1
The Bodhisattva is one who pledges himself to
the spiritual service of ignorant unawakened mankind. For this ideal he
sacrifices himself to the point of stopping his own liberation just when it is
about to be realized.
2
The man who is delivered from sin and freed from
illusion, who is emancipated from suffering for all time because the flesh can
catch him no more, has earned the right to infinite rest in the eternal Void.
But he has also the power to choose otherwise. He may stop at its very threshold
and renounce the reward it offers. Since the phenomenal world has nothing to
offer him, the only reason for such a choice can be compassionate thought for
the benighted creatures he is about to leave behind.
3
If he refrains from the final mergence into
Nirvana, it is not only because he wants to be available for the
enlightenment of his more hapless fellows, but also because he knows that he has
really been in Nirvana from the beginning and has never left it.
4
Among those who have attained this higher life, who
feel its power and sense its peace, there are some who wish that others shall
attain it too. We say some for the very powerful reason that not all are
able to find it in their hearts to return to this bleak earth of ours, with its
sickness and darkness, its sins and sufferings, its evil and ignorance, when
there stretches invitingly before them the portals of a diviner world, with its
sublime harmony and beauty, its burden-free peace and goodness. This is why
Krishna is reported in the Bhagavad Gita as declaring that the greatest
sacrifice man can offer is that of wisdom, which means simply that the
enlightened man should give himself and use his wisdom for the benefit of
others. This is also why Buddha asserted that the greatest charity is to give
the truth to mankind. Therefore, the noblest sages give themselves secretly and
concentratively to a few or openly and widely to the many to enlighten, guide,
and insire them. They know that this twofold way is the one in which to help
mankind, that public work is not enough, that those who wish to do not only the
most widespread good in the time open to them but also the most enduring good,
must work deeply and secretly amongst a few who have dedicated themselves to
immediate or eventual service in their own turn. Thus, compassion is rendered
more effective through being guided by intelligence. To the few in the inner
circle, the sage transmits his best thought, his hidden knowledge, his special
grace, his most mystical power. How grand is the service such a sage can render
all those who accept the light of his knowledge! Then indeed is he, in
Shakespeare's phrase, "The star to every wandering barque."
5
Do not fall into the error of believing that, if he
speaks openly these doctrines to others, or writes of them publicly, he is
seeking to make proselytes. The religious missionary eagerly seeks to do so, but
the philosophic expounder cannot. This is because he is not governed by the
emotional desire to witness a large number of conversions but by the clear
understanding of evolutionary operations - an understanding which enables him to
see what is and is not possible, what is and is not suitable, at each stage of
those operations. He is not, like the missionary, seeking any personal
satisfaction by making an emotional or intellectual conquest.
6
The illuminate has a cosmic outlook. He thinks and
feels for all creatures no less than for himself.
7
Do you think that these ancient illuminati, full of
high intimations and carrying great lights in their hands, appeared before the
world out of their silence and solitude to suffer its ridicule and contempt
because they wished to brag about themselves or to amaze them? They came because
they dared not disobey compassion's call save at the pain of being false to all
that they knew to be true.
8
The sage makes the highest conceivable sacrifice in
willing to return to earthly life for times without end solely for the benefit
of all creatures.
9
People sometimes ask why anyone should give up even
a part of his time to unpaid service. But the truth is that the sage is always
paid by the friendship and gratitude, the trust and affection, which those he
has helped return him. And if it be further said that these are mere intangibles
which do not pay for the time and energy he gives, the answer is that they often
are convertible into the most tangible of things. For if he is in real need of a
home, a machine, a piece of domestic furniture, or a form of personal service,
he has only to express that need and those whom he has helped will provide it.
Nay, there are times when he need not even express it, when the silent magic of
thought will prompt someone to offer the provision quite spontaneously and
voluntarily. Anyway, the sage does not give his service with any thought about
the getting or non-getting of rewards. He gives it because he thinks it right to
do so and because he enjoys the satisfaction of giving a helping hand to the
spiritually needy. In short, he is doing what he likes.
10
When a man has attained this stage of perfection
he may truly rest, for Nature has achieved her task in him. Yet, if he chooses
the path of sagehood he must henceforth work harder than ever before! For he
must now work incessantly through repeated rebirths for the enlightenment of
others.
11
Whether or not a man will serve humanity after he
attains self-realization is not an attitude he can completely decide upon or
predetermine before he attains it. For the matter is then surely taken out of
his hands altogether.
12
The question whether he shall share his knowledge
with others or withhold it from them, will not be a real one to him. Its answer
was settled long before, by destiny, by his character, by his past, by the
World-Idea.
13
Helping others to attain what he has attained,
guiding seekers to reach safely the glorious summit where he now stands, is not
decided for him by personal temperament or choice but by the overpowering sense
of a primary and paramount duty.
14
We are asked: What is the interpretation of a
sentence in that excellent little book Light on the Path by Mabel
Collins, which runs "For within you is the light of the world - the only light
that can be shed upon the Path. If you are unable to perceive it within you, it
is useless to look for it elsewhere. It is beyond you; because when you reach it
you have lost yourself. It is unattainable because it forever recedes. You will
enter the light but you will never touch the flame."
The meaning of this mysterious sentence is that the sage refuses to claim the ultimate mergence which is his right because he refuses to desert "the great orphan Humanity." He stops short at the very threshold of Nirvana simply to remain here and help others reach that threshold. Thus by his altruistic activity, meditative power, and intellectual penetration he continuously earns a title to that utter absorption of his ego in the unutterable Absolute which is Nirvana, but by his continuous self-giving for suffering mankind he never actually attains this goal. This extraordinary situation may be represented mathematically by the asymptote - a line which is drawn on a graph to approach nearer and nearer to a given curve but which never actually touches it within a finite distance. Only a man who feels with and for his fellow creatures will dare to make such a tremendous sacrifice of the supreme peace which he has won. How much more generous, how nobly grander is this example of ever-active altruistic service than that of ever-idle meditative reclusiveness!(P)
15
The sage will not be primarily concerned with his
own personal welfare, but then he will also not be primarily concerned with
mankind's welfare. Both these duties find a place in his outlook, but they do
not find a primary place. This is always filled by a single motive: to do the
will, to express the inspiration of that greater self of which he is sublimely
aware and to which he has utterly surrendered himself. This is a point whereon
many students get confused or go astray. The sage does not stress altruism as
the supreme value of life, nor does he reject egoism as the lowest value of
life. He will act as the Overself bids him in each case, egotistically if it so
wishes or altruistically if it so declares, but he will always act for its sake
as the principal aim and by its light as the principal means.(P)
16
It is not enough for the illuminate when the veil
falls and the inner meaning of universal life is read. His efforts do not come
to such an abrupt end. For he does not consider his own salvation complete while
others remain unsaved. Consequently, he dedicates himself to the task of trying
to save them. But in order to do this he has to reincarnate on earth innumerable
times. For men can attain the goal here alone and nowhere else. This changes the
whole concept of salvation. It is no longer a merely personal matter but a
collective one. It also alters the concept of survival. This is no longer a
prolonged enjoyment of post-death heavenly spheres but a prolonged labour
through countless earthly lives for the service of one's fellow-creatures. And
yet, even this sombre path bears its own peculiar rewards. For he shall receive
the fraternal love of those who have been healed, the encouraging thoughts of
those who are beginning to find a foothold in life, the pledged loyalty of those
who want to share, with their lesser strength, the heavy burden through untold
incarnations.
17
Bergson was right. His acute French intelligence
penetrated like an eagle's sight beneath the world-illusion and saw it for what
it is - a cosmic process of continual change which never comes to an end, a
universal movement whose first impetus and final exhaustion will never be known,
a flux of absolute duration and therefore unimaginable. And for the sage who
attains to the knowledge of THAT which forever seems to be changing but forever
paradoxically retains its own pure reality, for him as for the ignorant, the
flux must go on. But it will go on here on this earth, not in the same mythical
heaven or mirage-like hell. He will repeatedly have to take flesh, as all others
will have to, so long as duration lasts, that is, forever. For he cannot sit
apart like the yogi while his compassion is too profound to waste itself in mere
sentiment. It demands the profound expression of sacrificial service in motion.
His attitude is that so clearly described by a nineteenth-century agnostic whom
religionists once held in horror, Thomas Huxley: "We live in a world which is
full of misery and ignorance, and the plain duty of each and all of us is to try
to make the little corner he can influence somewhat less miserable and somewhat
less ignorant than it was before he entered it." The escape into Nirvana for him
is only the escape into the inner realization of the truth whilst alive: it is
not to escape from the external cycle of rebirths and deaths. It is a change of
attitude. But that bait had to be held out to him at an earlier stage until his
will and nerve were strong enough to endure this revelation. There is no escape
except inwards. For the sage is too compassionate to withdraw into proud
indifferentism and too understanding to rest completely satisfied with his own
wonderful attainment. The sounds of sufferings of men, the ignorance that is the
root of these sufferings, beat ceaselessly on the tympanum of his ears. What can
he do but answer, and answer with his very life - which he gives in
perpetual reincarnation upon the cross of flesh as a vicarious sacrifice for
others. It is thus alone that he achieves immortality, not by fleeing forever -
as he could if he willed - into the Great Unconsciousness, but by suffering
forever the pains and pangs of perpetual rebirth that he may help or guide his
own.(P)
18
The mystic arrives at treating all people alike
through the emotion of love; the illuminate arrives at it through the
knowledge of reason. The first is likely to be changeable, the last
permanent because emotion is variable, reason firm.
19
The mystic who talks of giving love to all mankind
has still not realized Truth. What he really means is that he, the ego, is
giving the love. The Gnani, on the contrary, knows all men as himself and
therefore the idea of giving them love does not arise; he accepts his identity
of interest with them completely.(P)
20
His goodwill to, and sympathy for all men, rather
empathy, enables him to experience their very being in his own being. Yet his
loyalty toward his higher self enables him to keep his individuality as the
inerasable background for this happening.(P)
21
He seeks neither applause nor profit from others.
On the contrary, he is ever willing to give them out of the spiritual store he
possesses. But his giving is free from sentimentality and futility, because he
restricts it by wise discrimination.
22
In one sense, it belongs to him alone. Did he not
struggle with his ego so long, climb the ascending path of purification so
arduously, wait in meditation so patiently? Yet in another sense it does not
belong to him - his own work prepared the conditions, but the work of Grace, the
influx from the Overself gave him the strength, truth, love, and peace. He must
share what he has received, or at least proclaim its existence.
23
It is a compassionate obligation to share the
fruits of such a rare attainment with less fortunate seekers. But only
individuals of large generous natures can recognize this obligation.
24
The sage does not ask for service from others, but
only to be allowed to serve them. He does not seek to attach them to himself,
but only to God.
25
The illuminate never achieves perfect happiness
because he is well aware that others are unhappy and that they are not alien to
him.
26
When this wonderful compassion wells up within
man, he can no longer remain enthralled by the satisfactions of his own personal
peace. The cries which come to his ears out of the great black night which
envelops mankind tell him that all is not well with such a self-centered life.
He may not turn away from them by uttering the alibi that God is in his heaven
and all is well with the world. No! He realizes that he must go down into the
very midst of that darkness and somehow give out something of what he has
gained, offer true hope to a hopeless epoch.
27
"Is it not because he himself is disinterested
that the sage's own self-interest is established?" asks Lao Tzu. It is
impossible for the materialist to perceive that we live and move and have our
being in a universal Mind. But the sage, knowing this, knows also that this
universal life will take care of his individual life to the degree that he opens
himself out to it, to the extent that he takes a large and generous view of his
relation to all other individual lives.
28
Amidst peaceful landscape in calm forest retreats
or beside lonely seashores, where the attractions of Nature are all-powerful to
him and where he could gladly spend the remainder of his life in solitude, a
striking phenomenon will mark itself repeatedly on memory. Again and again,
faces of different people will float up and confront him. Some will be the faces
of friends or people known to him but others will be the faces of strangers. All
call to him to leave his solitude and give up his silence. It is not difficult
to understand this occurrence. The mountain eyrie, the jungle retreat, or the
forest cottage may continue to attract him powerfully, but the awakening of his
fellow men into truth must eventually seem a worthier objective than his own
external peace.
29
So long as there are others acutely conscious of
their spiritual need, so long must he go out among them. He does not do this by
an external command but only by an internal one - the command of compassion. He
no longer feels for himself alone but also for others. Indeed he cannot help
doing so, for the same reason that Jesus could not help proclaiming the gospel
to the Israelites, even though he foreknew the end would be impalement upon the
Cross.
30
His service is done out of the pure joy of giving
it.
31
The sage does not have to be told to help
mankind in its struggles towards the light. He is a helper by nature. His
compassion overflows and it is out of this, not out of condescension, that he
works for them. But his help will not necessarily take the particular forms that
humanity in its ignorance expects from him.
32
Fo Sho hing tsan: "I do not seek for any reward,
not even being reborn in a paradise. I seek the welfare of man. I seek to
enlighten those who harbour wrong thoughts."
33
He cannot help teaching confidence in the laws of
life or expressing joy in the inspiration of life. He cannot help making strong
affirmations of the Soul's dominion and power. He is exultant because he is in
harmony with the universe.
34
The idea took possession of the Buddha that his
doctrine was too deep for man's intellect and so he thought he would not teach
it. However Brahma, the Lord of the World, came and begged him to have mercy on
the erring world, for "the advent of Buddha is as uncommon as the flower on a
fig tree." Then Buddha reflected as to who would be a proper person for him to
teach.
35
The answer to the Buddha's soliloquy came,
belatedly it is true but at the right ripened hour. It is: "Is the opinion of
the ignorant many more important to you than the helping of the earnest few? If
the first will disdain your words, the second will heed them. Who else can help
them?" The final five words affected him deeply and forced him into action at
last.
36
Such a man's actions, however much they outwardly
appear to be like those of other men, are done under the impulsion of a higher
will than the personal.
37
He has no wish to put his ego forward, makes no
pretensions to spiritual superiority, yet he wishes to awaken others to the idea
that enlightenment is possible, is worth seeking, and is accompanied by
unparalleled felicity.
38
It is possible for man to realize his high
aspiration. But will he then find that all is bliss as the Hindus say? How could
that be when first he would become much more sensitive to the world's miseries
and sorrows and, second, much more aware that everything that is, including
himself, is merely a passing show - just like a dream of the night which
vanishes in the morning? Will there not be a touch of melancholy in these two
aspects of his awareness? The acceptance will be there, for he will be just as
much aware of the Real which does not pass, but this acceptance will itself be
touched with a kind of resignation. Is this what the religio-mystics mean when
they so often admonish others to resign themselves to God's will?
39
The sage has no desire to gain followers, only to
give service. His happiness comes from within. He looks to nothing and nobody
for it. Nevertheless, if faith and friendship are given to him he is always
grateful. And for such people he has the ardent wish that they too shall fully
attain this great inward happiness and in their turn keep the presence of God
alive in a materialistic world.
40
When he has found the truth, he has nothing to
decide. He will realize that the ALL, this whole teeming universe, is
himself, that all creatures and all men are one. Therefore their interests and
their welfare become his automatically. Therefore he will come back to earth
again and again to help all beings attain truth and happiness. The notion of
choosing selfish bliss or unselfish service does not occur to those who have
realized truth; it comes only to yogis and mystics who have experienced bliss in
trance. But this is not the highest goal or plane; it is the highest
illusion.
41
The thought of the burden that the sage has taken
on himself may seem dreadful, but he has his consolations even though they are
intangible. He has found unbroken peace and ultimate truth. He does not ask for
more, not even the ecstatic bliss which delights the mystic, but which is
necessarily intermittent. He knows that the whole creation is moving onwards to
self-discovery which means it is moving onwards to find the same things he has
found. The process is slow and painful, but it will surely be successful.
42
The sage has conquered separativeness in his mind
and realized the ALL as himself. The logical consequence is tremendous. It
follows that there is no liberation from the round of births and rebirths for
the sage; he has to go through it like the others. Of course, he does this with
full understanding whereas they are plunged in darkness. But if he identifies
himself with the All, then he can't desert but must go on to the end, working
for the liberation of others in turn. This is his crucifixion, that being able
to save others he is unable to save himself. "And the scripture was fulfilled,
which saith, 'And he was numbered with the transgressors.'" Why? Because
compassion rules him, not the ego. Nobody is likely to want such a goal (until,
indeed he is almost ready for it) so it is usually kept secret or symbolized.
Again: "For this is my blood of the new testament, which is shed for many for
the remission of sins."
43
What is the sage's reaction to the cosmos? It is
very different from that of the ignorant who have never asked the question "What
am I?" and who may regard the calm visage of a Yogi as a "frozen face." The sage
has no sense of conflict, no inner division. He has expanded his notion of self
until it has embraced the universe and therefore rightly he may say "the
universe is my idea." He may make this strange utterance because he has so
expanded his understanding of mind. Lesser men may only say "the universe is an
idea."(P)
44
All these sufferers come to him in their need and
expect so much from him, but he must expect and ask nothing from them; he is to
be content with this one-way transaction. If he wishes anything in return - even
an acknowledgment of service rendered much less a payment in any mental,
emotional, or physical form - the ego has reared its head and the service is
impure. If he helps them, it is out of natural goodwill to all men.
45
The sage approaches them with compassion balanced
by comprehension.
46
No mother asks why she should help her child or
concern herself with the well-being of her husband. She identifies herself with
them and takes it for granted that their interests are her own. Similarly, the
illuminate takes it for granted that the interests of all mankind are his own
and others are his family.
47
If the sage has to reincarnate perpetually because
of his sympathy for the suffering world, if he cannot get freedom from this
suffering cycle of rebirth, what is the use of the Quest and its labours? Reply:
True, he can't get outer freedom, but he does get inner freedom, of mind
and heart.
48
No worldly advantage can tempt the sage into
desertion of his sacred task of serving humanity, nor can any egoism lead him
into betrayal of those who trust him.
49
The goodwill which he shows to all men is devoid
of any self-seeking motive, is a natural expression of the love which he finds
in the innermost chambers of his soul.
50
The world play is but an illusion of the mind, but
the integral vision of the sage enables him to act his part perfectly in the
very heart of the world's tumult. The knowledge that all action is ultimately
illusory does not prevent him being dynamically active. Supreme calm and silence
reigns in his centre, but his harmony with Nature is such that he joins the
world-movement spontaneously.
51
He does not fall into the error of a certain kind
of ascetic who assumes a callous indifference to the sufferings of others as
part of his plan to render himself invulnerable.
52
Such a man is truly a Christ-like one, inasmuch as
he seeks to open the door of the kingdom of heaven for others as well as
himself.
53
He may or may not know in advance that his efforts
will avail little, but if the Power bids him say what must be said, he will
accept the result calmly.
54
When there is no feeling of separateness from
others, there can be no resultant feeling of doing good when helping them.
55
If he only holds before the aspirant a prophetic
picture of man's higher possibilities, an ideal that transcends the commonplace
trivialities of everyday, his service is sufficient. But in actuality he does
very much more than that.
56
There are two ways in which an enlightened person
may help humanity. The first is individual, therefore he becomes a teacher and
accepts disciples. The second is general and may be entirely inward as in
meditation, or quite outward, affecting the welfare of groups - whether small in
number or as large as an entire nation. In rare cases this generalized help may
even extend internationally.
57
He seeks no power over others, no claim to
rulership over their lives, no disciples of his own, no train of followers
clinging to his coat-tails. Yet he will not refrain from helping where such help
is imperative, nor from giving counsel where the young, the inexperienced, the
bewildered seekers have desperate need of it. But the moment after he will
appear to have forgotten what he has done, so gracious is his delicacy, so
strong his desire to leave others quite free and unobligated.
58
His inner state will not be easily discernible to
others, unless they happen to be the few who are themselves sufficiently
advanced and sufficiently sensitive to appreciate it. Yet it is his duty to
announce the glorious news of its discovery, to publish the titanic fact of its
existence. But he will do so in his own way, according to his own
characteristics and circumstances. He will not need to announce it in a speech,
or print it in a book; he will not publish the fact in daily newspapers or shout
it from the housetops. His whole life will be the best announcement, the
grandest publication.(P)
59
Without himself being a priest, he performs the
true priestly office.
60
That strange and sweet spell flung forever over
sensitive, ripe, and ready minds by a sage, when he uses his wisdom and
goodness, is like a caduceus to enchant them into becoming seekers after truth.
61
He is a prophet without a church, a teacher
without a school, a reformer without an institution.
62
The adept can do much more through the prestige of
true ideas set down in writing than through the mechanical efforts of any formal
organization, more by helping individuals than by creating a collective body
which would one day exploit them.
63
He is the abstract, far-off ideal, but embodied
visibly for our benefit and put near us for our inspiration.
64
Can one man transfer spiritual grace to another?
If by grace is meant here can he give a glimpse of the Overself to another, the
answer is Yes! - if the other is worthy, sensitive, and above all karmically
ready. He can if the other man is capable of absorbing the stimulus radiated to
him.
65
In the case of those who are ready for it or who
have affinity with him, a master may be able to bring about a temporary
illuminating glimpse through his inner contact with the other person by the
power of his spiritual force. This force can be expressed through the Master's
spoken words or in silent meditation.
66
Those who are always hoping to receive full
enlightenment from a master, exaggerate the service he can render.
67
The most that a master can give is a glimpse, and
that not to everyone. If the Zen assertion were true, if anything more than
that, if full and final and durable illumination could be passed on to another,
what Zen master could be so lacking in compassion as not to confer it upon
everyone, everywhere? But it is not done simply because it cannot be done.
68
If a master could permanently add his spiritual
vitality to that of all those who come as seekers to him, surely he would do so?
History in the past times and observation in our own times shows no such
desirable consequence of approaching him. But if a master cannot give
illumination to a would-be disciple, he can show in his own person what
illumination is. This is not less true of such men as Christ as of the minor
prophets of the minor sects of contemporary history.
69
Those who penetrate into the holy of holies bless
the world when they bring forth the treasures they find therein. What they
achieve and accomplish mentally in the period of meditation, they will later
express automatically in action during the days that follow. Theirs is the
balanced life which is true sanity, so lacking in modern existence.
70
Unless he is bidden from the higher power (and he
is sure of the source) to become an apostle, he will not take on the task of
making available to others in such a public fashion, truths which most are not
ready enough to recognize, which would create bewilderment or scorn in their
minds. Nor, again, will he communicate privately without the inner command and
thus become a guru to others.
71
The awareness that he existed on this planet made
its grievous and troubled life more bearable, gave a little meaning to what
seemed otherwise quite chaotic. For his own higher development reminded, nay
assured, us that there was some sort of an evolution going on, that there
was a goal and a purpose behind it all. Thus, merely to know that this
man was alive, even though we might never again meet him and could never hope to
become intimate with him, sustained our faith in Life itself and helped us to
live.
72
The prayers of such a man are not lightly uttered
nor egotistically born. Therefore they are always heard and generally answered.
73
He can communicate to others something of his
mystical enlightenment through words and something of his mystical serenity
through silence.
74
He carries with him a perpetual blessing, although
it is seldom possible for those who identify themselves with their fleshly
bodies to receive this unheralded gift with their conscious minds.
75
The sage may tell of truth, as he knows it, by
refraining from speech and entering the Stillness. But if his interlocutors have
not been previously prepared to understand what lies behind his silence, they
may not benefit by it.
76
Serving humanity in his secret way, drawing
benediction for all from this divine source, it would seem to be an unrequited
activity; but he himself is included as recipient and beneficiary.
77
Like Jesus, Buddha preached to the masses. But
other illumined men, like Atmananda and Mahavira, did not have this special
mission and confined themselves to the educated and ruling classes.
78
Some come to illuminate, not to instruct.
79
Some who have attained true wisdom make no special
attempt to communicate it through speech or writing, or to express it in action.
Does this mean the world never benefits from them, as it benefits by the
existence and work of even the humblest primary school teacher? It does not. For
their contribution, though quite noiseless, is not at all valueless. It is to
let the silent influence of their presence among us touch those who can receive
it, even though they do so unwittingly.
80
This kind of illuminate is like a spectacle to be
gazed at; he is not a teacher to be studied with. That does not mean he is
useless to humanity. On the contrary, the mere fact of his attainment is more
valuable than any physical or intellectual service that could be performed.
But its value is mysterious and magical, for the moment perhaps better left
undescribed.
81
He may leave his record in the silence, without
producing a single piece of writing, without delivering a single lecture.
82
The greater his power, the less will he seek
publicity. It is only if he knows that a mission has to be performed calling for
public notice that he is likely to abrogate this rule. But of course there will
then be no egoism and no vanity behind the abrogation.
83
Such a prophet is like a bell, calling its hearers
to attend the true church within themselves.
84
His work is being done within the inner life of
hundreds of human beings. His altruism is active more often behind the scenes of
the world-stage than before its footlights.
85
The masters rarely emerge from their obscurity to
positions of influence and prominence but their disciples may and occasionally
do.
86
He will be content to plant seed-thoughts, and
wait and work patiently, knowing and believing in the inherent power of true
ideas to grow in their proper time into mature, fruitful existence.
87
The perfect concentration that reigns within his
being can have the same effect when deliberately directed upon sensitive and
sympathetic minds as the concentration of the burning lens upon dry paper. The
devotee can be inspired, exalted, and illumined.
88
Once he has uttered the sacred Word, once he has
revealed to men what they have not been able to know for themselves, he has done
his work. If it fails to be accepted, if he gains no converts to belief in man's
higher purpose, the blame is not his.
89
He cannot give spiritual peace to the spiritually
peaceless as a lasting gift, but he can show them that it does exist as a
reality and is no mere figment of the imagination. And he makes this
demonstration by being just what he is and acting just as he does.
90
The sage starts no cult himself and founds no
church. This is usually done by the disciples who gather together because he
would not gather them around him.
91
Merely to remember with devotion that such a man
is living on earth is to know, in some mysterious telepathic way, that there is
inward sustenance.
92
The last thing he wants to do is to leave a sect
behind him. Like the Buddha, he wants men to depend on the truth rather than on
a person.
93
The words of a man so inspired, so wise, directly
act on our minds and evoke our intuition.
94
The sage will help people on his own terms, not
theirs, and guide them in his own way, again not necessarily the expected way.
95
Could we but trace some of these higher movements
of history, we would have to trace their course back to the secret inspiration
of some illuminates who live quietly and serve mankind without advertising the
fact.
96
That which the illuminate will give out as
doctrine will depend upon the conditions and needs of his epoch and place. He
will be neither too active nor ultramodernistic.
97
He announces his revelation to his contemporaries
in the mode that is his and theirs. In a scientific age he will present facts
and reason logically.
98
Great Adepts are content to make history rather
than figure in it, although their figures have glowed brightly in history like
shooting stars and then disappeared.
99
His success in communicating truth will depend, on
his audience's side, both on the degree of understanding it possesses and the
feelings it evinces toward him.
100
It is not for him to work for humanity by
helping particular persons and by alleviating isolated distresses. His form of
service must stretch over wider areas, must affect a multitude of persons. But
this is possible only if he works in deeper ground and through secret
unobtrusive ways.
101
The world being what it is, human nature what it
has long been, and human affairs all-too-repetitious, he will not waste time and
energy attempting to re-arrange them by surface efforts.
102
He may do nothing more than put his mite of
cheering truth and softening goodness into the grim world around him, but this
will be enough. He cannot contribute more than he has. The ultimate result of
this contribution may be little, but he has tried to do God's will on earth.
103
Just the fact that he is here, on this planet
and at this time, makes its own contribution to humanity's welfare. This is
still true even though he may not try to manage other peoples' lives on the plea
of serving them. His service may not be immediately, or locally, apparent; it
may need time to come up from the subconscious levels that are the deeper layers
of mind and spirit, but it will be nevertheless real.
104
Although it is not his direct purpose, his
existence will lessen humanity's suffering, increase its hope and goodwill.
105
He puts the teaching forward as far as it is
proper for him to do so, but then leaves the matter. Those who receive it must
take it up from there, or ignore it. He is not a missionary seeking to make
converts.
106
Those who cross his path only once in a
lifetime, as well as those who are often near him, receive instruction even
though he is not outwardly teaching them. Such is the subtle impact his mind
makes upon theirs, such the half-recognized influence of his greatness.
107
They tried to influence kings and rulers and
leaders of men and culture. They even emerged into public view on rare occasions
in order to quicken the pace of evolution by active external work; but when this
happened, they did not usually reveal their true spiritual identity. Their
efforts were not always successful because they had to deal with frail stubborn
human nature and, moreover, they had to work within the karma of their own land.
108
Knowing such men convinces us better than
printed arguments of the eternal Spiritual truths.
109
The truth flows from such a man all the time and
not only when he speaks or writes. It flows silently. But whereas anyone can
hear his spoken words or read his printed ones, not many can receive this
voiceless and inkless message.
110
If he must lead men, he prefers to do so
indirectly; if he is to serve them, he prefers to serve them unobtrusively; and
if he needs to work among them, he seeks to do it self-effacingly.
111
It is only in the deepest possible sense that it
may be said he is all things to all people, a spiritual opportunist who meets
each man on his own level. But this is not to be taken to imply any desertion of
principle.
112
Tradition tells us, and history confirms, that
before passing away the illuminated man may preach the truth or write a record
or communicate his knowledge to at least one other man.
113
In this state of direct relation with the soul's
power, he feels and knows that his thoughts and prayers directed towards the
good of others can help them.
114
The sage gladly opens to all qualified and eager
seekers the mysteries and treasures of his own inner experience, that they may
profit by his past struggles and present success.
115
He brings revelations to meet our gropings,
inspirations to meet our doubts.
116
He becomes, for those docile enough to receive
them, a bearer of grace and a vessel of truth, a bestower of comfort and a
dispenser of confidence.
117
Chuang Tzu, the ancient Chinese mentalist sage,
wrote: "All that was worth handing on died with them (the sages). The rest they
put into their books."
118
Prophets and sages, teachers and saints receive
the urge to share their knowledge and experience with others. Whence does this
urge derive? Both lower and higher, personal and nonpersonal sources are
possible. But if from the highest, then we may say that God sends his messages
to mankind through these channels.
119
The sage who starts a movement or puts his
thoughts out, acts as a lighthouse which guides many a fumbling but aspiring
soul.
120
If he does not accept disciples individually it
is because he serves men otherwise. Those who try to get such acceptance and
find themselves rebuffed may consider him selfish, cold, remote. But they will
be greatly mistaken. He can serve mankind - not each person separately but in
groups or masses - and he may do this by lecturing, by writing, or simply by
directing his meditation in the appropriate way. For a writer's books spread not
only his ideas but also something of himself.
121
He can put thought on a high level but the way
in which he does this depends upon him and his circumstances. He can do it
personally as a private teacher, impersonally as a public lecturer or writer, or
anonymously as a proficient contemplative.
122
All these men who have attained Reality
inevitably leave a record for others or for posterity, but not necessarily with
their name attached.
123
Has any one of the sages ever vanished without
leaving behind a trace of Power, knowledge, goodness, and inspiration? Even if
not in words or deeds, something is left in the unseen atmosphere.
124
They are not usually members of any sect, but
circumstances or necessity may sometimes render it desirable that they be such.
125
The sage may or may not descend into the arena
of action but if not he will still find ways and means to inspire, guide, or
ennoble the actions of other men. He does this by teaching them and travelling
among them, or by sitting still and meditating alone, or by disseminating
writings among them. Even when he is unheard publicly he can help by the
concentrated mind's great power.
126
He does what he can to introduce here and there
into the consciousness of others, through whatever means he possesses, the seeds
of higher ideas. These seeds may not grow and certainly may not fructify for
many years, but that is not his affair. He knows that the vitality in these
seeds and depth of mental ground in which they have been sown will inevitably
lead to some result.
127
It is enough. He has sown the seed. He does not
have to wait for roots to form, stems to grow, fruits to appear. His work is
done.
128
In this momentous period the true sage has
special work to do in trying to protect the human race from its own folly. One
way is intercessory meditation which may help to mitigate the effects of the
world crisis. This requires solitude. It is an impersonal contemplation and must
not be disturbed by those who break into it, either to unload their personal
problems or to offer personal service which in the end has the same result.
129
Yes, some of us are genuinely aware of the
soul's existence and intimately know its freedom and blessedness. Modesty has
hitherto imposed silence upon us about the fact, although compassion induced us
to break it on occasions. But we mystics must now stand on our own dignity. It
is time that the world, brought to its inevitable and by us expected
materialistic dead-end, should realize at last that we are not talking out of
our hats but out of a real and impeccable experience. It would be an
unpardonable treachery to our duty in the final and terrible world-crisis of
this materialistic age if, out of false modesty or fear of intimidation by a
cynical society, we who daily feel and commune with the divine presence, who
realize its tremendous importance for humanity's present condition and future
life, fail to testify to its existence and reality. If today we venture to speak
more freely and frequently, our ideas may drop into a few hospitable minds and
sublimely penetrate their consciousness.
130
It is not the sage's function to tackle the
worldly problems which governments usually deal with: the social, political,
economic, and technical ones. His particular work is concerned with first, his
ordinary duty of professional service through whatever skill he possesses to
earn his livelihood, and second, to make truth available.
131
The mere existence of one who succeeds in
identifying himself with the Overself benefits every sensitive person who meets
him, even for a minute or two. Further, it inspires spiritual seekers who never
get the chance to meet him but who hear favourably about him and respectfully
receive what they hear. Finally, posterity benefits from the records left about
him.
132
Each teacher - if he is divinely commissioned -
leaves a deposit of truth after he dies.
133
The Master who leaves a record of his own climb,
or a testimony to the goal's existence, or a path pioneered for those who would
follow, or an instructed disciple here and there, leaves something of himself.
134
Even where help may not directly and outwardly
be given when difficult circumstances press on a man, it may yet be indirectly
and inwardly given to his mind, which has to deal with, or endure, them.
135
He can awaken some persons to this divine
presence within themselves, but not all. He may do this mysteriously by some
unknown process, or he may do it deliberately and with the display of his
technique.
136
The abstract does not appeal to the masses,
because it gives them nothing. But an embodied man can be seen, heard, and
touched, to that extent can be understood, to that extent he gives them
something; he can be followed, admired, feared, reverenced, or worshipped.
137
Secure in his own peace of mind, it is
inevitable that the more sensitive among those who meet him feel it too. But
those who come with hostility, personal or intellectual, will be avoided if
possible or find their time cut to the shortest if not.
138
Such a man has a catalytic action on the minds
and even on the lives of those who come into sympathetic contact with him.
139
Just by being himself he makes the philosophic
virtues real to others.
140
He does not need to be conscious of a clearly
defined mission before he sets about doing something for the enlightenment of
others. There is always some means open to him, some little thing he can do to
make this knowledge available or to set an example of right living.
141
It is his duty to communicate what he feels
there, what he finds there, to those who are excluded from it. If at times, and
with sympathetic auditors, his duty becomes his joy, at other times and with
insensitive auditors it becomes his cross. Jesus exemplified this in his own
history.
142
The illuminate practises a wiser philanthropy
than those who are presented as models of this virtue.
143
He has no wish to take charge of anyone's life
or undertake the management of anyone's affairs.
144
He is not allowed by the code of ethics
corresponding to his knowledge to make other people's decisions for them. Hence
he can say neither yes nor no to such highly personal questions. But he
can point out the consequences which are likely to follow in each case.
145
When we shall apprehend the meaning of life, we
may discover that it provides its presage in such prodigies.
146
When the band of sixty young men met Buddha
while they were looking for a woman of their pleasure, he said to them: "Abide
with me a little while and I will teach you truth." Such is the power of the
spoken word of the illuminate, when falling on a sensitive or sympathetic ear,
that again and again, we find in the history of the Buddha that he quickly
converted and quickly brought to spiritual enlightenment those to whom he chose
to address his speech.
147
The highest service they render is in silent
contemplation, which inspires so many aspiring souls to a higher life. This is
the truth.
148
The mere fact that these prophets, these
light-bringers and way-showers have existed at all is enough to change a man's
life if he is sensitive, reflective, and penetrative.
149
Even if he does no more than open the human mind
to its higher possibilities, he does enough.
150
The fact that there have been higher men who
have gone beyond the mass in goodness and insight, in serenity and radiant
self-mastery, can be taken as a hint of re-embodiment's purpose.
151
He speaks or writes as one who is perfectly at
home in these higher levels of consciousness.
152
If an illuminated teacher or an illuminating
book cannot lead anyone into the Kingdom of Heaven and keep him there, they can
at least give everyone a clue which, if followed up, may lead there.
153
Whatever help he can give through teaching is
limited on the other person's side by both ability to understand and willingness
to receive it.
154
He can give a man no other Grace than this, to
point out the way to the Innermost Self. But there is none better.
155
He seeks to bring man back to the memory of his
true native land.
156
There is no room for such a man in rigid
official worlds. He could not even influence, let alone save, such a society. At
best he can make some people more fully conscious of what they already dimly
feel: that civilization is in danger and its leaders half-bankrupt; that society
is sick into death; that the individual needs spiritual help to endure and
grapple with the depressing situation in which he finds himself.
157
What chance has the individual spiritual
educator to continue his work when public and government alike accept the false
suggestion that only through large organized groups and recognized traditional
institutions can people be correctly led? The end of such a trend can only be as
it has been in the past - monopoly, dictatorial religion, centralized tyrannical
power, heresy-hunting persecution, and the death of individualism, which means
the death of truth. Jesus, Buddha, Spinoza were all individualists.
158
He prefers to remain unrecognized for what he
genuinely is so that others will not even suspect his true status - unless he
deliberately wishes them to be made aware in order to help them in a special
way.
159
Unless he has been invested with a special
mission to speak or write to the world, the authentically illumined man will not
publicly announce the fact of his illumination. Anyone who does is an impostor.
160
We may turn over the multitudes of tomes in
which the opinions of man lie locked up, but one sage will tell us more Truth in
a day than we are likely to learn from all that huge mass of speculation.
161
If world history shows little if any ethical
progress on the part of humanity, are the sages to be blamed as futile? No. That
merely shows the intractability of the human material they are working on, for
their lives are given to doing whatever they can. They are not miracle men.
162
The best help he can give is to put a man
upright on his own feet by helping him get his own experience of the glimpse.
The man will then know that God really exists, that his own inner being is
connected with God, and that he can draw upon this connection for moral strength
and personal guidance, mental peace and spiritual knowledge.
163
The response of others to the adept's presence
is curiously opposite in kind: with a few, the finer evolved, it is beautifully
comforting, exalting, pacifying, and draws their interest to him. But with many
others it acts in reverse. His quiet ease puts them at ill-ease; his
self-possession disturbs them. Either an unpleasant sense of guilt insidiously
enters their feelings or one of resentment arises against someone who seems
quite unlike other men, and whom they cannot therefore meet on even ground, who
arouses their suspicions as being probably a fanatical religious heretic.
164
Those who are sufficiently sensitive feel, when
they spend a short time with one who has learned to live in the Overself, a
large relief from all their ancient burden of anxieties and difficulties and
darknesses for a while. This effect is so extraordinary, its exalted peace so
glowing, that although it passes away its memory will never pass away.
165
He who arrives at this stage becomes so wise and
understanding, so strong and dependable, so kind and calm, that those who seek
to foster these qualities within their own selves will receive from his word -
sometimes from his mere presence - a powerful impetus to their progress. They
will catch fire from his torch, as it were, and find a little easier of
accomplishment the fulfilment of these aspirations. And those who are able to
share in his effort to serve, to collaborate with his selfless work for the
world, will receive daily demonstration of and silent tuition in those still
loftier and more mysterious qualities which pertain to the quest of the
Overself: in the paradox of dynamic stillness, inspired action, and sublime
meditation. Yet he accepts worship from nobody as he himself worships none. For
he will not degrade himself into such materiality nor permit others so to
degrade themselves through their own superstition or someone else's
exploitation.
166
His thoughts are permeated with unusual energy,
and strange intensity, so that sensitive persons feel its atmosphere when in his
presence or react quickly to its spoken and written expression when not.
167
Time-harried men and women, if they have not
given themselves up to utter materialism and lost all their sensitivity, will
draw serenity and touch repose when they enter his timeless atmosphere.
168
We do not have to become the privileged,
personal disciple of such a man to benefit by him. If we have met him only once,
for however short a time, merely to think of him helps us and merely to know of
his presence in this world cheers us.
169
Those who are sensitive enough to be able to do
so, become by faith and sympathy sharers in his own divine perception of the
world. But whereas theirs is a glimpse, his is abiding.
170
The man who dwells in this light may transmit it
to others if he is intuitively directed to do so or is charged with a mission
involving others. But if others are hostile to it, there will be no felt result
or perhaps even an uneasiness in its presence. This is a service of transmission
or Grace, although not to be regarded as arbitrarily or capriciously given.
171
When he penetrates to the still centre of his
being, the thoughts of this and that subside, either to a low ebb or into a
temporary non-existence. Since thoughts express themselves in language, when
they are inactive speech becomes inactive too. What he feels is quite literally
too deep for thoughts. He falls into perfect silence. Yet it is not an empty
silence. Something is present in it, some power which he can direct toward
another man and which that man can feel and absorb temporarily - to whatever
extent he is capable - if or when he is in a relaxed and receptive mood. The
communication will best take place, if both are physically present, in total
silence and bodily stillness, that is, in meditation.(P)
172
People react differently to his presence but
only a few react rightly. Those are the ones with whom he has a spiritual
affinity, and a prenatal link.
173
Association with or proximity to such a man not
only brings out what is best in them but also, when it ends, invokes the
reaction of what is worst.(P)
174
Constant association with him can only benefit
the sensitive after all. It exalts and tutors them. But it leaves the
insensitive exactly as they were before. Long ago Jesus pointed out the futility
of casting seed on stony ground. Not that this lack of sensitivity is to be
deprecated. Nature has set us all on different rungs of her evolutionary ladder.
No one is to blame for being what he or she is.
175
If, through his complete calmness of manner, his
presence was restful and agreeable to some people, it was disturbing to others.
It seemed inhuman and mysterious. If some felt uplifted by his tranquillity and
strength, others were frightened at its possible connotation of secret evil.
176
If the contact stimulates him before he is ready
for it, then it will help his spiritual growth in some ways but hinder it in
other ways. It may give him greater enthusiasm conviction and determination, but
it may also inflate rather than abnegate the ego. This is another reason why
adepts are hard to approach.
177
It is only for the sensitive that his bland
serenity and benevolent smile will hold a distinct attraction, for it is only
they who will feel the subtle unusual emanation from his person.
178
In the presence of an illuminate one feels, as
Hawthorne felt and said of Emerson, so "happy, as if there were no questions to
be put."
179
Mencius: "He who has wandered to the gate of the
sage finds it difficult to think anything about the words of others."
180
The blessing of his compassion streams into
one's soul.
181
In his presence, the disciple with true affinity
feels an infinite rest.
182
Others avoid him after the first meeting because
they cannot endure the uneasy feeling of guilt which arises in his presence. For
their most secret sins and most hidden weaknesses are suddenly displayed to
their mind's eye by the mere fact of his propinquity. It is an involuntary and
mysterious experience.
183
Sometimes the interrogation in the eyes of an
illuminate will prove fatal to the worldly foolishness we bring into his
presence.
184
There is a silence which soothes and a silence
which disturbs. With a genuine adept the first is felt, but with the other kind,
the second.
185
Like a looking-glass, he shines back the image
of what their conscious self turns away from but what their diviner self is
silently pointing toward.
186
Those who feel this deep peace in the atmosphere
around and between them, do not feel any need of words. The soothing stillness
is their best communication and indeed gives the latter a quality of sacred
communion.
187
Sitting in the aura of greatness that exudes
from this man, a sensitive person absorbs some vitalizing element which gives
him the impetus to nurture the quality of greatness in himself. The pretensions
of the ego must collapse.
188
In this man's presence others often feel
inadequate, often become acutely aware of their own deficiencies. Why is this?
It is because they abruptly find themselves measured against his breadth of soul
and height of wisdom. They become ashamed of their own littleness when it is
shown up by his greatness.
189
They come to him with a head full of questions,
but they find themselves struck with vocal dumbness in his presence. They come
to him expectant of wonderful revelations, but they find that he takes care to
seem and speak like other men and to keep his feet solidly planted on the ground
of common sense.
190
They may draw near to him and cross his orbit
for only a few minutes in a whole lifetime but it proves enough to inspire and
irradiate the rest of their days. They now have not only the feeling that this
man knows whereof he speaks but also the assurance that the Overself is utterly
real and that the quest of it is the most worthwhile of all enterprises.
191
In his presence all that is best in a man
receives stimulation and he comes closer to his true self. The significance of
the meeting will emerge still more in after years.
192
He will be so quiet in his daily bearing, so
calm in his dealings with others, that they will begin to sense despite his
unfailing modesty that here, in his presence, there is a living echo from a
higher world of being.
193
In his presence the shadows of depression or
fear vanish. For then the disciple can look out on life with clearer eyes,
seeing the Perfect which already exists beyond its imperfections.
194
Certain kinds of sensations, feelings, and
thoughts are automatically repelled from the field of blessed consciousness in
which the illumined man lives. All negative and destructive, egoistic and unruly
ideas - certainly all those that the best conscience of the human race has
stamped as "wicked" and generative of "evil-doing" - are not compatible with his
purified state of mind and accordingly cannot enter it.
195
If he lets them, many will come to him in search
of guidance help comfort or healing. Some will place their problem before him
humbly and candidly, but others will be too afraid, or too proud, to do so
openly.
196
Whether there is an actual transference of his
power and light, or whether his actual presence and desire to help set up
vibrations in the subconscious mind of the seeker, or whether he is merely a
medium for higher forces, it is not easy to determine. The truth may well be a
combination of all these three factors.
197
Constant contact with such an exalted personage
is likely to influence others, but it is not possible to say when this influence
will rise up into the conscious mind. The time will always be different with
different individuals.
198
His silences may be exasperating to those who
are insensitive and uncomprehending, but they will be exhilarating to those who
have begun to learn how the Spirit operates.
199
In the presence of such a man, one instinctively
feels that there are tremendous reserves of knowledge, virtue, and power within
him, that he has so much more to give than is apparent.
200
His presence calls out the good, the true, and
the beautiful in others.
201
The sensitive will quickly become aware of the
hidden strength that is in him, the strength which kindles assurance in his own
heart and confidence in others' hearts.
202
A benign influence diffuses itself from him and
is felt by the sensitive, as if borne on telepathic waves.
203
This peace which he seems to diffuse is really
there, is a central characteristic that never leaves him even when surrounded by
dangers or beset by troubles.
204
A meeting with such a man, by those who are
sensitive enough to register more finely than the gross senses can register, is
always a benediction; the remembrance of him is always an exaltation.
205
By a principle of symbiosis, what he is, being
now at the source of human power, spreads out and ripples its influence on the
human group, which at the least keeps it from becoming worse than it is, and at
the most lights up inspiration in certain individual minds and makes them
benefactors of the race.
206
His goodness acts as a silent reproach to those
who are unwilling to give up their badness: hence their discomfort.
207
His very presence is a silent rebuke to them; he
stands there in all his integrity and spirituality - an embarrassment, for it
makes such a contrast with their own worldliness.
208
In the serene presence of an illuminate, all
criticism is charmed to ant-like littleness. What can our broken thoughts do to
injure or belittle one who is safely above all thought? And how dull seem these
dogmas which we have brought into the neighbourhood of one who has liberated
himself from all dogmas!
209
If "dead" illuminati can help the world as
readily as those who are among us in the flesh, I would like to ask those who
believe this why Ramakrishna uttered the following pathetic plaint as he lay
dying in Cossipore: "Had this body been allowed to last a little longer, many
more people would have become spiritually awakened." No, it is more rational to
believe that a living illuminate is needed, that one who has flung off the
physical body has no further concerns with the physical world, and that he whose
consciousness is in the Real, uses the world (in the form of a body) to save
those whose consciousness is in the world.
210
In the personal aura of such an adept, the
sensitive person gets a feeling first, of peace, second, of security and safety.
211
Why do sensitive people feel protected and
secure in his presence? It is because he knows and obeys the universal laws,
invokes and attracts superhuman power.
212
The impact of such a person on others may be the
most memorable event of their lives or it may be the most trivial. That will
depend on their own readiness to appreciate and estimate, their own capacity to
absorb and receive. Take only the quality of his serenity, for instance, and
imagine what it could mean to anyone thrown into contact with him during a
frightening crisis.
213
In the presence of such greatness, a feeling of
humility comes into a sensitive heart.
214
The uneasiness which many feel in his presence
is partly caused by the fact that there are negative qualities in themselves
which are not present in him. But partly it is also caused by their
miscomprehension of his character. He does not attempt to criticize, judge, or
condemn them, nor to approve or disapprove of them. He accepts that this is not
his business for he accepts that evolution has made them what they are, both the
good and bad in them. To this extent their uneasiness is unnecessary.
215
Some sages do not wish to enter into any precise
relationship with others. They do not give personal initiation or accept
disciples formally. But the sensitive will feel that some sort of inner benefit
was got by the contact, non-visible and impersonal though it was.
216
The meeting with a higher personage, whether on
the physical plane or on an inner one, is to be considered fortunate, and a
blessing upon one's own higher endeavours.
217
Why is it that in India the crowds come from far
distance merely to have the sight - perhaps for a few minutes - of a great soul?
And why is this regarded as beneficial and worth the toil and trouble of the
journey? Even if the opportunity to have a few words of conversation with him is
quite impossible, it is still thought worthwhile merely to see him or be seen by
him. There is, of course, the personal satisfaction of having seen him. Is that
merely a sentimental and emotional satisfaction, or is there a scientific basis
of fact making the visit worthwhile? The answer to this question can be found in
the knowledge that the body is a battery and that there are electrical
radiations from certain parts of the body, certain centres - the most important
centre being the eye - and that through those radiations, a part of the aura is
actually projected outwards. This would also explain why the Indians of the
higher caste do not like to have their food looked at by those of the very
lowest caste, which they would consider a polluting act.
218
The meeting with a great soul, a mahatma, is
called darsan in India and is considered to convey some kind of a
blessing. We now see the scientific grounds for this belief, even though the
masses themselves are quite unaware of this fact but feel or have the faith that
the blessing is there.
219
Once a man has found his way to truth he can
speak of it simply, directly, and naturally, without personal pretentiousness or
ostentation. Yet those who underestimate the worth of what he has to say would
be in error. The insensitive and coarse may not feel it but the others will not
need much dealing with him to find an air of distinction, not easily explicable.
220
There is power and strangeness in his presence,
for it brings those who are sensitive enough to feel its quality to confess what
they can hardly confess to their intimate friends.
221
He has no desires to satisfy through them, no
claims to make upon them. Because they instinctively feel that nothing of the
personal self enters into his dealings with them, they just as instinctively
trust him. He becomes their confessional priest. They bring their secrets, their
sins and their confidences to his ears.
222
He who has conquered his own sorrows and
abolished his own ignorance will find in time that others will come of their own
accord to him. He will sit there imperturbable yet sympathetic, inscrutably
poised yet gently understanding, while the sorrowful and the aspiring, the
world-worn and the seeking, pour out their sorrows and aspirations, their sins
and ideals as at a priestly confessional - yet without any assumption of
priestly superiority, without any pretense of moral height, and without any
quackery of pontifical infallibility. When he speaks, his detached, impersonal
standpoint will help to reorient their own, will show the truth of a situation
and the lesson of an experience as their desire-tossed ego could never show it.
And all the while, the impact of his aura will gradually strengthen, calm, and
uplift them if they are at all sensitive.
223
Sometimes the mere act of confession to an adept
brings release to a troubled mind almost instantaneously and seemingly
miraculously. Thus a highly placed government official who was troubled for many
years with nightmares in which odious reptiles played a prominent role, was
entirely and permanently freed from them by nothing more than mentioning his
case to such an adept in whose attainment he believed. Again, an exceedingly
busy businessman, who could find no time for meditation or spiritual study and
saw no prospect of doing so for many years, became distressed and worried about
this situation. He did not want to be submerged by material activities. He asked
an adept for advice. He was told to begin each morning with a three-minute
prayer and not worry. Since then his anxiety has vanished and he has enjoyed
spiritual peace in the very midst of his work. At other times a question or two
by the same adept will ferret out secreted episodes that are stifling progress
or will bring up subconscious memories that are poisoning character. The third
group of effects are perhaps the most wonderful of all because they deal with
causes that are the most deep-rooted of all. The innate tendencies born of
former incarnations may themselves be influenced beneficially by the healing
association of an adept.
He may sit quietly and listen very sympathetically to the troubled outpouring of a sufferer. At the end of a single session, the healing vibrations of the adept's interest may spontaneously effect an apparent miracle. The burden of long-felt grievance may fall away, the pressure of agony be taken away. The sufferer's inner being will give up its secret sins, expose its hidden uglinesses, and surrender its private fears only to have them thrown instantly out of his mind and life.
224
Only the sensitive are likely to leave his
presence uplifted, quieted, and reassured in mind. The others - and they are the
majority - come with nothing and leave with nothing.
225
He who sits in meditation with a master may find
an inner impetus developing out of the contact.
226
He may never utter aloud any prayer on behalf of
others or pronounce any benedictory formula over them. Yet the silent descent of
his grace may be acutely felt and gratefully received.
227
We may borrow inner peace and inner strength by
the proximity of such a man. But with its cessation, the peace and strength
depart.
228
Without opening his lips he communicates a
message to every sensitive seeker who enters his orbit.
229
The effect of this meeting, provided the proper
conditions exist, is to give the seeker a powerful psychic and spiritual
stimulus.
230
The presence of one man demeans us and makes us
seem less than we are, whereas that of another like this adept will dignify us
and seem to bring the goal for awhile within easy reach.
231
Those who are sensitive to true spirituality
will always leave his presence with a feeling of having been greatly benefited.
232
From his own unshakeable calm, the sensitive
draw respite from their troubles. From his own unusual experiences, the humble
draw priceless counsel.
233
There is danger in the frown of one guided and
over-shadowed by the Overself as there is blessing in his favour.
234
To come near to such a man is to come more
closely to the possibility - which all possess - of finding God.
235
He remains calm amid adversity to a degree so
extraordinary that others sharing the same trouble feel less borne down by it
and more able to tackle it.
236
In his presence we are willing to sit without
words merely to enjoy the peace which emanates from him.
237
To have sat within the aura of a great soul is a
memorable thing, but to have communed silently with him while doing so is to
have received a lifelong blessing.
238
In one adept's presence, some men felt as if
they underwent a religious conversion - yet there was no particular brand of
religion to which it could be referred.
239
His beneficent spiritual influence may
profoundly affect others to the point of revolutionizing their attitude to life,
yet he may be unaware of both the influence and its effect! The part of his mind
which knows what is happening is not the true source of the grace; this flows
through him and is not created by him.
240
Let us not ascribe to the ordinary self of man
what belongs to the Overself. The mystical phenomena, the "inner" experiences
engendered by an adept, are done through him, not by him.
241
Help comes, inspiration is derived, peace is
felt, and the support of moral fortitude is obtained without personal
intervention by the sage or without even his personal knowledge of the matter.
It is automatic, a response from grace to faith.
242
The catalyst which by its presence enables
chemical elements to change their forms does not itself change. In the same way
the illuminate may be used by higher forces to affect, influence, or even change
others without any active personal move on his part to bring about this result.
He may not even feel, see, or know what is happening, yet he has started it!
243
He is an agent for the work of Providence, a
carrier of its messages and forces. At times he is used with his conscious
knowledge and acceptance but at other times without them.
244
Much occult phenomena of the adept is performed
without his conscious participation and "above" his personal knowledge, as when
various people claim to be aware of receiving help from him which he has no
recollection of having given. It is the Overself which is really giving the
help, their contact with him being merely like the switch which turns on a
light. But a switch is not the same as the electric current which, in this
simile, represents the Overself. Yet a switch is not less necessary in its own
place. If he does not use it, a man may grope in vain around a dark room and not
find what he is seeking there. The contact with an adept turns some of the power
that the adept is himself in touch with into the disciple's direction. The flick
of a switch is done in a moment, whereas the current of light may flow into the
light bulb for many hours. The contact with an adept takes a moment, but the
spiritual current may emanate from him for many years, even for a lifetime. Just
as in the ordinary man's deep sleep no ego is working, so this is the perfect
and highest state because no ego is working here either. It reproduces deep
sleep by eliminating egotism but transcends deep sleep by retaining
consciousness. Thus it brings the benefit without the spiritual blankness of
deep sleep into the waking state. If it be said, in criticism of his unawareness
of so much occult phenomena manifesting in his name, that this lessens his
mental stature, he must answer that it also preserves his mental sanity. How,
with a thousand devotees, could he be attending to all of them at one and the
same time? By what magic could this be done and his peace remain, his sanity be
kept? God alone knows all things in a mysterious everywhereness and
everywhenness. How could he be as God and yet remain as man, much more deal with
other men? For all occult phenomena belong to the world of finite form, time and
space, not to the world of infinite spirit, to illusion and not to reality. And,
if, in further criticism, it be said that his unawareness makes him seem weaker
than an adept should be, he can only answer humbly that because he has
surrendered his personal rights he is weaker and more helpless than the most
ordinary man, that his situation was tersely described in Jesus' confession, "I
have no power in myself, but only from the Father."
245
The strain of these hundreds of questioning,
eager, demanding, struggling, and perhaps suffering minds constantly directed
towards his own would be so tremendous if he had to bear it in the ordinary way
that his own mind would break under it. He is given no rest from his task. But
his extraordinary attainment provides his protection. They reach him mostly
through the subconscious self, which automatically takes care of them and leaves
him free of the burden.
246
The message or the manifestation may, on the
surface, appear to come directly from the master. This may be quite true in some
cases but it could not possibly be true in all cases. If it were, then he would
have to look in a dozen different directions every minute of every day. But the
fact is that he helps most people without being consciously and directly aware
of them.
247
There is magical power in the thoughts of such a
man. The mind, the animal, and the ego in him being mastered, many other things
become mastered as a consequence. Rabbi Gamaliel, who once taught Saul and
prepared him to become Paul, has put this secret into these words: "Do His will
as if it were thy will, that He may do thy will as if it were His will. Annul
thy will before His will, that he may annul the will of others before thy will."
Jesus put it somewhat differently: "Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven and all
these things shall be added to you.... Ask whatsoever ye will and it shall be
done unto you." Those religionists who take the latter words as applicable to
any and all prayers are woefully ignorant. They cannot properly be said of
persons who have not attained some or sufficient mastery of self, who give
nothing from within themselves except wishes and the words which clothe them.
248
He may well be unaware how subtly the force is
working within him until he begins to notice its effects on others, as they
themselves draw attention to it.
249
Such is the wonderful infinitude of the soul
that the man who succeeds in identifying his everyday consciousness with it,
succeeds also in making his influence and inspiration felt in any part of the
world where there is someone who puts faith in him and gives devotion to him.
His bodily presence or visitation is not essential. The soul is his real self
and operates on subconscious levels. Whoever recognizes this truth and humbly,
harmoniously, places himself in a passive receptive attitude towards the
spiritual adept, finds a source of blessed help outside his own limited
powers.(P)
250
He takes no credit to himself for these things.
He feels he is only an instrument. All that he can do is to invoke the higher
power, and it is this which makes these things possible. It is not really any
power of his own that does it. But quite often he does not even have to invoke
the power - and yet these things will happen all the same. Nevertheless, his
followers are not attributing powers to him which he does not possess. For these
happenings, after all, occur only as the result of the contact with him. He
knows that in some mysterious way he is the link between the power and the
event.
251
Although the master may not directly transmit
the message or prompt the manifestation, he does exercise an influence which
indirectly causes this to happen and indicates the direction in which it is to
happen.
252
The power to inspire or comfort others can
operate without his personal awareness and even without his own consent.
Sometimes it will manifest itself merely as if he were present and close, to be
felt but not seen mentally. Sometimes, a like form of his body or face will
appear to the mind's eye along with this same feeling.
253
Those whom he never even meets but who direct
their thought and faith towards him, receive inspiration automatically. The
impact of his personality helps those whom he does meet, if they are
sympathetic, but often without his even being aware of it.
254
It is not necessary for him to preach and
sermonize others. Sometimes in a purely secret and unnoticed way, sometimes in a
half-conscious way, those who cross his path temporarily and those who associate
with him permanently will feel that the good is being strengthened in them. This
is his silent service.
255
Just by being himself, without preaching,
without trying, the sage may awaken in others whose lives touch his a longing
for the higher life.
256
He has a peculiar power which acts upon the
subconscious minds of those who have any contact or association with him.
257
The illuminate exerts his influence upon others
spontaneously and effortlessly rather than deliberately and purposely. He need
make no effort but the benign power and light will radiate naturally from him
just the same and reach those who come within his immediate orbit. It is
sufficient for them to know with faith and devotion that he is and they
receive help and healing. The Overself works directly through him and works
unhindered upon all who surrender themselves to it.
258
Because he has no feeling of egoism, he has no
feeling of a mission to accomplish. Yet a work will be done all the same.
259
"The Sage works when apparently doing nothing;
instructs without uttering a word." - Lao Tzu
260
The sage does not need to pray for anyone nor
does the other person even need to know that the sage has thought about or
remembered him. For we are all held within the World-Mind. But if the sage does
not think of the person, the latter must believe, or remember, or ask, or think
of the sage if help is sought.
261
Only such a man has the right to echo back the
statement of Lao Tzu: "To do nothing is to do everything." For others to do so
is to claim what is not theirs, and to breed laziness and parasitism.
262
By being what he is, there is nothing to impede
the flow of pure consciousness from him to those he contacts. The ego does not
intervene, the lower nature does not interrupt, and without his making any
deliberate effort something passes through and from him to benefit them.
263
Without trying to influence others to reform
their characters or to improve their thoughts, his influence will still appear
whether they know its true source or not, and whether it is after the lapse of
many years or not. Nor does he ask any credit for this result for he gives that
to the World-Mind whose World-Idea is being realized in this and many other
ways.
264
Quite often he does not need to do anything; it
is enough if he beneficently remembers the person before emerging from his own
periods of contemplation. Sometimes, even merely being present may act as a
catalyst for remedial forces. If however he goes farther than this, and performs
a specific act, the result must come.
265
Such a power is like a catalyst in chemistry.
Itself invisible, it inspires others to visible deeds.
266
As the light of truth passes into him, he in
turn refracts it to others, although only some will let it touch them.
267
Grace flows from such a man as light flows from
the sun; he does not have to give it.
268
It will suffice for him to be what he is and
thirsty seekers will draw from him in a mysterious, silent way, what they need
of his power and wisdom, his love and serenity. The beautiful statement of
Bishop Phillips Brooks is worth quoting here: "It is the lives like the stars,
which simply pour down on us the calm light of their bright and faithful being,
up to which we look, and out of which we gather the deepest calm and courage."
269
He can take no credit of his own for the service
rendered, and calls no attention to himself. How could he honestly do so when he
is fully aware that it is only by ceasing from his own activities, by being
inwardly still, and by abandoning his own ego that the power which really
renders the service manifests itself?
270
Where do these phenomena originate? Not always
from himself, but more often from outside himself, from the mysterious and
unknown mind which is the soul of the universe and the ground in which all
individual minds are rooted.
271
The sun does not ask any plant, animal, or human
if it is worthy before shedding benign life-giving rays upon it. The light is
given without stint to all. Why should the man who has united with the spiritual
sun of pure love within himself hold its warmth back from any living creature?
Why should he make distinctions and bestow it only on a chosen few? The fact is
that he does not. But the mass of men fail to recognize what he is, seeing only
his body, and miss the opportunity that his presence among them affords.
272
It is certainly not all mankind, not even all
those who cross his orbit, whom the sage is called upon to help but only those
with whom there is either an inner affinity or a karmic link. "I pray not for
the world, but for them which Thou hast given me," said Jesus in his last prayer
with his disciples before the great betrayal. He could not undertake to save all
men and women, for that were an infinite labour without end, but only some among
them. At any given time there are several spiritual shepherds in the world, each
with his own distinct and separate flock. It is inevitable and right that he
should sieve humanity for those alone who need him or who were born to follow
him or who seek the kind of guidance which he especially can give.
273
His compassion is broad-based; it is for all.
But his personal work is extremely narrow for it is only for the few who will
receive it most readily. This implies that he works among the sympathetic and
mature, not among the hostile and immature. The reason for this is the need to
practise economy of time and energy that he may not waste his arrows of effort
on the vacant air. For a similar reason he prefers to enlighten the
leaders, and let the flocks alone.
274
He will seek to give depth of instruction rather
than width of influence. Hence his own activity will be directed towards a
severely limited number. Whatever movement he inaugurates and personally leads
will be small, indeed, for he will understand that were it to become popular and
widespread its quality of thought would immediately degenerate, its purity of
motive would instantly be degraded. He will count the years gloriously spent if,
when the moment comes to drop the body-idea and pass through the portcullis of
death, he can look back and reflect that a hundred men have firmly grounded
their minds in truth and planted their feet on the road to eternal liberation
through the work done by this transitory body. For those who welcome the
Truth-bringer must needs be few, those who want the truth must be fewer still,
and of these again those who can endure it when brought face to face with it are
rare.
275
The sages of old deliberately restricted the
public from their full knowledge so that their immediate following was always
numerically insignificant. Yet the paradox was that they exercised an indirect
influence disproportionate to their small numbers. This was achieved by (a)
concentrating their tuition on men in positions of high authority or leadership,
and (b) establishing popular religions and cults suited to the capacity of the
multitude.
276
Few are fit and worthy to be taught by such a
sage for few would accept him if he were clothed in an unattractive body, if his
skin were the wrong colour or his stature dwarfed or his face ugly or his
shoulders hunch-backed.
277
He is better occupied in quietly revealing his
knowledge to the elect than in publicly defending it against those who are
incapable of receiving it mentally, and therefore incapable of appreciating it
morally.
278
Should a master composer spend his time teaching
musical scales to children? Should an adept come out of his seclusion and spend
his time teaching the mass of people? The answer to the first question is
obviously, no! The answer to the second question is less obviously but not less
equally, no!
279
Many will admire such a teacher but few will
emulate him.
280
The illuminate bestows his grace in vain on the
man who will not yield up for a moment his intellectual pride and his incessant
egotism.
281
For him to try and convince others of the truth
would require that they are seeking truth. But how many are consciously and
deliberately doing so?
282
The persuasive influence of his mind and the
pellucid truth of his sentences do not register with many men. Fitness,
readiness and ripeness must be present first if receptivity is to be achieved.
283
No sage who has entered the great enlightenment
is going to tell everyone he meets what has happened to him. Nor is he going to
reveal everything he knows at the first few meetings even with those who want to
find truth.
284
The sage does not try to collect a personal
following, nor does he try to stop anyone who wishes to wander elsewhere. He
does not wish to form a cult or even a school of thought. He seeks to attach
only those who seek for the truth alone, both in his thinking and in his life.
Sometimes he trains a few in meditation and instructs them in philosophy.
285
Unlike insane self-titled "Messiahs," he has no
program of saving the whole world from its sinfulness, for the chances of such
an enterprise are microscopic; but he has a program of finding his own kindred -
those whose aspiration thought and prenatal relationship with him make them his
natural followers.
286
Such a man may have many acquaintances, may make
a modest number of friends, but he is unlikely to find more than a few
intimates.
287
He sees that there is nothing he can do for
people whose point of view is so undeveloped, so materialistic, so concerned
with surfaces and appearances. He does not engage in the futile task of meddling
with their lives. He does not attempt the impossible task of changing them
suddenly. He leaves them to the natural processes of growth and to the cosmical
forces responsible for their past and future course.
288
He is the silent background counsellor for a few
men who have the opportunity and capacity to serve mankind.
289
These adepts help the few who are in a position
and attitude to help a multitude.
290
He seeks no personal devotees but is glad over
each person who becomes a follower of impersonal Truth.
291
The illumined man becomes a channel of the Holy
Ghost, a chalice of the Prophet's Wine. Yet even he cannot turn the absolute
mystical Silence into finite comprehensible speech for more than a sensitive
few. With most people he finds himself utterly dumb because they themselves are
utterly deaf. This is the tragic pity of it, that just because his words have a
value far beyond that of other men's, there is no audience for them, so few ears
to receive them.