The Teacher Of Spirituality - Swamiji
THE TEACHER OF SPIRITUALITY
Every soul is destined to be perfect, and every being, in the
end, Karw is the result of whatever
we have been or thought in the past; and whatever we shall be in the future
will be the result of what we do or think now. But this does not preclude our
receiving help from outside; the possibilities of the soul are always quickened
by some help from outside, so much so that in the vast majority of cases in the
world, help from outside is almost absolutely necessary. Quickening influence
comes from outside, and that works upon our own potentialities; and then the
growth begins, spiritual life comes, and man becomes holy and perfect in the
end. This quickening impulse which comes from outside cannot be received from
books; the soul can receive impulse only from another soul, and from nothing
else. We may study books all our lives, we may become very intellectual, but in
the end we find we have not developed at all spiritually. It does not follow
that a high order of intellectual development always shows an equivalent
development of the spiritual side of man; on the other hand, we find cases
almost every day where the intellect has become very highly developed at
the expense of the spirit.
Now in intellectual development we can get much help from books,
but in spiritual development, almost nothing. In studying books, sometimes we
are deluded into thinking that we are being spiritually helped; but if we
analyse ourselves, we shall find that only our intellect has been helped, and
not the spirit. That is the reason why almost everyone of us can speak most
wonderfully on spiritual subjects, but when the time of action comes, we find
ourselves so woefully deficient. It is because books cannot give us that
impulse from outside. To quicken the spirit, that impulse must come from
another soul.
That soul from which this impulse comes is called the Guru, the
teacher; and the soul to which the impulse is conveyed is called the disciple,
the student. In order to convey this impulse, in the first place, the soul from
which it comes must possess the power of transmitting it, as it were, to
another; and in the second place, the object to which it is transmitted must be
fit to receive it. The seed must be a living seed, and the field must be ready
ploughed; and when both these conditions are fulfilled, a wonderful growth of
religion takes place. "The speaker of religion must be wonderful, so must
the hearer be"; and when both of these are really wonderful,
extraordinary, then alone will splendid spiritual growth come, and not
otherwise. These are the real teachers, and these are the real students.
Besides these, the others are playing with spirituality — just having a little
intellectual struggle, just satisfying a little curiosity — but are standing
only on the outward fringe of the horizon of religion. There is some value in
that; real thirst for religion may thus be awakened; all comes in course of
time. It is a mysterious law of nature that as soon as the field is ready the
seed must come, as soon as the soul wants religion,
the transmitter of religious force must come. "The
seeking sinner meeteth the seeking Saviour." When the power that attracts
in the receiving soul is full and ripe, the power which answers to that
attraction must come.
But there are great dangers in the way. There is the danger to
the receiving soul of mistaking its momentary emotion for real religious
yearning. We find that in ourselves. Many times in our lives, somebody dies
whom we loved; we receive a blow; for a moment we think that this world is
slipping between our fingers, and that we want something higher, and that we
are going to be religious. In a few days that wave passes away, and we are left
stranded where we were. We ofttimes mistake such impulses for real thirst after
religion, but so long as these momentary emotions are thus mistaken, that
continuous, real want of the soul will not come, and we shall not find the
"transmitter".
So when we complain that we have not got the truth, and that we
want it so much, instead of complaining, our first duty ought to be to look
into our own souls and find whether we really want it. In the
vast majority of cases we shall find that we are not fit; we do not want; there
was no thirst after the spiritual.
There are still more difficulties for the
"transmitter". There are many who, though immersed in ignorance, yet,
in the pride of their hearts, think they know everything, and not only do not
stop there, but offer to take others on their shoulders, and thus "the
blind leading the blind, they both fall into the ditch". The world is full
of these; everyone wants to be a teacher, every beggar wants to make a gift of
a million dollars. Just as the latter is ridiculous, so are these teachers.
How are we to know a teacher then? In the first place, the sun
requires no torch to make it visible. We do not light a candle to see the sun.
When the sun rises, we instinctively become aware of its rising; and when
a teacher of men comes to help us, the soul will instinctively know that
it has found the truth. Truth stands on its own evidences; it does not require
any other testimony to attest it; it is self-effulgent. It penetrates into the
inmost recesses of our nature, and the whole universe stands up and says,
"This is Truth." These are the very great teachers, but we can get
help from the lesser ones also; and as we ourselves are not always sufficiently
intuitive to be certain of our judgment of the man from whom we receive, there
ought to be certain tests. There are certain conditions necessary in the
taught, and also in the teacher.
The conditions necessary in the taught are purity, a real thirst
after knowledge, and perseverance. No impure soul can be religious; that is the
one great condition; purity in every way is absolutely necessary. The other
condition is a real thirst after knowledge. Who wants? That is the
question. We get whatever we want — that is an old, old law. He who wants,
gets. To want religion is a very difficult thing, not so easy as we generally
think. Then we always forget that religion does not consist in hearing talks,
or in reading books, but it is a continuous struggle, a grappling with our own
nature, a continuous fight till the victory is achieved. It is not a question
of one or two days, of years, or of lives, but it may be hundreds of lifetimes,
and we must be ready for that. It may come immediately, or it may not come in
hundreds of lifetimes; and we must be ready for that. The student who sets out
with such a spirit finds success.
In the teacher we must first see that he knows the secret of the
scriptures. The whole world reads scriptures — Bibles, Vedas, Korans, and
others; but they are only words, external arrangement, syntax, the etymology,
the philology, the dry bones of religion. The teacher may be able to find what
is the age of any book, but words are only the external forms in which things
come. Those who deal too much in words and let the mind run always in
the force of words lose the spirit. So the teacher must be able to know
the spirit of the scriptures. The network of words is like a
huge forest in which the human mind loses itself and finds no way out. The
various methods of joining words, the various methods of speaking a beautiful
language, the various methods of explaining the dicta of the
scriptures, are only for the enjoyment of the learned. They do not attain
perfection; they are simply desirous to show their learning, so that the world
may praise them and see that they are learned men. You will find that no one of
the great teachers of the world went into these various explanations of texts;
on their part there is no attempt at "text-torturing", no saying,
"This word means this, and this is the philological connection between
this and that word." You study all the great teachers the world has produced,
and you will see that no one of them goes that way. Yet they taught, while
others, who have nothing to teach, will take up a word and write a three-volume
book on its origin and use. As my Master used to say, what would you think of
men who went into a mango orchard and busied themselves in counting the leaves
and examining the colour of the leaves, the size of the twigs, the number of
branches, and so forth, while only one of them had the sense to begin to eat
the mangoes? So leave this counting of leaves and twigs and this note-taking to
others. That work has its own value in its proper place, but not here in the
spiritual realm. Men never become spiritual through such work; you have never
once seen a strong spiritual man among these "leaf-counters". Religion
is the highest aim of man, the highest glory, but it does not require
"leaf-counting". If you want to be a Christian, it is not necessary
to know whether Christ was born in Jerusalem or Bethlehem or just the exact
date on which he pronounced the Sermon on the Mount; you only require to feel the
Sermon on the Mount. It is not necessary to read two thousand words on when it
was delivered. All that is for the enjoyment of the learned. Let them have
it; say amen to that. Let us eat the mangoes.
The second condition necessary in the teacher is that he must be
sinless. The question was once asked me in England by a friend, "Why
should we look to the personality of a teacher? We have only to judge of what
he says, and take that up." Not so. If a man wants to teach me something
of dynamics or chemistry or any other physical science, he may be of any
character; he can still teach dynamics or any other science. For the knowledge
that the physical sciences require is simply intellectual and depends on
intellectual strength; a man can have in such a case a gigantic intellectual
power without the least development of his soul. But in the spiritual sciences
it is impossible from first to last that there can be any spiritual light in
that soul which is impure. What can such a soul teach? It knows nothing.
Spiritual truth is purity. "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall
see God". In that one sentence is the gist of all religions. If you have
learnt that, all that has been said in the past and all that it is possible to
say in the future, you have known; you need not look into anything else, for
you have all that is necessary in that one sentence; it could save the world,
were all the other scriptures lost. A vision of God, a glimpse of the beyond
never comes until the soul is pure. Therefore in the teacher of spirituality,
purity is the one thing indispensable; we must see first what
he is, and then what he says. Not so
with intellectual teachers; there we care more for what he says than what he
is. With the teacher of religion we must first and foremost see what he is, and
then alone comes the value of the words, because he is the transmitter. What
will he transmit, if he has not flat spiritual power in him? To give a simile:
If a heater is hot, it can convey heat vibrations, but if not, it is impossible
to do so. Even so is the case with the mental vibrations of the religious
teacher which he conveys to the mind of the taught. It is a question of
transference, and not of stimulating only our intellectual faculties. Some
power, real and tangible, goes out from the teacher and begins to grow in the
mind of the taught. Therefore the necessary condition is that the teacher must
be true.
The third condition is motive. We should see that he does not
teach with any ulterior motive, for name, or fame, or anything else, but simply
for love, pure love for you. When spiritual forces are transmitted from the
teacher to the taught, they can only be conveyed through the medium of love;
there is no other medium that can convey them. Any other motive, such as gain
or name, would immediately destroy the conveying medium; therefore all must be
done through love. One who has known God can alone be a teacher. When you see
that in the teacher these conditions are fulfilled, you are safe; if they are
not fulfilled, it is unwise to accept him. There is a great risk, if he cannot
convey goodness, of his conveying wickedness sometimes. This must be guarded
against; therefore it naturally follows that we cannot be taught by anybody and
everybody.
The preaching of sermons by brooks and stones may be true as a
poetical figure but no one can preach a single grain of truth until he has it
in himself. To whom do the brooks preach sermons? To that human soul only whose
lotus of life has already opened. When the heart has been opened, it can
receive teaching from the brooks or the stones — it can get some religious
teaching from all these; but the unopened heart will see nothing but brooks and
rolling stones. A blind man may come to a museum, but he comes and goes only;
if he is to see, his eyes must first be opened. This eye-opener of religion is
the teacher. With the teacher, therefore, our relationship is that of ancestor
and descendant; the teacher is the spiritual ancestor, and the disciple is the
spiritual descendant. It is all very well to talk of liberty and independence,
but without humility, submission, veneration, and faith, there will not be
any religion. It is a significant fact that where this relation still exists
between the teacher and the taught, there alone gigantic spiritual souls grow;
but in those who have thrown it off religion is made into a diversion. In
nations and churches where this relation between teacher and taught is not
maintained spirituality is almost an unknown quantity. It never comes without
that feeling; there is no one to transmit and no one to be transmitted to,
because they are all independent. Of whom can they learn? And if they come to
learn, they come to buy learning. Give me a dollar's worth of
religion; cannot I pay a dollar for it? Religion cannot be got that way!
There is nothing higher and holier than the knowledge which
comes to the soul transmitted by a spiritual teacher. If a man has become a
perfect Yogi it comes by itself, but it cannot be got in books. You may go and
knock your head against the four corners of the world, seek in the Himalayas,
the Alps, the Caucasus, the Desert of Gobi or Sahara, or the bottom of the sea,
but it will not come until you find a teacher. Find the teacher, serve him as a
child, open your heart to his influence, see in him God manifested. Our
attention should be fixed on the teacher as the highest manifestation of God;
and as the power of attention concentrates there, the picture of the teacher as
man will melt away; the frame will vanish, and the real God will be left there.
Those that come to truth with such a spirit of veneration and love — for them
the Lord of truth speaks the most wonderful words. "Take thy shoes from
off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground".
Wherever His name is spoken, that place is holy. How much more so is a man who
speaks His name, and with what veneration ought we to approach a man out of
whom come spiritual truths! This is the spirit in which we are to be taught. Such
teachers are few in number, no doubt, in this world, but the world is never
altogether without them. The moment it is absolutely bereft of these, it
will cease to be, it will become a hideous hell and will just drop. These
teachers are the fair flowers of human life and keep the world going; it is the
strength that is manifested from these hearts of life that keeps the bounds of
society intact.
Beyond these is another set of teachers, the Christs of the
world. These Teachers of all teachers represent God Himself in the form of man.
They are much higher; they can transmit spirituality with a touch, with a wish,
which makes even the lowest and most degraded characters saints in one second.
Do you not read of how they used to do these things? They are not the teachers
about whom I was speaking; they are the Teachers of all teachers, the greatest
manifestations of God to man; we cannot see God except through them. We cannot
help worshipping them, and they are the only beings we are bound to worship.
No man bath "seen" God but as He is manifested in the
Son. We cannot see God. If we try to see Him, we make a hideous caricature of
God. There is an Indian story that an ignorant man was asked to make an image
of the God Shiva, and after days of struggle he made an image of a monkey. So
whenever we attempt to make an image of God, we make a caricature of Him,
because we cannot understand Him as anything higher than man so long as we are
men. The time will come when we transcend our human nature and know Him as He
is; but so long as we are men we must worship Him in man. Talk as we may, try
as we may, we cannot see God except as a man. We may deliver great intellectual
speeches, become very great rationalists, and prove that these tales of God as
all nonsense, but let us come to practical common sense. What is behind this
remarkable intellect? Zero, nothing, simply so much froth. When next you hear a
man delivering great intellectual lectures against this worship of God, get
hold of him and ask him what is his idea of God, what he means by
"omnipotence", and "omniscience", and "omnipresent
love", and so forth, beyond the spelling of the words. He means nothing,
he cannot formulate an idea, he is no better than the man in the street who has
not read a single book. That man in the street, however, is quiet and does not
disturb the world, while the other man's arguments cause disturbance. He has no
actual perception, and both are on the same plane.
Religion is realisation, and you must make the sharpest
distinction between talk and realisation. What you perceive in your soul is
realisation. Man has no idea of the Spirit, he has to think of it with the
forms he has before him. He has to think of the blue skies, or the expansive
fields, or the sea, or something huge. How else can you think of God? So what
are you doing in reality? You are talking of omnipresence, and thinking of the
sea. Is God the sea? A little more common sense is required. Nothing is so
uncommon as common sense, the world is too full of talk. A truce to all this frothy
argument of the world. We are by our present constitution limited and bound to
see God as man. If the buffaloes want to worship God, they will see Him as a
huge buffalo. If a fish wants to worship God, it will have to think of Him as a
big fish. You and I, the buffalo, the fish, each represents so many different
vessels. All these go to the sea to be filled with water according to the shape
of each vessel. In each of these vessels is nothing but water. So with God.
When men see Him, they see Him as man, and the animals as animal — each
according to his ideal. That is the only way you can see Him; you have to
worship Him as man, because there is no other way out of it. Two classes of men
do not worship God as man — the human brute who has no religion, and the
Paramahamsa (highest Yogi) who has gone beyond humanity, who has thrown off his
mind and body and gone beyond the limits of nature. All nature has become his
Self. He has neither mind nor body, and can worship God as God, as can a
Jesus or a Buddha. They did not worship God as man. The other extreme is the
human brute. You know how two extremes look alike. Similar is the case with the
extreme of ignorance and the other extreme of knowledge; neither of these
worships anybody. The extremely ignorant do not worship God, not being
developed enough to feel the need for so doing. Those that have attained the
highest knowledge also do not worship God — having realised and become one with
God. God never worships God. Between these two poles of existence, if anyone
tells you he is not going to worship God as man, take care of him. He is an
irresponsible talker, he is mistaken; his religion is for frothy thinkers, it
is intellectual nonsense.
Therefore it is absolutely necessary to worship God as man, and
blessed are those races which have such a "God-man" to worship.
Christians have such a God-man in Christ; therefore cling close to Christ;
never give up Christ. That is the natural way to see God; see God in man. All
our ideas of God are concentrated there. The great limitation Christians have
is that they do not heed other manifestations of God besides Christ. He was a
manifestation of God; so was Buddha; so were some others, and there will be
hundreds of others. Do not limit God anywhere. Pay all the reverence that you
think is due to God, to Christ; that is the only worship we can have. God
cannot be worshipped; He is the immanent Being of the universe. It is only to
His manifestation as man that we can pray. It would be a very good plan, when
Christians pray, to say, "in the name of Christ". It would be wise to
stop praying to God, and only pray to Christ. God understands human failings
and becomes a man to do good to humanity. "Whenever virtue subsides and
immorality prevails, then I come to help mankind", says Krishna. He also
says, "Fools, not knowing that I, the Omnipotent and Omnipresent God of
the universe, have taken this human form, deride Me and think that cannot
be." Their minds have been clouded with demoniacal ignorance, so they
cannot see in Him the Lord of the universe. These great Incarnations of God are
to be worshipped. Not only so, they alone can be worshipped; and on the days of
their birth, and on the days when they went out of this world, we ought to pay
more particular reverence to them. In worshipping Christ I would rather worship
Him just as He desires; on the day of His birth I would rather worship Him by
fasting than by feasting — by praying. When these are thought of, these great
ones, they manifest themselves in our souls, and they make us like unto them.
Our whole nature changes, and we become like them.
But you must not mix up Christ or Buddha with hobgoblins flying
through the air and all that sort of nonsense. Sacrilege! Christ coming into a
spiritualistic seance to dance! I have seen that presence in this country. It
is not in that way that these manifestations of God come. The very touch of one
of them will be manifest upon a man; when Christ touches, the whole
soul of man will change, that man will be transfigured just as He was. His
whole life will be spiritualised; from every pore of his body spiritual power
will emanate. What were the great powers of Christ in miracles and healing, in
one of his character? They were low, vulgar things that He could not help doing
because He was among vulgar beings. Where was this miracle-making done? Among
the Jews; and the Jews did not take Him. Where was it not done? In Europe. The
miracle-making went to the Jews, who rejected Christ, and the Sermon on the
Mount to Europe, which accepted Him. The human spirit took on what was true and
rejected what was spurious. The great strength of Christ is not in His miracles
or His healing. Any fool could do those things. Fools can heal others, devils
can heal others. I have seen horrible demoniacal men do wonderful miracles.
They seem to manufacture fruits out of the earth. I have known fools and
diabolical men tell the past, present, and future. I have seen fools heal at a
glance, by the will, the most horrible diseases. These are powers, truly, but
often demoniacal powers. The other is the spiritual power of Christ which will
live and always has lived — an almighty, gigantic love, and the words of truth
which He preached. The action of healing men at a glance is forgotten, but His
saying, "Blessed are the pure in heart", that lives today. These
words are a gigantic magazine of power — inexhaustible. So long as the human
mind lasts, so long as the name of God is not forgotten, these words will roll
on and on and never cease to be. These are the powers Jesus taught, and the
powers He had. The power of purity; it is a definite power. So in worshipping
Christ, in praying to Him, we must always remember what we are seeking. Not
those foolish things of miraculous display, but the wonderful powers of the
Spirit, which make man free, give him control over the whole of nature, take
from him the badge of slavery, and show God unto him.
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