Although it is no exaggeration to say
that there are numberless religions
in the world. And every religion has so many different
sects and churches and chapels that this life is not long enough to
study them. Indeed it would be impossible even to count
them in one lifetime – yet that which should really be studied proves
to be something very different, for the thinker perceives
that these many different religions have sprung out of one religion.
Religion may begin in the East or the West, in the South or
the North, yet it will always end in many religions. The more we ponder
upon how all can have come from one, the plainer
becomes the fact that all are expressions of one religion. And this
religion is nature’s religion.
The question as to what exactly this
religion really is and how one
may get to know it, can only be answered by those who
have raised themselves beyond the limitations of ceremonial and dogma
in which they are always first instructed. But rising
above a religion does not mean giving up the religion. It means being
fully benefited by the religion. Those who say they have
given up their religion are not above it; those alone are above it
who have arrived at a full understanding of the spirit of religion.
As soon as the spirit of religion has become manifest, then indeed
are the eyes blessed. The distinctions and differences of
castes and creeds and religions all vanish away in one moment of time.
Once this is perceived, there ceases to
be anything to criticize; it
is all one what form of worship is to be used, what church is
to be attended, what book is to be read. From now on it is seen that
there is no such thing as a heretic, no such thing as a
heathen, no difference between Kufr and Muslim. But until this truth
is perceived, there is always the thought: "Whatever
religion, or belief, or faith I have or hold, the scripture that I
read, the church that I attend, is the only scripture, the only church,
the only faith. This that I have understood and regarded as mine all
through my life, this is the only path."
It is like a person in pursuit of a
bird. He looks at the branch of
the tree, which is still shaking after the bird has flown from it.
He says, "Oh here is the bird," but he is only looking at the branch
trembling hither and thither after the bird has sat there just
for a moment. He calls the branch the bird. Another person may see
a branch moving, but this time the branch is so strong that
the bird could not possibly have moved it. Not understanding this,
he thinks the bird sat on that branch. Thus it is with the truth.
Instead of understanding the spirit of
the truth people have taught
that religion lies in the name of the teacher. Importance is
given to the name of the teacher, to the scripture, to the house in
which worship is customary, to the priests or clergy who
officiate. Prominence is given to being Brahmin or Buddhist, to
belonging
to certain communities formed in the name of a
particular religion, to the castes set up, to the families formed,
to those associations made in order to follow one particular
creed, or ceremony, or law. Finally the loyalty to that particular
religious system becomes its life, and this leads to the
neglect-not only neglect, but actual hatred-of the religion followed
by others. It is in this way that all wars and differences that
have existed in all ages have arisen.
When one studies nature, one finds that
nature cannot create itself
without expressing its religion. The origin of all religion is
love and beauty. If there were no love or beauty religion would never
have existed, because beauty is the beginning of worship
and prayer. The beginning of prayer and the first step of worship is
admiration.
A child knows nothing about religion,
and yet from the very first it
is attracted to something that is beautiful, something that it
can like. As it grows older it is only the form of its desires that
changes; it still seeks to acquire the object of beauty. As it
grows older still, it comes to recognize beauty in intellectual things.
It is beauty that man bows down to. When a man gives
honor and respect and reverence to another it is still because of the
beauty which he perceives in some form or other in a
person, and he has a natural inclination to bow before this beautiful
living thing. Prayer and worship are acts of bowing to
beauty, acts necessary to satisfy the predisposition with which every
soul is born, the predisposition which is called love. And it
is the innate desire of love to satisfy itself by admiring and bowing
before someone, to respect someone, to have veneration for
someone, to worship someone.
Man goes step by step from simple
worship to the worship of the Most
High, as he realizes a higher and higher ideal. We can
see this when we study the history of religions. It is the desire to
pay respect, the desire to idealize that has made man worship
idols or trees. Some people consider a certain tree sacred. And even
in bowing before trees the desire of love is satisfied, its
desire to humble itself, its desire to pay respect and reverence; and
by this means the love of the heart has its outlet. Such
people are not evolved enough to know where God is. He is not before
their eyes as this idol is. How can He who is not seen
be known? Therefore people bow before beautiful flowers, beautiful
herbs, beautiful trees in the forest. Others bow before
rocks that have a certain form which attracts them and produces in
them the desire to pay homage to this particular rock, thus
bringing satisfaction to the soul’s desire to bow and pay respect.
Then, as intelligence developed still
more, people would perceive that
sometimes they were higher than the rock before which
they had previously bowed. They thought, "That rock is low; we can
touch it; we can reach the top of it; there are a thousand
others like it." Therefore they come to think, "It is best to worship
the sun, because there can be nothing higher than the sun.
We cannot get near it. There is nothing as bright as the sun. when
the sun appears, does it not take away all our gloom and
worries and all the fears of the dark night also? It takes away all
the conditions of death and destruction such as thieves,
robbers, tigers, and lions in country-sides and villages; all clear
away when the sun rises, and a new life begins; and with it
come strength, vigor, energy and enthusiasm to go out into the world.
This is the one thing that takes away fear, and when it
goes away we are afraid again and hide in our little villages."
And this worship of the sun lasted a
long time. In places like Persia,
and in places like eastern Russia where there is not always
sun but always need of a fire, the people sought refuge from the cold
weather by sitting near the fire. The light of the fire
becomes company in loneliness, the heat of the fire brings comfort,
the light takes away fear, the heat purifies everything that
comes into it. So that is why, in those countries which are cold they
call fire sacred, and bow before it in obedience to the
same innate yearning to bow and pay respect.
But man ascended still higher until he
began to think, "No, no; the
sun, which goes away and comes back, appears and
disappears, is not constantly with us. So I will seek something that
is constantly with us." And what is that? Surely it is the
imagination. Surely it is a spirit that is God. In Mongolia and China
and in all those Eastern countries where numberless gods
are worshipped, they say, "The one thing that abides with us, day and
night, in trouble and sorrow, in joy and sadness, is that
spirit which is God."
Then comes the time when the ruling
power is seen in every object, in
every being, in every plant, in every star, a controlling
power ruling so many diverse objects. Thus it came about that the
heroes
were respected, kings were worshipped, and even
every planet or star was thought to represent a separate god. This
ideal of worship was developed among the Greeks and
Hindus.
Then we come to the Semitic race, the
race from which the beginning
of the Bible is to be traced, the children of Israel.
Abraham noticed people around him worshipping idols, people worshipping
symbols, and people worshipping sacred cows,
or beasts, or birds. He pondered on God, thinking, "No, if Thou art
anywhere, Thou must be somewhere within me, and I
want to find Thee." Once, lying awake, he repeated His name, and as
he thus thought about Him he sought some sign of that
One who is really worthy of worship. Again, in his visions he saw the
star, and arose to ask, "Art Thou the God?" And the
answer came from within, "It is not He. It comes and goes, for it is
not stable nor steady. An object that is worthy of worship
must be constantly before one." Then, next day, he saw the moon and
asked, "Art Thou the God?" And the answer came,
"No, for the moon takes its light from the sun." Then he saw the sun
and asked the same question, and the answer came, "No,
that which appears or disappears, however perfect in its light and
form, cannot be the eternal God." And thus he perceived that
God is a higher ideal than the sun, or moon, or anything that words
can ever express; a God who is unseen and without form
and without name, altogether beyond man’s conception. That is how the
ideal of one God began.
This great ideal came through different
prophets, and was expressed
in different ways. If Moses said, "One God; no other
gods but Me," Jesus Christ taught that there is not only one God, but
also one Life; the whole of manifestation is one. The sun
is not what we see; there is the sun, there is the manifestation which
we see, and there is that which proceeds from the sun--all
three aspects of the one. "I and my Father are one." "That which
proceeds
from the Father and the Son is one:" these sayings
contain the three aspects, and they create a puzzle in man’s mind;
he can remain in this puzzle all his life. There is the thing itself,
there is its manifestation, and there is that which proceeds from it,
always this trinity in one. In all ages the message was given
with truth and wisdom as each messenger came, but how could all
understand
the truth when not everyone has even been able
to understand another? Language can hardly express it, and it is hard
to understand.
The same difficulty arose at the time of
Mohammad. He said to his people,
who were the worshippers of so many gods,
"There is no god but the one God." They asked, "Where is He? Is He
in our temples? Is He in the Ka’ba?" He said, "No, His
temple is in man’s heart." "How far away is He?" "He is nearer to you
than yourself." "In what can we find Him?" "In all things
and all beings." "What is His sign?" "He is beyond all signs and yet
all are His signs. He cannot be restricted to one center or
one form or one name, because all names are His names, all forms are
His form, all in heaven or earth are His beings, and
there is only One!"
If you want to find Him you will find
Him in the higher intelligence.
When intelligence manifests itself on the surface, that is God.
In manifesting Himself, He has assumed various forms; through each
of these He seeks gradually to attain to the same state of
absolute being. Every form: rock, animal, bird, man, everything, is
always striving to climb to the surface. The Bible tells us to
raise our light on high; it is covered under a bushel. The bushel is
the manifested part of our life; all these forms that cover the
inner intelligence, which in its original aspect is the root of being,
are the bushel. The inner intelligence, the light, has become
veiled under the manifestation, and it is the desire of nature to
unfold
it again, so as to allow it to behold its original being, which
it does through all changes that take the form of death and
destruction.
This great truth, so difficult to
express, must needs be uttered by
every prophet, every teacher, every saint who has brought the
message, in that language which their hearers could best understand.
If the teacher perceived that the method used by the
hearers was good, he would advise them to continue in the same mode
of worship. He would advise them to continue to go to
such a temple or such a church, until they were able to perceive what
is the real truth hidden behind all these things.
Having grasped the idea of God, there
comes the question of the mode
of worshipping Him. Religion offers many ways of
worship; but various religions offer many modes of worship which have
become the law of each religion, and how can that law
be obeyed by the whole world? Let us ask the ministers of any religion,
of Islam, of Christianity, of Buddhism, of Hinduism,
whether their own law can become the law for the religion of the whole
world. Though each one of them will say yes, yet
surely it is not meant to be so. All men are not alike; the tendencies
of every people differ; their habits are not the same. For
instance the law of the Hindu is to go to the Ganges in the morning
and bathe in it. How would that do in London? How could
one bathe in the Themes in December before offering one’s prayers?
Everybody will agree that no one could do such a thing.
Again, a Muslim obeys the law of leaving his shoes outside the mosque,
and then goes to wash his hands and feet, and make
his ablutions in running water; then he stands on the marble floor
of the mosque, and offers up his prayers. If the same mode of
worship were to be the law for Russia, where there is so much cold
and snow underfoot, to prostrate oneself on the marble
would mean to be frozen to death in one day. And then one would never
live to take the name of any religion again.
In this way we see that one faith and
religion and law cannot be promoted
and advocated in the same way in all different lands
and places. The different faiths are bound gradually to become
unrecognized
and forgotten. Those who wish to promote their
own customs would cease even to imagine such a thing, could they
realize
that every person has a different temperament, that
every form of religion is a form of worship of the same God. Nature
teaches every soul to worship God in some way or other,
and often provides that which is suitable for each. Those who want
one law to govern all have lost sight of the spirit of their
own religion. And it is in people who have not yet learned their own
religion that such ideas are commonly found. Did they but
know their own religion, how tolerant they would become, and how free
from any grudge against the religion of others!
So it is too with the manner of worship.
It does not matter in what
way a person offers his respect and his reverence to the
deity he worships. It only matters how sincere he is in his offering.
In one house of God we find that people do not wear hats;
in Hindustan, Persia, and Arabia they put on turbans to go to the
mosque.
That is their custom. It makes no difference whether
one person prays standing, another sitting, another kneeling, another
prostrating himself, another in company with other people
and another alone. All that matters is that the heart of the worshipper
is pure, that the mind is connected with God, that there is
sincerity and earnestness.
There is a story that a farmer’s boy,
who was taking care of his father’s
cattle in the jungle, had heard a teacher of religion in
his village. This teacher was teaching about God and glorifying the
name of God. The young boy was so impressed that when
he went to the jungle next time he experienced that innate tendency
to worship someone, and so in the jungle he began to say
aloud, "Oh, God, I have heard so much about You; You are so good and
kind that I feel that if You were here by me I would
take such good care of You, more than of all my sheep, more than of
all my fowls. In the rain I would keep You under the roof
of my grass-shed; when it was cold, I would wrap You in my blanket,
and in the heat of the sun I would give You a bath. I
would put You to sleep with Your head on my lap, and I would fan You
with my hat, and I would always watch You and
guard You from wolves. I would give You bread of manna, and buttermilk
to drink; and to entertain You I would sing and
dance and play my flute. O God, come and see how I would tend You."
Then Moses, the Messenger of God, came up and
heard all that the boy said, and answered, "Oh boy , how foolish is
this conversation! God, the unknown and unseen, who is in
the heavens, the one before whom there is no might, no strength that
can stand, He is almighty; the power is all His. He is
beyond form and name and color; He is beyond the perception and
comprehension
of man."
The boy was disheartened, and afraid of
what he had done. But the next
message from God to Moses was: "We are very
displeased indeed with you that you have alienated a devotee who did
not know us. If he did not know us as you do, at least
he knew us as far as his mind could grasp. All our devotees picture
us in different forms and according to different qualities of
love, and we receive their love through whatever form or garb it is
directed to us. They are all our creatures and we receive it
even if they worship the sun. We have sent you to unite our children
to us, and not to separate them from us."
How we would hesitate to air our wisdom
did we but realize that the
first step of approach to God is sincerity and earnest love
for Him! We should never call anyone heathen or pagan. We should never
consider anybody in this world as unworthy. We do
not know in what form a person is worshipping God. We do not know the
earnestness in man’s heart; yet that is what is really
important.
It is not only the learned, or so-called
educated and enlightened persons,
who perceive the meaning of the law of right and
wrong. Even among savages there is some sense of it, because it is
an instinct; it is the law by which the savage lives. We may
think many people are doing wrong, yet we do not know what is wrong
for them and what is not wrong; we do not know what
is right for them and what is not right. We ourselves may be doing
many things that we think right, but really are wrong to
others; and others do things that appear to us to be wrong, and yet
are acting rightly in their case. It is just a matter of looking
at it from the other person’s point of view.
How few there are in this world, who
stop to think whether the actions
of another are right for him! We are so ready to accuse
another, and we are so ready to hide our own faults. Did we but look
at right and wrong from his standpoint, we should find
that the meaning of right and wrong would change. It is wrong for a
little child to go out without asking its parents, because
perhaps it will meet a motorcar from which it cannot protect itself.
But would the same thing be wrong for a grown-up? It is
only during the age of childhood that the act is wrong, later it is
right.
Did we but study the object of life, we
should come to understand the
nature of right and wrong. And once we knew the
nature of right and wrong we would not need to consult the law of the
scripture, for that law itself would then begin to reveal to
us its own truth. Nature herself can tell us what is right and wrong
for us and for another person.
The secret of it all is found in the
answer to the question: Why is
man here? The answer is, that he is here to attain the
satisfaction of his innermost desire. And what is that innermost
desire?
It is first joy, then peace. But the attainment of each is
contrary, because joy comes from activity of life, and peace comes
from rest.
All this activity that a person
experiences and enjoys by his senses,
is a glimpse of joy. The greater joy comes when he can
experience through his inner self also, through his mind. For there
is another joy, that of the mind when it is delighted with a
thing of truth or delicacy, or a beautiful thought. Beautiful music,
beautiful verse, beautiful imagination, all bring delight. It is
perhaps a greater joy that the joy of a delicious dish, for some
persons
would give anything for a verse which they would never
give for a delicious dish.
But there is a still greater joy, that
of the heart, the innermost being
of a person; the joy when this heart can express itself and
experience love. There are many in this world who only live in the
body; their heart is dead, their mind is dead; they seek their
highest joy only in the body. But there are others who live in mind
as well as in body. It is like the difference between a
thoughtful man and an ordinary man. When a man is thoughtful he has
become a different man. This idea is expressed by the
word "gentleman." There are very few who could be truly called
gentlemen,
though many pass for such. The gentleman is he
who is beginning to live in his mind, whose mind is becoming alive,
who enjoys life too, yet is not delighted merely with the
experience of the senses.
But he whose heart is awakened is higher
than a gentleman. Such a one
can sympathize with another; his sympathies are
awake to consider another, to think for another, to serve another,
to sacrifice for another. He is not merely a gentleman, he is a
saint. The power of sympathy and love takes away the gross self, which
used to demand all for itself. Once that is taken away,
man thinks in a far higher way. "Whatever I can do for another, that
will I do. I will sacrifice all I have; the loss is no matter; it is
a satisfaction." To satisfy the heart, what a thing it is! This also
is a part of joy, but it is not peace.
Joy is experienced by worldly
attainment; peace is the attainment of
heaven. In the ordinary sense we call it peace to be at rest
in an armchair, on cushions, or in bed. But when the body is on a
comfortable
couch, does that mean that the mind is resting on
cushions also? Cannot the mind go through torture at the same time?
If that be the case, of what benefit is the peace and
comfort of the body? The whole being must have peace. The mind must
have peace from anxieties, worry, and from the greed
that gives us ambitious desires and that we call "wrong" and "sin."
When all this has gone, the mind is at rest. Then, when the
heart is at peace and had done its work of love, the heart has enough;
it ceases to be interested in any particular object in life,
but is equal towards all. When there is no demand there is peace, and
this peace helps towards peace of the soul.
These are the two desires, which we
hold. It is when we do not know
the manner in which to attain these two desires that
sometimes the joy of one part of our being takes away the peace of
the other. Or the peace of one part of our life takes away
the joy of the other part of our being. It is when man once knows this
that he is able really to master himself, to manage his
life’s affairs as he wishes, to have a better idea of what is right
and what is wrong, and of what is sin and what is virtue.
This knowledge is gained through a study
of life rather than of books.
If we only knew how much the study of life can tell us!
One could go into the British Museum and read every book in the
building,
and yet not obtain satisfaction. It is not study, it is
not research, it is not inquiry which gives this knowledge; it is
actually
going through the experiences of life, witnessing life in its
different aspects and in its different phases or spheres; that is what
reveals the ideal of life.
A man may know about the whole world’s
doings, saying to himself, "In
the morning I will go from my home to the office, and
will find out all about the world from my paper before I go." But all
he has learned is what the newspapers feed him with; for
how often next day is the news of today contradicted! Still he is
satisfied,
thinking he has learned so much about the world in
the morning. And in the evening he is ready to discuss these topics
at the dinner table. The next day there is again something
fresh; but is that knowledge?
How wonderful is the sight that is given
to us, how marvelous is the
mind, how great a treasure is the light of the soul! Can
these be intended only for things like that? If we only knew the value
of our life, the value of our soul, we would give the
precious time that is ours to keen observation with calm perception,
combining the attitude of a student with the care of a
scientist.
Look not on life as a person would watch
a play on the stage. Rather
look upon it as a student who is learning at college. It is
not a passing show; it is not a place of amusement in which to fool
our life away. It is a place for study, in which every sorrow,
every heartbreak brings a precious lesson. It is a place in which to
learn by one’s own suffering, by the study of the suffering of
others; to learn from the people who have been kind to us as well as
from the people who have been unkind. It is a place in
which all experiences, be they disappointments, struggles, and pains,
or joys, pleasures, and comforts, contribute to the
understanding of what life is, and the realization what it is.