SIMPLICITY AND COMPLEXITY
We read in the Vadan, "Simplicity is the living beauty." Man today has
made life so complex that whatever he seeks after, he
wants to find in complexity. All things in life, which have importance,
beauty and value are simple; and simplest of all things is
the divine truth. The one who cares little for it thinks it is too
deep water to go into, and the one who cares much for it thinks
that it is so difficult that it would be very hard to find it. In this
way both the lover of truth and the one who does not care look
for complexity.
Knowing his nature, the wise have guided man gradually to the truth.
Nevertheless, Jesus Christ, the Prophet Mohammad,
Moses, all the different prophets who in their time have given the
message of God and truth, have given it in perfect simplicity.
Today man with all his knowledge complicates that truth and gives it
a form, which is not understood. The general tendency is
that when a man does not understand something, he believes by the very
fact of his not understanding it, that there must be
something in it.
Can there be any truth, which the human soul has not known? If the soul
had not known it, it could not be truth; for truth is not
a knowledge, it is the very self of man. The truth is not a newly invented
theory, not a dogma, not an idea; it is reality itself. At
the back of it is the self of man; therefore it is simple. But it is
not simplicity that man seeks, he is longing for complexity.
Anything, which will confuse he is glad to take interest in. If it
is simple, he says, "I know it already."
Spirit is generally considered to mean the source and goal of all things
and the essence of life, that spirit from which the whole
of manifestation comes and the same to which the whole of manifestation
is drawn. We also use this word in the case of a
person who has passed from this earth. This is another meaning of the
word spirit. From a metaphysical point of view it is the
mind and the soul and their activity which is spirit, but there is
still another meaning of the word spirit that we use in everyday
language: influence, power, radiance, enthusiasm; those also are called
spirit.
This chapter deals with the spirit, which we call manifestation or life.
Many ask what was the reason at the back of this
manifestation, of this creation. The reason is beyond all reasoning.
There is no reason. It is nature itself; love cannot but
manifest. It is its nature. When poetically expressed, the great ones
have said that God was lonely and in order to realize his
predisposition, which is love, in order to experience it, He manifested.
It is poetic and it is true. But the process of
manifestation can be understood by knowing the nature of manifestation:
that the spirit is likened to the sun and what we call
souls are the rays of the spirit. If the spirit is eternal, then the
souls are eternal. If the sun is eternal, the rays are eternal because
the sun and the rays are not two things; rays are the unfoldment of
the sun and souls are the unfolding of the spirit.
In manifesting, the souls enter into three spheres. No sooner does a
soul come forth as a ray, than it enters what may be called
the angelic sphere. In order to make this intelligible the wise of
ancient times have pictured angels in human form. Nevertheless,
it was in order to make man that the whole of creation was made; it
was not only the angels, but the rocks and shells, fruits and
flowers, birds and beasts, all show in their form a preparatory stage
of the human being. As we read in the scriptures, man was
make in the image of God. The whole of creation was a process to make
that image which was the image of man. Man was
the finished image. For this reason God was recognized in the image
of man.
The nature of the beings of this sphere is such that it can be said
that they are happy, innocent, musical, lyrical, poetical, pure,
and full of worship. When we see that nature in a human being we say,
"Here is an angelic soul." Perhaps one person may
show this more distinctly than another person. It is not necessary
in order to be wise, that one should not be innocent. It is not
necessary for an innocent person to be an ignorant one; it is the foolish
person who is ignorant. The most wise are innocent
because they hear all things and do not hear; the foolish are innocent
because life does not speak to them; their heart is closed.
The soul on its further journey pierces another sphere, the sphere of
the jinns. The qualities of this sphere are represented by
the soul in intellectuality, in poetic gifts,
in musical talent, in art, in science, in all those attributes which
belong to the mind. It is for this reason that we call such a person
a genius.
After this sphere, the soul manifests in the physical sphere where it
adorns the physical garb, which is the human frame. Every
soul that has been projected as a ray from the spirit must pass through
all these three spheres. Sometimes it remains in one
sphere longer than in another. It remains or it goes further, just
as some of us in art, in science, in learning, in the pursuit of
knowledge, go so far and no further. So it is with souls; those which
are satisfied in one sphere remain there; they may behave
like any creature of the lower creation would – eat, drink, and make
merry and be quite happy. There are others who feel
uncomfortable until they have penetrated into another sphere where
they are more contented; some are not satisfied in that
sphere either and look for another sphere. We human beings here have
this tendency and it is also the tendency of the soul.
Wherever it finds interest, joy, and pleasure, it remains, it settles
there. But again, every soul is bound to its goal, it must reach
there, and in order to reach the goal it must return. The condition
of that return is that it must give up the garb of the particular
sphere it has dwelt in, in order to enter another sphere. It is not
allowed to enter into the inner sphere with the outer garb.
These three spheres: angelic, jinn, and physical, have each a particular
garb. This garb may be called the body of that sphere
which the soul has to adorn. And when returning, it must give back
that garb to the same sphere from which it borrowed it.
And this giving back of the garb to the sphere from which it was borrowed,
we recognize as death. Since man does not know
his soul and is only acquainted with the garb, when the garb is given
back man says that it is the end of life. But in reality it is
only the beginning-just another act of the play, which is the further
journey it must make.
There are, however, three different ways of returning, or one should
really say going forward. One is the way of the drunken
man; another of the man who is asleep; and the third is the way of
the man whose eyes are open. The way of the drunken man
is the general way. What is life? Life is drunkenness. Whether a man
is in business or amuses himself, whether he is in a
profession or has any other interest in life, what is it all? It is
a wine. He is drunk. Afterwards he knows nothing except that
particular intoxication. He is intoxicated by the life he has lived.
That is his world: ambition, aspiration. He is taken back against
his wish like a drunken man. This is the general way that a soul goes
towards the goal.
Then there is the way of the man who is asleep. He knows not what death
and life and birth mean. He does not know why he
came here, why he is going away. He is happy because he is asleep.
He is taken wherever he is taken.
Thirdly there is the way of the man who journeys with open eyes. The
one with open eyes will see all the beauty on the way.
He is the one who will enjoy the journey, who will appreciate the beauty
of traveling. For him every step forward provides a
new experience, a greater joy, a particular blessing. He experiences
the dance of the soul, and what the dance of the soul is
may be understood by watching the water in a tank and the running water
of a stream. In the tank it is stagnant, dead; in the
same way a person can be dull, heavy, depressed. The water of the running
stream is dancing at every step, and the dancing
soul attracts everything towards itself like the stream of water, and
will bring pleasure and satisfaction to all who can see.
This process by which every soul comes forth and returns is the very
process that the mystics of all ages have realized here on
the earth;. And the true meaning of mysticism or spiritual attainment
is to know fully, here on the earth, about the way that the
soul has manifested and is bound to return. The question is: how do
the mystics know this explanation of the journey we have
made? To understand this it is necessary to make intelligible to our
minds that this journey is only an idea. In reality the soul has
never been away. If one thinks of the soul as a line, one end is attached
to the goal, and the other end is manifested; but when
we look at the center of the line, it is one line. Neither is God man,
nor is man god; and yet man is God and God is man. The
difference is in how we look at it. If the soul of man is attached
to the goal, then it has not departed from any sphere it has once
penetrated. It is still there. But man is unconscious of those spheres
that he has gone through, because he is so open to this
visible sphere that his soul has closed its eyes to the sphere within.
Heaven is not a place where the virtuous are sent. Heaven
and hell are both within man. All the higher spheres of which man talks
are within, but he never realizes nor imagines that he
can find the higher spheres with in himself.
The analysis of the spirit is simple: spirit is fine matter and matter
is the dense spirit. It is only a difference of words, and most
difficulties that arise come from a difference of words. Words are
to cover truth, not to explain it. Truth cannot be explained in
words. The spirit is likened to water; matter is likened to snow. Water
and snow are the same, it is only the condition of water
that makes it snow; thus it is a condition of spirit that makes it
matter. It is in this process that man must realize and come to
understand the great fullness of the purpose of life and of all that
he seeks after through life.
It is related among Hindus that the Lord Indra, the God of the heavens,
had fairies at his court, Upsaras whose work was to
dance. Once one of them went to the earth and saw a mortal being, and
she fell so deeply in love with him that she lifted him
up and brought him to the spheres of Indra. And when it was known that
the mortal man had been brought there, Indra
commanded that he should be dropped back to the earth to live the mortal
life, and that the fairy should be sent to the other
end of the world to overcome her Karma.
This story conveys that every soul is born to dance before the throne
of Indra, God. In reality every action of beauty, of
harmony, every action of love, of kindness, of compassion is the dance
of the soul. But when the soul becomes conscious of
this dance, then the presence of Indra becomes clear to that soul.
To be in the presence of Indra is to be in the presence of
God. It is the greatest joy and happiness, which nothing on the earth
can give. As Rumi has written in the Masnavi, where the
soul is likened to a reed flute: "Why does the music of the flute appeal
to you? Because it laments, it cries; it longs for that
spirit, for that being which was its stem. This reed was cut away from
its stem and holes were make in its heart. That made it
cry. It cries with longing to rejoin the stem."
So it is with every soul. The restlessness, the uncomfortable feeling
of every soul, is always for one and the same reason,
though each one gives a different reason. The one would like to possess
earthly wealth; another suffers from the contempt of
friends; another cannot approach his beloved; another has troubles
at home; another has a case in court. But in reality there is
only one trouble and that is the sorrow of the spirit. As it is the
inclination of every river to go and meet the sea, so it is the
inclination of every soul to go and meet the spirit.
At this time, when materialism prevails everywhere, there seems to be
a great hunger after truth. It is natural that people should
hunger after truth. The very fact that there is so much materialism
shows that every soul feels uncomfortable and begins to long
for spiritual attainment. But how do they pursue spiritual attainment?
Generally there are two kinds of seekers. There is one
kind who is curious, who wonders if there is anything or not; if it
is really true that there is a soul and a hereafter. They look for
some phenomenon in order to try and prove it. They use psychometry,
palmistry, clairvoyance, and all such different means.
There may be hundreds and thousands wandering about in delusion looking
for phenomena. And there may be another one
who is perhaps more intellectual, who reads books on occult science,
often because he has seen them recommended in the
newspapers, and in the end he will surely become more and more confused.
Is this the way of learning? Is it not enough that from childhood one
has to learn in school. And, after having read all those
books, all that there is to be read, at what does one arrive? At confusion.
One does not know which is false and which is true.
Learning is one thing and unlearning is another, and unlearning means
rising above what we call worldly learning. Very often
what we call knowledge keeps our soul away from the knowledge of itself,
a knowledge which is most essential because the
knowledge acquired by learning is very complex. People think that if
it is simple it cannot be truth, they value what is complex.
But in this way by one’s won tendency one covers over the truth in
oneself, which is one’s own being.