THE SPIRITUAL HIERARCHY
In the Qur’an we read that God is the Light of the heavens and of the
earth. This explains to us that if the Creator is the light of
the heavens and of the earth, if the Creator Himself is light, then
the whole creation is His light also. Therefore, if we wish to
know the secret of the nature of the heavens or of the earth, we can
learn by studying the nature of light. There is nothing more
attractive to our eyes than light, nothing more elevating. Every heart
feels full of delight in the sun.
The nature of light is to throw out its rays. The nature of the Light
of God is the same. If we study the rays minutely we shall
see that from whatever angle we view them, there is one central ray
shooting forth with more intensity and with much more light
than all the others. That means that there is a central ray. Actually
the emblem of the cross, which is most ancient, is derived
from the study of light. The first glance shows the one central ray.
The second glance develops that ray into a horizontal line,
and the two lines then form a cross.
But light is everywhere. Whether electricity, or gas, or candle, it
is all the same. Though, light in its perfection, as in the sun, can
be observed better than the smaller forms of light. Science has come
to understand that the light of the sun is in all things, but all
religions have understood this from the beginning. The Hindus and Egyptians
taught it. All over the East the worship of the sun
was the first to come into existence. Only later were the sun worshippers
considered infidels, or heathens, or pagans. But as
sun worship is the natural religion, it is true that every religion
can be traced to it. The external light was the first thing that
impressed the heart of man with the idea of God. No doubt the inner
light helped, but that too is light. Therefore, both the
external and inner light reveal the mystery of the source and secret
of all religions.
We can see the same thing in different aspects of life. For instance,
the fall and springs of water, the different channels, all show
one big current of water, which scatters as it falls. It touches different
rocks, spreads into many streams, and yet ultimately
unites again. In vegetable life we see the same. A tree with fruit
and flowers and so many leaves and branches has yet one
central part of its being: its stem. The life of the stem is the life
of the whole tree. It is not so much that the stem itself is repeated
over and over again. Every branch is stem to smaller branches. This
again shows how the light, which we call life, takes a main
channel for its expression, and spreads through all the different organs,
the small channels and boughs.
We see it in man’s form. There is the spine, which is the stem. The
breath runs through the center of man’s body, although the
hands and legs and face and various organs have different directions.
This central life is more important than any other part of
man.
Then we see it in the life of people. Perhaps in every house there is
someone whose sorrow means sorrow to the whole family,
whose pleasure or happiness means some pleasure or happiness to all
the others. Perhaps a whole town acts through the
strength, energy, enthusiasm, and initiative of one person. A whole
nation may move through the man of the day. However
many wise people there are, however intelligent and capable they may
be, there is still one person like the stem, through whom
the whole activity is kept going. It has never been otherwise, whether
the age was aristocratic or democratic. Even if the age
was one of democracy, a democrat has nevertheless represented that
stem, just as in the age of aristocracy an aristocrat held
that place. No nation, no town, no city, no family exists without that
one soul on whom the happiness, unhappiness,
degeneration, or evolution of the whole depends.
Once, on being asked whether a person’s influence or understanding could
be better than that of five people, it was evident to
me that the questioner thought that in these days one individual is
no better than another. But the answer is, ‘Five people? That
is very few. There are some persons who know and understand more than
five thousand!’ In all ages we find musicians, poets,
and others of the greatest repute, who were seen by thousands of people,
who did not understand them. Millions of people
may have adored them after they were gone. Poets, reformers, scientists
have been considered crazy for thinking out
something impossible. Yet, they have been the greatest men in the world.
Is not such a man equal to fifty thousand people?
Surely.
Even to day we can see in everyday life how people argue and dispute
without coming to a conclusion. Then perhaps another
comes and sets the whole thing right. The discord of thousands of people
could be resolved, and thousands of people could be
united into one harmony by the presence of one who unites them all.
Whether the democrat accepts it readily or not, it does not matter.
Even in a democratic land like Russia, there is the influence
of a leader just the same. Whatever nation one goes to there will be
one person who equals thousands.
This natural condition is the basis of ancient civilization. We see
it in the reverence and honor, which was given to age: the old
person has experience. However intelligent someone may be, it is the
older person’s experience of life, the life he has seen, that
tells.
Honor has been paid to learning. The learned person was respected because
he understood more. Honor was paid to
goodness. If a person showed goodness to his family, proved to be honest,
virtuous, and good to his neighbor, they had
respect for him also and made him a leader in the village or town.
The social life was based on the appreciation of virtue,
intelligence, and experience. Thence came the idea of the king, raja,
chief, pasha, or sultan. Whatever name he received, he
received it by virtue of his goodness, kindness, education, experience,
or bearing. He became the leader of those, who wished
to become like him.
Those who believed in religion had faith in their Church. They believed
in their tradition. They had a regard for it. Others had
faith in their king. In the story of the dervish and the procession
of the king, we see how easy it is, under the delusion of
democracy, to go against all tradition, education, authority, experience,
and age. But if we avoid that delusion, then we find the
real democracy. It is that which comes from showing an ideal to others
and honoring and respecting that ideal ourselves. It is a
crude spirit, which says, ‘I do not care about your education, your
experience, or your age. I do not care if you are thousands
of years old.’ That is the false democratic spirit. The true democratic
spirit feels within itself that there is nothing one cannot be,
and at the same time appreciates, respects, and understands all that
it sees in age, experience, goodness, righteousness, piety,
or virtue. To follow such a spirit means evolution. Not to follow means
degeneration.
So we come to the idea of the religious hierarchy. It is natural for
those who admire art to admire those who have painted
beautiful pictures. Those who have a taste for music naturally admire
the composers of the past, who dedicated their lives to
the study and contemplation of music, and have benefited us by that
deep pursuit of music, and enabled us to start from the
point at which we begin today. This inclination is inherent: to admire,
respect, and feel grateful to the masters of the past. We
feel the desire to be near them, to get still closer.
It is the same in all directions in life. There is always the desire
to get near to those lives which have helped humanity in music,
science, reform, philosophy, and religion. Whatever we know today is
the result of thousands of years of experience. No
country or nation can say, ‘We were the only discoverers of this, or
that.’ No, the discovery of the very least thing is the
discovery of the whole of humanity. How could we understand language,
if we were not taught? Books, reading, civilization,
seeing life, all have helped so much that no one can say that something
is only due to a particular person or nation. The whole
of humanity has shared in everything that we think new today.
In the case of the spiritual cults, we find that all the mystical and
occult schools gratefully recognize the masters of the past who
have given their experience: sometimes by dedicating their efforts,
sometimes by surrendering their happiness, sometimes
leading a very hard and restricted life, sometimes renouncing all the
happiness and wealth and possessions of this world,
rejecting all the temptations of life by going to live in mountain
caves or forests.
Every cult of mystics has used certain names. There are certain names
in the cult of the Hindus, under which they recognize
certain masters. We find them also in the Semitic races, mentioned
in the Bible, the Kabala, and the Qur’an. Naturally, the
human mind has its limitations. If we had no limitations we should
be perfect. So it has always been that man has recognized as
masters only those who are found in his own tradition. He only recognizes
the spirituality or greatness or blessedness of those
whose names he finds in his own tradition. In the Hebrew tradition
there are the names of Abraham and Moses. In the
Christian tradition there is the name of Jesus Christ, and after him
those of the saints. In the tradition of Islam there are other
names again, Mohammad and many Muslim saints. In India there are, for
instance, Rama, Shiva, Vishnu, and Krishna. And
there was little means of communication in ancient times. It was only
natural that the traditions of one country should not be
known to the others and that it should become corrupted as it passed
to another. The names used in one nation thus came to
be different from those in another. Brahma, Abraham, Bahram in Persia,
are all related names. If we tell some people that one
name is really the same as another, they will not accept it, because
they do not wish to think another tradition is the same as
their own. Those of their own tradition are the only ones!
There is no blame in this, seeing the tendency in man to revere, appreciate,
be grateful, and to link himself with their piety,
virtue, goodness, spirituality, or power. It does not matter as long
as the greater thing is recognized. If he does not recognize it
now, he will perhaps do so later. In just the same way no particular
school or group of scientists has been the only help. When
we look deeply into life, we see that every person in this world has
been helped in his evolution, and all have helped each
other. We see how one person is illuminated by another, how one learns
from another. Whatever the name of the teacher,
there is still the one stem of life and light. As long as the tree
of this manifestation exists, the stem will exist. The names are all
the names of one current of life and light that runs through the tree.
The one Spirit of life is given different names, the sacred
names. We more easily recognize the current by the particular name
to which we are accustomed. So far we are right, but the
mistake we make, and it is to our loss, is to ignore or deny the same
truth because it is given to us in another form and under
another name. We limit it. We say the truth existed only in that period
when certain teachers came to the world, and that after
that it stopped. But the spirit of illumination can never stop as long
as life goes on. Illumination has continued from the
beginning, and will always continue until the manifestation ends. So
long will the spirit of illumination continue to spread out its
rays.
We accept some forms and ignore others. It is the natural tendency of
mankind. It is this that accounts for so many religions.
Even if a person cannot see things in this light, he can at least be
tolerant of other people’s religions. He can respect the religion
because he sees others respect it, even if he himself has no respect
for its teacher. After all, spirituality means respect,
advancement. Man shows his evolution according to his respect, his
consideration, his thoughtfulness. If we could only develop
that faculty in our mind, it would not matter not believing or recognizing
the Spirit of Guidance shown in different human forms.
If we held our own teacher or master in the greatest esteem it would
do a great deal of spiritual good. The disharmony of the
world is usually caused by religious differences, as were the wars
of ancient times. The differences are caused by men failing to
understand that religion is one, truth is one, God is one. How can
there be two religions?
It is natural to regard highly the teachers who have passed away, for
when a person has passed he is unapproachable, and the
goodness of his spirit can be recognized. When the spirit is in physical
form, it is more difficult to recognize spirituality in him
and give him the same esteem as one who has passed. Sages and teachers
in all ages have usually been recognized after they
have died. In their lifetime they were neglected and even met with
opposition.
The mystic understands that illuminated souls, guiding souls, are on
earth today too. They were not only in the past. They are
here now also. Were there none on the earth now, how could illumination
be continued? It is the present that is the best, not
the past. What is present today will be the past tomorrow, so the mystic
does not lose the opportunity of recognizing the spirit
in the present as well as in the past. The Sufis use such terms as
Wali, Nabi, Ghauth, Rasul, Qutb. But names do not matter,
though the grades are necessary. The influence of one soul may be felt
in a village, of another in a country, of another in the
whole country.
What is the sign of such souls? In the East it is believed that some
people bring good luck, some child in the house, a guest, or
a friend. The good luck may be brought to one person, or it may be
brought to ten or fifty. This shows that there is some
influence, and we can recognize it as something which is beneficial,
good, harmonious, to five, ten, a hundred, or even more.
The soul is as great as the circle of its influence.
Human beings are all in limited form. They are so tall or so short.
But the soul is much wider. One person’s influence may hold
a thousand people. There is a saying in Gujerati, ‘It is possible that
the world may be saved by the virtue of one. It is possible
that a whole ship may sink by the sin of one.’
We see this also in practical life. An incapable foreman in a factory
will bring nothing but disappointment. An inefficient
manager in an office or shop will bring nothing but bad luck one person’s
influence, capability, knowledge, enthusiasm,
initiative, strength of mind, will power, are perhaps far greater than
those of a thousand people. When we look at it from a
spiritual point of view one person’s soul is emitting a blessing and
goodness to thousands.
There are two forms of this. Firstly, there may be a soul in a very
humble guise, so that nobody would think that soul could
possibly be very spiritual, or pious, or good. It may be a soul working
as a servant, one who scrubs the floor. Yet, there is
such a great influence of goodness and light and blessing in that soul,
that unconsciously wherever it goes it brings some
blessing, some goodness, light, harmony, joy and peace.
In the East this has always been believed and still is. Therefore, a
child is taught to be careful and not to offend anybody.
However humble or weak he seems. We do not know what is hidden in his
humbleness or weakness. He may be uneducated,
or possess no money, position, or sign of high birth, or anything noticeable
to the eyes of the world. Yet, a beautiful soul may
be hidden there like a precious gem lying for thousands of years under
a rock, until someone finds it and puts it in a crown to
be worn by a king, where everybody can see it.
A person who welcomes everybody, who sees virtue in everybody, who is
faithful and considerate to everybody, his soul
develops so that in time others might perceive his light. Wherever
the light is, it can be perceived.
But it is not necessary for the jewel to be so hidden. Sometimes it
is not. It is not hidden where there is a special task in life that
a soul has to do. There may be a task to give a divine message, or
to uphold a country or nation that is becoming degenerate.
Such a soul may have to guide it through its difficulties and preserve
its harmony and peace.
As in the days of Noah, there may be need of a warning. That soul comes
to give it. The light that is usually hidden now comes
forward to bring something to view that was buried in the depths of
life. At one time such a soul was called a prophet, or
teacher, or godhead, or incarnation. Others claim to be prophets, healers,
or warners. But in the time of man’s maturity, of the
whole world’s maturity, such things are no longer called by these names,
and yet the work is needed. The personality has been
the sign, the evidence. The message has been the sign, the evidence
of its truth or falseness. There was a time when the world
was not capable of seeing. Humanity did not have enough realization
to recognize the message that is why the claim of
prophecy had to be made. But now the world can recognize, sooner or
later, what is right and what is wrong. The warner, the
master, the messenger of today will not claim. He will only work. He
will leave his work to prove for itself whether it is true or
false.
Those who view life mystically consider that they are not only at one
with the teachers of this or that tradition of the past, but
that in every soul there is a spark of that teacher. No soul is without
the light of that spiritual teacher. Therefore, they have
regard and respect not only for the spiritual hierarchy, but also for
the spark of that light which has made every soul a part of
the spiritual hierarchy. So they regard with respect and reverence
every human being in the world.
The whole vision of life, the whole manifestation becomes one single
evidence of the sublimity of God.