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Chapter I
Love and the Triple Path
WILL, knowledge and love are
the three divine powers in human nature and the life of man, and they point
to the three paths by which the human soul rises to the divine. The
integrality of them, the union of man with God in all the three, must
therefore, as we have seen, be the foundation of an integral Yoga.
Action is
the first power of life. Nature begins with force and its works which, once
conscious in man, become will and its achievements; therefore it is that by
turning his action Godwards the life of man best and most surely begins to
become divine. It is the door of first access, the starting-point of the
initiation. When the will in him is made one with the divine will and the
whole action of the being proceeds from the Divine and is directed towards the
Divine, the union in works is perfectly accomplished. But works fulfil
themselves in knowledge; all the totality of works, says the Gita, finds its
rounded culmination in knowledge, sarvam
karmākhilam jñāne parisamāpyate. By union in will and
works we become one in the omnipresent conscious being from whom all our will
and works have their rise and draw their power and in whom they fulfil the
round of their energies. And the crown of this union is love; for love is the
delight of conscious union with the Being in whom we live, act and move, by
whom we exist, for whom alone we learn in the end to act and to be. That is
the trinity of our powers, the union of all three in God to which we arrive
when we start from works as our way of access and our line of contact.
Knowledge is
the foundation of a constant living in the Divine. For consciousness is the
foundation of all living and being, and knowledge is the action of the
consciousness, the light by which it knows itself and its realities, the
power by which, starting from action, we are able to hold the inner results
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of thought and act in a firm
growth of our conscious being until it accomplishes itself, by union, in the
infinity of the divine being. The Divine meets us in many aspects and to each
of them knowledge is the key, so that by knowledge we enter into and possess
the infinite and divine in every way of his being, sarvabhāvena,¹ and
receive him into us and are possessed by him in every way of ours.
Without
knowledge we live blindly in him with the blindness of the power of Nature
intent on its works, but forgetful of its source and possessor, undivinely
therefore, deprived of the real, the full delight of our being. By knowledge
arriving at conscious oneness with that which we know, – for by identity
alone can complete and real knowledge exist, – the division is healed and the
cause of all our limitation and discord and weakness and discontent is
abolished. But knowledge is not complete without works; for the Will in being
also is God and not the being or its self-aware silent existence alone, and
if works find their culmination in knowledge, knowledge also finds its
fulfilment in works. And, here too, love is the crown of knowledge; for love
is the delight of union, and unity must be conscious of joy of union to find
all the riches of its own delight. Perfect knowledge indeed leads to perfect
love, integral knowledge to a rounded and multitudinous richness of love. “He
who knows me” says the Gita “as the supreme Purusha,” – not only as the immutable
oneness, but in the many-souled movement of the divine and as that, superior
to both, in which both are divinely held, – “he, because he has the integral
knowledge, seeks me by love in every way of his being.” This is the trinity
of our powers, the union of all three in God to which we arrive when we start
from knowledge.
Love is the
crown of all being and its way of fulfilment, that by which it rises to all
intensity and all fullness and the ecstasy of utter self-finding. For if the
Being is in its very nature consciousness and by consciousness we become one
with it, therefore by perfect knowledge of it fulfilled in identity, yet is
delight the
¹ Gita.
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nature of consciousness and of
the acme of delight love is the key and the secret. And if will is the power
of conscious being by which it fulfils itself and by union in will we become
one with the Being in its characteristic infinite power, yet all the works of
that power start from delight, live in the delight, have delight for their aim
and end; love of the Being in itself and in all of itself that its power of
consciousness manifests, is the way to the perfect wideness of the Ananda.
Love is the power and passion of the divine self-delight and without love we
may get the rapt peace of its infinity, the absorbed silence of the Ananda,
but not its absolute depth of richness and fullness.
Love leads
us from the suffering of division into the bliss of perfect union, but
without losing that joy of the act of union which is the soul's greatest
discovery and for which the life of the cosmos is a long preparation.
Therefore to approach God by love is to prepare oneself for the greatest
possible spiritual fulfilment. Love fulfilled does not exclude knowledge, but
itself brings knowledge; and the completer the knowledge, the richer the
possibility of love. “By Bhakti” says the Lord in the Gita “shall a man know
Me in all my extent and greatness and as I am in the principles of my being,
and when he has known Me in the principles of my being, then he enters into
Me.” Love without knowledge is a passionate and intense, but blind, crude,
often dangerous thing, a great power, but also a stumbling-block; love,
limited in knowledge, condemns itself in its fervour and often by its very
fervour to narrowness; but love leading to perfect knowledge brings the
infinite and absolute union. Such love is not inconsistent with, but rather
throws itself with joy into divine works; for it loves God and is one with
him in all his being, and therefore in all beings, and to work for the world
is then to feel and fulfil multitudinously one's love for God. This is the
trinity of our powers, the union of all three in God to which we arrive when
we start on our journey by the path of devotion with Love for the Angel of
the Way to find in the ecstasy of the divine delight of the All-Lover's being
the fulfilment of ours, its secure home and blissful abiding-place and the
centre of its universal radiation.
Since then
in the union of these three powers lies our base of perfection, the seeker of
an integral self-fulfilment in the Divine must avoid or throw away, if he has
them at all, the
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misunderstanding and mutual
depreciation which we often find existent between the followers of the three
paths. Those who have the cult of knowledge seem often, if not to despise,
yet to look downward from their dizzy eminence on the path of the devotee as
if it were a thing inferior, ignorant, good only for souls that are not yet
ready for the heights of the Truth. It is true that devotion without
knowledge is often a thing raw, crude, blind and dangerous, as the errors,
crimes, follies of the religious have too often shown. But this is because
devotion in them has not found its own path, its own real principle, has not
therefore really entered on the path, but is fumbling and feeling after it,
is on one of the bypaths that lead to it; and knowledge too at this stage is
as imperfect as devotion, – dogmatic, schismatic, intolerant, bound up in the
narrowness of some single and exclusive principle, even that being usually
very imperfectly seized. When the devotee has grasped the power that shall
raise him, has really laid hold on love, that in the end purifies and
enlarges him as effectively as knowledge can; they are equal powers, though
their methods of arriving at the same goal are different. The pride of the
philosopher looking down on the passion of the devotee arises, as does all
pride, from a certain deficiency of his nature; for the intellect too
exclusively developed misses what the heart has to offer. The intellect is
not in every way superior to the heart; if it opens more readily doors at
which the heart is apt to fumble in vain, it is, itself, apt to miss truths
which to the heart are very near and easy to hold. And if when the way of
thought deepens into spiritual experience, it arrives readily at the etherial
heights, pinnacles, skyey widenesses, it cannot without the aid of the heart
fathom the intense and rich abysses and oceanic depths of the divine being
and the divine Ananda.
The way of
Bhakti is supposed often to be necessarily inferior because it proceeds by
worship which belongs to that stage of spiritual experience where there is a
difference, an insufficient unity between the human soul and the Divine,
because its very principle is love and love means always two, the lover and
the beloved, a dualism therefore, while oneness is the highest spiritual
experience, and because it seeks after the personal God while the Impersonal
is the highest and the eternal truth,
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if not even the sole Reality.
But worship is only the first step on the path of devotion. Where external
worship changes into the inner adoration, real Bhakti begins; that deepens
into the intensity of divine love; that love leads to the joy of closeness in
our relations with the Divine; the joy of closeness passes into the bliss of
union. Love too as well as knowledge brings us to a highest oneness and it
gives to that oneness its greatest possible depth and intensity. It is true
that love returns gladly upon a difference in oneness, by which the oneness
itself becomes richer and sweeter. But here we may say that the heart is
wiser than the thought, at least than that thought which fixes upon opposite
ideas of the Divine and concentrates on one to the exclusion of the other
which seems its contrary, but is really its complement and a means of its
greatest fulfilment. This is the weakness of the mind that it limits itself
by its thoughts, its positive and negative ideas, the aspects of the Divine
Reality that it sees, and tends too much to pit one against the other.
Thought in
the mind, vicāra, the
philosophic trend by which mental knowledge approaches the Divine, is apt to
lend a greater importance to the abstract over the concrete, to that which is
high and remote over that which is intimate and near. It finds a greater
truth in the delight of the One in itself, a lesser truth or even a falsehood
in the delight of the One in the Many and of the Many in the One, a greater
truth in the impersonal and the Nirguna, a lesser truth or a falsehood in the
personal and the Saguna. But the Divine is beyond our oppositions of ideas,
beyond the logical contradictions we make between his aspects. He is not, we
have seen, bound and restricted by exclusive unity; his oneness realises
itself in infinite variation and to the joy of that love has the completest
key, without therefore missing the joy of the unity. The highest knowledge
and highest spiritual experience by knowledge find his oneness as perfect in
his various relations with the Many as in his self-absorbed delight. If to
thought the Impersonal seems the wider and higher truth, the Personal a
narrower experience, the spirit finds both of them to be aspects of a Reality
which figures itself in both, and if there is a knowledge of that Reality to
which thought arrives by insistence on the infinite Impersonality, there is
also a know-
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ledge of it to which love
arrives by insistence on the infinite Personality. The spiritual experience
of each leads, if followed to the end, to the same ultimate Truth. By Bhakti
as by knowledge, as the Gita tells us, we arrive at unity with the
Purushottama, the Supreme who contains in himself the impersonal and
numberless personalities, the qualityless and infinite qualities, pure being,
consciousness and delight and the endless play of their relations.
The devotee
on the other hand tends to look down on the sawdust dryness of mere
knowledge. And it is true that philosophy by itself without the rapture of
spiritual experience is something as dry as it is clear and cannot give all
the satisfaction we seek, that its spiritual experience even, when it has not
left its supports of thought and shot up beyond the mind, lives too much in
an abstract delight and that what it reaches, is not indeed the void it seems
to the passion of the heart, but still has the limitations of the peaks. On
the other hand, love itself is not complete without knowledge. The Gita
distinguishes between three initial kinds of Bhakti, that which seeks refuge
in the Divine from the sorrows of the world, ārta, that which, desiring, approaches the Divine as the
giver of its good, arthārthī,
and that which attracted by what it already loves, but does not yet know,
yearns to know this divine Unknown, jijñāsu;
but it gives the palm to the Bhakti that knows. Evidently the intensity of
passion which says, “I do not understand, I love,” and, loving, cares not to
understand, is not love's last self-expression, but its first, nor is it its
highest intensity. Rather as knowledge of the Divine grows, delight in the
Divine and love of it must increase. Nor can mere rapture be secure without
the foundation of knowledge; to live in what we love, gives that security,
and to live in it means to be one with it in consciousness, and oneness of
consciousness is the perfect condition of knowledge. Knowledge of the Divine
gives to love of the Divine its firmest security, opens to it its own widest
joy of experience, raises it to its highest pinnacles of outlook.
If the
mutual misunderstandings of these two powers are an ignorance, no less so is
the tendency of both to look down on the way of works as inferior to their
own loftier pitch of spiritual achievement. There is an intensity of love, as
there is an intensity
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of knowledge, to which works
seem something outward and distracting. But works are only thus outward and
distracting when we have not found oneness of will and consciousness with the
Supreme. When once that is found, works become the very power of knowledge
and the very outpouring of love. If knowledge is the very state of oneness
and love its bliss, divine works are the living power of its light and
sweetness. There is a movement of love, as in the aspiration of human love,
to separate the lover and the loved in the enjoyment of their exclusive
oneness away from the world and from all others, shut up in the nuptial
chambers of the heart. That is perhaps an inevitable movement of this path.
But still the widest love fulfilled in knowledge sees the world not as
something other and hostile to this joy, but as the being of the Beloved and
all creatures as his being, and in that vision divine works find their joy
and their justification.
This is the
knowledge in which an integral Yoga must live. We have to start Godward from
the powers of the mind, the intellect, the will, the heart, and in the mind
all is limited. Limitations, exclusiveness there can hardly fail to be at the
beginning and for a long time on the way. But an integral Yoga will wear
these more loosely than more exclusive ways of seeking, and it will sooner
emerge from the mental necessity. It may commence with the way of love, as
with the way of knowledge or of works; but where they meet, is the beginning
of its joy of fulfilment. Love it cannot miss, even if it does not start from
it; for love is the crown of works and the flowering of knowledge.
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