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Mother,
on January 6 you said, "Give all you are, all you have,
nothing more is asked of you but also nothing less."
Yes.
What
is meant by "all you have" and "all you are"?
I
am going to tell you in what circumstances I wrote this; that
will make you understand:
Someone
wrote to me saying that he was very unhappy, for he longed
to have wonderful capacities to put at the disposal of the
Divine, for the Realisation, for the Work; and that he also
longed to have immense riches to be able to give them, to
put them at the feet of the Divine for the Work. So I replied
to him that he need not be unhappy, that each one is asked
to give what he has, that is, all his possessions whatever
they may be, and what he is, that is, all his potentialities
- which corresponds to the consecration of one's life and
the giving of all one's possessions - and that nothing more
than this is asked. What you are, give that; what you have,
give that, and your gift will be perfect; from the spiritual
point of view it will be perfect. This does not depend upon
the amount of wealth you have or the number of capacities
in your nature; it depends upon the perfection of your gift,
that is to say, on the totality of your gift. I remember having
read, in a book of Indian legends,
a story like this. There was a very poor, very old woman who
had nothing, who was quite destitute, who lived in a miserable
little hut, and who had been given a fruit. It was a mango.
She had eaten half of it and kept the other half for the next
day, because it was something so marvellous that she did not
often happen to get it - a mango. And then, when night fell,
someone knocked at the rickety door and asked for hospitality.
And this someone came in and told her he wanted shelter and
was hungry. So she said to him, "Well, I have no fire
to warm you, I have no blanket to cover you, and I have half
a mango left, that is all I have, if you want it; I have eaten
half of it." And it turned out that this someone was
Shiva, and that she was filled with an inner glory, for she
had made a perfect gift of herself and all she had.
I
read that, I found it magnificent. Well, yes, this describes
it vividly. It's exactly that....
And
the beauty of the story I told you - moreover, there are
many others like it here - is just this, that when the old
woman gave, she didn't know that it was Shiva. She gave to
the passing beggar, for the joy of doing good,
of giving, not because he was a god and she hoped to have
salvation or some knowledge in exchange.
The Mother
11
January 1956
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