A SERIES OF
Lessons
in Gnani Yoga
THE FOURTH LESSON THE
UNITY OF LIFE.
In
our First Lesson of this series we spoke
of the One Reality underlying all Life.
This One Reality was stated to be higher
than mind or matter, the nearest term
that can be applied to it being
"Spirit." We told you that it was
impossible to explain just what "Spirit"
is, for we have nothing else with which
to compare or describe it, and it can be
expressed only in its own terms, and not
in the terms applicable to its
emanations or manifestations. But, as we
said in our First Lesson, we may think
of "Spirit" as meaning the "essence" of
Life and
Being--the Reality underlying Universal
Life, and from which the latter
emanates.
In the Second Lesson we stated
that this "Spirit," which we called "The
Absolute," expressed itself in the
Universal Life, which Universal Life
manifested itself in countless forms of
life and activity. In the same lesson we
showed you that the Universe is
alive--that there is not a single dead
thing in it--that there can be no such
thing as a dead object in the Universe,
else the theory and truth of the One
underlying Life must fall and be
rejected. In that lesson we also showed
you that even in the world of inorganic
things there was ever manifest life--in
every atom and particle of inorganic
matter there is the universal life
energy manifesting itself, and in
constant activity.
In the Third Lesson, we went
still further into this phase of the
general subject, and showed you that the
Creative Will--that active principle of
the Universal Life--was ever at work,
building up new forms, shapes and
combinations, and then tearing them down
for the purpose of rebuilding the
material into new forms, shapes, and
combinations. The Creative Will is ever
at work in its threefold function of
creating, preserving and destroying
forms--the change, however, being merely
in the shape and form or combination,
the real
substance remaining unchanged in
its inner aspect, notwithstanding the
countless apparent changes in its
objective forms. Like the great ocean
the depths of which remain calm and
undisturbed, and the real nature of
which is unchanged in spite of the
waves, and billows of surface
manifestation, so does the great ocean
of the Universal Life remain unchanged
and unaltered in spite of the constant
play of the Creative Will upon the
surface. In the same lesson we gave you
many examples of the Will in action--of
its wondrous workings in the
various forms of life and activity--all
of which went to show you that the One
Power was at work everywhere and at all
times.
In our next lesson--the Fifth
Lesson--we shall endeavor to make plain
to you the highest teachings of the Yogi
Philosophy regarding the One Reality and
the Many Manifestations--the One and the
Many--how the One apparently becomes
Many--that great question and problem
which lies at the bottom of the well of
truth.
In that lesson we shall present
for your consideration some fundamental
and startling truths, but before we
reach that point in our teachings, we
must fasten upon your mind the basic
truth that all the various
manifestations of Life that we see on
all hands in the Universe are but forms
of manifestation of One Universal Life
which is itself an emanation of the
Absolute.
Speaking generally, we would say
to you that the emanation of the
Absolute is in the form of a grand
manifestation of One Universal Life, in
which the various apparent separate
forms of Life are but centers of Energy
or Consciousness, the separation being
more apparent than real, there being a
bond of unity and connection underlying
all the apparently separated forms.
Unless the student gets this idea firmly
fixed in his mind and consciousness, he
will find it difficult to grasp the
higher truths of the Yogi Philosophy.
That all
Life is One, at the last,--that
all forms of manifestation of Life are
in harmonious Unity, underlying--is one
of the great basic truths of the Yogi
Teaching, and all the students of that
philosophy must make this basic truth
their own before they may progress
further. This grasping of the truth is
more than a mere matter of intellectual
conception, for the intellect reports
that all forms of Life are separate and
distinct from each other, and that there
can be no unity amidst such diversity.
But from the higher parts of the mind
comes the message of an underlying
Unity, in spite of all apparent
diversity, and if one will meditate upon
this idea he will soon begin to realize
the truth, and will feel that he,
himself, is but a center of
consciousness in a great ocean of
Life--that he and all other centers are
connected by countless spiritual and
mental filaments--and that all emerge
from the One. He will find that the
illusion of separateness is but "a
working fiction of the Universe," as one
writer has so aptly described it--and
that All is One, at the last, and
underlying all is One.
Some of our students may feel
that we are taking too long a path to
lead up to the great basic truths of our
philosophy, but we who have traveled The
Path, and know its rocky places and its
sharp turns, feel justified in insisting
that the student be led to the truth
gradually and surely, instead of
attempting to make short cuts across
dangerous ravines and canyons. We must
insist upon presenting our teachings in
our own way--for this way has been
tested and found good. We know that
every student will come to realize that
our plan is a wise one, and that he will
thank us for giving him this gradual and
easy approach to the wondrous and awful
truth which is before us. By this
gradual process, the mind becomes
accustomed to the line of thought and
the underlying principles, and also
gradually discards wornout mental
sheaths which have served their
purposes, and which must be discarded
because they begin to weigh heavily upon
the mind as it reaches the higher
altitudes of The Path of Attainment.
Therefore, we must ask you to consider
with us, in this lesson, some further
teachings regarding the Unity of Life.
All the schools of the higher
Oriental thought, as well as many of the
great philosophical minds of the Western
world, have agreed upon the conception
of the Unity of Life--the Oneness of All
Life. The Western thinkers, and many of
the Eastern philosophers arrived at this
conclusion by means of their
Intellectual powers, greatly heightened
and stimulated by concentration and
meditation, which latter process
liberated the faculties of the Spiritual
Mind so that it passed down knowledge to
the Intellect, which then seized upon
the higher knowledge which it found
within itself, and amplified and
theorized upon the same. But among the
Eastern Masters there are other sources
of information open, and from these
sources come the same report--the
Oneness and Unity of Universal Life.
These higher sources of information to
which we have alluded, consist of the
knowledge coming from those Beings who
have passed on to higher planes of Life
than ours, and whose awakened spiritual
faculties and senses enable them to see
things quite plainly which are quite
dark to us. And from these sources,
also, comes the message of the Oneness
of Life--of the existence of a wonderful
Universal Life including all forms of
life as we know it, and many forms and
phases unknown to us--many centers in
the great Ocean of Life. No matter how
high the source of inquiry, the answer
is the same--"All Life is One." And this
One Life includes Beings as much higher
than ourselves, as we are higher than
the creatures in the slime of the
ocean-bed. Included in it are beings who
would seem as archangels or gods to us,
and they inform that beyond them are
still higher and more radiant creatures,
and so on to infinity of infinities. And
yet all are but centers of Being in the
One Life--all but a part of the great
Universal Life, which itself is but an
emanation of The Absolute.
The mind of man shrinks back
appalled from the contemplation of such
wonders, and yet there are men who dare
to attempt to speak authoritatively of
the attributes and qualities of "God,"
as if He, the Absolute, were but a
magnified man. Verily, indeed, "fools
rush in where angels fear to tread," as
the poet hath said.
Those who will read our next
lesson and thus gain an idea of the
sublime conception of the Absolute held
by the Yogi teachers may shudder at the
presumption of those mortals who dare to
think of the Absolute as possessing
"attributes" and "qualities" like unto
the meanest of things in this his
emanated Universe. But even these
spiritual infants are doing well--that
is, they are beginning to _think_, and
when man begins to think and _question_,
he begins to progress. It is not the
fact of these people's immature ideas
that has caused these remarks
on our part, but rather their tendency
to set up their puny conceptions as the
absolute truth, and then insisting upon
forcing these views upon the outer world
of men, whom they consider "poor
ignorant heathen."
Permit each man to think
according to his light--and help him by
offering to share with him the best that
you possess--but do not attempt to force
upon him your own views as absolute
truth to be swallowed by him under
threat of damnation or eternal
punishment. Who are you that dares to
speak of punishment and damnation, when
the smell of the smoke of the hell of
materialism is still upon your robes.
When you realizejust what spiritual
infants you still are--the best of
you--you will blush at these things.
Hold fast to the best that you know--be
generous to others who seem to wish to
share your knowledge--but give without
blame or feeling of superiority--for
those whom you teach today may be your
teachers tomorrow--there are many
surprises of this kind along The Path.
Be brave and confident, but when you
begin to feel puffed up by your
acquirement of some new bit of
knowledge, let your prayer--our prayer,
for we too are infants--be, "Lord, be
merciful unto me, a fool!"
The above words are for us, the
students of the Yogi Philosophy--the
teachers of the same--for human nature
is the same in spite of names, and we
must avoid the "vanity of
vanities"--Spiritual Pride and
Arrogance--that fault which has sent
many a soul tumbling headlong from a
high position on The Path, and compelled
it to again begin the journey, chastened
and bruised. The fall of Lucifer has
many correspondences upon the occult
plane, and is, indeed, in itself an
allegorical illustration of just this
law. Remember, always, that you are but
a Centre in the Ocean of Life, and that
all others are Centres in the same
ocean, and that underlying both and all
of you is the same calm bed of Life and
Knowledge, the property of all. The
highest and the lowest are part of the
same One Life--each of you has the same
life blood flowing through your
veins--you are connected with every
other form of life, high or low, with
invisible bonds, and none is separate
from another.
We are speaking, of course, to the
personalities of the various students
who are reading these words. The Real
Self of each is above the need of such
advice and caution, and those who are
able to reach the Real Self in
consciousness have no need for these
words, for they have outlived this stage
of error. To many, the consciousness of
the One Life--the Universal Life--in
which all are centres of consciousness
and being--has come gradually as a final
step of a long series of thought and
reasoning, aided by flashes of truth
from the higher regions of the mind. To
others it has come as a great
illumination, or flash of Truth, in
which all things are seen in their
proper relations and positions to each
other, and all as phases of being in the
One. The term "Cosmic Consciousness,"
which has been used in the previous
series of these lessons, and by other
writers, means this sudden flash of
"knowing" in which all the illusionary
dividing lines between persons and
things are broken down and the Universal
Life is seen to be actually existent as
One Life. To those who have reached this
consciousness by either route just
mentioned--or by other routes--there is
no sense of loss of individuality or
power or strength. On the contrary there
is always a new sense of increased power
and strength and knowing--instead of
losing Individuality, there is a sense
of having found it. One feels that he
has the whole Universe at his back, or
within him, rather than that he has lost
his identity in the great Ocean of Life.
While we are speaking of this
phase of the subject, we should like to
ask you if you have ever investigated
and inquired into the real meaning of
the much-used word "Individuality?" Have
you ever looked up its origin and real
meaning, as given by the standard
authorities? We are sure that many of
you have no real idea of the actual
meaning of the term, as strange as this
statement may appear to you at first
glance. Stop now, and define the word to
yourself, as you have been accustomed to
think of it. Ninety-five people of a
hundred will tell you that it means
something like "a strong personality."
Let us see about this.
Webster defines the word
"Individual" as follows: "Not divided,
or not to be divided; existing as one
distinct being or object; single; one."
The same authority informs us that the
word arises from the Latin word
_individuus_, meaning "indivisible; not
divisible." Does not this help you to
gain a clearer idea of the Individuality
that knows itself to be a Centre of
Consciousness in the One Life, rather
than a separate, puny, insignificant
thing apart from all other centres or
forms of Life, or the source of Life? We
think it will help to clear your mind of
some of the fog that has not as yet
lifted itself.
And while we are on the subject
of definitions, let us take a little
look at the word "Personality," that is
generally believed to be a synonym of
"Individuality," and is often so used.
Webster tells us that the word "Person"
originated from the Latin word
_persona_, meaning "a mask used by
actors," which word in turn arose from
two other words, _per_, meaning
"through," and _sonare_, meaning "to
sound," the two combined words meaning
"to sound through." The same authority
informs us that the archaic meaning of
the word was "a
character or part, as in a play; an
assumed character." If you will think of
Personality as "a mask used by anactor,"
or as "a part in a play," or as
something used to "sound through" or to
speak through, by the real Individual
behind the mask of Personality, then
perhaps you will see a little further
into the Mystery of Personality and
Individuality.
Oh, dear students, be not
deceived by the mask of Personality
which you may happen to be wearing at
this moment, or by the masks which are
worn by those around you. Realize that
back of your mask is the great
Individual--the Indivisible--the
Universal Life, in which you are a
centre of consciousness and activity.
This does not wipe out your
identity--instead it gives you a greater
and grander identity. Instead of your
sinking into a Nirvana of extinction of
consciousness, your consciousness so
enlarges as you unfold, that you will in
the end feel your identity to be the
identity of the Universe. Instead of
your gaining Nothingness, you gain
Allness. All spiritual growth and
unfoldment gives you a constantly
increasing sense of relationship with,
and agreement with, the All. You grow
into Allness as you unfold. Be not
deceived by this chatter about
Nothingness, and loss of Individuality,
in the Oriental thought, although some
of the presentations of its teachings
may so seem to mean at first reading.
Remember always that Personality is the
mask, and Individuality the Real One.
You have often heard persons,
claiming to be acquainted with the
teachings of Theosophy and other
expositions of the Oriental Wisdom
Religion (including our own
presentation), asserting that the
Oriental mind was ever bent upon
attaining a final stage of Nothingness
or Extinction in Nirvana. In addition to
what we have said, and to what we shall
say on this subject, let us quote from
the inspired writer of the "_Secret
Doctrine_" (a standard Theosophical
work) when she says, in that work on
page 286, Vol. I: "Is this annihilation,
as some think? ... To see in Nirvana
annihilation, amounts to saying of a man
plunged in a sound, dreamless sleep--one
that leaves no impression on the
physical memory and brain, because the
sleeper's Higher Self is in its original
state of absolute consciousness during
these hours--that he too is annihilated.
The latter simile answers only to
one side of the question--the most
material; since reabsorption is by no
means such a dreamless sleep, but, on
the contrary, absolute existence, an
unconditional unity, or a state, to
describe which human language is
absolutely and hopelessly inadequate...
Nor is the individuality--nor even the
essence of the personality, if any be
left behind--lost because re-absorbed."
As J. Wm. Lloyd says, in connection with
the above quotation, "This seems
conclusive proof that Theosophy does not
regard Nirvana as annihilation, but as
an infinite enlargement of
consciousness." And we would add that
this is true not only as regards the
Nirvana of the Theosophist, but also of
the consciousness of the Unity of
Life--the Universal Life. This too is
not annihilation of individual
consciousness, but an "infinite
enlargement of consciousness" as this
Western writer Lloyd has so well
expressed it.
The very consciousness of Life
that every man feels within him, comes
not from something belonging exclusively
to himself as a separate or personal
thing. On the contrary, it belongs to
his Individuality, not to his
Personality, and is a phase of his
consciousness or "awareness" of his
relation to the One Universal Life which
underlies his existence, and in which he
is a center of consciousness. Do you
grasp this idea? If not, meditate and
concentrate upon it, for it is
important. You must learn to feel the
Life within you, and to know that it is
the Life of the great Ocean of Universal
Life upon the bosom of which you are
borne as a centre of consciousness and
energy. In this thought there is Power,
Strength, Calm, Peace, and Wisdom.
Acquire it, if you are wise. It is
indeed a Gift from the Gods.
In this lesson we are not
attempting to build up your idea of the
Unity of Life by a series of arguments
taken from a world of phenomena in which
separateness and non-Unity is apparent.
No such arguments would suffice, for it
would be like trying to prove the
existence and laws of color to a man
born blind, by arguments taken from his
world of darkness. On the contrary we
are appealing to that region of the mind
in which is stored the capacity for
intuitively apprehending truth. We are
endeavoring to speak in tones which will
awaken a similar vibration in that part
of your mentality, and if these
vibrations be started into being, then
will you be able to feel and know the
truth, and then will your Intellect
eagerly seize upon the new idea that it
finds within itself, and will proceed to
apply the same to the various problems
that have been bothering you in the
past.
This consciousness of Unity must
come from the higher regions of the
mind, for the Intellect alone knows it
not,--it is out of its field. Just as
one may not know that the earth is round
by means of his senses which report
quite the contrary, but may and does
know this truth by abstract reasoning
and higher intellectual effort; so may
one know the truth that All Life is
indeed One, at the last, and underlying,
by the higher faculties of the mind,
although his senses and ordinary
intellectual processes fail to so inform
him. The senses cannot inform man that
the earth is round, _because they cannot
see it as a whole, but only in
part_--while the higher reasoning
faculties are able to visualize the
earth as a whole, and know it must be
round. And the Intellect, in its
ordinary field can see only
separateness, and cannot report Oneness,
but the Higher Mind sees Life as a
Whole, and knows it to be One. And it is
the Higher Mind that we are trying to
bring into the field of consciousness in
the appeal to you in this lesson. We
trust that we may be successful--in fact
we know that we shall be so, in many
cases, for we know that the field is
ready for the sowing of the seed--and
that the call has been heard, and the
message passed on to us to answer the
call--else these words would not have
been written.
The consciousness of the Unity of
Life is something that must be
experienced before the truth may be
realized. It is not necessary for one to
wait until he acquire full Cosmic
Consciousness before he may realize, at
least partially, the Oneness of All
Life, for he may unfold gradually into
the Cosmic Knowing, experiencing at each
stage a fuller conception of the
underlying Unity of Life, in which he is
a centre of consciousness and
manifestation. But there must be at
least a partial unfoldment before one is
able to feel the sense of Unity. To
those who have not unfolded sufficiently
to gain at least a glimmering of the
truth, everything appears separate from
every other thing, and there is no Unity
of All. It is as if every leaf on a
mighty tree were to consider itself a
being separate and distinct from
everything else in the world, failing to
perceive its connection with the branch
or limb, and tree, and its unity in
being with every other leaf on the tree.
After a bit the unfolding consciousness
of the leaf enables it to perceive the
stem that connects it with the twig.
Then it begins to realize certain
relationships, and feels its vital
connection with the twig and the few
other leaves attached to the same twig.
Later on, it unfolds sufficiently to
perceive that certain other leaf-bearing
twigs are connected with the same
branch, and it learns to feel its
relationship with all twigs and leaves
springing from that branch. Then again,
a little later on, it begins to realize
that other branches spring from the same
limb as its branch, and the sense of
relationship and dawning Unity begins to
widen still further. And so it goes on,
until at last, the tiny leaflet realizes
that the life of the tree is the life of
all of its parts--limbs, branches,
twigs, leaves, blossoms, fruit, seed,
etc., and that it, itself, is but a
centre of expression in the One Life of
the tree. Does the leaf feel less
important and real from this discovery?
We should say assuredly not, for it must
feel that behind its tiny form and
limited strength is the strength and
vitality of the entire organism of the
tree. It must know that the tree is ever
at work extracting nourishment from the
earth, air, and water, and transmitting
that nourishment to its every part,
including our little friend the leaflet.
It knows that the sap will rise in the
Spring to renew the manifestations of
life, and it knows that although its
leafy form may wither and die, still the
essence of its life--its real Life--does
not die but remains ever active and
strong awaiting its chance for future
expression and re-embodiment. Of course
this figure of the leaf and the tree
fails us if we attempt to carry it very
far, but it will give us at least a
partial idea of the relationship between
the life of the person, and the One
Life.
Some of the Oriental teachers
have illustrated this idea to their
students by various familiar examples
and figures of speech. Some bid the
student hold up his hand, and then point
out to him that each finger is
apparently separate and distinct if one
does not look down to where it joins the
hand. Each finger, if it had
consciousness, might well argue that it
was a separate individual, having no
relationship with any other finger. It
might prove this to its own
satisfaction, and to that of its
listeners, by showing that it could move
itself without stirring the other
fingers. And so long as its
consciousness was confined to its upper
two joints it would remain under the
illusion of separateness. But when its
consciousness at last permeated the
depths of its being, it would find that
it emerged from the same hand from which
also sprung the other fingers, and that
its real life and power was vested in
the hand rather than in itself, and that
although apparently separate and
independent, it was really but a part of
the hand. And when its consciousness,
through the consciousness of the hand,
broadened and widened, it would perceive
its relationship with, and
interdependence with, the whole body,
and would also recognize the power of
the brain, and its mighty Will.
Another favorite illustration of
the Eastern teachers is the stream of
water flowing over a rocky bed. They
point to the stream before it comes to a
rocky place, and show the chela
(student) that it is One. Then they will
move a little way down the stream and
show him how the rocks and stones divide
the stream into countless little
streams, each of which might imagine
itself a separate and distinct stream,
until later on it again joins the main
united stream, and finds that it was but
a form of expression of the One.
Another illustration that is
frequently used by the teachers, is that
which bids the student consider himself
as a minute cell, or "little-life" as
the Hindus call it, in a body. It may be
a cell in the blood performing the
office of a carrier or messenger, or it
may be a working cell in one of the
organs of the body; or it may be a
thinking cell in the brain. At any rate,
the cell manifests capacity for thought,
action and memory--and a number of
secondary attributes quite wonderful in
the way. (See "_Hatha Yoga_,".) Each
cell might well consider itself as a
separate individual--in a certain sense
it does. It has a certain degree of
something akin to consciousness,
enabling it to perform its work
correctly and properly, and is called
upon at times to manifest something like
judgment. It may well be excused for
thinking of itself as a "person" having
a separate life. The analogy between its
illusions and that of the man when seen
by a Master, is very close. But we know
that the life of the cell is merely a
centre of expression of the life of the
body--that its consciousness is merely a
part of the consciousness of the mind
animating the body. The cell will die
and apparently perish, but the essence
of it will remain in the life of the
person whose body it occupied, and
nothing really dies or perishes. Would
the cell feel any less real if it knew
that behind its Personality as a cell,
there was the Individuality of the
Man--that its Real Self was the Man, not
the cell? Of course, even this figure of
speech can be carried only so far, and
then must stop, for the personality of
the man, when it is dissolved, leaves
behind it an essence which is called
Character, which becomes the property of
the Ego and which accompanies it into
after life according to the Law of
Karma, of which we shall speak in future
lessons. But back even of these
attributes of Personality, is the Ego
which exists in spite of Personality,
and lives on and on throughout many
Personalities, and yet learning the
lessons of each, until at last it rises
above Personality and enters into higher
sphere of Knowing and Being.
Still another favorite
illustration of the Hindu teachers is
that of the sun beating down upon the
ocean and causing a portion of the water
to rise in the form of vapor. This vapor
forms clouds which spread all over the
earth, and which eventually condense in
the form of rain drops, dew, etc. This
rain and dew form streams, rivers, etc.,
and sooner or later every drop finds its
way back to Mother Ocean which is its
Real Self. Separate though the dewdrop
be, yet it is a part of the Ocean, no
matter how far distant it may be, and
the attraction of the
Ocean will surely, and without fail,
draw it back to its bosom. And the
dewdrop, if it could know the truth,
would be so much happier and stronger,
and braver if it could know that it was
superior to accident, time and space,
and that it could not escape its own
good, and that nothing could prevent its
final triumph and victory when at last
"the dewdrop glides into the shining
sea." How cheerfully it could have met
its many changes of form. and the
incidents of its journey, if it could
have gotten rid of the illusion of
separateness, and knew that instead of
being a tiny insignificant dewdrop it
was a part of the Mighty Ocean--in fact
that its Real Self was that Ocean
itself--and that the Ocean was
continually drawing it toward it, and
that the many changes, up and down, were
in response to that mighty power of
attraction which was slowly but
irresistibly drawing it back Home to
Rest, Peace, and Power.
As valuable as are all these
illustrations, examples, and figures of
speech, still all must of necessity fall
short of the truth in the case of the
Soul of Man--that wondrous something
which has been built up by the Absolute
after aeons and aeons of time, and which
is destined to play an important part in
the great Cosmic Drama which it has
pleased the Absolute to think into
existence. Drawing its Life from the
Universal Life, it has the roots of its
being still further back in the Absolute
itself, as we shall see in the next
lesson. Great and wonderful is it all,
and our minds are but illy fitted to
receive the truth, and must be gradually
accustomed to the glare of the Sun. But
it will come to all--none can escape his
glorious destiny.
The Oriental writings are full of
allusions to the underlying Oneness, in
fact the entire Oriental philosophies
rest upon it. You may find it everywhere
if you will but look for it. The
experience of Cosmic Consciousness,
which is naught but a sudden or gradual
"awareness" of the underlying Unity of
Life, is evidenced everywhere in the
_Upanishads_, that wonderful series of
teachings in the Hindu classics. Every
writer in the collection gives his
evidence regarding this awareness of
Unity and Oneness, and the experiences
and mental characteristics arising from
the same. The following quotations will
give an idea of the prevalence of this
thought:
"He that beholds all beings in
the Self, and the Self in all things, he
never turns away from it."
"When to a man who understands,
the Self has become all things, what
sorrow, what trouble, can there be to
him who once beheld that unity."
The Hindu father explains to his
son that the One Life is in all forms
and shapes, points out object after
object, saying to the boy: "_Tat tuam
asi_, Thou art that; That thou art."
And the Mystics have added their
testimony to that of others who have
experienced this consciousness. Plotinus
said: "Knowledge has three degrees:
opinion, science, and illumination. The
last is absolute knowledge founded upon
the identity of the knowing mind with
the known object."
And Eckhardt, the German mystic,
has told his pupils that: "God is the
soul of all things. He is the light that
shines in us when the veil is rent."
And Tennyson, in his wonderful
verse describing the temporary lifting
of the veil for him, has described a
phase of Cosmic Consciousness in the
following words:
"For knowledge is the swallow on
the lake That sees and stirs the
surface-shadow there, But never yet hath
dippt into the abysm, The Abysm of all
Abysms, beneath, within The blue of sky
and sea, the green of earth, And in the
million-millionth of a grain Which cleft
and cleft again for evermore And ever
vanishing, never vanishes. . .
And more, my son, for more than
once when I Sat all alone, revolving in
myself That word which is the symbol of
myself, The mortal symbol of the Self
was loosed, And past into the Nameless,
as a cloud Melts into Heaven. I touched
my limbs, the limbs Were strange, not
mine--and yet no shadow of doubt, But
utter clearness, and through loss of
Self The gain of such large life as
matched with ours Were Sun to spark,
unshadowable in words, Themselves but
shadows of a shadow-world."
And not only among the mystics
and poets is this universal truth
experienced and expressed, but among the
great philosophers of all ages may we
find this teaching of the Unity of Life
originally voiced in the Upanishads. The
Grecian thinkers have expressed the
thought; the Chinese philosophers have
added their testimony; the modern
philosophers, Spinoza, Berkeley, Kant,
Hegel, Schopenhauer, Hartman, Ferrier,
Royce, although differing widely in
their theories, all have expressed as a
fundamental truth the Unity of Life--a
One Life underlying. The basic teachings
of the Vedas are receiving confirmation
at the hands of Modern Science, which
while calling itself Rationalistic and
inclining to a Materialistic conception
of the Universe, still finds itself
compelled to say, "At the last, All is
One."
And in nearly every human soul
there is a secret chamber in which the
text of this knowledge lies hidden, and
in the rare moments in which the chamber
door is opened in response to poetry,
music, art, deep religious feeling, or
those unaccountable waves of uplift that
come to all, the truth is recognized for
the moment and the soul feels at peace
and is content in the feeling that it is
at harmony with the All. The sense of
Beauty, however expressed, when keenly
experienced, has a tendency to lift us
out of our consciousness of separateness
into another plane of mind in which the
keynote is Unity. The higher the human
feeling, the nearer is the conscious
realization of the underlying Unity.
This realization of the Unity of
Life--the Oneness of Life--the Great
Life--even when but faintly experienced,
renders Life quite a different thing to
the person. He feels no longer that he
is a mere "part" of something that may
be destroyed--or that he is a tiny
personal something, separate from and
opposed to all the rest of the
Universe--but that he is, instead, a
Unit of Expression--a Centre of
Consciousness--in the Great One Life. He
realizes that he has the Power, and
Strength, and Life, and Wisdom of the
Whole back of him,
upon which he may learn to draw as he
unfolds. He realizes that he is at Home,
and that he cannot be thrust out, for
there is no outside of the All. He feels
within himself the certainty of infinite
Life and being, for his Life is the all
Life, and that cannot die. The petty
cares, and worries, and griefs, and
pains of everyday personal life are seen
for what they are, and they cease to
threaten and dominate him as of old. He
sees the things of personality as merely
the costume and trappings of the part in
the play of life that he is acting out,
and he knows that
when he discards them he will still be
"I."
When one really feels the
consciousness of the One Life
underlying, he acquires a confident
trust and faith, and a new sense of
freedom and strength comes to him, for
is he not indeed delivered from the
bondage of fear that has haunted him in
his world of separateness. He feels
within him the spiritual pulse of the
Universal Life, and at once he thrills
with a sense of new-found power and
being. He becomes reconciled with Life
in all its phases, for he knows these
things as but temporary phases in the
working out of some great Universal plan,
instead of things permanent and fixed
and beyond remedy. He begins to feel the
assurance of Ultimate Justice and God,
and the old ideas of Injustice and Evil
begin to fade from him. He who enters
into the consciousness of the Universal
Life, indeed enters into a present
realization of the Life Everlasting. All
fear of being "lost" or "eternally
damned" fades away, and one
instinctively realizes that he is
"saved" because he is of the One Life
and cannot be lost. All the fear of
being lost arises from the sense of
illusion of separateness or
apartness from the One Life. Once the
consciousness of Unity is gained, fear
drops from the soul like a wornout
garment.
When the idea and consciousness
of the Unity takes possession of one, he
feels a new sense of cheerfulness and
optimism entirely different from any
other feeling that he has ever
experienced. He loses that distrust and
hardness which seems to cling to so many
in this age who have arrived at the
Intellectual stage of development, and
have been unable to progress further. A
new sense of peace and harmony comes to
one, and illuminates his entire
character and life. The bitterness
engendered by the illusion of
separateness is
neutralized by the sweetness of
the sense of Unity. When one enters into
this consciousness he finds that he has
the key to many a riddle of life that
has heretofore perplexed him. Many dark
corners are illuminated--many hard
sayings are made clear. Paradoxes become
understandable truths, and the pairs of
opposites that dwell in all advanced
intellectual conceptions, seem to bend
around their ends and form themselves
into a circle.
To the one who understands the
Unity, all Nature seems akin and
friendly. There is no sense of
antagonism or opposition--everything is
seen to fit into its place, and work out
its appointed task in the Universal
plan. All Nature is seen to be friendly,
when properly understood, and Man
regains that sense of harmonious
environment and at-home-ness that he
lost when he entered the stage of
self-consciousness. The lower animal and
the children feel this Unity, in their
poor imperfect way, but Man lost this
Paradise when he
discovered Good and Evil. But
Paradise Lost becomes Paradise Regained
when Man enters into this new stage of
consciousness. But unlike the animal or
child, which instinctively feels the
Unity, the awakened soul of man
possesses the Unity consciousness,
coupled with intelligent comprehension,
and unfolding spiritual power. He has
found that which he lost, together with
the accumulated interest of the ages.
This new kingdom of Consciousness is
before the race. All must enter into it
in time--all will enter into it--many
are entering into
it now, by gradual stages. This dawning
sense of Unity is that which is causing
the spiritual unrest which is now
agitating the world, and Which in time
will bring the race to a realization of
the Fatherhood of God and the
Brotherhood of Man, and his kinship to
Every Living Thing. We are entering into
this new cycle of human unfoldment, and
the greatest changes are before the
race. Ye who read these words are in the
foremost ranks of the new dispensation,
else you would not be interested in this
subject. You are the leaven which is
designed to lighten the heavy mass of
the world-mind. Play well your parts.
You are not alone. Mighty forces and
great Intelligences are behind you in
the work. Be worthy of them. Peace be
with you.
Carry with you the Central
Thought of this lesson:
CENTRAL THOUGHT. _There is but
One Life--a Universal Life--in the
world. This One Life is an emanation
from the Absolute. It infills all forms,
shapes and manifestations of Life, and
is the Real Life that each imagines to
be his personal property. There is but
One--and you are centres of
consciousness and expression in that
One. There is a Unity and Harmony which
becomes apparent to those who enter into
the consciousness of the One Life. There
is Peace and Calm in the thought. There
is Strength and Power in the knowledge.
Enter ye into your Kingdom of
Power--possess yourselves of your
Birthright of Knowledge. In the very
center of your being you will find a
holy of holies in which dwells the
Consciousness of the One Life,
underlying. Enter into the Silence of
the Shrine within.