FAITH
When the question of faith arises, the orthodox always think that it
is their religion, which is being spoken of. To have faith in a
religion, in the priests or clergy, in a certain dogma, ceremony, principle,
or in a certain form of teaching, this is what is usually
understood by the word faith. On the other hand, those who are intellectual
ad look at life from a different point of view say,
"Faith is blind, why should we believe blindly?"
To a mystic, faith is the unique power that works through the whole
of creation. He does not mean by faith a belief in a certain
religion or dogma or ceremony or book or teacher; he means trust, a
trust even in the absence of reason.
Many people possess this quality naturally, while others do not seem
to possess it. We may think that one person has brought
faith with him and another has not, because he has or has not that
quality. But when we study life minutely we find that there is
no soul, which does not possess faith. How true it is as the Prophet
says, ‘Every soul when born is a faithful follower, it is
afterwards that he doubts. If it were not so, we should never have
been able to learn the language we speak. Was it not
learned by faith, from infancy? When the mother says, ‘This is a tree’,
the child says ‘tree’; when she says, ‘This is water’ the
child calls it ‘water’. And there are many things, which the parents
speak of apart from ordinary every day matters, and the
child believes them, as they want him to believe. Whether the names
given to the things are right or wrong, the child takes them
as his guardians wish him to take them, for that is his natural tendency.
In the beginning every soul has faith. Then how is it that man loses
this quality which nature has bestowed on him? He losers it
by the knowledge of names and forms. As he grows he covers up his faith
with the knowledge of names and forms, calling that
‘learning’. At every step in his progress towards knowledge he compares
things and considers some things better than others,
saying of one thing, ‘This is true’, of another, ‘This is false’, ‘That
is what I can believe and rely upon’ and ‘This is what I
cannot believe and rely upon.’ The one thing he calls true, the other
false; but in reality neither is true or false. It is only at the
beginning of knowledge that man passes through this stage. Later, when
a person has raised himself above ordinary
knowledge, he arrives at a stage when he is able to say, ‘All that
I have called true is not true, and all I have called false is not
false He finds that whatever difference there is, is only a difference
of comparison. This point of view is difficult and vague, and
everybody does not perceive it.
The course of human life involves so many disappointments, so many failures,
so many heartaches, that no one can avoid
doubting. ‘He who has once burned his tongue with hot milk tries to
cool even buttermilk by blowing on it.’ When a man has
been deceived by one person, he distrusts ten people; when he has found
one person unreliable, he may perhaps consider a
hundred others to be so too. After failing in one thing he suspects
he will fail in a thousand other things. So many things take
away that natural and powerful quality which was at first present,
that faith which is the secret of the whole creation, the secret
of all success that can ever be attained in life. This faith is broken
by life’s discouraging experiences. When confidence in others
is lost, then confidence in self is lost also; and the more it is lost,
the more failures one meets. A doubting person considers
himself to be wise and one of simple faith to be a fool. Whoever he
sees he suspects; whatever he hears he questions whether
it is right or wrong. He will doubt even his friend in business, waiting
for the time to come when he can trust him. But that time
never comes. His very doubts create doubts in the mind of the suspected
person; and often the doubts come true as the effect
of the doubter’s thought; or at least it creates an illusion which
for the moment shows the pictures of his doubts.
How truly the story of Othello demonstrates this! The more he doubted
Desdemona, the more proofs for his doubts life
created. His belief was fed more and more by the illusory proofs, until
in the end he could not possibly believe the least thing
contrary to his doubts. So it is with our own lives. We doubt, and
by that very doubt that which we fear happens, because it is
created by us in the other person’s heart. Whether the actions we see
support our belief or only seem to support it, yet our
suspicion creates the desire in the doubted person.
We can experience the same thing with dogs. If we have the least fear
of a dog barking or biting, He will bark and come up to
us and bite us. If there is no fear in us, the dog will not come towards
us. The belief that makes us suspect that that a dog will
bite is enough to give the dog the desire to bite, because we are looking
for it to do so.
If we could only develop the quality which is called faith, about which
so much is said in the scriptures, in the Bible, in the
Qur’an, we should find what power it would carry. It is the secret
of all success.
We are here to fulfill the purpose of our life. What is that purpose?
Our desire, our inclination which is constantly at work in
our mind, that is the purpose of our life. If we are unable to fulfill
that inclination, we go from this world without accomplishing
our purpose. As Omar Khayyam says, ‘Heaven is the vision of fulfilled
desire, Hell is the shadow of a soul on fire.’ If the
desires are not fulfilled the soul is naturally on fire. But there
is no reason why the desire should not be fulfilled; the very
existence of a desire promises its fulfillment. In the heart of man
is the desire of God. The Qur’an says that without the will of
God not even a single atom can move. This shows that every wave of
thought and feeling, every motion and action is from
God. Every thought that comes to our mind is God’s thought, even if
it appears to be a thought of everyday life in the world.
Once man realizes that every activity and impulse that comes into his
mind is really from God, from that time he feels that it
must be fulfilled. If it is not fulfilled, it is man’s limitation that
is the cause of its hindrance; he has allowed his weakness to hinder
its accomplishment. It is man’s lack of faith that generally causes
failures. In faith is the secret of fulfillment or non-fulfillment of
every thought. There is no doubt about the fulfillment of a desire
if man’s faith works with it. But when one’s own reason and
doubt come and destroy the hope, one generally meets with failure.
What an important part faith plays in life! Can there be anything equal
to it? In the Arabic language it is called Iman. The whole
of religion is faith, however much people have called the separate
religions faith. Faith itself is a religion.
Does this mean that one is to believe and trust anyone blindly? Would
not that be a blind faith? Would it not be obscuring the
reason, the power of discrimination between right and wrong, between
possible and impossible? Suppose a person says you
are going to be a king, and you believe it, this would be a blind faith,
since there is no possibility of it being realized, still more
impossible would it be to believe if he said, ‘You are a king’, when
you see no sign of kingship in your life, but rather the
contrary!
But the point is that the first lesson to be learned is to have faith
in oneself. How many among us there are who have no faith in
themselves. It is this very lack that makes them have no faith in others.
Once a person has faith in himself, he can have faith in
others also. For instance, if one feels a person to be good and spiritual,
what does it matter if the whole world does not think
the same? But if a person says, ‘I do not know, perhaps the other person
thinks right, and I do not’, then he has no faith. He
does not know what faith is. He may have faith in a man, but yet as
the days go on the time comes when he will lose it. A
person who does not believe in himself cannot believe in anybody else,
and is really an unbeliever. Faith must begin within.
Belief in oneself should be so strong that even if a thousand people
say ‘no’, one will say ‘yes’. To look to others for every
opinion, not trusting oneself to say whether it is day or night is
to end by not only distrusting others but by developing a kind of
insanity.
Faith means self-confidence. The secret of faith is that it can be used
as a medicine, and it will be better than medicine; it can
be wealth, and greater than wealth; it can be a religion, and greater
than religion; happiness, and greater than happiness. For
nothing can buy or sell faith. If there is anything that can be called
the grace of God, it is faith and self-confidence. It is
something one can neither teach nor develop; it must be in one, and
one can only strengthen it by loving it, by enjoying it. It
must develop by itself.
Faith is in fact a power operating all through our lives, and imparted
to us from the time of our birth. This power is obscured as
soon as reason is developed, which occurs during the process of acquiring
the knowledge needed for merely maintaining life;
and then one loses one’s self-confidence as well as one’s confidence
in others. This is doubt, which is the greatest enemy of
the soul it its progress towards self-realization. It is removed as
soon as one sees that faith is really a power from God, by
which He seeks to express Himself through the individual.
Confidence is assured, not by blind belief but by careful insight into
the life, which surrounds us. The higher self is then able to
be like the rider on a horse, and directs all the affairs and actions
of the lower self. Faith defends the innate desire of the higher
self, and the more faith develops, the greater is its influence, through
us, upon our whole environment. Faith breeds faith. Also,
faith must dominate the reason and direct the reason; and it will do
this the more surely when we realize that every thought,
desire, and impulse that comes to our heart is from God; to be accomplished
for some greater purpose of His own.
Sometimes a person will say, ‘I had great faith once, but in the course
of my life I have met with people one could never trust.
They deceived me, and since then I have lost faith in everybody.’ That
person is much to be pitied; he has lost so much more
than anybody else has. The good quality, which was in him, has been
killed by unfortunate experiences. How important it is
that the heart of the faithful should be kept unbroken!
In India birds are made to fight as a sport. It is called Buttase. Two
birds are brought together on a table, while all stand round
to see the fun. As soon as the birds see one another they attack each
other. The owner of each bird thinks that his bird will
win, the prize will be his. But as soon as it appears as if one bird
will be beaten, the owner takes it away, saying to the other,
‘You have won, we will not continue the fight.’ This is because he
wants to save his bird from being disappointed. The bird
would then be without faith.
Those who have no faith in themselves, those whose faith is broken,
are like the bird, which is allowed to be beaten. However
strong he may become, there will always remain the impression in his
mind of having been beaten, and this he cannot bear.
It is like this with the elephant too, giant animal that he is. Once
it is beaten all his strength and power go. For years he will not
forget it. In spite of all that power which is within him, he will
never attack another elephant. The faith that really gave him his
power has all gone.
There is a Hindustani saying, ‘Failure and victory are both in the mind.’
As long as the mind has not failed a seeming failure
may be a victory, but if the mind has failed a seeming victory becomes
a failure. That great power which the mind has is nothing
but the power of faith. People who have done great works have not done
them because of their worldly heritage, for instances
occur in which people began life without a penny, and yet have ended
their lives the possessors of millions. They have had no
help to encourage them in life, or to raise them in life, they have
raised their position themselves.
So we see that reason has no part in faith. People may be called fanatics
because they work only by faith, their critics thinking
that faith only enables them to imagine things. But there are numberless
people who are thinking and reasoning all their lives,
asking themselves, ‘Shall I do this? How can I do that? How can I overcome
these obstacles? And all the time they are
thinking of the hindrances, or waiting for suitable circumstances to
arise, and they never do. Their whole life may be spent in
the pursuit of something which reason prevents them from attaining.
It is quite otherwise with faith. When there is faith there is no thought
about whether there are any means of accomplishing the
desire that has entered one’s mind, or whether there are no means.
This does not matter when faith is there, to care for and to
defend the thought, to rain upon the thought and make the plant grow
and bear fruit, so that one day one may see its
realization.
Ask those people who have led wonderful lives in the world. See what
they have to say about it. What does Christ say? What
does Mohammad say? Christ said to Peter, when he walked on the water,
‘O thou of little faith, wherefore didst thou doubt?
If Peter had had faith, he could have conquered the water.
In the different wars that the Prophet of Arabia had to face throughout
his life, what do we find? From the beginning to the end
there were wars. He was born an orphan, for his father was no longer
alive and his mother died in giving him birth. There were
no resources, either of money or of influence when the message was
given, later the whole community rose against him; even
his relatives were against him. What stood by him? It was his faith.
His call to his people was to have faith.
It once happened that when the army of the Prophet’s enemies had been
successful one among them by chance caught the
Prophet alone. He was kneeling on his chest, and wanted to kill him.
Buy before doing so, he said, ‘O Prophet, all your life
you have taught the name of God. Now tell me where your God is. Where
has he gone? And the Prophet called on the Name
of God, on whom he called night and day; and as soon as that Name came
to his mind, the strength of the whole world came
into the Prophet. With one bound he brought the man down, took his
sword in his hand, and said, ‘Who will save thee now,
since thou art again in my hands?’ And he answered, ‘Thou, Mohammad.’
And Mohammad said, ‘O man of little faith, till now
thou has not learned the lesson. Now thou has seen that my faith in
Him saved me. He has just saved me. If thou takest the
Name, He will save thee too. Ask Him!’
The strength of that faith and the hope it imparts, the power it gives, the might that faith can give, is there anything like it?
One person may doubt and doubt, one moment he believes that things will
come right, and then he fears that perhaps they will
not. Another person will trust, and he will be watching, and his trust
will become bigger with every experience.
There is a story of a Sufi who was travelling with a caravan through
Arabia. Among the travelers were some who had money
with them for their expenses. They came to a place where it was said
that robbers were likely to be and that everybody should
take care of his own purse as many caravans had been robbed in that
area. This young Sufi also had some money, but he
thought to himself, ‘I have no place to keep my money. I will find
some man with whom I can leave it. To whom can I give it
for safety?’ He was wondering if there could be any village or habitation,
but he could see only a tent some distance away from
where the caravan had come to a halt. So he went and found a man sitting
smoking his pipe in the tent. He went up to him and
said, ‘I do not know you, sir, but I have heard there are robbers here
and that many caravans have been robbed, and I am a
poor man. I thought I should protect my money, if I could only find
someone to whom I could trust it, having found this tent, I
feel I should entrust it to you. He left the purse, and returned to
the caravan. When he arrived he found that the caravan had
been robbed, and all had lost their money. He was very glad he had
escaped. They were all moaning and lamenting about their
losses. He thought that he at any rate was safe. Then they described
the robbers, saying how many of them had come, how w
many had been there.
He returned to the tent to fetch his money again. He found the same
man smoking there, but he was surrounded by many men,
for he proved to be the chief of the robbers. The others were all sitting
there, fighting and disputing what share each should
take, and the chief was helping them to divide their spoil. So the
young man was afraid to go nearer; and at the same time
could not help thinking how foolish he was not to have kept his money,
for while he was bringing it the robbers had come, and
so he would have escaped anyway. The others had lost everything, but
he had fooled himself. While he was thinking this, and
was about to turn away, the chief called out for him to be fetched.
He approached the chief trembling, because he believed that
now even his life was in danger.
The chief said, ‘Why did you come here, why are you turning back?’ The
young man asked, ‘Are you not the head of the
robbers? Then why should I not wish to go? What use can it be to come?’
The chief answered, ‘Man, I received your money
to keep; I did not rob you of it. You trusted me. The money is therefore
in my trust. Even if I am a robber, I am not dishonest.
I gain by robbery, not by breaking trust. You trusted me with your
money, and your money is safe. Here it is for you to take
back again.’ So the young man was delighted, reflecting what a good
thing trust is, inasmuch as one may have faith even in a
robber, for he had proved himself trustworthy.
We can see this in our everyday life. A servant, a helper, an assistant,
a co-worker, a partner, can be made either trustful or
distrustful, trustworthy or unworthy of trust; \\; This we do ourselves
by our own faith. How true it is that when faith is
beginning to fail, when doubts begin to come, the loss of faith goes
on until a person begins to doubt his nearest and dearest
friends. Husband can doubt wife; wife can doubt husband, brother can
doubt sister; parents can doubt children. One can
doubt one’s nearest friend, and in the end one doubts oneself. That
is the utmost limit; from then on life can be nothing less than
torture.
The question arises, is it right to cover up our reason and act according
to our faith? The answer is that it is not right. Reason is
the servant of faith, and faith is the king of reason. But failure
comes when reason becomes the king, and faith the servant.
Success comes when faith is king and reason is the servant. If faith
says, ‘I wish to open a factory’, reason replies, ‘Yes, you
can proceed with your factory in this way. You will be successful.’
Reason is the servant; faith is the first thing. Faith says, ‘I
will succeed; Reason says, ‘These are the different paths you will
have to take’. This is how faith is helped by reason.
It is very different when reason is king. When reason is king, it says,
‘Open a factory? Why, just look at yourself, without a
single penny in your pocket.’ Faith says, ‘You are right.’ Reason says,
‘You don’t know anything about a factory; how can
you pretend to carry on such work?’ And faith answers, ‘Yes, I will
not think about it any more.’ When reason is the leader of
faith, the result is failure, it is when faith is the leader of reason
that success comes.
With regard to trusting people a person may think, ‘Is it right to believe
in anything a person says? Is it right to trust
=everybody? There are many people who are not worthy of trust; shall
we then trust everybody in order to develop our trust?’
The answer is yes. Perhaps we will have failures, but we will only
trust another person when we trust ourselves, when we have
faith in ourselves then we will have faith in another. Without faith
in ourselves we can never have faith in another; to have faith in
another is to have faith in ourselves. It does not matter if once or
twice we are disappointed, but if we are afraid of being
disappointed even once more I our lives, perhaps we will doubt all
through life, and so there will never come a time when we
will be able to trust anybody, even ourselves. There are many things
that can develop our trust. Sometimes an unworthy person
can become worthy of trust.
The Hindus say that if one has faith in an idol-god that god will listen
and grant one’s desires, but if one has no faith in the God
of Heaven, even He Is helpless to do anything for one. The Bible says
that faith like a grain of mustard can remove mountains.
There is a story that a preacher was once speaking in a little village
in India. The peasants he was preaching to could not
understand philosophy or mysticism or the great problems of life. What
the preacher taught was, / Have faith in God; faith is
such a great virtue; and he told them that if a person repeated the
sacred word he would be able to walk on water.
Everyone was delighted to hear this, saying, ‘What a great thing! He
is always talking about the same thing.’ Next day an old
man came and said, ‘Sir, I cannot understand the deep problems of life,
but I was very delighted with your idea last evening.’
The preacher answered, ‘What was that?’ He said, ‘I was very much surprised.
Will you come and dine at my home? It will
be such an honor.’ The preacher said, ‘Yes, with great pleasure.’ A
day was appointed. When the day came, the man arrived
to fetch the preacher, and they set off together. On their way there
was a little river which had to be crossed. When they
reached the bank, the preacher said, ‘Where is the boat?’ ‘Why do you
ask for a boat?’ the peasant replied. ‘The other day
you said that when you use that sacred word you can walk on the water.
And I was very much astonished to find that it is so.
Why take a boat when it is only necessary to say that word? But the
preacher could not do it’ he was not a true teacher. So he
said to the old man, ‘You are my teacher. I have spoken, but you have
acted; and if I had had tour faith I should also have
been able to cross the water.’
This shows us that things sometimes seem obscured, as if in a mist,
as if seen through a dark glass. We fear beforehand that a
thing will never come that there will always be disappointments, failure,
sorrow. Depression comes on. We begin to think the
times will never alter, and the same conditions will always continue.
The only remedy to clear these clouds away is to look for
a better time, to hope for something better in life, to feel that every
thought, desire, and impulse that comes to our heart is from
Him. And that it is to be accomplished, with all that power, for some
purpose. No circumstances in our lives, not even friends
and advisors, nor our reason or our doubt should be allowed to prevent
the realization of our thoughts. It is through that one
thing, faith, that our thoughts are kept powerful and full of strength;
it is by nothing but that one thing: faith.