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Is
Religion Possible?
Broadly speaking
religious life may be divided into three periods. These may be described as
the periods of Faith, Thought, and Discovery.
In the first period religious life appears as a form of discipline which the
individual or a whole people must accept as an unconditional command without
any rational understanding of the ultimate meaning and purpose of that command.
This attitude may be of great consequence in the social and political history
of a people, but is not of much consequence in so far as the individuals
inner growth and expansion are concerned. Perfect submission to discipline is
followed by a rational understanding of the discipline and the ultimate source
of its authority. In this period religious life seeks its foundation in a kind
of metaphysics - a logically consistent view of the world with God as a part
of that view. In the third period metaphysics is displaced by psychology, and
religious life develops the ambition to come into direct contact with the Ultimate
Reality. It is here that religion becomes a matter of personal assimilation
of life and power; and the individual achieves a free personality, not by releasing
himself from the fetters of the law, but by discovering the ultimate source
of the law within the depths of his own consciousness. As in the words of a
Muslim Sufi - no understanding of the Holy Book is possible until it is
actually revealed to the believer just as it was revealed to the Prophet.1
It is, then, in the sense of this last phase in the development of religious
life that I use the word religion in the question that I now propose to raise.
Religion in this sense is known by the unfortunate name of Mysticism, which
is supposed to be a life-denying, fact-avoiding attitude of mind directly opposed
to the radically empirical outlook of our times. Yet higher religion, which
is only a search for a larger life, is essentially experience and recognized
the necessity of experience as its foundation long before science learnt to
do so. It is a genuine effort to clarify human consciousness, and is, as such,
as critical of its level of experience as Naturalism is of its own level.
As we all know,
it was Kant who first raised the question: Is metaphysics possible?2
He answered this question in the negative; and his argument applies with equal
force to the realities in which religion is especially interested. The manifold
of sense, according to him, must fulfil certain formal conditions in order to
constitute knowledge. The thing-in-itself is only a limiting idea. Its function
is merely regulative. If there is some actuality corresponding to the idea,
it falls outside the boundaries of experience, and consequently its existence
cannot be rationally demonstrated. This verdict of Kant cannot be easily accepted.
It may fairly be argued that in view of the more recent developments of science,
such as the nature of matter as bottled-up light waves, the idea
of the universe as an act of thought, finiteness of space and time and Heisenbergs
principle of indeterminacy3 in Nature, the case for a system of rational
theology is not so bad as Kant was led to think. But for our present purposes
it is unnecessary to consider this point in detail. As to the thing-in-itself,
which is inaccessible to pure reason because of its falling beyond the boundaries
of experience, Kants verdict can be accepted only if we start with the
assumption that all experience other than the normal level of experience is
impossible. The only question, therefore, is whether the normal level is the
only level of knowledge-yielding experience. Kants view of the thing-in-itself
and the thing as it appears to us very much determined the character of his
question regarding the possibility of metaphysics. But what if the position,
as understood by him, is reversed? The great Muslim Sufi philosopher, Muhyaddin
Ibn al-Arabâ of Spain, has made the acute observation that God is a percept;
the world is a concept.4 Another Muslim Sufi thinker and poet, Ir«qâ,
insists on the plurality of space-orders and time-orders and speaks of a Divine
Time and a Divine Space.5 It may be that what we call the external
world is only an intellectual construction, and that there are other levels
of human experience capable of being systematized by other orders of space and
time - levels in which concept and analysis do not play the same role as they
do in the case of our normal experience. It may, however, be said that the level
of experience to which concepts are inapplicable cannot yield any knowledge
of a universal character, for concepts alone are capable of being socialized.
The standpoint of the man who relies on religious experience for capturing Reality
must always remain individual and incommunicable. This objection has some force
if it is meant to insinuate that the mystic is wholly ruled by his traditional
ways, attitudes, and expectations. Conservatism is as bad in religion as in
any other department of human activity. It destroys the egos creative
freedom and closes up the paths of fresh spiritual enterprise. This is the main
reason why our medieval mystic techniques can no longer produce original discoveries
of ancient Truth. The fact, however, that religious experience is incommunicable
does not mean that the religious mans pursuit is futile. Indeed, the incommunicability
of religious experience gives us a clue to the ultimate nature of the ego. In
our daily social intercourse we live and move in seclusion, as it were. We do
not care to reach the inmost individuality of men. We treat them as mere functions,
and approach them from those aspects of their identity which are capable of
conceptual treatment. The climax of religious life, however, is the discovery
of the ego as an individual deeper than his conceptually describable habitual
selfhood. It is in contact with the Most Real that the ego discovers its uniqueness,
its metaphysical status, and the possibility of improvement in that status.
Strictly speaking, the experience which leads to this discovery is not a conceptually
manageable intellectual fact; it is a vital fact, an attitude consequent on
an inner biological transformation which cannot be captured in the net of logical
categories. It can embody itself only in a world-making or world-shaking act;
and in this form alone the content of this timeless experience can diffuse itself
in the time-movement, and make itself effectively visible to the eye of history.
It seems that the method of dealing with Reality by means of concepts is not
at all a serious way of dealing with it. Science does not care whether its electron
is a real entity or not. It may be a mere symbol, a mere convention. Religion,
which is essentially a mode of actual living, is the only serious way of handing
Reality. As a form of higher experience it is corrective of our concepts of
philosophical theology or at least makes us suspicious of the purely rational
process which forms these concepts. Science can afford to ignore metaphysics
altogether, and may even believe it to be a justified form of poetry6,
as Lange defined it, or a legitimate play of grown-ups, as Nietzsche
described it. But the religious expert who seeks to discover his personal status
in the constitution of things cannot, in view of the final aim of his struggle,
be satisfied with what science may regard as a vital lie, a mere as-if7
to regulate thought and conduct. In so far as the ultimate nature of Reality
is concerned, nothing is at stake in the venture of science; in the religious
venture the whole career of the ego as an assimilative personal centre of life
and experience is at stake. Conduct, which involves a decision of the ultimate
fate of the agent cannot be based on illusions. A wrong concept misleads the
understanding; a wrong deed degrades the whole man, and may eventually demolish
the structure of the human ego. The mere concept affects life only partially;
the deed is dynamically related to Reality and issues from a generally constant
attitude of the whole man towards reality. No doubt the deed, i.e. the control
of psychological and physiological processes with a view to tune up the ego
for an immediate contact with the Ultimate Reality is, and cannot but be, individual
in form and content; yet the deed, too, is liable to be socialized when others
begin to live though it with a view to discover for themselves its effectiveness
as a method of approaching the Real. The evidence of religious experts in all
ages and countries is that there are potential types of consciousness lying
close to our normal consciousness. If these types of consciousness open up possibilities
of life-giving and knowledge-yielding experience, the question of the possibility
of religion as a form of higher experience is a perfectly legitimate one and
demands our serious attention.
But, apart
from the legitimacy of the question, there are important reasons why it should
be raised at the present moment of the history of modern culture. In the first
place, the scientific interest of the question. It seems that every culture
has a form of Naturalism peculiar to its own world-feeling; and it further appears
that every form of Naturalism ends in some sort of Atomism. We have Indian Atomism,
Greek Atomism, Muslim Atomism, and Modern Atomism.8 Modern Atomism
is, however, unique. Its amazing mathematics which sees the universe as an elaborate
differential equation; and its physics which, following its own methods, has
been led to smash some of the old gods of its own temple, have already brought
us to the point of asking the question whether the casualty-bound aspect of
Nature is the whole truth about it? Is not the Ultimate Reality invading our
consciousness from some other direction as well? Is the purely intellectual
method of overcoming Nature the only method? We have acknowledged,
says Professor Eddington,
that
the entities of physics can from their very nature form only a partial aspect
of the reality. How are we to deal with the other part? It cannot be said that
other part concerns us less than the physical entities. Feelings, purpose, values,
made up our consciousness as much as sense-impressions. We follow up the sense-impressions
and find that they lead into an external world discussed by science; we follow
up the other elements of our being and find that they lead - not into a world
of space and time, but surely somewhere.9
In the second
place we have to look to the great practical importance of the question. The
modern man with his philosophies of criticism and scientific specialism finds
himself in a strange predicament. His Naturalism has given him an unprecedented
control over the forces of Nature, but has robbed him of faith in his own future.
It is strange how the same idea affects different cultures differently. The
formulation of the theory of evolution in the world of Islam brought into being
Rëmâs tremendous enthusiasm for the biological future of man. No cultured
Muslim can read such passages as the following without a thrill of joy:
Low in the
earth
I lived in realms of ore and stone;
And then I smiled in many-tinted flowers;
Then roving with the wild and wandering hours,
Oer earth and air and oceans zone,
In a new birth,
I dived and flew,
And crept and ran,
And all the secret of my essence drew
Within a form that brought them all to view -
And lo, a Man!
And then my goal,
Beyond the clouds, beyond the sky,
In realms where none may change or die -
In angel form; and then away
Beyond the bounds of night and day,
And Life and Death, unseen or seen,
Where all that is hath ever been,
As One and Whole.
(Rëmâ: Thadanis
Translation)10
On the other
hand, the formulation of the same view of evolution with far greater precision
in Europe has led to the belief that there now appears to be no scientific
basis for the idea that the present rich complexity of human endowment will
ever be materially exceeded. That is how the modern mans secret
despair hides itself behind the screen of scientific terminology. Nietzsche,
although he thought that the idea of evolution did not justify the belief that
man was unsurpassable, cannot be regarded as an exception in this respect. His
enthusiasm for the future of man ended in the doctrine of eternal recurrence
- perhaps the most hopeless idea of immortality ever formed by man. This eternal
repetition is not eternal becoming; it is the same old idea of being
masquerading as becoming.
Thus, wholly
overshadowed by the results of his intellectual activity, the modern man has
ceased to live soulfully, i.e. from within. In the domain of thought he is living
in open conflict with himself; and in the domain of economic and political life
he is living in open conflict with others. He finds himself unable to control
his ruthless egoism and his infinite gold-hunger which is gradually killing
all higher striving in him and bringing him nothing but life-weariness. Absorbed
in the fact, that is to say, the optically present source of sensation,
he is entirely cut off from the unplumbed depths of his own being. In the wake
of his systematic materialism has at last come that paralysis of energy which
Huxley apprehended and deplored. The condition of things in the East is no better.
The technique of medieval mysticism by which religious life, in its higher manifestations,
developed itself both in the East and in the West has now practically failed.
And in the Muslim East it has, perhaps, done far greater havoc than anywhere
else. Far from reintegrating the forces of the average mans inner life,
and thus preparing him for participation in the march of history, it has taught
him a false renunciation and made him perfectly contented with his ignorance
and spiritual thraldom. No wonder then that the modern Muslim in Turkey, Egypt,
and Persia is led to seek fresh sources of energy in the creation of new loyalties,
such as patriotism and nationalism which Nietzsche described as sickness
and unreason, and the strongest force against culture11.
Disappointed of a purely religious method of spiritual renewal which alone brings
us into touch with the everlasting fountain of life and power by expanding our
thought and emotion, the modern Muslim fondly hopes to unlock fresh sources
of energy by narrowing down his thought and emotion. Modern atheistic socialism,
which possesses all the fervour of a new religion, has a broader outlook; but
having received its philosophical basis from the Hegelians of the left wing,
it rises in revolt against the very source which could have given it strength
and purpose. Both nationalism and atheistic socialism, at least in the present
state of human adjustments, must draw upon the psychological forces of hate,
suspicion, and resentment which tend to impoverish the soul of man and close
up his hidden sources of spiritual energy. Neither the technique of medieval
mysticism, nor nationalism, nor atheistic socialism can cure the ills of a despairing
humanity. Surely the present moment is one of great crisis in the history of
modern culture. The modern world stands in need of biological renewal. And religion,
which in its higher manifestations is neither dogma, nor priesthood, nor ritual,
can alone ethically prepare the modern man for the burden of the great responsibility
which the advancement of modern science necessarily involves, and restore to
him that attitude of faith which makes him capable of winning a personality
here and retaining it in hereafter. It is only by rising to a fresh vision of
his origin and future, his whence and whither, that man will eventually triumph
over a society motivated by an inhuman competition, and a civilization which
has lost its spiritual unity by its inner conflict of religious and political
values.
As I have indicated
before,12 religion as a deliberate enterprise to seize the ultimate
principle of value and thereby to reintegrate the forces of ones own personality,
is a fact which cannot be denied. The whole religious literature of the world,
including the records of specialists personal experiences, though perhaps
expressed in the thought-forms of an out-of-date psychology, is a standing testimony
to it. These experiences are perfectly natural, like our normal experiences.
The evidence is that they possess a cognitive value for the recipient, and,
what is much more important, a capacity to centralize the forces of the ego
and thereby to endow him with a new personality. The view that such experiences
are neurotic or mystical will not finally settle the question of their meaning
or value. If an outlook beyond physics is possible, we must courageously face
the possibility, even though it may disturb or tend to modify our normal ways
of life and thought. The interests of truth require that we must abandon our
present attitude. It does not matter in the least if the religious attitude
is originally determined by some kind of physiological disorder. George Fox
may be a neurotic; but who can deny his purifying power in Englands religious
life of his day? Muhammad, we are told, was a psychopath13. Well,
if a psychopath has the power to give a fresh direction to the course of human
history, it is a point of the highest psychological interest to search his original
experience which has turned slaves into leaders of men, and has inspired the
conduct and shaped the career of whole races of mankind. Judging from the various
types of activity that emanated from the movement initiated by the Prophet of
Islam, his spiritual tension and the kind of behaviour which issued from it,
cannot be regarded as a response to a mere fantasy inside his brain. It is impossible
to understand it except as a response to an objective situation generative of
new enthusiasms, new organizations, new starting-points. If we look at the matter
from the standpoint of anthropology it appears that a psychopath is an important
factor in the economy of humanitys social organization. His way is not
to classify facts and discover causes: he thinks in terms of life and movement
with a view to create new patterns of behaviour for mankind. No doubt he has
his pitfalls and illusions just as the scientist who relies on sense-experience
has his pitfalls and illusions. A careful study of his method, however, shows
that he is not less alert than the scientist in the matter of eliminating the
alloy of illusion from his experience.
The question
for us outsiders is to find out an effective method of inquiry into the nature
and significance of this extraordinary experience. The Arab historian Ibn Khaldën,
who laid the foundations of modern scientific history, was the first to seriously
approach this side of human psychology and reached what we now call the idea
of the subliminal self. Later, Sir William Hamilton in England and Leibniz in
Germany interested themselves in some of the more unknown phenomena of the mind.
Jung, however, is probably right in thinking that the essential nature of religion
is beyond the province of analytic psychology. In his discussion of the relation
of analytic psychology to poetic art, he tells us that the process of artistic
form alone can be the object of psychology. The essential nature of art, according
to him, cannot be the object of a psychological method of approach. A
distinction, says Jung,
must
also be made in the realm of religion; there also a psychological consideration
is permissible only in respect of the emotional and symbolical phenomena of
a religion, where the essential nature of religion is in no way involved, as
indeed it cannot be. For were this possible, not religion alone, but art also
could be treated as a mere sub-division of psychology.14
Yet Jung has
violated his own principle more than once in his writings. The result of this
procedure is that, instead of giving us a real insight into the essential nature
of religion and its meaning for human personality, our modern psychology has
given us quite a plethora of new theories which proceed on a complete misunderstanding
of the nature of religion as revealed in its higher manifestations, and carry
us in an entirely hopeless direction. The implication of these theories, on
the whole, is that religion does not relate the human ego to any objective reality
beyond himself; it is merely a kind of well-meaning biological device calculated
to build barriers of an ethical nature round human society in order to protect
the social fabric against the otherwise unrestrainable instincts of the ego.
That is why, according to this newer psychology, Christianity has already fulfilled
its biological mission, and it is impossible for the modern man to understand
its original significance. Jung concludes:
Most
certainly we should still understand it, had our customs even a breath of ancient
brutality, for we can hardly realize in this day the whirlwinds of the unchained
libido which roared through the ancient Rome of the Caesars. The civilized man
of the present day seems very far removed from that. He has become merely neurotic.
So for us the necessities which brought forth Christianity have actually been
lost, since we no longer understand their meaning. We do not know against what
it had to protect us. For enlightened people, the so-called religiousness has
already approached very close to a neurosis. In the past two thousand years
Christianity has done its work and has erected barriers of repression, which
protect us from the sight of our own sinfulness.15
This is missing
the whole point of higher religious life. Sexual self-restraint is only a preliminary
stage in the egos evolution. The ultimate purpose of religious life is
to make this evolution move in a direction far more important to the destiny
of the ego than the moral health of the social fabric which forms his present
environment. The basic perception from which religious life moves forward is
the present slender unity of the ego, his liability to dissolution, his amenability
to reformation and the capacity for an ampler freedom to create new situations
in known and unknown environments. In view of this fundamental perception higher
religious life fixes its gaze on experiences symbolic of those subtle movements
of Reality which seriously affect the destiny of the ego as a possibly permanent
element in the constitution of Reality. If we look at the matter from this point
of view modern psychology has not yet touched even the outer fringe of religious
life, and is still far from the richness and variety of what is called religious
experience. In order to give you an idea of its richness and variety I quote
here the substance of a passage from a great religious genius of the seventeenth
century - Shaikh AÁmad of Sirhind - whose fearless analytical criticism of contemporary
Sufism resulted in the development of a new technique. All the various system
of Sufi technique in India came from Central Asia and Arabia; his is the only
technique which crossed the Indian border and is still a living force in the
Punjab, Afghanistan, and Asiatic Russia. I am afraid it is not possible for
me to expound the real meaning of this passage in the language of modern psychology;
for such language does not yet exist. Since, however, my object is simply to
give you an idea of the infinite wealth of experience which the ego in his Divine
quest has to sift and pass through, I do hope you will excuse me for the apparently
outlandish terminology which possesses a real substance of meaning, but which
was formed under the inspiration of a religious psychology developed in the
atmosphere of a different culture. Coming now to the passage. The experience
of one Abd al-Mumin was described to the Shaikh as follows:
Heavens
and Earth and Gods Throne and Hell and Paradise have all ceased to exist
for me. When I look round I find them nowhere. When I stand in the presence
of somebody I see nobody before me: nay even my own being is lost to me. God
is infinite. Nobody can encompass Him; and this is the extreme limit of spiritual
experience. No saint has been able to go beyond this.
On this the
Shaikh replied:
The experience
which is described has its origin in the ever varying life of the Qalb;
and it appears to me that the recipient of its has not yet passed even one-fourth
of the innumerable Stations of the Qalb. The remaining three-fourths
must be passed through in order to finish the experiences of this first Station
of spiritual life. Beyond this Station there are other Stations
know as RëÁ, Sirr-i-Khafâ, and Sirr-i-Akhf«, each of these Stations
which together constitute what is technically called ÿlam-i Amr
has its own characteristic states and experiences. After having passed through
these Stations the seeker of truth gradually receives the illuminations
of Divine Names and Divine Attributes and finally the
illuminations of the Divine Essence.16
Whatever may
be the psychological ground of the distinctions made in this passage it gives
us at least some idea of a whole universe of inner experience as seen by a great
reformer of Islamic Sufâsm. According to him this ÿlam-i Amr, i.e.
the world of directive energy, must be passed through before one
reaches that unique experience which symbolizes the purely objective. This is
the reason why I say that modern psychology has not yet touched even the outer
fringe of the subject. Personally, I do not at all feel hopeful of the present
state of things in either biology or psychology. Mere analytical criticism with
some understanding of the organic conditions of the imagery in which religious
life has sometimes manifested itself is not likely to carry us to the living
roots of human personality. Assuming that sex-imagery has played a role in the
history of religion, or that religion has furnished imaginative means of escape
from, or adjustment to, an unpleasant reality - these ways of looking at the
matter cannot, in the least, affect the ultimate aim of religious life, that
is to say, the reconstruction of the finite ego by bringing him into contact
with an eternal life-process, and thus giving him a metaphysical status of which
we can have only a partial understanding in the half-choking atmosphere of our
present environment. If, therefore, the science of psychology is ever likely
to possess a real significance for the life of mankind, it must develop an independent
method calculated to discover a new technique better suited to the temper of
our times. Perhaps a psychopath endowed with a great intellect - the combination
is not an impossibility - may give us a clue to such a technique. In modern
Europe, Nietzsche, whose life and activity form, at least to us Easterns, an
exceedingly interesting problem in religious psychology, was endowed with some
sort of a constitutional equipment for such an undertaking. His mental history
is not without a parallel in the history of Eastern Sufâsm. That a really imperative
vision of the Divine in man did come to him, cannot be denied. I call his vision
imperative because it appears to have given him a kind of prophetic
mentality which, by some kind of technique, aims at turning its visions into
permanent life-forces. Yet Nietzsche was a failure; and his failure was mainly
due to his intellectual progenitors such as Schopenhauer, Darwin, and Lange
whose influence completely blinded him to the real significance of his vision.
Instead of looking for a spiritual rule which would develop the Divine even
in a plebeian and thus open up before him an infinite future, Nietzsche was
driven to seek the realization of his vision in such scheme as aristocratic
radicalism.17 As I have said of him elsewhere:
The I
am which he seeketh,
Lieth beyond philosophy, beyond knowledge.
The plant that groweth only from the invisible soil of the heart of man,
Groweth not from a mere heap of clay!18
Thus failed
a genius whose vision was solely determined by his internal forces, and remained
unproductive for want of expert external guidance in his spiritual life,19
and the irony of fate is that this man, who appeared to his friends as
if he had come from a country where no man lived, was fully conscious
of his great spiritual need. I confront alone, he says, an
immense problem: it is as if I am lost in a forest, a primeval one. I need help.
I need disciples: I need a master.20 It would be so sweet to obey.
And again:
Why do
I not find among the living men who see higher than I do and have to look down
on me? Is it only that I have made a poor search? And I have so great a longing
for such.
The truth is
that the religious and the scientific processes, though involving different
methods, are identical in their final aim. Both aim at reaching the most real.
In fact, religion; for reasons which I have mentioned before, is far more anxious
to reach the ultimately real than science.21 And to both the way
to pure objectivity lies through what may be called the purification of experience.
In order to understand this we must make a distinction between experience as
a natural fact, significant of the normally observable behaviour of Reality,
and experience as significant of the inner nature of Reality. As a natural fact
it is explained in the light of its antecedents, psychological and physiological;
as significant of the inner nature of Reality we shall have to apply criteria
of a different kind to clarify its meaning. In the domain of science we try
to understand its meaning in reference to the external behaviour of Reality;
in the domain of religion we take it as representative of some kind of Reality
and try to discover its meanings in reference mainly to the inner nature of
that Reality. The scientific and the religious processes are in a sense parallel
to each other. Both are really descriptions of the same world with this difference
only that in the scientific process the egos standpoint is necessarily
exclusive, whereas in the religious process the ego integrates its competing
tendencies and develops a single inclusive attitude resulting in a kind of synthetic
transfiguration of his experiences. A careful study of the nature and purpose
of these really complementary processes shows that both of them are directed
to the purification of experience in their respective spheres. An illustration
will make my meaning clear. Humes criticism of our notion of cause must
be considered as a chapter in the history of science rather than that of philosophy.
True to the spirit of scientific empiricism we are not entitled to work with
any concepts of a subjective nature. The point of Humes criticism is to
emancipate empirical science from the concept of force which, as he urges, has
no foundation in sense-experience. This was the first attempt of the modern
mind to purify the scientific process.
Einsteins
mathematical view of the universe completes the process of purification started
by Hume, and, true to the spirit of Humes criticism, dispenses with the
concept of force altogether.22 The passage I have quoted from the
great Indian saint shows that the practical student of religious psychology
has a similar purification in view. His sense of objectivity is as keen as that
of the scientists in his own sphere of objectivity. He passes from experience
to experience, not as a mere spectator, but as a critical sifter of experience,
who by the rules of a peculiar technique, suited to his sphere of inquiry, endeavours
to eliminate all subjective elements, psychological or physiological, in the
content of his experience with a view finally to reach what is absolutely objective.
This final experience is the revelation of a new life-process - original, essential,
spontaneous. The eternal secret of the ego is that the moment he reaches this
final revelation he recognizes it as the ultimate root of his being without
the slightest hesitation. Yet in the experience itself there is no mystery.
Nor is there anything emotional in it. Indeed with a view to secure a wholly
non-emotional experience the technique of Islamic Sufâsm at least takes good
care to forbid the use of music in worship, and to emphasize the necessity of
daily congregational prayers in order to counteract the possible anti-social
effects of solitary contemplation. Thus the experience reached is a perfectly
natural experience and possesses a biological significance of the highest importance
to the ego. It is the human ego rising higher than mere reflection, and mending
its transiency by appropriating the eternal. The only danger to which the ego
is exposed in this Divine quest is the possible relaxation of his activity caused
by his enjoyment of and absorption in the experiences that precede the final
experience. The history of Eastern Sufâsm shows that this is a real danger.
This was the whole point of the reform movement initiated by the great Indian
saint from whose writings I have already quoted a passage. And the reason is
obvious. The ultimate aim of the ego is not to see something, but to be something.
It is in the egos effort to be something that he discovers his final opportunity
to sharpen his objectivity and acquire a more fundamental I am which
finds evidence of its reality not in the Cartesian I think but in
the Kantian I can. The end of the egos quest is not emancipation
from the limitations of individuality; it is, on the other hand, a more precise
definition of it. The final act is not an intellectual act, but a vital act
which deepens the whole being of the ego, and sharpens his will with the creative
assurance that the world is not something to be merely seen or known through
concepts, but something to be made and re-made by continuous action. It is a
moment of supreme bliss and also a moment of the greatest trial for the ego:
Art thou in
the stage of life. death, or death-in-life.
Invoke the aid of three witnesses to verify thy Station.
The first
witness is thine own consciousness -
See thyself, then, with thine own light.
The second witness is the consciousness of another ego -
See thyself, then, with the light of an ego other than thee.
The third witness is Gods consciousness -
See thyself, then, with Gods light.
If thou standest unshaken in front of this light,
Consider thyself as living and eternal as He!
That man alone is real who dares -
Dares to see God face to face!
What is Ascension? Only a search for a witness
Who may finally confirm thy reality -
A witness whose confirmation alone makes thee eternal.
No one can stand unshaken in His Presence;
And he who can, verily, he is pure gold.
Art thou a mere particle of dust?
Tighten the knot of thy ego;
And hold fast to thy tiny being!
How glorious to burnish ones ego.
And to test its lustre in the presence of the Sun!
Re-chisel, then, thine ancient frame; And build up a new being.
Such being is real being;
Or else thy ego is a mere ring of smoke!
J«vid
N«mah
[See
Notes]
Date/Time Last Modified: 6/18/2002 8:03:47 AM
Readers'
Comment
Mohammad Fazlul Kader: 6/15/2005 11:05:55 PM
I downloaded the book of Dr. Iqbal ( Reconstruction of .. in Islam) from your website. I was looking for this book and finally found it here. Please accept my deep gratitude for this kind service.
Md. Fazlul Kader
Bangladesh
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