Man's highest aspiration—his seeking for perfection, his
longing for freedom and mastery, his search after pure truth and unmixed delight—is
in flagrant contradiction with his present existence and normal experience.
Such contradiction is part of Nature's general method; it
is a sign that she is working towards a greater harmony. The reconciliation is
achieved by an evolutionary progress.
Life evolves out of Matter, Mind out of Life, because they
are already involved there: Matter is a form of veiled Life, Life a form of
veiled Mind. May not Mind be a form and veil of a higher power, the Spirit,
which would be supramental in its nature? Man's highest aspiration would then
only indicate the gradual unveiling of the Spirit within, the preparation of a
higher life upon earth.
Man and Evolution
An evolution of consciousness is the central motive of
terrestrial existence. The evolutionary working of Nature has a double process:
an evolution of forms, an evolution of the soul. Man occupies the crest of the
evolutionary wave. With him occurs the passage from an unconscious to a
conscious evolution. At each step one receives an intimation of what the
following step will be. The nature of the next step is indicated by the deep
aspirations awakening in the human race. A change of consciousness is the major
fact of the next evolutionary transformation, and the consciousness itself, by
its own mutation, will impose and effect any necessary mutation of the body.
There is no reason to suppose that this transformation is impossible on earth.
In fact, it would give the truest meaning to earthly existence. Man's urge
towards spirituality is an undeniable indication of the inner drive of the
Spirit within towards emergence, its insistence towards the next step of its
manifestation.
The Present Crisis
It is often claimed that reason is the highest faculty of
man and that it has enabled him to master himself and to master Nature. Has
reason really succeeded? When reason applies itself to life and action it
becomes partial and passionate and the servant of other forces than the pure
truth. Why does man have faith in reason? Because reason has a legitimate function
to fulfil, for which it is perfectly adapted; and this is to justify and
illumine for man his various experiences and to give him faith and conviction
in holding on to the enlarging of his consciousness.
But reason cannot arrive at any final truth because it can
neither get to the root of things nor embrace their totality. It deals with the
finite, the separate and has no measure for the all and the infinite. The
limitations of reason become very strikingly apparent when it is confronted
with the religious life. What is religion really and essentially and why is it
outside the realm of reason? Can religion then be the guide of human life? It
is a fact that in ancient times society gave a pre-eminent place to religion.
But, on the other hand, humanity—and in particular that
portion of humanity which was the standard-bearer of progress—has revolted
against the predominance of religion.
Very often the accredited religions have opposed progress
and sided with the forces of obscurity and oppression. And it has needed a
denial, a revolt of the oppressed human mind and heart to correct their errors
and set religion right. This would not have been so if religion were the true
and sufficient guide of the whole of human life.
If religion has failed, it is because it has confused the
essential with the adventitious. True religion is spiritual religion, it is a
seeking after God, the opening of the deepest life of the soul to the
indwelling Godhead, the eternal Omnipresence. Dogmas, cults, moral codes are
aids and props; they may be offered to man but not imposed on him.
Moreover, religion often considers spiritual life as made
up of renunciation and mortification. Religion thus becomes a force that
discourages life and it cannot, therefore, be a true law and guide for life.
In spirituality then, restored to its true sense, we must
seek for the directing light and the harmonising law. On the other hand, modern
man has not solved the problem of the relation of the individual to the
society. What are their respective roles in the spiritual progress of mankind?
It is wrong to demand that the individual subordinate
himself to the collectivity or merge in it, because it is by its most advanced
individuals that the collectivity progresses and they can really advance only
if they are free. But it is true that as the individual advances spiritually,
he finds himself more and more united with the collectivity and the All.
The present evolutionary crisis comes from a disparity
between the limited faculties of man-mental, ethical and spiritual-and the
technical and economical means at his disposal. Without an inner change man can
no longer cope with the gigantic development of the outer life. The exaltation
of the collectivity, of the State, only substitutes the collective ego for the
individual ego. If humanity is to survive, a radical transformation of human
nature is indispensable.
Conduct and Freedom
Since perfection is progressive, good and evil are shifting
quantities and change from time to time their meaning and value. Four main
principles successively govern human conduct. The first two are personal need
and the good of the collectivity.
A conflict is born of the two instinctive tendencies which
govern human action: the individualist and the gregarious. In order to settle
this conflict, a new principle comes in, other and higher than the two
conflicting instincts, and aiming both to override and to reconcile them. This
third principle is the ethical ideal.
But conflicts do not subside; they seem rather to multiply.
Moral laws are arbitrary and rigid; when applied to life, they are obliged to
come to terms with it and end in compromises which deprive them of all power.
Behind the ethical law, which is a false image, a greater
truth of a vast consciousness without fetters unveils itself, the supreme law
of our divine nature. It determines perfectly our relations with each being and
with the totality of the universe, and it also reveals the exact rhythm of the
direct expression of the Divine in us. It is the fourth and supreme principle
of action, which is at the same time imperative law and absolute freedom.
The Spiritual Man
Spirituality is something else than intellectuality; its
appearance is the sign that a power greater than mind is striving to emerge in
its turn. Spirituality is a progressive awakening to the inner reality of our
being to a spirit, self, soul which is other than our mind, life and body. It
is an inner aspiration to know, to enter into contact and union with the
greater Reality beyond, which also pervades the universe and dwells in us, and,
as a result of that aspiration, that contact and that union, a turning, a
conversion, a birth into a new being.
In her attempt to open up the inner being, Nature has
followed four main lines - religion, occultism, spiritual thought, and an inner
spiritual realization and experience. Only spiritual realization and experience
can achieve the change of the mental being into a spiritual being.
Mysticism and spirituality have been criticized from two
points of view. These criticisms should be examined before proceeding further:
1. The mystic turns away from life.
2. Mystical knowledge is purely subjective.
The Triple Transformation
If the final goal of terrestrial evolution were only to
awaken man to the supreme Reality and to release him from ignorance and
bondage, so that the liberated soul could find elsewhere a higher state of
being or merge into this supreme Reality, the task would be accomplished with
the advent of the spiritual man. But there is also in us an aspiration for the
mastery of Nature and her transformation, for a greater perfection in the
earthly existence itself.
To be established permanently, this new order of existence
demands a radical change of the entire human nature. In this transformation,
there are three phases.
The first phase of this transformation can be called
psychic: the soul or psychic being has to come forward and take the lead of the
whole being. In the course of evolution, the soul in order to emerge
successfully and turn the being towards the supreme Reality, uses three dynamic
images of this supreme Reality: Truth, Beauty and Good. Three ways thus open
before the seeker.
1. The way of the intellect or of knowledge.
2. The way of the heart or of emotion.
3. The way of the will or of action.
These three ways, combined and followed concurrently, have
a most powerful effect. A shifting of the consciousness, a withdrawal within
becomes imperative at this stage, in order to reach the central being, the true
Soul, and to allow it to become the guide and sovereign of the nature. Two
principal results follow this emergence: first an effective guidance and
mastery which unmask and reject all that is false and obscure or all that
opposes the divine realisation; then a spontaneous influx of spiritual
experiences of all kinds.
The second phase of the transformation may be called
spiritual; it is an opening to an Infinity above us, an eternal Presence, a
boundless Self, an infinite Existence, an infinity of Consciousness, an
infinity of Bliss, an All Power.
The spiritual change culminates in a permanent ascension
from the lower consciousness to the higher consciousness, followed by an
effective permanent descent of the higher nature into the lower.
A new consciousness begins to form with new forces of
thought and sight, and a power of direct spiritual realisation which is more
than thought or sight.
To make this new creation permanent and perfect, the very
foundation of our nature of ignorance must be transfigured and a greater power,
a supramental Force must intervene to accomplish that transfiguration. This is
the third phase: the supramental transformation.
Towards Supermind
It is difficult to conceive intellectually what the
Supermind is; and to describe it, another language would be needed than the
poor abstract counters of the mind. The transition from Mind to Supermind is a
passage from Nature into Supernature. For that very reason it cannot be
achieved by a mere effort of our mind or our unaided aspiration. Overmind and
Supermind are involved and hidden in the earth-nature but, in order that they
may emerge in us, there is needed a pressure of the same powers already
formulated in their full natural force on their own superconscient planes. The
powers of the Superconscience must descend into us and uplift us and transform
our being.
What should be the preparation for the supramental
transformation? First, an increasing control of the individual over his own
nature and a more and more conscious participation in the action of the Supernature.
A second condition consists in a conscious obedience, a
surrender of our whole being, to the light, the truth and force from above.
A third condition is the unification of the whole being
around the true self and the opening of the individual to the cosmic
consciousness.
Four steps of ascent lead from the human intelligence to
the Supermind; these are:
1. Higher Mind. 2. Illumined Mind. 3. Intuitive Mind. 4.
Overmind.
The Overmind descent is not sufficient to transform wholly
the Inconscient; the Supramental Force alone is capable of achieving this.
The Gnostic Being
The difficulty in understanding and describing the
supramental nature comes from the fact that in its very essence it is
consciousness and power of the Infinite. One can, however, describe in a
general way the passage from the Overmind to the Supermind and form an idea of
the supramental existence in its initial step.
The supramental or gnostic being will be the perfect
consummation of the spiritual man. The law of the Supermind is unity fulfilled
in diversity; unity does not imply uniformity.
The supramental being will realise harmony of his
individual self with the cosmic Self, of his individual will and action with
the cosmic Will and Action.
The transcendent aspect of the spiritual life is
indispensable for the freedom of the Spirit; but it will harmonise with the
manifested existence and give it an unshakable foundation. For the gnostic
being, to act in the world does not signify a lapse from unity.
The gnostic consciousness will proceed towards an integral
knowledge. And that will not be a revelation or a delivery of light out of
darkness, but of light out of light.
The joy of an intimate self-revealing diversity of the One,
the multitudinous union and happy interaction within the One, will give a fully
perfected sense to the gnostic life.
Matter will reveal itself as an instrument of the
manifestation of Spirit; a new liberated and sovereign acceptance of material
Nature will then be possible.
The body will become a faithful and capable instrument,
perfectly responsive to the Spirit. Health, strength, duration, bodily
happiness and ease, liberation from suffering, are a part of the physical
perfection which the gnostic evolution is called upon to realise.
A vast calm and a deep delight of the gnostic existence
rise together in a growing intensity and culminate in an eternal ecstasy. In
the universal phenomenon is revealed the eternal Bliss, Ananda.
Two questions remain to be examined, which are important
for the human conception of life.
1. What is the place of personality in the gnostic being?
In the gnostic consciousness personality and impersonality
are not opposing principles; they are inseparable aspects of one and the same
reality.
2. What will be the nature of the gnostic person? If there
is a gnostic personality and if it is in some way responsible for its acts,
what is the place of the ethical element in the gnostic nature, what is its
perfection and its fulfilment?
The gnostic life will reconcile freedom and order. There
will be an entire accord between the free expression of the Individual and his
obedience to the inherent law of the supreme and universal Truth of things. All
mental standards would disappear because their necessity would cease; the
authentic law of identity with the Divine Self would have replaced them
.
The Divine Life
To be wholly and integrally conscious of oneself and of all
the truth of one's being is what is implied by the perfect emergence of the
individual consciousness, and it is that towards which evolution tends. All
being is one, and to be fully conscious means to be integrated with the
consciousness of all, with the universal self and force and action.
The plenitude of this consciousness can only be attained by
realizing the identity of the individual self with the transcendent self, the
supreme Reality.
This realization demands a turning of the consciousness
inward. The ordinary human consciousness is turned outward and sees the surface
of things only. It recoils from entering the inner depths which appear dark and
where it is afraid of losing itself. Yet the entry into this obscurity, this
void, this silence is only the passage to a greater existence.
Indeed, this inward-turning movement is not an imprisonment
in the personal self; it is the first step towards a true universality. The law
of the divine life is universality in action, organized by an all-seeing Will,
with the sense of the true oneness of all. New powers of consciousness and new
faculties will develop in the gnostic being who will use them in a natural,
normal and spontaneous way both for knowledge and for action.
The life of gnostic beings might fitly be characterised as a Superhuman or divine life. But it must not be confused with past and present ideas of supermanhood. It would be a misconception to think that a life in the full light of knowledge would lose its charm and become an insipid monotony. The gnostic manifestation of life would be more full and fruitful and its interest more vivid than the creative interest offered to us by the world of Ignorance.