and cannot be foreseen.
254
Grace may be granted at any unexpected time. We
supply the channel but do not determine the means.
255
Although all this working of Grace takes place
outside the level of ordinary consciousness - whether above or beneath it is a
matter of the point of view - nevertheless it influences that consciousness far
more than most people suspect.
256
The advent of Grace is so unpredictable that we
dare not even say that Grace will come into action only after a man consciously
and deliberately seeks God and practises self-purification. We may only say that
it is more likely to come to him then.
257
In our own time the case of Aldous Huxley shows
how a scientific agnostic is moved unwillingly toward the intellectual
acceptance of truth. The case of Simone Weil shows how a Marxist materialist is
moved just as unwillingly to an even farther distance - the direct experience of
what she had to call God and the utter submission of the ego which permanently
followed that experience. Both cases illustrate the mysterious and unpredictable
character of Grace.
258
It is a mystery of Grace that it will come
looking for one who is not pursuing truth, not looking for holiness, not even
stumbling towards any interest in spirituality. And it will capture that person
so completely that the character will totally change, as in Francis of Assisi's
case, or the world view will totally change, as in Simone Weil's case.
259
The Overself can work in him - without his
knowledge or help - to unfold, balance, or integrate him.
260
Grace happens. But to whom, when, and where,
cannot be said with certainty, at best only with probability.
261
It is possible to chart out a course for man
whereby he may move step by step towards the discovery of his own divine
Overself, and with it the beauty and dignity in life. But it is not possible to
say at what point in his movement the working of Grace will manifest itself.
262
Many who ask for Grace would be shocked to hear
that the troubles which may have followed their request were actually the very
form in which the higher power granted the Grace to them.
263
The influx comes at its own sweet will: he
cannot grasp at it. It has to happen of itself. This enforces a full measure of
humbleness and a wide stretch of patience on his part.
264
In a dozen different places Jacob Boehme
declares that his wonderful illumination was a gift of Grace and that he had
done nothing to deserve it. Although in a few other places he balanced this
declaration with the idea that he was being used as a serving vessel from which
others could draw the teaching given him, the fact remains that he did not
aspire to be the recipient of a revelation and was astounded when it came.
265
The Grace works from his centre outward,
transforming him from within, and therefore its earliest operation is unknown to
his everyday mind.
266
The workings of Grace cannot always be judged by
their temporary emotional effects. It depends on the particular circumstances,
special needs, and evolutionary stage of a man as to whether these effects will
be joyous or melancholy. But in the end, and when he enters into the actual
consciousness of the sacred Overself, he will feel intense happiness.
267
Sometimes we are pushed to perform deeds which
turn out to be our finest ones, or our most fortunate ones, although at the time
we did not know this. Who is the pusher? In those cases it is either karma or
grace.
268
Sometimes the Overself does its recondite work
in the arid desolation of "the soul's dark night" but sometimes in the rapturous
awakening to the new life of spring.
269
The psychological laws governing the inner
development of spiritual seekers often seem to operate in most mysterious ways.
The very power whose presence he may think has been denied him - Grace - is
taking care of him even when he is not conscious of this fact. The more the
anguish, at such a time, the more the Higher Self is squeezing the ego. The more
he seems to be alone and forsaken, the closer the Higher Self may be drawing him
to Itself.
270
Grace breathes where it will. It does not
necessarily follow the lines set by man's expectation, prayer, or desire.
271
The Overself's grace will be secretly active
within and without him long before it shows itself openly to him.
272
The grace may be barely felt, may come on slowly
for many months, so that when he does become aware of its activity, the final
stage is all he sees and knows.
273
Those who will not pause to philosophize about
life are sometimes forced to do so by illness or distress. Although this brings
suffering to the ego, to the aspirant it brings grace, latent in him.
274
The effect may not show itself immediately; in
most cases it cannot, for most people are insensitive. But in such cases it will
show itself eventually.
275
Grace has no favourites. Its working is
characterized by its own mysterious laws. Do not expect it in return for faith
alone, nor for just effort alone. Try both.
276
Because grace is an element in this enterprise,
the question where will he stand in ten years' time is not answerable.
277
He may be disappointed because he is not more
consciously aware of being helped. The forms which spiritual help takes may not
always be easily recognizable because they may not conform to his wishes and
expectations. Moreover, the kind of help given in this manner may require a
period of time to elapse between its entry on the subconscious level and its
manifestation on the conscious level. This period varies in actual experience
with different individuals, from a few days to a number of years. Its exact
duration is unpredictable because it is individual in each case. God alone knows
what it is, but its final eruption is sure.
278
He may know that the work of Grace has begun
when he feels an active drawing from within which wakes him from sleep and which
recurs in the day, urging him to practise his devotions, his recollections, his
prayers, or his meditations. It leads him from his surface consciousness to his
inner being, a movement which slowly goes back in ever-deepening exploration and
discovery of himself.(P)
279
A certain momentum will be imparted to his
aspirations. During all this time the spiritual forces have been slowly maturing
in mental regions below consciousness. Their eruption will be sudden and
violent.
280
The weeping, begging, and worshipping through
which the seeker passes is a result of Grace which occurred when, deciding to
give up the ego, he felt a great peace. It is an emotional upheaval of an
agonizing kind but it soon passes. He will then feel much calmer, more aspiring,
and less worldly in character. This permanent change is a reorientation of the
love forces; the Sufis call it "the overturning of the cup of the heart." In
view of its being both auspicious and beneficial, he should not worry about it,
but be patient and have hope.
281
The force which becomes active in his meditation
- and which is associated with Grace - will also become active in waking him up
from sleep in the morning, or even earlier. It will lead him immediately into
the thought and practice of loving devotion to the higher self. He may even
dream of doing his practice during the night. This will fill him with great joy.
The force itself is a transforming one.
282
All he can do is to accept the inner gift when
it is offered, which is not so easy or simple a feat as it sounds. Too many
people brush it off because its beginnings are so delicate, so faint, as not to
point at all plainly to their glorious consequences.
283
A shadow cast by the light of oncoming Grace
sometimes appears as a fit of weeping. Without outer cause, the tears stream
without stop or else sadness wells up without mitigation. But most often the
cause does exist.
284
If a man misses the chance when grace is offered
him internally by impersonal leadings or externally by a personal master, he
will have to wait several years before the possibility of its recurrence can
arise, if it does arise at all. In the same form, unobstructed by the
disadvantages accumulated during the years, it can never arise again. Therefore
it behooves him to be heedful that spiritual opportunity does not pass him by
unrecognized or unseized. In this affair, the heart is often a better guide than
the head, for the intellect doubts and wavers where intuition inclines and
impels.
285
If this happens, if he surrenders himself
unreservedly to the first faint growth of Grace within his innermost heart, then
its blessing will eventually fructify gloriously.
286
The sudden, unexpected, and violent agitation of
the diaphragm for a few moments may be a favourable phenomenon. It signifies a
visitation of Grace from the Overself, a visitation which is the precursor of
coming intellectual change and spiritual redirection.
287
It is one sign of coming Grace when he begins to
despise himself for his weaknesses, when he begins to criticize his lower nature
to the point of hating it.
288
When the Grace at last overcomes the inner
resistance of the ego, the latter breaks down and the eyes often break into
tears.
289
The simple working of inward Grace is the
essential mystical experience; the extraordinary clairvoyant accompaniments are
not.
290
Saint Thomas Aquinas: "Whoever receives Grace
knows by experiencing a certain sweetness, which is not experienced by one who
does not receive it."
291
It is most important to recognize what is
happening - a visitation of Grace - and to respond to it at once. This means
that everything else must be dropped without delay.
292
True sacredness is not something which anyone
can pick up in his hands, examine, and identify at once. It is impalpable, as
subtle and as delicate as perfume.
293
When Grace takes the form of spiritual
enlightenment, it may catch him unawares, enter his consciousness unexpectedly,
and release him abruptly from the protracted tensions of the quest.
294
The awakening to spiritual need, although often
productive of longing and sadness, is also often a sign of the preliminary
working of Grace.
295
Sometimes the Grace is felt psychically as a
spiritual current actually pouring in through the head, although its posture may
be inwardly shaped to the upturned tilt at one time or the bowed depression at
another time.
296
When his aspiration rises to an overpowering
intensity, it is a sign that Grace is not so far off.
297
Let us look for those wonderful moments when
grace has been bestowed and peace has been felt. Let us stop all this busy
business awhile, and stand still. Let us listen for awhile for then we may hear
the Word which God is forever speaking to man.
298
In its presence it is easier to cast off some of
the cares of life and, for the more practised, even feel some inner calm. Such
moods are spiritual in the finer meanings of the word.
299
The wonderful effect of profound sleep is not
only the recovery of the physical body's energy but much more the man's return
to himself, his spiritual self, the pure universal consciousness. Note that all
this happens without any effort on his part, without any use of the personal
will. It is all done to him. Grace acts in the same way.
300
When the grace descends, whether from some
action or attitude of one's self, or apparently without cause from outside one's
self, if it is authentic, it will seem for the brief while that it lasts as if
one has touched eternity, as if life and consciousness are without beginning and
without end. It is a state of absolute contentment, complete fulfilment.
301
I dislike the word "bliss" - so often used in
translating ananda. Surely "beatitude" is the word measuring more clearly
the experienced feeling.
302
He may be one of the fortunate ones who can call
down upon themselves the workings of Grace. When he feels the urge to weep for
no apparent reason he should not resist, as it is a sign of the working of Grace
upon him. The more he yields to this urge the more quickly will he progress.
This is an important manifestation although its inner significance will not be
understood by the materialistic world.
303
The seeker need not be worried about frequent
weeping spells, but must be patient and have hope. Such actions assist him in
bringing about permanent changes for the better in his character.
304
He is aware that a new force, more powerful than
his own normally is, has risen up and taken command of his whole being.
305
When he reaches this stage, he will cease to
waver, either in allegiance to the doctrine or in practice of the discipline. He
will be steadfast.
306
The need to be alert against negative
suggestions, to guard himself mentally against divergent or degrading ideas,
exists for a time but not for all time. When Grace begins its operation, the
danger from these sources vanishes, for the possibility of his being attracted
by or open to them itself vanishes. The Grace enfolds him like a mantle.
307
As the light of Grace begins to fall upon him,
he becomes aware of the tendencies and propensities, the motives and desires
which obstruct or oppose the awakening into awareness of the Overself.
308
If it is individual effort which has to make the
long journey from ignorance to illumination, it is divine Grace which has
secretly and silently to lead the way for it.
309
Grace settles the intellect on a higher level
and stabilizes the emotions with a worthier ideal.
310
If his mastery of self is established on
well-earned and well-worked-for inward grace more than on outward will, then it
is well sealed and cannot break down, cannot be wrecked by the lusts and hates,
the greeds and passions which agitate ordinary humanity.
311
Grace works magically on the man who opens
himself humbly and sensitively to receive it. His personal feelings undergo a
transformation into their higher impersonal octaves. His very weaknesses provoke
occasions for gaining effortlessly their opposite virtues. His selfish desires
are turned by Grace's alchemy into spiritual aspirations.
312
The man's effort must be met by the Overself's
Grace. What he does attracts what the Overself gives. This he can understand.
But what he seldom knows, and finds hard to understand, is that in certain cases
the aspiration which impels such effort is itself impelled by Grace.
313
Wherever you read in history of a religious
martyr who was filled with supernatural serenity in the midst of terrible
torture, be sure that he was supported by the Overself. The consciousness of his
divine soul had, by its grace, become stronger than the consciousness of his
earthly body. If you wish, you may call it a kind of mesmerism, but it is a
divine and not a human mesmerism.
314
There will be moments when a tendency to sin
will suddenly be checked by an invading power which will work against the lower
will.
315
When the power of Grace descends into his heart,
no evil passion or lower emotion can resist it. They, and their accompanying
desires, fade and then fall away of themselves.
316
From that time he will feel increasingly yet
intermittently that a force other than his own is working within him,
enlightening his mind and ennobling his character. The Overself's Grace has
descended on him.
317
His innate tendencies may still be there for a
time - they constitute his karma - but the grace keeps them in check.
318
With the coming of Grace, his development takes
on a life of its own and is no longer to be measured in direct ratio to his
effort.
319
After the descent of grace, he feels lifted by a
power stronger than his own above the stormy passions and unpleasant greeds, the
petty egotisms and ugly hatreds which agitate the mass of mankind.
320
He experiences a veritable rebirth, an inspiring
renewal of all his being, a feeling of liberation from darkness, weakness, and
moral blindness.
321
He may watch the working of Grace in its varied
manifestations both within himself and in his personal relationships.
322
Grace is a powerful stimulus. It descends from a
higher source, urges us to perfect our nature, equips us to complete it. Thus we
are lifted up to its own higher level.
323
That enlightenment is a transfiguring event
which not only revolutionizes general outlook but also changes moral character,
there is testimony enough for anyone in the archives of mystical biography. The
old self is laid aside as too imperfect, the old weaknesses are drowned in the
overwhelming tide of Grace which pours through the man and his life.
324
The truth is that the Overself's power has
worked upon him in advance of his own endeavours. The urge to seek a close and
conscious relationship with it, the decision to enter upon the quest - these
very thoughts stemmed from its hidden and active influence.
325
The emptied and stilled mind opens the way for
the grasp of divine grace. The latter may then gather us up into its fold,
leaving behind the ego's conceit and the body's passion. But when it is time for
us to return to the world's nervous restlessness, to its tumult and jarring
noise, we find how far humanity has fallen.
326
The ineffable peace and exquisite harmony which
take hold of his heart are the first results of grace.
327
In the end all this aspiration supported by
practical effort attracts Grace. He finds that he is not alone, that in becoming
its recipient not only is a glimpse vouchsafed him but also some part of him has
now an unassailable faith no matter what vacillations, questionings, or lapses
the strains of life, the moods of ill health, or the changes of fortune may do
to his thoughts for a time.
328
A new understanding has been gained. It is a
possession that may be kept, with care, as long as he lives. Of how many other
possessions may this be said?