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1
WHEN Sri Aurobindo said, "Our Yoga is not for ourselves
but for humanity," many heaved a sigh of relief and thought
that the great soul was after all not entirely lost to the world,
his was not one more name added to the long list of Sannyasins
that India has been producing age after age without much profit
either to herself or to the human society ( or even perhaps
to their own selves) .People understood his Yoga to be a modern
one, dedicated to the service of humanity. If service to humanity
was not the very sum and substance of his spirituality, it was,
at least, the fruitful end and consummation. His Yoga was a
sort of art to explore and harness certain unseen powers that
can better and ameliorate human life in a more successful way
than mere rational scientific methods can hope to do.
Sri Aurobindo saw that the very core of his
teaching was being missed by this common interpretation of his
saying. So he changed his words and said, "Our Yoga is
not for humanity but for the Divine." But I am afraid this
change of front, this volte-face, as it seemed, was not welcomed
in many quarters ; for thereby all hope of having him back for
the work of the country or the world appeared to be totally
lost and he came to be looked upon again as an irrevocable "metaphysical"
dreamer, aloof from physical things and barren, even like the
Immutable Brahman.
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In order to get a nearer approach to the ideal
for which Sri Aurobindo has been labouring, we may combine with
advantage
the two mottoes he has given us and say that his mission is
to find and express the Divine in humanity. This is the
service he means to render to humanity, viz, to manifest and
embody in it the Divine: his goal is not merely an amelioration,
but a total change and transformation, the divinisation of human
life.
Here also one must guard against certain misconceptions that
are likely to occur. The transformation of human life does not
necessarily mean that the entire humanity will be changed into
a race of gods or divine beings; it means the evolution or appearance
on earth of a superior type of humanity, even as man evolved
out of animality as a superior type of animality, not that
the entire animal kingdom was changed into humanity.
As regards the possibility of such a consummation,Sri Aurobindo
says it is not a possibility but an inevitability-one must remember
that the force that will bring about the result and is
already at work is not any individual human power, however great
it may be, but the Divine himself, it is the Divine's own Shakti
that is labouring for the destined end.
Here is the
very heart of the mystery, the master-key to the problem. The
advent of the superhuman or divine race, however stupendous
or miraculous the phenomenon may! appear to be, can become a
thing of practical actuality , precisely because it is no human
agency that has undertaken it but the Divine himself in his
supreme potency and wisdom and love. The descent of the Divine
into the ordinary human nature in order to purify and transform
it and be lodged there is the whole secret of the sadhana in
Sri Aurobindo's Yoga. The sadhaka has only to be quiet and silent,
calmly aspiring, open and acquiescent and receptive to the one
Force ; he need not and should not try to do things by
his independent personal effort, but get them done or let them
be done for him in the dedicated consciousness by the Divine
Master and Guide. All other Yogas or spiritual disciplines in
the past envisaged an ascent of the consciousness, its sublimation
into the consciousness of the Spirit and its fusion and dissolution
there in the end. The descent of the Divine Consciousness to
prepare its definitive home in the dynamic and pragmatic human
nature, if considered at all, was not the main theme
of the past efforts and achievements. Furthermore, the descent
spoken of here is the descent, not of a divine consciousness-
for there are many varieties of divine consciousness-but of
the Divine's own consciousness, of the Divine himself with his
Shakti. For it is that that is directly working out this evolutionary
transformation of the age.
It is not my purpose
here to enter into details as to the exact meaning of the descent,
how it happens and what are its lines of activity and the results
brought about. For it is indeed an actual descent that happens:
the Divine Light leans down first into the mind and begins its
purificatory work there- although it is always the inner heart
which first recognises the Divine Presence and gives its assent
to the Divine action-for the mind, the higher mind that is to
say, is the summit of the ordinary human consciousness and receives
more easily and readily the Radiances that descend. From the
Mind the Light filters into the denser regions of the emotions
and desires, of life activity and vital dynamism; finally, it
gets into brute Matter itself, the hard and obscure rock of
the physical body, for that too has to be illumined and made
the very form and figure of the Light supernal. The Divine in
his descending Grace is the Master-Architect who is building
slowly and surely the many-chambered and many-storeyed edifice
that is human nature and human life into the mould of the Divine
Truth in its perfect play and supreme expression. But this is
a matter which can be closely considered when one is already
well within the mystery of the path and has acquired the elementary
essentials of an initiate.
Another question that troubles
and perplexes the ordinary human mind is as to the time when
the thing will be done. Is it now or a millennium hence or at
some astronomical distance in future, like the cooling of the
sun, as someone has suggested for an analogy. In view of the
magnitude of the work one might with reason say that the whole
eternity is there before us, and a century or even a millennium
should not be grudged to such a labour for it is nothing less
than an undoing of untold millenniums in the past and the building
of a far-flung futurity. However, as we have said, since it
is the Divine's own work and since Yoga means a concentrated
and involved process of action, effectuating in a minute what
would
perhaps take years to accomplish in the natural course, one
call expect the work to be done sooner rather than later . Indeed,
the ideal is one of here and now-here upon this
earth of material existence and now in this life, in this very
body- not hereafter or elsewhere. How long exactly that will
mean, depends on many factors, but a few decades on this side
or the other do not matter very much.
As to the extent of realisation, we
say again that that is not a matter of primary consideration.
It is not the quantity but the substance that counts. Even if
it were a small nucleus it would be sufficient, at least for
the beginning, provided it is the real, the genuine thing-
Swalpamapyasya dharmasya trtzyate
mahato bhayat.
Now, if it is asked what is the
proof of it all, how can one be sure that one is not running
after a mirage, a chimera ? We can only answer with the adage,
the proof of the pudding is in the eating thereof.
3
I have a word to add finally in justification
of the title of this essay. For, it may be asked, how can spirituality
be considered as one of the Arts or given an honourable place
in their domain ?
From a certain point of view, from the point
of view of essentials and inner realities, it would appear that
spirituality is, at least, the basis of the arts, if not the
highest art. If art is meant to express the soul of things,
and since the true soul of things is the divine element in them,
then certainly spirituality, the discipline of coming in conscious
contact with the Spirit, the Divine, must be accorded the regal
seat in the hierarchy of the arts. Also, spirituality is the
greatest and the most difficult of the arts; for it is the art
of life. To make of life a perfect work of beauty, pure in its
lines, faultless in its rhythm, replete with strength, iridescent
with light, vibrant with delight- an embodiment of the Divine,
in a word-is the highest ideal of spirituality; viewed as such,
spirituality- the spirituality that Sri Aurobindo practises
- is the ne plus ultra of artistic creation.
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