1
We may argue about everything except Truth. Even the
very best argument can produce only another thought at the end. For Truth can be
expressed in words, spoken or written, only by bringing it down to the level of
intellect, whereas on its own level as being knowledge of the Real it transcends
intellect. Any thought of the Real merely makes an object of it, one among a
multitude of other objects, and hence fails to arrive at it.
2
It is impossible to think of the Pure Self without
making it an idea, that is, an object, and therefore without missing it.
3
God is neither to be looked upon with human eyes nor
comprehended with human intellect. For the eyes see only things and the
intellect takes hold only of thoughts.
4
Absolute Being is neither analysable nor measurable,
neither imaginable nor weighable.
5
If the Real is unique, if it has no duplicate,
nothing inferior to it can make it an object of experience. The ego, the self
which sets out to do so, cannot come closer than getting its own personal
reactions, however rarefied these may be and however uncommon these mystic
experiences are.
6
What the Godhead is we do not know. The nature and
the structure of the Grand Mystery are beyond all human investigation. We cannot
describe it correctly or name it accurately. We can only observe some of its
workings and effects in our individual selves and in the universe.
7
The Infinite Reality cannot be reasoned with, but
only reasoned about. It cannot even be adequately symbolized, for regarding it
as a mental image, a pictured thought is only a more refined form of
idol-worship. It can only be designated. The true Godhead is unconditioned,
formless, not picturable. No individual worship can reach what is utterly beyond
all individual existence. No name can be given that will properly stand for what
is without attributes and without limitations. In the ultimate reality there are
and can be no distinctions and no differences, no grades and no change.
8
The utter incomprehensibility of the ultimate Source
makes it impossible for any religion to offer more than its own symbols to the
human mind. From them man creates his own mental pictures. But he does not and
cannot touch the Untouchable.
9
God is unpicturable by human imagination, truth is
unattainable by human thinking. There is a grand mystery at the heart of things.
Why then degrade the Unique by confounding its symbols or traditions (in all
religions) with its reality?
10
If, remembering the infinitude of the Ultimate
Reality, we refuse to personify it and refuse to worship such a personification,
we lift ourselves from the exclusively religious to the integrally
religio-mystical-philosophic standpoint.
11
In ancient Mexico, the Highest Godhead was "the
Idea that could not be reproduced" and no personification or representation of
it of any kind was allowed. But this was doctrine only for the upper classes and
the intellectually cultivated. The masses were given a God who was visible and
comprehensible.
12
The ultimate reality cannot be represented with
any fidelity nor can the ultimate truth be communicated with any accuracy.
13
Let no one confuse this grand concept of the
Absolute, the Unbounded, the Timeless, with the lesser concept of a God made in
a semi-human image.
14
We may not personalize the Absolute except at the
terrible cost of utterly deceiving ourselves.
15
Just as Islam allows no portrait, no graven image
to represent the man Muhammed; just as Buddha forbade any figure of himself to
be made or used (a prohibition disobeyed after a century or two); just as the
Jews were willing to be executed rather than to allow Caesarian deificatory
effigies newly brought to Jerusalem to be displayed, so philosophy holds that no
words can ever describe, no concept ever express, no human leader ever incarnate
the ineffable truth, and that all assertions to the contrary merely defile
truth. IT cannot be confined.
16
It is totally incommunicable, but
thoughts about it can be communicated in words or formed into
pictures.
17
So far as truth can appear in words, this is so.
But on the ultimate level, this is but an echo of an echo infinitely multiplied.
18
It is merely a statement about reality, but
it is not reality itself. It is a sound in the air (if voiced) or a mark on
paper (if printed) but not truth.
19
Nothing that words could say could give any proper
description of That Which Is, for it belongs to a totally different dimension.
So this is God, or more correctly, as near as man can get to God.
20
No one can describe the Absolute, or speak on its
behalf, for that would impose his human consciousness upon it and merely create
a private imagination about it.
21
The Real cannot be put under any label or
classification because it is what it is of itself. Yet it pervades all things.
22
We must separate, in our human thought, Mind as
passive reality (the void) from Mind as active being (World-Mind). All our
understanding and interpretation of such words as are affixed to this state, be
they Overself, Divine Being, Absolute, or Reality, is inevitably drawn from, and
associated with, our experience in the world of time-space and relativity. It is
what these words mean for our minds, not what they mean in themselves,
that constitutes our use of them. We easily fall into self-deception about them,
for the meaning given them is what we imagine, not what we know.
23
Being especially above all relationships and
contrasts that the intellect can make or the imagination can create, it cannot
rightly be called "The One" as it so often has been, for that implies that a
second or a third entity of the same kind could be added to it, which is false.
The intellect may attempt the task during its highest flights, but in the end
what does it produce? Only more thoughts!
24
This is the Godhead, of which, in nearly all the
ancient religious Mysteries, lawfully man may make no image and to which he may
give no name.
25
Why is it that Lao Tzu wrote the Tao cannot be
named? Simply because all names attached to it and all descriptions made of it
cannot help being incomplete.
26
Each word which can be used for the first goal
tells of some particular aspect, be it knowledge, awakening, or enlightenment.
Beyond that incomplete description words cannot go, except negatively.
27
The last thought that intelligence can make is
about this divine mystery which lies beyond everything thinkable: but it will
necessarily have to be a negative thought, that is, it can only say what the
Godhead is not, deny any and every affirmation about it, unknow all that it has
previously known about God.
28
Every attempt at understanding the Great Mystery,
and very much more at representing it, merely leads to self-deception.
29
It is not only the Uncontradictable, but also the
Unapproachable.
30
We may ascribe no attributes to Mind nor confine
it within any limitations.
31
The great mysterious emptiness - that is all man
can know of God.
32
Although nothing can be written about IT that is
truly descriptive, everything can be written about what leads up to the
revelation of IT; that can be written with precision and luminosity. The inside
must forever elude words, but the outside need not. The greatest of questions,
"What is Truth?" is answered best by Silence; this answer is inherent in the
question. Metaphysics and poetry may provide a medium for clues and hints,
symbols and images.
33
To say what the Absolute is not, to describe it in
negatives, is correct so far as it goes but is not so satisfactory. The terms
Void or Space, being more positive, are even better.
34
Space is a good metaphor for Mind. In one aspect
it is bounded, in another it is infinite. Mind also is static and dynamic, still
and active, within universes yet transcending them all.
35
What Tibetan Buddhism used as a symbol of the
Infinite Being, medieval Christian theology used for the same idea - the circle.
36
Where is the man who has ever known the unknowable
and indescribable Supreme Godhead? For all men came into existence after it
already was there. But whoever receives knowledge by tradition, investigation,
or intuition, by meditation, revelation, or even by science leading into
metaphysics, by art or poetry or literature, may acquire the tremendous
certitude that it is there. More - it must always have been there.
37
That which transcends even the highest of the
gods, even World-Mind, is unthinkable and unimaginable. Therefore is it without
name or form, beyond all contact with the senses, beginningless and endless,
neither growing nor diminishing, indestructible, free from any relations or
comparisons - this is the Undefinable Mystery of Mysteries. Let no one seek it,
for he cannot find IT. But he can know that it is there and, through its
manifestations, the Gods, worship IT.
38
All human explanation of the nature of Mind, as
all human expositions of the working of the World-Mind, are limited forms of
language. This cannot be helped, for "that which can be named is not the Tao,"
as a Chinese sage affirmed. It is outside time in a Now beyond the successive
character of human thinking and incomprehensible to it. Yet intellect, though it
cannot enter this Grand Mystery, can at its most brilliant perception infer that
it is.
39
Try as it might, the finite thinking mind cannot
break through this sound-barrier of mystery which surrounds the Unique Being,
That which is ever the same. All thoughts simply pile up, leaving the last one
unanswered, if not unanswerable, or else ending in an involved labyrinth from
which there is no outlet. IT cannot be investigated, but the fact of its
necessary existence can be stated more emphatically than can any other of the
innumerable or observable facts.
40
In the end he will have to confess, as the English
hermit Richard Rolle confessed six hundred years ago, despite his deep mystical
experiences, that it is not possible to know what God is but only that he
is.
41
When the last words have been uttered, the final
sentences written down; when the sermons, books, and articles have exhausted all
that human intellect and human intuition can explain, suggest, or hint; when the
profoundest mystical experience has yielded all that it could reveal, there will
still remain an awed feeling before the Grand Mystery that is God, a tremendous
humility before Its unknowableness.
42
Because there is nothing quite like it in human
experience and because there is no opposite in the entire cosmos from which it
can be differentiated, the Absolute Being remains utterly incomprehensible to
the human intellect.
43
The mystery of That Which Is baffles not only the
comprehension of the ordinary mind but also that of the philosophic mind.
44
There is an abyss which no human can cross, a
mystery which remains utterly impenetrable to him. This is the transcendent
Godhead.
45
We can know as much, and as little, of God as the
wave dashing against the Californian coastline can know of the immense ocean
stretching so many thousand miles to the Australian shore: such is human
insignificance in relation to that activity of God which is directed to this
universe. But in relation to that non-activity which is God-in-itself, at rest,
we can know absolutely nothing. For here is Being without end, Mind without
individualization of any kind, and Life without any bottom or top to it.
46
The Unfathomable Mystery of Mind will always
remain.
47
Despite all the absurd claims to the contrary, no
one has ever interpreted to us the great Mystery of mysteries, the Godhead
behind the God active in the universe.
48
The absoluteness of the Godhead is complete and
basic. It is not categorically identical with man any more than the ray is with
the sun; they are different although not more fundamentally different than the
ray from the sun. Hence there can be no direct communication and no positive
relationship between them. A profound impenetrability, an existence beyond
comprehension, is the first characteristic of the Godhead, when gazed at by
human sight.(P)
49
The Godhead as he is, and God as he appears; God
in the vacuous repose of Nothingness, and God in the continuous activity of a
cosmos; God forever hidden in his own being and forever unknown to mortals, and
God revealed in relation to man; THAT which is not perceptible to human thinking
as opposed to HE who is experienceable by intuition - these differences seem to
imply an inherent contradiction. Those attractive and positive attributes which
we always associate with the very name God - justice, goodness, and the like -
cannot be associated with the Godhead for the reason that nobody, not the
greatest of mystics, knows or ever can know the Godhead.
50
If man is made in the image of God, then this God
is something other than the Ultimate Principle, for THAT has no likeness with
anything else; it is a void, a no-thing, and so utterly beyond human perception
that it is destined to remain forever unknown.
51
Neither the practice of yoga nor the reflection of
metaphysics is alone adequate to comprehend the Real. Neither can inner peace
affirm it nor can intellect negate it.
52
Not for the finite mind is there to be knowledge
of Ein Soph, the Hebrew philosopher's idea of the Infinite, what he terms
"the Most Hidden of the Hidden."
53
Leave God alone! Why must men forever bleat and
whimper, praise and glorify That of which they know nothing and imagine
everything! Why don't they write and fight, argue and quarrel about those things
which they can touch or know, see or examine?
54
There is no discernible sign, form, or clue by
which the Absolute, the Unmanifest, may be known. It is wrapped in blackness,
which is why the Manifested World is symbolized by light, why its colour is
white when contrasted with the other.
55
The great Mystery remains where it always has been
- untouched by man's feelings and undefined by his thoughts.
56
Human mentality cannot comprehend the real nature
of this mysterious substratum of all existence. Human understanding cannot
assimilate that which utterly transcends it.
57
It is not a testable truth; it must be left the
mystery that it is.
58
If, out of the Silent Mind, words come forth to
affirm the consciousness of Consciousness, let it be known that the truth never
dies but springs back to life again. We should be glad, enormously happy, that
it is so.
59
Philosophy understands sympathetically but does
not agree practically with the Buddha's consistent refusal to explain the
ultimate realization. His counsel to disciples was: "What word is there to be
sent from a region where the chariot of speech finds no track on which to go?
Therefore to their questionings offer them silence only."
It is certainly hard to capture this transcendental indefinable experience in prosaic pen-and-ink notes. But is it really so impossible for the initiate to break his silence and voice his knowledge in some dim finited adumbration of the Infinite? To confess that intellectually we know nothing and can know nothing about the Absolute is understandable. But to say that therefore we should leave its existence entirely out of our intellectual world-view, is not. For although the exact definition and direct explanation of words are unable to catch the whole of this subtle experience within their receiving range because they are turned into ordinary human intellectual emotional and physical experience, they may nevertheless evoke an intuitive recognition of its beauty; they may suggest to sensitive minds a hint of its worth and they may arouse the first aspiration towards its attainment for oneself.
Why if this state transcends thinking, whether in words or pictures, have so many mystics nevertheless written so much about it? That they have protested at the same time the impossibility of describing the highest levels of their experience does not alter this curious fact. The answer to our question is that to have kept completely silent and not to have revealed that such a unique experience is possible and that such a supreme reality is existent would have been to have left their less fortunate fellow men in utter ignorance of an immensely important truth about human life and destiny. But to have left some record behind them, even if it would only hint at what it could not adequately describe, would be to have left some light in the darkness. And even though an intellectual statement of a super-intellectual fact is only like an indirect and reflected light, nevertheless it is better than having no light at all.
So long as men feel the need to converse with other men on this subject, so long as masters seek to instruct disciples in it, and so long as fortunate seers recognize the duty to leave some record - even if it be an imperfect one - of their enlightenment behind them for unfortunate humanity, so long will the silence have to be broken, despite Buddha, and the lost word uttered anew.(P)
60
It is the topic most worth writing about yet least
understood. Whoever has entered into a partial understanding - it would be too
much to demand more - of it, bears some responsibility. He must communicate with
his fellows.
61
There was one question which Jesus left
unanswered. It was Pontius Pilate's "What is truth?" There was one question
which Buddha heard several times but always refused to answer. It was "What is
Reality?" Since truth is the knowledge of reality, both amount to the same.
62
The poverty and limitation of human language in
this matter, however rich in most other references, makes it necessary to warn
the users and readers of words to be careful here. There can only be clues,
hints, traces.
63
What can a writer do when confronted with the work
of describing the Transcendental except make allusions to it, provide clues
which must be followed up by the reader himself, and affirm that it IS?
64
The mystic who tries to give utterance, which is
an intellectual act, to that which is itself unutterable, because it transcends
intellect, must be understood suggestively and not literally.
65
Because the Real is beyond the thinking
intellect's grasp, it cannot be formulated into ideas. Yet because we need
signposts and a goal to give guidance and direction, we must tentatively and
provisionally formulate it.
66
When the Chinese sages were confronted with the
need of telling others what their insight revealed, they said that anything
communicated could be affirmed in one way or negated in another, and that
therefore it would be quite incorrect. For behind Nature, or as they called it
"at the Head," was Mystery beyond all knowing, all thinking, all describing,
absolute Being beyond all relativity, that was also Non-Being.
67
All evaluative theories, opinions, judgements,
interpretations are assemblages of thoughts. Insofar as religious theories
depart from or lack direct insight into the Real, into what is, they are mere
thoughts. Where these thoughts enter into the recording, or the communication,
of the result of such insight they colour it, add to it, adulterate it. It is
when the person attempts to report the Impersonal that this danger exists.
68
Do not attempt to describe what God is, for
whatever you say would limit God, who would then become something inferior to
God. This is why Hebrew and Hindu bible alike say he is the Nameless One. But
you may describe what God is not, you may draw illustrations from human mind,
capacity, and character to suggest what some aspect of God may be like in a
quite different degree and way.
69
Once, when the Buddha was at Savatthi, a Brahmin
came into the presence of the Exalted One, exchanged greetings, and spake thus:
"What think you, Bho Gotama - Everything is?" "Everything is, that Brahmin, is
the chief world superstition." "Then indeed, Bho Gotama, nothing is?" "Nothing
is, that Brahmin, is the second world superstition." "What think you, Bho Gotama
- Everything is a unity?" "Everything is a unity, that Brahmin, is the third
world superstition." "Then, indeed, Bho Gotama - everything is a plurality?"
"Everything is a plurality, that Brahmin, is the fourth world superstition."
70
Some of the seers even call it blasphemy to
proclaim or write down a description of the Supreme Divinity. By this they mean
that the mind cannot bring Truth into any limited thought, so a description
would be false. The most appropriate act is silent awestruck reverence.
71
Words circumscribe meaning, confine it by the very
act of defining it. But the Real is infinite, outside all circumscription and
beyond all inclusion. If you must express it, you may do so correctly only by
silence. But it is essentially inexpressible.
72
Concepts, thoughts, and words would bring him down
from the plane of Being to that of thinking, which would not only be a descent
but also a falsification at worst, or a deformation at best.
73
The man who really believes that he can explain
nothing of the highest truth to any other man ought to follow his theory into
practice. He ought to write nothing and speak nothing about it, create nothing
artistically to suggest it. In short, he ought to act as if it does not exist.
74
It is a fundamental error to turn the pure mind
into an object of experience in an attempt to reach comprehension. Mind can know
everything else and is the inescapable condition of every experience, for by its
light every object and every event is revealed, but it cannot itself be known in
the same way that we know everything else. Ordinarily there is a knower and a
known, and mind would have to transcend such a relation were it to become aware
of itself, which means that it would have to transcend thinking itself. Mind
itself produces the categories of time, space, and cause which make world
experience possible and knowable - that is, thinkable - which is why it cannot
be grasped in the same way. The nature of mind is unique, and before its sublime
verity speech trembles into silence.
75
In affirming that the One alone exists, they imply
their own existence. The affirmation points to someone who affirms, so he must
be added to the One, making Two. The more they prattle about the One, the more
they proclaim, by inference, the Two.
76
We may perceive how the highest truth turns all
lesser doctrines into illusions and yet admits their validity on their own
level.
77
There is a beauty in the infinite reality which
outshines whatever beauty there is in the imaginative phantasy.
78
"With the lamp of Word one must go beyond Word." -
Lankavatara Sutra
79
The chasm between the Real and man seems entirely
impassable. The intellect is conditioned by its own finitude, by its particular
set of space and time perceptions. It is unable to function where absolutes
alone reign. The infinite eternal and absolute existence eludes the grasp of
man's logical thought. He may form mental pictures of it but at best they will
be as far off from it as a photograph is far off from flesh and blood.
Idea-worship is idol-worship. Everything else is an object of knowledge,
experienced in a certain way by ourself as the knower of it; but the Infinite
Real cannot be an object of anyone's knowledge simply because it cannot be
conditioned in any way whatsoever. It is absolute. If it is to be known to all
it must therefore be in a totally different way from that of ordinary
experience. It is as inaccessible to psychic experience as it is impenetrable by
thought and feeling. But although we may not directly know Reality, we may know
that it is, and that in some mysterious way the whole cosmic existence roots
from it. Thus whichever way man turns he, the finite creature, finds the door
closed upon his face. The Infinite and Absolute Essence is forever beyond his
vision, unreachable by his knowing capacity and inaccessible to his experience,
and will forever remain so. The point is so subtle that, unless its development
is expressed with great care here, it is likely to be misunderstood. Although
man must pause here and say, with Socrates, "None knoweth save God only" - for
with this conception he has gone as far as human thought can grasp such
mysteries - nevertheless he may know that the seers have not invented an
imaginary Reality. He has neither been left alone in his mortality nor abandoned
utterly to his finitude. The mysterious Godhead has provided a witness to its
sacred existence, a Deputy to evidence its secret rulership. And that Witness
and Deputy can be found for it sits imperishable in the very heart of man
himself. It is indeed his true self, his immortal soul, his Overself. Although
the ultimate principle is said to be inconceivable and unknowable, this is so
only in relation to man's ordinary intellect and physical senses. It is not so
in relation to a faculty in him which is still potential and unevolved -
insight. If it be true that even no adept has ever seen the mysterious absolute,
it is also true that he has seen the way it manifests its presence through
something intimately emanated from it. If the nameless formless Void from which
all things spring up and into which they go back is a world so subtle that it is
not really intellectually understandable and so mysterious that it is not even
mystically experienceable, we may however experience the strange atmosphere
emanating from it, the unearthly aura signifying its hidden presence.(P)
80
Although God is inaccessible to man, man is not
inaccessible to God. [Note attached to para reads, PB: Use above as the basic
principle of Agnostic Mysticism in former class XIII.]
81
When we seek comprehension of that aspect of the
Overself where there is no universe at all, no activity, no ideation, we seem to
enter a great void, an utter no-thingness. The "I" cannot breathe in this
rarefied atmosphere. And yet it would be the supreme illusion in a world of
illusions to regard this void as the abode of unreality.
No object in the universe corresponds to the Overself; therefore we are forced to term it "The Void," but the existence of all objects is only explained by its own.
We may fittingly compare the Overself with any catalytic agent of chemistry which, unaltered itself, activates other substances by its presence. We may carry the comparison further and point out that just as the catalyst is ultimately a product of the same primal stuff as these substances, however different they appear to be, so the thoughts and things whose play constitutes the universe are ultimately of the same primal essence as the Overself.
82
This is passive Mind or pure Being, the First, the
Unconditioned Origin of all, the Inconceivable and Unknowable. It is beyond the
capacity of any individual entity to penetrate this mystery of mysteries and
still remain an individual. A mediating principle is necessary. This exists in
the Overself, in man's higher self, which is nothing less than a germ of that
same infinite life. If this were not present in man, not only would mystical
experience be impossible for him but all religious intuition would be mythical
to him.
83
"I and the Father are One," said Jesus. The
student asks why the individual should not therefore know the One as oneself?
The saying of Jesus presuppposes duality and difference, which explains why the
awareness such a student seeks does not exist; it can come only after all
duality disappears - even that mystical monism which seems to have
transcended duality but has not really. The theosophy of The Secret
Doctrine does not reach the height of the doctrine of Nonduality. That is
quite all right because it purported to be only a "fragment" of the truth.
H.P.Blavatsky wrote that the Causeless Cause, as she termed it, the Absolute,
was unknowable and that seekers could reach only to the Logos. Dr. Brunton does
not teach that. If all else but the Absolute is illusory (including the Logos)
then the path is not worthwhile because truth is unattainable. This philosophy
says that Truth is attainable and the so-called Absolute can be
realized by man. Some theosophic studies will help in the understanding of the
teachings of this path, while others will bring the student's mind into direct
conflict with them. He will have to decide for himself whether to give his
loyalty to the one or the other, but this doctrine cannot be mixed with any
other save at the risk of diluting its truth. This path is based solely on the
appeal to reason, never to belief, whereas there are many items of theosophy
which no one can prove.
84
Wang Yang-ming and Chou Tun-Yi taught a metaphysic
which made "Principle" the Real, the Unique and the Absolute, the ground of all
being and existence: they taught that man's nature was aligned with Principle
but he had to find his way to this consciousness: they taught that he has the
capacity but must realize it, to think and live in goodness, sincerity; finally
that the truth, being innate in him, could be found by intuiting it.
85
To say that the ultimate Reality is utterly
unknowable is quite correct from the standpoint of the actual human situation
involving ordinary and familiar instruments of knowledge, namely, the body's
senses and the mind's reasonings. But it is not quite correct from the
standpoint of possible human attainment. What neither sense nor intellect can
find, a third and higher faculty, now latent, may find. This is the faculty of
insight.
86
This is the wordless and pictureless discovery
that insight reveals and intelligence confirms. This is the beautiful source of
all life and unfailing sustainer of all beings.
87
It is a wisdom-knowledge which is no mere
intellectual abstraction but a truly living, deeply felt, and mystically
experienced evolution discovery or event - call it as you wish.
88
They are all aware of relative truths concerning
this realm of human affairs, but very few are aware of the relativity itself
which limits them. The basis of unchanging verities can only be gnosis,
the deepest kind of perception, the final awareness of mind's absolute
experience which swallows up the knower himself by carrying him outside time.
This is rarely taught in religion.
89
The inability of little man to enter into the
knowledge of transcendent God does not doom him to perpetual ignorance. For God,
being present in all things, is present in him too. The flame is still in the
spark. Here is his hope and chance. Just as he knows his own personal identity,
so God knows God in him as the Overself. This divine knowing is continually
going on, whether he is awake or asleep, whether he is an atheist or a
saint. He can share in it too, but only by consenting to submit his
intellect to his intuition. This is not an arbitrary condition imposed by
theocratic whim but one which inheres in the very nature of the knowing
processes. By accepting it, he may put the whole matter to the test and learn
for himself, in due time, his other nonpersonal identity.(P)
90
The divine essence is Unknowable to the finite
intellect, but knowable, in a certain sense, by the deepest intuition. And this
sense can arise to the man previously prepared by instruction and purification,
or by studied knowledge and purification, if he puts away thoughts, even those
about the essence, or lets them lapse of their own accord, and awaits its
self-disclosure patiently, reverently, lovingly - three conditions of high
importance.(P)
91
The Godhead is too far beyond man's conception,
experience, and knowledge; the Absolute cannot be comprehended by his finite
capacity. It is indeed the Unknowable. Now metaphysical ideas must be
metaphysically understood. If they are understood sensuously or physically, or
if an eternal principle is replaced by a historical person, truth is turned to
idolatry. Those who are able to hold such a lofty conception of its fleshly
appearance as an Incarnation cannot cramp it into the little box of human
individuality. Any prophet who makes such a claim repeatedly is merely
emphasizing his person at the cost of his Overself, is glorifying his little
self rather than the Infinite whose messenger he claims to be. The man who
understands his own limitations and the Absolute's lack of them will never claim
equality with it. Such a man will never ask others to show him the reverence
which they ought to show to the pure spirit nor to give him the allegiance which
they ought to give to God. Whereas nearly all popular religions set up as an
intermediary between It and us "The Divinely Incarnate Prophet" or else "The Son
of God," philosophy depersonalizes it and sets up instead the true self, the
divine soul in man. For even the prophets and avatars whom the divine Godhead
sends down to mankind are sent not only to teach them that this Absolute exists
but also to direct them towards the realization of their own true inner self.
The true self will then reflect as much of the divine as it is able to, but it
can never exhaust it. It is the Overself and, through the threefold path, is
Knowable. In the Unique Godhead, ever mysterious in its unmanifested
self-existence, there rises and sets, like the sun's light, the manifested
World-Mind, in which - in its turn - there rises and sets all this wonderful
cosmos of which it is the very soul. The first is forever beyond man but the
second is always accessible to man as the Overself within him.
92
We cannot know it as it is but only can know that
the creative God could not have been there if IT had not been there first. We
cannot give it any name for no picture, no concept, no thinkable nature is
within our apprehension concerning IT. At the enunciation of its mere
possibility we are hushed into silence, struck dumb. Let us retreat, then, into
territory where a contact is possible, where GOD and MAN may meet.
93
This is the Great Aloneness, where no other living
creature may intrude - no matter who - where man and God mingle.
94
When we, human beings, through our most
enlightened representatives, look for the highest principle of being, life,
existence, consciousness - the Supreme Power, the Origin of all Substance, the
ultimate Deity, in fact - we find It is one and the same thing looked at from
different human standpoints. It is nameless but we may call it, Mind. There is
no point where we can come into contact with It for It transcends everything,
every human capacity. When we look for It in relation to the universe which
includes us, we may call It World-Mind, or in religious terminology, God. Here
there is real possibility of a contact, for in our innermost self the connection
is already there.
95
Let us not deceive ourselves and dishonour the
Supreme Being by thinking that we know anything at all about IT. We know
nothing. The intellect may formulate conceptions, the intuition may give
glimpses, but these are our human reactions to IT. Even the sage, who has
attained a harmony with his Overself, has found only the godlike within
himself. Yes, it is certainly the Light, but it is so for
him, for the human being. He still stands as much outside the divine
Mystery as everyone else. The difference is that whereas they stand in darkness
he stands in this Light.(P)
96
Philosophic meditation will show him that his own
existence is rooted in that of a higher power, while philosophic study will
explain some of the laws governing his experiences from birth to death. But at
the bottom of existence and experience is ineffable incomprehensible Mystery.
97
Neither the senses nor the intellect can tell us
anything about the intrinsic nature of this Infinite Mind. Nevertheless we are
not left in total ignorance about it. From its manifestation, the cosmos, we may
catch a hint of its Intelligence. From its emanation, the soul, we may catch
more than a hint of its Beneficence. "More than," I say, because the emanation
may be felt within us as our very being whereas the manifestation is outside us
and is apart.(p. 383)
98
After the last sermon has been preached, the last
book written, Mind remains the Mystery behind all mysteries. Thought cannot
conceive It, imagination picture It, nor language express It. The greatest
mystic's experience is only his own personal reaction to Its atmosphere, as from
a distance. Even this blows him to pieces like a bomb, but the fact that he can
collect them together again afterwards shows that it must have been present in
some inexplicable supernormal way and was not lost, both to continue existence
and to remember the event.(P)
99
The topic with which all such metaphysical
thinking should end after it has pondered on mentalism is that out of which the
thinking principle itself arises - Mind - and it should be considered under its
aspect as the one reality. When this intellectual understanding is brought
within one's own experience as fact, when it is made as much one's own as a
bodily pain, then it becomes direct insight. Such thinking is the most
profitable and resultful in which he can engage, for it brings the student to
the very portal of Mind where it stops activity by itself and where the
differentiation of ideas disappears. As the mental muscles strain after this
concept of the Absolute, the Ineffable and Infinite, they lose their materialist
rigidity and become more sensitive to intimations from the Overself. When
thinking is able to reach such a profound depth that it attains utter
impersonality and calm universality, it is able to approach the fundamental
principle of its own being. When hard thinking reaches a culminating point, it
then voluntarily destroys itself. Such an attainment of course can take place
deep within the innermost recesses of the individual's consciousness alone.(P)
100
He will arrive at the firm unshakeable
conviction that there is an inward reality behind all existence. If he wishes he
may go farther still and seek to translate the intellectual idea of this reality
into a conscious fact. In that case the comprehension that in the quest of pure
Mind he is in quest of that which is alone the Supreme Reality in this entire
universe, must possess him. The mystery of Mind is a theme upon which no
aspirant can ever reflect enough: first, because of its importance, and second,
because of its capacity to unfold his latent spirituality. He will doubtless
feel cold on these lofty peaks of thought, but in the end he will find a
heavenly reward whilst still on earth. We are not saying that something of the
nature of mind as we humans know it is the supreme reality of the universe, but
only that it is more like that reality than anything else we know of and
certainly more like it than what we usually call by the name of "matter." The
simplest way to express this is to say that Reality is of the nature of our mind
rather than of our body, although it is Mind transcending the familiar phases
and raised to infinity. It is the ultimate being the highest state. This is the
Principle which forever remains what it was and will be. It is in the universe
and yet the universe is in it too. It never evolves, for it is outside time. It
has no shape, for it is outside space. It is beyond man's consciousness, for it
is beyond both his thoughts and sense-experience, yet all consciousness springs
mysteriously out of it. Nevertheless man may enter into its knowledge, may enter
into its Void, so soon as he can drop his thoughts, let go his sense-experience,
but keep his sense of being. Then he may understand what Jesus meant when
saying: "He that loseth his life shall find it." Such an accomplishment may
appear too spectral to be of any use to his matter-of-fact generation. What is
their madness will be his sanity. He will know there is reality where they think
there is nothingness.(P)
101
To keep this origin always at the back of one's
mind because it is also the end of all things, is a necessary practice. But this
can only be done if one cultivates reactionlessness to the happenings of every
day. This does not mean showing no outward reaction, but it does mean that deep
down indifference has been achieved - not an empty indifference, but one based
on seeing the Divine essence in all things, all creatures, and a Divine meaning
in all happenings.(P)
102
There is only this one Mind. All else is a
seeming show on its surface. To forget the ego and think of this infinite and
unending reality is the highest kind of meditation.
103
First, remember that It is appearing as ego;
then remember to think that you are It; finally cease to think of
It so you may be free of thoughts to be It!(P)
104
To attach oneself to a guru, an avatar, one
religion, one creed, is to see the stars only. To put one's faith in the
Infinite Being and in its presence within the heart, is to see the vast empty
sky itself. The stars will come and go, will disintegrate and vanish, but the
sky remains.(P)
105
In a world of constantly changing scenes,
fortunes, health, and relationships, a precious possession is the knowledge that
there is the unseen Unchanging Real. Still more precious is awareness within
oneself of ITS ever-presence.
106
In the moment that there dawns on his
understanding the fact of Mind's beginninglessness and deathlessness, he gains
the second illumination, the first being that of the ego's illusoriness and
transiency.(P)
107
Not to find the Energy of the Spirit but the
Spirit itself is the ultimate goal - not its power or effects or qualities or
attributes but the actuality of pure being. The aspirant is not to stop short
with any of these but to push on.
108
He will have gone far intellectually when he can
understand the statement that mind is the seeker but Mind is the sought.(P)
109
He who puts his mind on the Unlimited instead of
on the little parts, who does not deal with fractions but with the all-absorbing
Whole, gains some of Its power.
110
What we need to grasp is that although our
apprehension of the Real is gradual, the Real is nonetheless with us at every
moment in all its radiant totality. Modern science has filled our heads with the
false notion that reality is in a state of evolution, whereas it is only our
mental concept of reality which is in a state of evolution.(P)
111
Thinking can, ordinarily, only produce more
thoughts. Even thinking about truth, about reality, however correct it be,
shares this limitation. But if properly instructed it will know its place and
understand the situation, with the consequence that at the proper moment it will
make no further effort, and will seek to merge into meditation. When the merger
is successfully completed, a holy silence will pervade the consciousness which
remains. Truth will then be revealed of its own accord.(P)
112
When all thoughts are gone, when all vibration,
movement, or activity of the thinking faculty has ceased, then is the
self-revealing possible of Mind-in-itself, of Consciousness without its states.
113
Where the intellect is active it creates a
double result - the thought and the thinker. Where the enlightened man goes into
the Stillness this duality does not appear but Consciousness remains. It
contains nothing created by him. It is the Alone.
114
Every creature, from the most primitive amoeba
up to the most intellectual man, has some kind and degree of awareness; but only
the Illuminate has that toward which awareness itself is striving to attain -
Consciousness.
115
The "Void" means void of all mental activity and
productivity. It means that the notions and images of the mind have been emptied
out, that all perceptions of the body and conceptions of the brain have gone.(P)
116
Master Huang Po: "This Mind is here, now. But as
soon as any thought arises you miss it. It is like space ...unthinkable."
117
What Lao Tzu calls "the great Emptiness" is the
Ultimate Being, without form, Matterless and Motionless, ineffable, and
undescribable except by statements of what it is not. Those whose study can lead
them to this high level must then let go of words, abandon images,
representations, symbols, numberings, divisions, and dualities; must be ready to
enter the Stillness.
118
This is what Lao Tzu meant when he advised:
"Attain to the utmost Vacuity. Cling single-heartedly to Quietude."
119
Mentalism is the study of Mind and its product,
thoughts. To separate the two, to disentangle them, is to become aware of
Awareness itself. This achievement comes not by any process of intellectual
activity but by the very opposite - suspending such activity. And it comes not
as another idea but as extremely vivid, powerfully compelling insight.(P)
120
Nothing that the mind can think into mental
existence is IT.
121
Mind in its most unlimited sense is reality. A
man can know it only by the intuitive process of being it, in the same
manner in which he knows his name, which is not an intellectual process but an
immediate one.
122
We shall never grasp that totality of being with
our intellect, but we shall grasp it with the only thing capable of holding it,
with Consciousness.
123
The awareness of It as being It is
something other, and more, than the mere emptiness of mind.
124
God is unfathomable and unknowable. Every idea
of Him is a false idea, created to satisfy our little human mental need but also
sharing our finite human limitations. That is, the idea describes something
about man, nothing about God. We prefer to delude ourselves with such images and
idols, rather than to take off our shoes at the very remembrance of God and
enter the mosque of the Silenced Mind. Here, at least, we get no untrue concepts
which have to be discarded in the end. Here the awakened faint or strong
intuition may get intimations godlike in quality, of THAT which must always
remain incomprehensible to the intellect.
125
Those who look to God as a healer, or as a
mother, or as a father, or as a teacher are still looking for God within the
ego. They are thinking of God only in relation to themselves because their first
interest is in themselves. But those who look to God in the Void, and not in any
relationship or under any image or idea, really find God. Therefore they really
find "the peace which passeth understanding."
126
All attempts to explain the inexplicable, to
describe the inscrutable, to communicate the ineffable must end in failure if
they begin and end in words. For then it is merely intellect talking to
intellect. But let the attempts be made in the stillness, let "heart speak to
heart," and the Real may reveal itself.
127
All talk of things being inside or outside the
mind is submission to the spell of a vicious spatial metaphor. All language is
applicable to things and thoughts, but not to the august infinity of mind. Here
every word can be at best symbolic and at worst irrelevant, while remaining
always as remote from definable meaning as unseen and unseeable universes are
from our own. We have lived in illusions long enough. Let us not yield the last
grand hope of man to the deceptive sway of profane words. Here there must and
shall be SILENCE - serene, profound, mysterious, yet satisfying beyond all
earthly satisfactions.
128
It is not possible for a finite human being to
grasp the infinite significance of the Infinite Being, nor to gather any true
idea about such Being. He can only think what It is not: otherwise he must
retreat into utter silence, not merely of speech alone but also of mental
imaginative and passional activity.
129
(a) Awareness alone is whatever it turns
its attention to, seems to exist at the time: only that. If to Void then there
is nothing else. If to world, then world assumes reality. (b) What is it that is
aware? The thought of a point of awareness creates, gives reality at the lowest
level to ego, and at the highest to Higher Self but when the thought itself is
dropped there is only the One Existence, Being, in the divine Emptiness. It is
therefore the Source of all life, intelligence, form. (c) The idea held becomes
direct experience for the personality, the awareness becomes direct
perception.(P)
130
Awareness is the very nature of one's being: it
is the Self.(P)
131
Every man credits himself with having
consciousness during the wakeful state. He never questions or disputes the fact.
He does not need anyone else to tell it to him, nor does he tell it to himself.
It is the surest part of his knowledge. Yet this is not a knowing which he
brings into the field of awareness. It is known differently from the way other
facts are known by him. This difference is that the ego is absent from the
knowledge - the fact is not actually perceived.(P)
132
Reason tells us that pure Thought cannot know
itself because that would set up a duality which would be false if pure thought
is the only real existence. But this is only reason's inability to measure what
transcends itself. Although all ordinary experience confirms it, extraordinary
experience refutes it.(P)
133
Consciousness is the best witness to its own
existence.
134
When we experience Mind through the senses we
call it matter. When we experience it through imagination or thinking we
call it idea. When we experience it as it is in its own pure being, we
call it Spirit, or better, Overself.
135
In grammar, sentences are built up basically
from three things: a subject, a verb, and an object, with the subject acting
upon the object through the verb. A sentence is not considered complete unless
it has these three things, this relationship between the subject and the object.
In metaphysics, every experience also requires a subject and an object - a
person or a thing who is affected by or produces an action on a second entity.
All statements about human experiences must include this subject-object
relationship. Thus, in the relationship between a man and his thoughts, the man
is the subject and the thoughts are the objects. In Oriental metaphysics, a
similar relationship holds good - except that the subject is there called the
seer, the object is called the seen, and seeing describes the relationship
between the two. All existence in the time-space order as experienced by a human
being necessarily has these three elements within it. There is no subject
without an object, no seer without a seen plus the relationship or the action
between them. They are always linked together. If however we look beyond this
existence to the timeless spaceless Reality, it is obvious that there can be no
such relationship therein, for it is completely nondual, the Reality which never
changes, which has no second thing. We learn from mentalism that this Reality is
Mind. If we are ever to find it we know that it cannot be found as if it were a
second thing, with us as subject and it as object. In that sense we can never
find it, but only substitutes which themselves are in duality. We have indeed to
set up a search for the kind of consciousness where there is no object to be
experienced and therefore where there is no subject-ego to receive the
experience. Such is the unified consciousness which is none other than Mind
itself. We can use this criterion not only with reference to our experiences of
the world but also with reference to our inner mystical experiences and check
from this on what level they really are.
136
Mind has no second thing to know and experience,
no world. Nor can anyone know and experience Mind and yet remain an individual,
a person.(P)
137
When thought of the little self vanishes, even
gloating thought of its spiritual rapture, and That which is behind or beyond it
in utter stillness is alone felt and known, then he is said to experience "the
touch of the Untouchable," as ancient sages called it.
138
Asparsa Yoga: The literal meaning is
"non-touching" or, possibly, "touching the Untouchable." Everything is either
related to, or in contact with, something else, that is, in touch with it. But
in the state of Asparsa there is no such possibility because the nondual
Brahman is alone acknowledged, THAT which is uncontacted by anything.
139
If you believe that you have had the ultimate
experience, it is more likely that you had an emotional, or mental, or mystic
one. The authentic thing does not enter consciousness. You do not know
that it has transpired. You discover it is already here only by looking back at
what you were and contrasting it with what you now are; or when others recognize
it in you and draw attention to it; or when a situation arises which throws up
your real status. It is a permanent fact, not a brief mystic "glimpse."(P)
140
The true union, completely authentic and
completely beatific, where mind melts into Mind without the admixture of
personal wish or traditional suggestion, cannot be properly described in words.
For he who experiences it may know its onset or its end because of the enormous
contrast with his ordinary self, but he will not know its full height simply
because he will not even know that he is experiencing it. For to do so would
be to re-introduce the ego again and thus fall away from the purity of the
union. There would then be admixture - which is the fate of most unions.(P)
141
All teachings which try to inform us what the
Real is like can only honestly do so if they use negative terms: they can only
say what it is not like. For where is the individual who can continue to exist
in its discovery and note its nature or attributes? His limited consciousness
has dissolved in the larger one. Only afterwards, when looking back at the
experience, dare he say that the experience itself was ineffable but what
it concerned was incomprehensible; it was luminous, but that which shone was an
unseen power.
142
The actual experience alone can settle this
argument. This is what I found: The ego vanished; the everyday "I" which the
world knew and which knew the world, was no longer there. But a new and diviner
individuality appeared in its place, a consciousness which could say "I AM" and
which I recognized to have been my real self all along. It was not lost, merged,
or dissolved: it was fully and vividly conscious that it was a point in
universal Mind and so not apart from that Mind itself. Only the lower self, the
false self, was gone but that was a loss for which to be immeasurably
grateful.(P)
143
When you speak of "an experience" you imply that
first, there is an experiencer and second, there is an object of which he has an
experience. That is, you refer to the realm of duality. It may be lofty,
inspiring, unusual, but it is an event with a beginning and an ending; it is
inside time, however variously the sense of time changes. It is not to be
identified with the Real.
144
The ordinary person is quite incapable of
penetrating the absolute. The extraordinary person - the genius - may get
flashes of intuition which reflect some truths that lift him above the little
self. But no one really attains the absoluteness without getting dissolved in
it, without knowing and remembering nothing of it. Those who claim these "unions
with God" are really describing something quite different. Too often they are
overwhelmed by their experience and quite naturally take it to be outside
relativity when it is in fact a higher degree of it.
145
The question of "I" and of self-consciousness in
any form, whether universal or personal, vanishes when the truth is known
because there is none then to mark out selfhood of any kind. When it is
understood that the mind cannot become an object to itself, it will be
understood that everything one may say about it will merely impose an illusory
limitation upon it. There are not two thoughts, the ego and the universal self,
to enter into relationship in the final stage.
146
The ocean of infinite impersonal being closes
over the man's ego, and he is forever submerged in anonymity, never again to see
or be seen.
147
The final grade of inner experience, the deepest
phase of contemplation, is one where the experiencer himself disappears, the
meditator vanishes, the knower no longer has an object - not even the Overself -
to know for duality collapses. Because this grade is beyond the supreme "Light"
experience where the Overself reveals its presence visually as a dazzling mass,
shaft, ball, or ray of unearthly radiance which is seen whether the bodily eyes
are open or closed, it has been called the divine darkness.(P)
148
He can find the nothingness within himself only
after he has evaluated the nothingness of himself. The mystery of the Great Void
does not disclose itself to the smugly satisfied or the arrogantly proud or the
intellectually conceited.(P)
149
The truth becomes self-evident on this highest
level and needs no endorsement from anything or anyone outside. It puts the
searching intellect and the aspiring emotions back in their place as mere
channels for its use.
150
Here is the most private experience anyone can
have - to be alone with the Alone!
151
To return to the Source is to hold on until you
immerse yourself in the threefold being of Time, Space, and Mind which together
make the One, the Source of God.
152
What the Sage Plotinus called the First
Principle, the One, is as high as enlightenment can bring the seeker.
153
In this astonishing revelation, he discovers
that he himself is the seeker, the teacher, and the sought-for goal.
154
Without keeping steadily in view this original
mentalness of things and hence their original oneness with self and Mind, the
mystic must naturally get confused if not deceived by what he takes to be the
opposition of Spirit and Matter. The mystic looks within, to self; the
materialist looks without, to world. And each misses what the other finds. But
to the philosopher neither of these is primary. He looks to that Mind of which
both self and world are but manifestations and in which he finds the
manifestations also. It is not enough for him to receive, as the mystic
receives, fitful and occasional illuminations from periodic meditation. He
relates this intellectual understanding to his further discovery got during
mystical self-absorption in the Void that the reality of his own self is Mind.
Back in the world once more he studies it again under this further light,
confirms that the manifold world consists ultimately of mental images, conjoins
with his full metaphysical understanding that it is simply Mind in
manifestation, and thus comes to comprehend that it is essentially one with the
same Mind which he experiences in self-absorption. Thus his insight actualizes,
experiences, this Mind-in-itself as and not apart from the sensuous world
whereas the mystic divides them. With insight, the sense of oneness does not
destroy the sense of difference but both remain strangely present, whereas with
the ordinary mystical perception each cancels the other. The myriad forms which
make up the picture of this world will not disappear as an essential
characteristic of reality nor will his awareness of them or his traffic with
them be affected. Hence he possesses a firm and final attainment wherein he will
permanently possess the insight into pure Mind even in the midst of physical
sensations. He sees everything in this multitudinous world as being but the Mind
itself as easily as he can see nothing, the imageless Void, as being but the
Mind itself, whenever he cares to turn aside into self-absorption. He sees both
the outer faces of all men and the inner depths of his own self as being but the
Mind itself. Thus he experiences the unity of all existence; not intermittently
but at every moment he knows the Mind as ultimate. This is the philosophic or
final realization. It is as permanent as the mystic's is transient. Whatever he
does or refrains from doing, whatever he experiences or fails to experience, he
gives up all discriminations between reality and appearance, between truth and
illusion, and lets his insight function freely as his thoughts select and cling
to nothing. He experiences the miracle of undifferentiated being, the wonder of
undifferenced unity. The artificial man-made frontiers melt away. He sees his
fellow men as inescapably and inherently divine as they are, not merely as the
mundane creatures they believe they are, so that any traces of an ascetical
holier-than-thou attitude fall completely a way from him.(P)
155
Only after he has worked his way through
different degrees of comprehension of the world whose passing his own
development requires, and even after he has penetrated the mystery beyond it,
does he come to the unexpected insight and attitude which frees him from both.
In other words he is neither in the Void, the One, or the Many yet nor is he not
in them. Truth thus becomes a triple paradox!(P)
156
In the highest level there are utterly
unalterable truths. They are not got by logic, worked out by intellect, or
discovered by observation. They are announced. No one can know their mysterious
source in the sense that we know anything else. It is unique, indescribable, and
hence unnameable, unimaginable, and beyond all the forms of worship given to all
other gods - nowhere to be found in place or time, history or commentary. It is
more honest to let the Mystery of Mysteries remain as it is than to repeat
ancient portrayals or create new ones - all the labour of the human ego's
trivial or even misleading ideation. Within that silent seeming void,
which is as near as most are likely to come, they may be pacified, content,
perhaps even dissolved during those utterly surrendered lapses.