Showing posts with label Quaker Sufi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quaker Sufi. Show all posts

2021/09/08

Perennial Phil Ch 6 MORTIFICATION, NON-ATTACHMENT, RIGHT LIVELIHOOD 고행, 비집착, 올바른 생계

Perennial Phil Ch 6 MORTIFICATION, NON-ATTACHMENT, RIGHT LIVELIHOOD [20,10909]

06 고행, 비집착, 올바른 생계
일상의 삶에서 일어나는 일들을 수용하기
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Mortification of the flesh 
- is an act by which an individual or group seeks to mortify or deaden their sinful nature
- as a part of the process of sanctification
- Mortificaton of the flesh is undertaken 
in order to repent for sins and share in the Passion of Jesus. 

Wikipedia
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고행, 금욕abstinence, 禁欲
스스로의 행위를 내부로부터 규제하고 통괄하는 일

일체의 육체적·정신적인 욕구나 욕망을 억제하는 자기 부인(自己否認)의 행위(골3:5). 육욕(肉慾)을 금하는 일. 통상적으로, 금식, 절제, 독신생활, 또는 신체에 고통을 가함(자학) 등으로 나타난다. 
- 성도에게서 금욕의 목적은 죄 아래 있는 인간의 육체적 욕망을 억제함으로써 영혼을 정화하고, 하나님과의 거룩한 교제를 이루는 데 있다

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[A]  MORTIFICATION  고행


This treasure of the Kingdom of God has been hidden by time and multiplicity and the soul's own works, or briefly by its creaturely nature. But in the measure that the soul can separate itself from this multiplicity, to that extent it reveals within itself the Kingdom of God. Here the soul and the Godhead are one.

Eckhart

0 U R kingdom go' is the necessary and unavoidable corol­lary of 'Thy kingdom come.' For the more there is of self, the less there is of God. The divine eternal fullness of life can be gained only by those who have deliberately lost the partial, separative life of craving and self-interest, of ego­centric thinking, feeling, wishing and acting. 
Mortification or deliberate dying to self is inculcated with an uncompromising firmness in the canonical writings of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism and most of the other major and minor religions of the world, and by every theocentric saint and spiritual reformer who has ever lived out and expounded the principles of the Perennial Philosophy. 
But this 'self-naughting' is never (at least by anyone who knows what he is talking about) regarded as an end in itself. It possesses merely an instrumental value, as the indispensable means to something else. In the words of one whom we have often had occasion to cite in earlier sections, it is necessary for all of us to 'learn the true nature and worth of all self-denials and mortifications.'[113  114 ]

As to their nature, considered in themselves, they have nothing of goodness or holiness, nor are any real part of our sanctification, they are not the true food or nourishment of the Divine Life in our souls, they have no quickening, sanctifying power in them;  their only worth consists in this, that they remove the impedi­ments of holiness, break down that which stands between God and us, and make way for the quickening, sanctifying spirit of God to operate on our souls, which operation of God is the one only thing that can raise the Divine Life in the soul, or help it to the smallest degree of real holiness or spiritual life. . . . 

Hence we may learn the reason why many people not only lose the benefit, but are even the worse for all their mortifications. It is because they mistake the whole nature and worth of them. 
They practise them for their own sakes, as things good in themselves
they think them to be real parts of holiness, and so rest in them and look no further, but grow full of self-esteem and self-admiration for their own progress in them. 
This makes them self-sufficient, morose, severe judges of all those that fall short of their mortifi-cations. And thus their self-denials do only that for them which indulgences do for other people: they withstand and hinder the operation of God upon their souls, and instead of being really self-denials, they strengthen and keep up the kingdom of self.

William Law

The rout and destruction of the passions, while a good, is not the ultimate good; the discovery of Wisdom is the surpassing good. When this is found, all the people will sing.

P/jib

Living in religion (as I can speak by experience) if one is not in a right course of prayer and other exercises between God and our soul, one's nature growth much worse than ever it would have been, if one had lived in the world. 
For pride and self-love, which are rooted in the soul by sin, find means to strengthen themselves exceedingly in religion, if the soul is not in a course that may teach her and procure her true humility. For by the corrections and contradictions of the will (which cannot be avoided by any living in a religious community) I find my heart grown, as I may say, as hard as a stone; and nothing would have been able to soften it but by being put into a course of prayer, by which the soul tendeth towards God and learneth of Him the lesson of truly humbling herself.

Dame Gertrude More

Once, when I was grumbling over being obliged to eat meat and do no penance, I heard it said that sometimes there was more of self-love than desire of penance in such sorrow.


St. Teresa

That the mortified are, in some respects, often much worse than the unmortified is a commonplace of history, fiction and descriptive psychology. 

Thus, the Puritan may practise all the cardinal virtues—prudence, fortitude, temperance and chastity —and yet remain a thoroughly bad man
for, in all too many cases, these virtues of his are accompanied by, and indeed causally connected with, the sins of pride, envy, chronic anger and an uncharitableness pushed sometimes to the level of active cruelty. 

청교도는 신중함, 강인함, 절제, 순결과 같은 모든 기본 덕목을 실천하면서도 철저히 나쁜 사람으로 남을 수 있습니다. 왜냐하면 너무나 많은 경우에 그의 이러한 미덕은 교만, 시기, 만성적인 분노, 때로는 적극적인 잔인함의 수준까지 밀어붙이는 무자비함을 동반하고 실제로 인과적으로 연결되어 있기 때문입니다.

Mistaking the means for the end, the Puritan has fancied himself holy because he is stoically austere. 청교도의 에고
But stoical austerity is merely the exaltation of the more creditable side of the ego at the expense of the less creditable. Holiness, on the contrary, is the total denial of the separative self, in its credit­able no less than its discreditable aspects, and the abandonment of the will to God. 
To the extent that there is attachment to 'I,' 'me,' 'mine,' there is no attachment to, and therefore no unitive knowledge of, the divine Ground. 

Mortification has to be carried to the pitch of non-attachment or (in the phrase of St. François de Sales) 'holy indifference'


otherwise it merely transfers self-will from one channel to another, not merely without decrease in the total volume of that self-will, but some­times with an actual increase. 

As usual, the corruption of the best is the worst. The difference between the mortified but still proud and self-centred stoic and the unmortified hedonist consists in this: 
  1. the latter, being flabby, shiftless and at heart rather ashamed of himself, lacks the energy and the motive to do much harm except to his own body, mind and spirit;
  2.  the former, because he has all the secondary virtues and looks down on those who are not like himself, is morally equipped to wish and to be able to do harm on the very largest scale and with a perfectly untroubled conscience.[116] 

These are obvious facts; and yet, in the current religious jargon of our day the word 'immoral' is reserved almost exclusively for the carnally self-indulgent. The covetous and the ambitious, the respect­able toughs and those who cloak their lust for power and place under the right sort of idealistic cant, are not merely unbiamed; they are even held up as models of virtue and godliness. The representatives of the organized churches begin by putting haloes on the heads of the people who do most to make wars and revolutions, then go on, rather plaintively, to wonder why the world should be in such a mess.

Mortification is not, as many people seem to imagine, a matter, primarily, of severe physical austerities. It is possible that, for certain persons in certain circumstances, the practice of severe physical austerities may prove helpful in advance towards man's final end. 
In most cases, however, it would seem that what is gained by such austerities is not liberation, but some­thing quite different—the achievement of 'psychic' powers. The ability to get petitionary prayer answered, the power to heal and work other miracles, the knack of looking into the future or into other people's minds—these, it would seem, are often related in some kind of causal connection with fasting, watching and the self-infliction of pain. Most of the great theocentric saints and spiritual teachers have admitted the exist­ence of supernormal powers, only, however, to deplore them. 
To think that such Siddkis, as the Indians call them, have any­thing to do with liberation is, they say, a dangerous illusion. These things are either irrelevant to the main issue of life, or, if too much prized and attended to, an obstacle in the way of spiritual advance.  Nor are these the only objections to physical austerities.

 Carried to extremes, they may be dangerous to health—and without health the steady persistence of effort re­quired by the spiritual life is very difficult of achievement. 
And being difficult, painful and generally conspicuous, physical aus­terities are a standing temptation to vanity and the competitive spirit of record breaking.
'When thou didst give thyself up to physical mortification, thou wast great, thou wast admired.' So writes Suso of his own experiences—experiences which led him, just as Gautama Buddha had been led many centuries before, to give up his course of bodily penance. 
And St. Teresa remarks how much easier it is to impose great penances upon oneself than to suffer in patience, charity and humbleness the ordinary everyday crosses of family life 
(which did not pre­vent her, incidentally, from practising, to the very day of her death, the most excruciating forms of self-torture. Whether these austerities really helped her to come to the unitive know­ledge of God, or whether they were prized and persisted in because of the psychic powers they helped to develop, there is no means of determining.)

Our dear Saint (Francois de Sales) disapproved of immoderate fasting. He used to say that the spirit could not endure the body when overfed, but that, if underfed, the body could not endure the spirit.

Jean Pierre Camus

When the will, the moment it feels any joy in sensible things rises upwards in that joy to God, and when sensible things move it to pray, it should not neglect them, it should make use of them for so holy an exercise; because sensible things, in these conditions, subserve the end for which God created them, namely to be occasions for making Him better known and loved.

St. John of the Cross

He who is not conscious of liberty of spirit among the things of sense and sweetness—things which should serve as motives to prayer—and whose will rests and feeds upon them, ought to abstain from the use of them; for to him they are a hindrance on the road to God.


St. John of the Cross

[118]

One man may declare that he cannot fast; but can he declare that he cannot love God? Another may affirm that he cannot preserve virginity or sell all his goods in order to give the price to the poor; but can he tell me that he cannot love his enemies? All that is necessary is to look into one's own heart; for what God asks of us is not found at a great distance.

St. Jerome

Anybody who wishes to do so can get all, and indeed more than all, 
the mortification he wants out of the incidents of ordinary, day-to-day living, without ever resorting to harsh bodily penance. 
Here are the rules laid down by the author of Holy Wisdom for Dame Gertrude More.

Dame Gertrude More (born as Helen More; 25 March 1606 - 17 August 1633) was a nun of the English Benedictine Congregation, a writer and chief founder of the abbey at Cambrai which became Stanbrook Abbey.

  1. First, that she should do all that belonged to her to do by any law, human or Divine. 
  2. Secondly, that she was to refrain from doing those things that were forbidden her by human or Divine Law, or by Divine inspiration. 
  3. Thirdly, that she should bear with as much patience or resignation as possible all crosses and contradictions to her natural will, which were inflicted by the hand of God. 
Such, for instance, were aridities, temptations, afflic­tions or bodily pain, sickness and infirmity; or again, the loss of friends or want of necessaries and comforts. 
All this was to be endured patiently, whether the crosses came direct from God or by means of His creatures. . . . These indeed were mortifications enough for Dame Gertrude, or for any other soul, and there was no need for anyone to advise or impose others.

Augustine Baker
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To sum up, that mortification is 
the best 
which results in the elimination of self-will, self-interest, self-centred thinking, wishing and imagining. 
Extreme physical austerities are not likely to achieve this kind of mortification. 
But the acceptance of what happens to us (apart, of course, from our own sins) in the course of daily living is likely to produce this result. 
If specific exercises in self-denial are undertaken, they should be inconspicuous, non-competitive and unirijurious to health.
  •  Thus, in the matter of diet, most people will find it sufficiently mortifying to refrain from eating all the things which the experts in nutrition condemn as unwholesome. 
  • And where social relations are concerned, self-denial should take the form, not of showy acts of would-he humility, but of control of the tongue and the moodsin refraining from saying anything uncharitable or merely frivolous (which means, in practice, refraining from about fifty per cent. of ordinary conversation), 
  • and in behaving calmly and with quiet cheerfulness when external circumstances or the state of our bodies predisposes us to anxiety, gloom or an excessive elation.
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요컨대, 고행은 자기 의지, 자기 이익, 자기 중심적 사고, 소원 및 상상을 없애는 때기 이 최고입니다.
 극단적인 육체적 가혹함은 이런 종류의 고행을 달성하지 못할 것입니다. 
그러나 일상 생활의 과정에서 우리에게 일어나는 일(물론 우리 자신의 죄는 제외하고)을 받아들이는 것이 이러한 결과를 낳을 가능성이 높습니다. 

극기의 특정 운동을 하는 경우 눈에 띄지 않고 경쟁적이지 않으며 건강에 해롭지 않아야 합니다. 

따라서 식이요법과 관련하여 대부분의 사람들은 영양 전문가들이 건강에 해롭다고 비난하는 모든 것을 삼가는 것이 충분히 고통스럽다는 것을 알게 될 것입니다. 
그리고 사회적 관계에 관한 한 극기는 겸손의 과시적인 행동이 아니라 혀와 기분을 통제하는 형태를 취해야 합니다. , 일상적인 대화의 약 50% 자제), 외부 환경이나 우리 몸의 상태가 불안, 우울 또는 과도한 의기양양함을 일으키기 쉬운 경우 침착하고 조용하고 쾌활하게 행동합니다.

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When a man practises charity in order to be reborn in heaven, or for fame, or reward, or from fear, such charity can obtain no pure  effect.

Sutra on the Distinction and Protection of the Dkarma

When Prince Wen Wang was on a tour of inspection in Tsang, he saw an old man fishing. But his fishing was not real fishing, for he did not fish in order to catch fish, but to amuse himself. So Wen Wang wished to employ him in the administration of government, but feared lest his own ministers, uncles and brothers might object. On the other hand, if he let the old man go, he could not bear to think of the people being deprived of such an influence.

Chuang Tu

God, if I worship Thee in fear of hell, burn me in hell. And if I worship Thee in hope of Paradise, exclude me from Paradise; but if I worship Thee for Thine own sake, withhold not Thine everlasting Beauty.

하나님, 제가 지옥이 두려워서 예배한다면 저를 지옥에서 불태워 주십시오. 
그리고 제가가 낙원을 바라면서 당신을 숭배한다면, 저를 낙원에서 제외시키십시오. 
그러나 제가가 당신 자신을 위해 예배한다면 당신의 영원한 아름다움을 아끼지 마십시오.

Rabia of Basra
8세기의 수피 시인
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[B] NON-ATTACHMENT  [120]      

Rabi'a, the Sufi woman-saint, speaks, thinks and feels in terms of devotional theism
the Buddhist theologian, in terms of impersonal moral Law
the Chinese philosopher, with character­istic humour, in terms of politics

but all three insist on the need for non-attachment to self-interest
—insist on it as strongly as does Christ when he reproaches the Pharisees 바리새인for their ego­centric piety, as does the Krishna of the Bhagavad-Gita when he tells Arjuna to do his divinely ordained duty without per­sonal craving for, or fear of, the fruits of his actions.

바리새 사람은 이스라엘이 그리스-로마 문화 곧 그리스와 로마문화가 융합된 이방문화의 영향을 받아가는 헬레니즘화로 이스라엘 고유 문화와 신앙을 잃을 것을 우려하여 오경(토라 또는 율법)의 가르침을 문자적으로 준수하는데 철저함을 보였으며,[1] 유대교 신학을 계승하는 업적을 남겼다. 이들은 천사 등의 영적인 존재를 받아들였고 부활을 믿었기 때문에, 모세5경에 나오지 않는다고 해석하여 영적인 존재와 부활을 믿지 않는 근본주의자들인 사두가이파와 대립하였다.

St. Ignatius Loyola was once asked what his feelings would be if the Pope were to suppress the Company of Jesus. 'A quarter of an hour of prayer,' he answered, 'and I should think no more about it.'

This is, perhaps, the most difficult of all mortifications—to achieve a 'holy indifference' to the temporal success or failure of the cause to which one has devoted one's best energies. 
If it triumphs, well and good; and if it meets defeat, that also is well and good
if only in ways that, to a limited and time-bound mind, are here and now entirely incomprehensible.

By a man without passions I mean one who does not permit good or evil to disturb his inward economy, but rather falls in with what happens and does not add to the sum of his mortality.


Chuang Tru

The fitting disposition for union with God is not that the soul should understand, feel, taste or imagine anything on the subject of the nature of God, or any other thing whatever, but should remain in that pureness and love which is perfect resignation and complete detachment from all things for God alone.

St. John of the Cross

Disquietude is always vanity, because it serves no good. Yes, even if the whole world were thrown into confusion and all things in it, disquietude on that account would be vanity.

St. John of the Cross

Sufficient not only unto the day, but also unto the place, is the evil thereof. Agitation over happenings which we are power­less to modify, either because they have not yet occurred, or else are occurring at an inaccessible distance from us, achieves nothing beyond the inoculation of here and now with the remote or anticipated evil that is the object of our distress. Listening four or five times a day to newscasters and com­mentators, reading the morning papers and all the weeklies and monthlies—nowadays, this is described as 'taking an intelligent interest in politics.' St. John of the Cross would have called it indulgence in idle curiosity and the cultivation of disquietude for disquietude's sake.

I want very little, and what I do want I have very little wish for. I have hardly any desires, but if I were to be born again, I should have none at all. We should ask nothing and refuse nothing, but leave ourselves in the arms of divine Providence without wasting time in any desire, except to will what God wills of us.

St. François de Sales

Push far enough towards the Void,
Hold fast enough to Quietness,
And of the ten thousand things none but can be worked on by you.
I have beheld them, whither they go back.
See, all things howsoever they fiourish
Return to the root from which they grew.
This return to the Root is called Quietness;
Quietness is called submission to Fate;
What has submitted to Fate becomes part of the always-so;
To know the always-so is to be illumined;
Not to know it means to go blindly to disaster.


Lao Tu

I wish I could join the 'Solitaries' (on Caldey Island), instead of being Superior and having to write books. But I don't wish to have what I wish, of course.

Abbot John Chapman

[122]

We must not wish anything other than what happens from moment to moment, all the while, however, exercising ourselves in goodness.

St. Catherine of Genoa

In the practice of mortification as in most other fields, advance is along a knife-edge. On one side lurks the Scylla of ego­centric austerity, on the other the Charybdis of an uncaring quietism. The holy indifference inculcated by the exponents of the Perennial Philosophy is neither stoicism nor mere pas­sivity. It is rather an active resignation. Self-will is renounced, not that there may be a total holiday from willing, but that the divine will may use the mortified mind and body as its instru­ment for good. Or we may say, with Kabir, that 'the devout seeker is he who mingles in his heart the double currents of love and detachment, like the mingling of the streams of Ganges and Jumna.' Until we put an end to particular attach­ments, there can be no love of God with the whole heart, mind and strength and no universal charity towards all creatures for God's sake. Hence the hard sayings in the Gospels about the need to renounce exclusive family ties. And if the Son of Man has nowhere to lay his head, if the Tathagata and the Bodhi-sattvas 'have their thoughts awakened to the nature of Reality without abiding in anything whatever,' this is because a truly Godlike love which, like the sun, shines equally upon the just and the unjust, is impossible to a mind imprisoned in private preferences and aversions.

The soul that is attached to anything, however much good there may be in it, will not arrive at the liberty of divine union. For whether it be a strong wire rope or a slender and delicate thread that holds the bird, it matters not, if it really holds it fast; for, until the cord be broken, the bird cannot fly. So the soul, held by the bonds of human affections, however slight they may be, cannot, while they last, make its way to God.

St. John of the Cross
[123]

There are some who are newly delivered from their sins and so, though they are resolved to love God, they are still novices and apprentices, soft and weak. . . . They love a number of super­fluous, vain and dangerous things at the same time as Our Lord. Though they love God above all things, they yet continue to take pleasure in many things which they do not love according to God, but besides Him—things such as slight inordinations in word, gesture, clothing, pastimes and frivolities.

St. Franpois de Saks

There are souls who have made some progress in divine love, and have cut off all the love they had for dangerous things; yet they still have dangerous and superfluous loves, because they love what God wills them to love, but with excess and too tender and passionate a love.... The love of our relations, friends and bene­factors is itself according to God, but we may love them exces­sively; as also our vocations, however spiritual they be; and our devotional exercises (which we should yet love very greatly) may be loved inordinately, when we set them above obedience and the more general good, or care for them as an end, when they are only means.


Sr. François de Sales

The goods of God, which are beyond all measure, can only be contained in an empty and solitary heart.


St. Jo/in of the Cross

Suppose a boat is crossing a river and another boat, an empty one, is about to collide with it. Even an irritable man would not lose his temper. But suppose there was someone in the second boat. Then the occupant of the first would shout to him to keep clear. And if he did not hear the first time, nor even when called to three times, bad language would inevitably follow. In the first case there was no anger, in the second there was—because in the first case the boat was empty, in the second it was occupied. And so it is with man. If he could only pass empty through life, who would be able to injure him?

Chuang Ttu

[124]

When the heart weeps for what it has lost, the spirit laughs for what it has found.

Anonymous Sufi Aphorism

It is by losing the egocentric life that we save the hitherto latent and undiscovered life which, in the spiritual part of our being, we share with the divine Ground. This new-found life is 'more abundant' than the other, and of a different and higher kind. Its possession is liberation into the eternal, and liberation is beatitude. Necessarily so; for the Brahman, who is one with the Atman, is not only Being and Knowledge, but also Bliss, and, after Love and Peace, the final fruit of the Spirit is Joy. Mortification is painful, but that pain is one of the pre-condi­tions of blessedness. This fact of spiritual experience is some­times obscured by the language in which it is described. Thus, when Christ says that the Kingdom of Heaven cannot be entered except by those who are as little children, we are apt to forget (so touching are the images evoked by the simple phrase) that a man cannot become childlike unless he chooses to undertake the most strenuous and searching course of self-denial. In practice the command to become as little children is identical with the command to lose one's life. As Traherne makes clear in the beautiful passage quoted in the section on 'God in the World,' one cannot know created Nature in all its essentially sacred beauty, unless one first unlearns the, dirty devices of adult humanity. Seen through the dung-coloured spectacles of self-interest, the universe looks singularly like a dung-heap; and as, through long wearing, the spectacles have grown on to the eyeballs, the process of 'cleansing the doors of perception' is often, at any rate in the earlier stages of the spiritual life, painfully like a surgical operation. Later on, it is true, even self-naughting may be suffused with the joy of the Spirit. On this point the following passage from the fourteenth-century Scale of Perfection is illuminating.

Many a man bath the virtues of humility, patience and charity towards his neighbours, only in the reason and will, and bath no spiritual delight nor love in them; for ofttimes he feeleth grudg­ing, heaviness and bitterness for to do them, but yet nevertheless he doth them, but 'tis only by stirring of reason for dread of God. This man hath these virtues in reason and will, but not the love of them in affection. But when, by the grace of Jesus and by ghostly and bodily exercise, reason is turned into light and will into love, then hath he virtues in affection; for he hath so gnawn on the bitter bark or shell of the nut that at length lie hath broken it and now feeds on the kernel; that is to say, the virtues which were first heavy for to practise are now turned into a very delight and savour.

Walter Hilton

As long as I am this or that, or have this or that, I am not all things and I have not all things. Become pure till you neither are nor have either this or that; then you are omnipresent and, being neither this nor that, are all things.


Eckhart

The point so dramatically emphasized by Eckhart in these lines is one that has often been made by the moralists and psycho­logists of the spiritual life. 
It is only when we have renounced our preoccupation with 'I,' 'me,' 'mine' that we can truly possess the world in which we live. 
Everything is ours, pro­vided that we regard nothing as our property. 
And not only is everything ours; it is also everybody else's.

True love in this differs from dross and clay, That to divide is not to take away.

There can be no complete communism except in the goods of the spirit and, to some extent also, of the mind, and only when such goods are possessed by men and women in a state of non-attachment and self-denial. Some degree of mortification, it should be noted, is an indispensable prerequisite for the crea­tion and enjoyment even of merely intellectual and aesthetic goods. [126]   Those who choose the profession of artist, philo­sopher or man of science, choose, in many cases, a life of  poverty and unrewarded hard work. But these are by no means the only mortifications they have to undertake. When he looks at the world, the artist must deny his ordinary human tendency to think of things in utilitarian, self-regarding terms. Similarly, the critical philosopher must mortify his common sense, while the research worker must steadfastly resist the temptations to over-simplify and think conventionally, and must make himself docile to the leadings of mysterious Fact. And what is true of the creators of aesthetic and intellectual goods is also true of the enjoyers of such goods, when created. That these mortifications are by no means trifling has been shown again and again in the course of history. One thinks, for example, of the intellectually mortified Socrates and the hemlock with which his unmortified compatriots rewarded him. One thinks of the heroic efforts that had to be made by Galileo and his contemporaries to break with the Aristotelian convention of thought, and the no less heroic efforts that have to be made today by any scientist who believes that there is more in the universe than can be discovered by employing the time-hallowed recipes of Descartes. Such mortifications have their reward in a state of consciousness that corresponds, on a lower level, to spiritual beatitude. The artist—and the philosopher and the man of science are also artists—knows the bliss of aesthetic contemplation, discovery and non-attached possession.

The goods of the intellect, the emotions and the imagination are real goods; but they are not the final good, and when we treat them as ends in themselves, we fall into idolatry. Morti­fication of will, desire and action is not enough; there must also be mortification in the fields of knowing, thinking, feeling and fancying.

Man's intellectual faculties are by the Fall in a much worse state than his animal appetites and want a much greater self-denial. And when own will, own understanding and own imagination have their natural strength indulged and gratified, and are made seemingly rich and honourable with the treasures acquired from  a study of the Belles Lettres, they will just as much help poor fallen man to be like-minded witW Christ as the art of cookery, well and duly studied, will help a professor of the Gospel to the spirit and practice of Christian abstinence.

William Law

Because it was German and spelt with a K, Kultur was an object, during the First World War, of derisive contempt. All this has now been changed. In Russia, Literature, Art and Science have become the three persons of a new humanistic Trinity. Nor is the cult of Culture confined to the Soviet Union. It is practised by a majority of intellectuals in the capitalist democracies. Clever, hard-boiled journalists, who write about everything else with the condescending cynicism of people who know all about God, Man and the Universe, and have seen through the whole absurd caboodle, fairly fall over themselves when it comes to Culture. With an earnest­ness and enthusiasm that are, in the circumstances, unutter­ably ludicrous, they invite us to share their positively religious emotions in the face of High Art, as represented by the latest murals or civic centres; they insist that so long as Mrs. X goes on writing her inimitable novels and Mr. Y his more than Coleridgean criticism, the world, in spite of all appearances to the contrary, makes sense. The same over-valuation of Culture, the same belief that Art and Literature are ends in themselves and can flourish in isolation from a reasonable and realistic philosophy of life, have even invaded the schools and colleges. Among 'advanced' educationists .there are many people who seem to think that all will be well so long as adolescents are permitted to 'express themselves,' and small children are en­couraged to be 'creative' in the art class. But, alas, plasticine and self-expression will not solve the problems of education. Nor will technology and vocational guidance; nor the classics and the Hundred Best Books. The following criticisms of education were made more than two and a half centuries ago; but they are as relevant today as they were in the seventeenth century.  [128]        

He knoweth nothing as he ought to know, who thinks he know-eth anything without seeing its place and the manner how it relateth to God, angels and men, and to all the creatures in earth, heaven and hell, time and eternity.

Thomas Traherne

Nevertheless some things were defective too (at Oxford under the Commonwealth). There was never a tutor that did professly teach Felicity, though that be the mistress of all the other sciences. Nor did any of us study these things but as aliens, which we ought to have studied as our own enjoyments. We studied to inform our knowledge, but knew not for what end we studied. And for lack of aiming at a certain end, we erred in the manner.

Thomas Traherne

In Traherne's vocabulary 'felicity' means 'beatitude,' which is identical in practice with liberation, which, in its turn, is the unitive knowledge of God in the heights within and in the fullness without as well as within.

Whit follows is an account of the intellectual mortifications which must be practised by those whose primary concern is with the knowledge of the Godhead in the interior heights of the soul.

Happy is the man who, by continually effacing all images and through introversion and the lifting up of his mind to God, at last forgets and leaves behind all such hindrances. For by such means only, he operates inwardly, with his naked, pure, simple intellect and affections, about the most pure and simple object, God. Therefore see that thy whole exercise about God within thee may depend wholly and only on that naked intellect, affection and will. For indeed, this exercise cannot be discharged by any bodily organ, or by the external senses, but only by that which constitutes the essence of man—understanding and love. If, therefore, thou desirest a safe stair and short path to arrive at the end of true bliss, then, with an intent mind, earnestly desire and aspire after continual cleanness of heart and purity of mind. [129]  Add to this a constant calm and tranquillity of the senses, and a recol­lecting of the affections of the heart, continually fixing them above. Work to simplify the heart, that being immovable and at peace from any invading vain phantasms, thou mayest always stand fast in the Lord within thee, to that degree as if thy soul had already entered the always present now of eternity—that is, the state of the deity. To mount to God is to enter into oneself. For he who so mounts and enters and goes above and beyond himself, he truly mounts up to God. The mind must then raise itself above 'itself and say, 'He who above all I need is above all I know.' And so carried into the darkness of the mind, gathering itself into that all-sufficient good, it learns to stay at home and with its whole affection it cleaves and becomes habitually fixed in the supreme good within. Thus continue, until thou becomest immutable and dost arrive at that true life which is God Himself, perpetually, without any vicissitude of space or time, reposing in that inward quiet and secret mansion of the deity.

A/b ertus Magnus (?)

Some men love knowledge and discernment as the best and most excellent of all things. Behold, then knowledge and discernment come to be loved more than that which is discerned; for the false natural light loveth its knowledge and powers, which are itself, more than what is known. And were it possible that this false natural light should understand the simple Truth, as it is in God and in truth, it still would not lose its own property, that is, it could not depart from itself and its own things.

Theologia Germanica

The relationship between moral action and spiritual knowledge is circular, as it were, and reciprocal. Selfless behaviour makes possible an accession of knowledge, and the accession of know­ledge makes possible the performance of further and more genuinely selfless actions, which in their turn enhance the agent's capacity for knowing. And so on, if all goes well and there is perfect docility and obedience, indefinitely. The pro­cess is summed up in a few lines of the Maitrayana Upanishad. [130]  

A man undertakes right action (which includes, of course, right recollectedness and right meditation), and this enables him to catch a glimpse of the Self that underlies his separate individual­ity. 
  • 'Having seen his own self as the Self, he becomes selfless (and therefore acts selflessly) 
  • and in virtue of selflessness he is to be conceived as unconditioned
  • '자신의 자아를 큰 자아로 봄으로서 이타적이 되고(따라서 이타적으로 행동하게되고) 
  • 이타심 덕분에 그는 무조건적인 것으로 간주된다.


This is the highest mystery, betokening emancipation; 
through selflessness he has no part in pleasure or pain (in other words, he enters a state of non-attachment or holy indifference), 
but achieves absoluteness' (or as Albertus Magnus phrases it, 'becomes immutable and arrives at that true life which is God Himself').

When mortification is perfect, its most characteristic fruit is simplicity.

A simple heart will love all that is most precious on earth, hus­band or wife, parent or child, brother or friend, without marring its singleness; 
external things will have no attraction save inas­much as they lead souls to Him; 
all exaggeration or unreality, affectation and falsehood must pass away from such a one, as the dews dry up before the sunshine. 
The single motive is to please God, and hence arises total indifference as to what others say and think, so that words and actions are perfectly simple and natural, as in his sight only. 
Such Christian simplicity is the very perfec­tion of interior life—God, his will and pleasure, its sole object.

N. Grou

And here is a more extended account of the matter by one of the greatest masters of psychological analysis.

In the world, when people call anyone simple
they generally mean a foolish, ignorant, credulous person. 

But real simplicity, so far from being foolish, is almost sublime. 
All good men like and admire it, are conscious of sinning against it, observe it in others and know what it involves; 
and yet they could not pre­cisely define it. 
I should say that simplicity is an uprightness of soul which prevents self-consciousness. 
It is not the same as sincerity, which is a much humbler virtue. 
Many people are sincere who are not simple. 
They say nothing but what they believe to be true, 
and do not aim at appearing anything but what they are. 

But they are for ever thinking about themselves, 
weighing their every word and thought, 
and dwelling upon themselves in apprehension of having done too much or too little. 
These people are sincere but they are not simple. 
They are not at their ease with others, nor others with them. 
There is nothing easy, frank, unrestrained or natural about them. 
One feels that one would like less admirable people better, who were not so stiff.

To be absorbed in the world around and never turn a thought within, 
as is the blind condition of some who are carried away by what is pleasant and tangible, is one extreme as opposed to sim­plicity

And to be self-absorbed in all matters, whether it be duty to God or man, 
is the other extreme, which makes a person wise in his own conceit—reserved, self-conscious, uneasy at the least thing which disturbs his inward self-complacency. 

Such false wisdom, in spite of its solemnity, 
is hardly less vain and foolish than the folly of those who plunge headlong into worldly pleasures. 

The one is intoxicated by his outward surroundings, the other by what he believes himself to be doing inwardly; 
but both are in a state of intoxication, and the last is a worse state than the first, because it seems to be wise, though it is not really, and so people do not try to be cured. 

Real simplicity lies in a juste milieu equally free from thoughtlessness and affectation, 
in which the soul is not overwhelmed by externals, 
so as to be unable to reflect, nor yet given up to the endless refinements, 
which self-consciousness induces. 
That soul which looks where it is going without losing time arguing over every step, or looking back perpetually, possesses true simplicity
Such simplicity is indeed a great treasure. 
How shall we attain to it? I would give all I possess for it; 
it is the costly pearl of Holy Scripture.

The first step, then, is for the soul to put away outward things and look within so as to know its own real interest
so far all is right and natural; thus much is only a wise self-love, which seeks to avoid the intoxication of the world.  [132] 

In the next step the soul must add the contemplation of God, whom it fears, to that of self. 
This is a faint approach to the real wisdom, but the soul is still greatly self-absorbed: it is not satis­fied with fearing God; it wants to be certain that it does fear Him and fears lest it fear Him not, going round in a perpetual circle of self-consciousness. 
All this restless dwelling on self is very far from the peace and freedom of real love; 
but that is yet in the distance;
 the soul must needs go through a season of trial, 
and were it suddenly plunged into a state of rest, it would not know how to use it.

The third step is that, ceasing from a restless self-contempla­tion
the soul begins to dwell upon God instead, and by degrees forgets itself in Him. 
It becomes full of Him and ceases to feed upon self. 
Such a soul is not blinded to its own faults or indif­ferent to its own errors; 
it is more conscious of them than ever, and increased light shows them in plainer form, 
but this self-knowledge comes from God, and therefore it is not restless or uneasy.

Fénelon
François de Salignac de la Mothe-Fénelon, more commonly known as François Fénelon, was a French Catholic archbishop, theologian, poet and writer. Today, he is remembered mostly as the author of The Adventures of Telemachus, first published in 1699. Wikipedia

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How admirably acute and subtle this is! One of the most extraordinary, because most gratuitous, pieces of twentieth-century vanity is the assumption that nobody knew anything about psychology before the days of Freud
But the real truth is that most modern psychologists understand human beings less well than did the ablest of their predecessors. Fnelon and La Rochefoucauld knew all about the surface rationalization of deep, discreditable motives in the subconscious, and were fully aware that sexuality and the will to power were, all too often, the effective forces at work under the polite mask of thepersoncz. Machiavelli had drawn Pareto's distinction between 'residues' and 'derivations'—between the real, self-interested motives for political action and the fancy theories, principles and ideals in terms of which such action is explained and justified to the credulous public. [133] 

Like Buddha's and St. Augustine's, Pascal's view of human virtue and rationality could not have been more realistically low. But all these men, even La Rochefoucauld, even Machiavelli, were aware of certain facts which twentieth-century psychologists have chosen to ignore—the fact that human nature is tripartite, consisting of a spirit as well as of a mind and body; the fact that we live on the border-line between two worlds, the temporal and the eternal, the physical-vital-human and the divine; the fact that, though nothing in himself, man is 'a nothing surrounded by God, indigent of God, capable of God and filled with God, if he so desires.'

The Christian simplicity, of which Grou and Fénelon write, is the same thing as the virtue so much admired by Lao Tzu and his successors
According to these Chinese sages, personal sins and social maladjustments are all due to the fact that men have separated themselves from their divine source and live according to their own will and notions
not according to Tao —which is the Great Way, the Logos, the Nature of Things, as it manifests itself on every plane from the physical, 
up through the animal and the mental, to the spiritual.

 Enlighten­ment comes when we give up self-will and make ourselves docile to the workings of Tao in the world around us and in our own bodies, minds and spirits. 

Sometimes the Taoist philosophers write as though they believed in Rousseau's Noble Savage, and (being Chinese and therefore much more con­cerned with the concrete and the practical than with the merely speculative) 
they are fond of prescribing methods by which rulers may reduce the complexity of civilization and so preserve their subjects from the corrupting influences of man-made and therefore Tao-eclipsing conventions of thought, feeling and action. 

But the rulers who are to perform this task for the masses must themselves be sages; and to become a sage, one must get rid of all the rigidities of unregenerate adulthood and become again as a little child. For only that which is soft and docile is truly alive; that which conquers and outlives every­thing is that which adapts itself to everything, that which always seeks the lowest place—not the hard rock, but the water that wears away the everlasting hills. 

The simplicity and spontaneity of the perfect sage 
are the fruits of mortification
—mortification of the will and, by recollectedness and meditation, of the mind. 

Only the most highly disciplined artist can recapture, on a higher level, the spontaneity of the child with its first paint-box. Nothing is more difficult than to be simple.[134]


'May I ask,' said Yen Hui, 'in what consists the fasting of the heart?'

'Cultivate unity,' replied Confucius. 
'You do your hearing, not with your ears, but with your mind; 
not with your mind, but with your very soul

But let the hearing stop with the ears
Let the working of the mind stop with itself. 
Then the soul will be a negative existence, passively responsive to externals. In such a negative existence, only Tao can abide. 
And that negative state is the fasting of the heart.'

'Then,' said Yen Hui, 'the reason I could not get the use of this method is my own individuality. If I could get the use of it, my individuality would have gone. 
Is this what you mean by the negative state?'

'Exactly so,' replied the Mastçr. 'Let me tell you. 
If you can enter the domain of this prince (a bad ruler whom Yen Hui was ambitious to reform) without offending his amour propre, 
cheer­ful if he hears you, passive if he does not; 
without science, with­out drugs, simply living there in a state of complete indifference —you will be near success. . ..

 Look at that window. Through it an empty room becomes bright with scenery; but the land­scape stops outside. in this sense you may use your ears and eyes to communicate within, but shut out all wisdom (in the sense of conventional, copybook maxims) from your mind. This is the method for regenerating all creation.'

Chuang Tu

Mortification may be regarded, in this context, as the process of study, by which we learn at last to have unstudied reactions to events—reactions in harmony with Tao, Suchness, the Will of God. [135]Those who have made themselves docile to the divine Nature of Things, those who respond to circumstances, not with craving and aversion, but with the love that permits them to do spontaneously what they like; those who can truthfully say, Not I, but God in me—such men and women are com­pared by the exponents of the Perennial Philosophy to children, to fools and simpletons, even sometimes, as in the following passage, to drunkards.

A drunken man who falls Out of a cart, though he may suffer, does not die. His bones are the same as other people's; but he meets his accident in a different way. His spirit is in a condition of security. He is not conscious of riding in the cart; neither is he conscious of falling out of it. Ideas of life, death, fear and the like cannot penetrate his breast; and so he does not suffer from contact with objective existence. If such security is to be got from wine, how much more is it to be got from God?

Chuang Tu

It is by long obedience and hard work that the artist comes to unforced spontaneity and consummate mastery. Knowing that he can never create anything on his own account, out of the top layers, so to speak, of his personal consciousness, he submits obediently to the workings of 'inspiration'; and knowing that the medium in which he works has its own self-nature, which must not be ignored or violently overriden, he makes himself its patient servant and, in this way, achieves perfect freedom of expression. But life is also an art, and the man who would become a consummate artist in living must follow, on all the levels of his being, the same procedure as that by which the painter or the sculptor or any other craftsman comes to his own more limited perfection.

Prince Hui's cook was cutting up a bullock. Every blow of his knife, every heave of his shoulders, every tread of his foot, every whs/ik of rent flesh, every ckhk of the chopper, was in perfect harmony—rhythmical like the Dance of the Mulberry Grove, simultaneous like the chords of the Ching Shou.[136]    

'Well done!' cried the Prince. 'Yours is skill indeed.' 
'Sire,' replied the cook, 'I have always devoted myself to Tao. It is better than skill. 

When I first began to cut up bullocks, I saw before me simply whole bullocks. After three years' practice I saw no more whole animals. And now I work with my mind and not with my eye. When my senses bid me stop, but my mind urges me on, I fall back upon eternal principles. I follow such openings or cavities as there may be, according to the natural constitution of the animal. I do not attempt to cut through joints, still less through large bones.

'A good cook changes his chopper once a year—because he cuts. An ordinary cook, once a month—because he hacks. But I have had this chopper nineteen years, and though I have cut up many thousands of bullocks, its edge is as if fresh from the whet­stone. For at the joints there are always interstices, and the edge of a chopper being without thickness, it remains only to insert that which is without thickness into such an interstice. By these means the interstice will be enlarged, and the blade will find plenty of room. It is thus that I have kept my chopper for nine­teen years, as though fresh from the whetstone.

'Nevertheless, when I come upon a hard part, where the blade meets with a difficulty, I am all caution. I fix my eyes on it. I stay my hand, and gently apply the blade, until with a hwah the part yields like earth crumbling to the ground. Then I withdraw the blade and stand up and look around; and at last I wipe my chopper and put it carefully away.'

'Bravo!' cried the Prince. 'From the words of this cook I have learnt how to take care of my life.'

Chuang Tu

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[C] (right) LIVELIHOOD



In the first seven branches of his Eightfold Path the Buddha describes the conditions that must be fulfilled by anyone who desires to come to that right contemplation which is the eighth and final branch.[137] The fulfilment of these conditions entails the undertaking of a course of the most searching and comprehen­sive mortificationmortification of intellect and will, craving and emotion, thought, speech, action and, finally, means of livelihood. 

Certain professions are more or less completely incompatible with the achievement of man's final end; and there are certain ways of making a living which do so much physical and, above all, so much moral, intellectual and spiritual harm that, even if they could be practised in a non-attached spirit (which is generally impossible), they would still have to be eschewed by anyone dedicated to the task of liberating, not only himself, but others. The exponents of the Perennial Philo­sophy are not content to avoid and forbid the practice of crim­inal professions, such as brothel-keeping, forgery, racketeering and the like; they also avoid themselves, and warn others against, a number of ways of livelihood commonly regarded as legitimate. Thus, in many Buddhist societies, the manu­facture of arms, the concoction of intoxicating liquors and the wholesale purveying of butcher's meat were not, as in con­temporary Christendom, rewarded by wealth, peerages and political influence; they were deplored as businesses which, it was thought, made it particularly difficult for their practi­tioners and for other members of the communities in which they were practised to achieve enlightenment and liberation. Similarly, in mediaeval Europe, Christians were forbidden to make a living by the taking of interest on money or by corner­ing the market. As Tawney and others have shown, it was only after the Reformation that coupon-clipping, usury and gambling in stocks and commodities became respectable and received ecclesiastical approval.

For the Quakers, soldiering was and is a form of wrong livelihood—war being, in their eyes, anti-Christian, not so much because it causes suffering as because it propagates hatred, puts a premium on fraud and cruelty, infects whole societies with anger, fear, pride and uncharitableness. Such passions eclipse the Inner Light, and therefore the wars by which they are aroused and intensified must be regarded, what­ever their immediate political outcome, as crusades to make the world safe for spiritual darkness.

It has been found, as a matter of experience, that it is dangerous to lay down detailed and inflexible rules for right livelihood—dangerous, because most people see no reason for being righteous overmuch and consequently respond to the imposition of too rigid a code by hypocrisy or open rebellion. [138]      

In the Christian tradition, for example, a distinction is made between the precepts, which are binding on all and sundry, and the counsels of perfection, binding only upon those who feel drawn towards a total renunciation of 'the world.' 

The precepts include the ordinary moral code and the command­ment to love God with all one's heart, strength and mind, and one's neighbour as oneself. 
Some of those who make a serious effort to obey this last and greatest commandment find that they cannot do so whole-heartedly unless they follow the coun­sels and sever all connections with the world. 

Nevertheless it is possible for men and women to achieve that 'perfection,' which is deliverance into the unitive knowledge of God, with­out abandoning the married state and without selling all they have and giving the price to the poor. 
Effective poverty (pos­sessing no money) is by no means always affective poverty (being indifferent to money). One man may be poor, but desperately concerned with what money can buy, full of cravings, envy and bitter self-pity. Another may have money, but no attachment to money or the things, powers and privi­leges that money can buy. 'Evangelical poverty' is a combina­tion of effective with affective poverty; but a genuine poverty of spirit is possible even in those who are not effectively poor. It will be seen, then, that the problems of right livelihood, in so far as they lie outside the jurisdiction of the common moral code, are strictly personal. The way in which any individual problem presents itself and the nature of the appropriate solu­tion depend upon the degree of knowledge, moral sensibility and spiritual insight achieved by the individual concerned. For this reason no universally applicable rules can be formu­lated except in the most general terms. 'Here are my three treasures,' says Lao Tzu. 'Guard and keep them! The first is pity, the second frugality, the third refusal to be foremost of all things under heaven.' And when Jesus is asked by a stranger to settle a dispute between himself and his brother over an inheritance, he refuses (since he does not know the circumstances) to be a judge in the case and merely utters a general warning against covetousness.[39]

Ga-San instructed his adherents one day: 'Those who speak against killing, and who desire to spare the lives of all conscious beings, are right. It is good to protect even animals and insects. But what about those persons who kill time, what about those who destroy wealth, and those who murder the economy of their society? We should not overlook them. Again, what of the one who preaches without enlightenment? He is killing Buddhism.'

From 'One Hundred and One Zen Stories'
Once the noble Ibrahim, as he sat on his throne,
Heard a clamour and noise of cries on the roof,
Also heavy footsteps on the roof of his palace.
He said to himself, "Whose heavy feet are these?'
He shouted from the window, 'Who goes there?'
The guards, filled with confusion, bowed their heads, saying,
'It is we, going the rounds in search.'
He said, 'What seek ye?' They said, 'Our camels.'
He said, 'Who ever searched for camels on a housetop?'
They said, 'We follow thy example,
Who seekest union with God, while sitting on a throne.'


Jalal-uddin Rumi

Of all social, moral and spiritual problems that of power is the most chronically urgent and the most difficult of solution
. Craving for power is not a vice of the body, consequently knows none of the limitations imposed by a tired or satiated physiology upon gluttony, intemperance and lust. 
Growing with every successive satisfaction, the appetite for power can manifest itself indefinitely, without interruption by bodily fatigue or sickness. Moreover, the nature of society is such that the higher a man climbs in the political, economic or reli­gious hierarchy, the greater are his opportunities and resources for exercising power. But climbing the hierarchical ladder is ordinarily a slow process, and the ambitious rarely reach the top till they are well advanced in life. [140]  The older he grows, the more chances does the power lover have for indulging his besetting sin, the more continuously is he subjected to tempta­tions and the more glamorous do those temptations become. In this respect his situation is profoundly different from that of the debauchee. The latter may never voluntarily leave his vices, but at least, as he advances in years, he finds his vices leaving him; the former neither leaves his vices nor is left by them. Instead of bringing to the power lover a merciful respite from his addictions, old age is apt to intensify them by making it easier for him to satisfy his cravings on a larger scale and in a more spectacular way. That is why, in Acton's words, 'all great men are bad.' Can we therefore be surprised if political action, undertaken, in all too many cases, not for the public good, but solely or at least primarily to gratify the power lusts of bad men, should prove so often either self-stultifying or downright disastrous?

'L'état c'est moi,' says the tyrant; and this is true, of course, not only of the autocrat at the apex of the pyramid, but of all the members of the ruling minority through whom he governs and who are, in fact, the real rulers of the nation. Moreover, so long as the policy which gratifies the power lusts of the ruling class is successful, and so long as the price of success is not too high, even the masses of the ruled will feel that the state is themselves—a vast and splendid projection of the individ­ual's intrinsically insignificant ego. The little man can satisfy his lust for power vicariously through the activities of the imperialistic state, just as the big man does; the difference between them is one of degree, not of kind.

No infallible method for controlling the political manifesta­tions of the lust for power has ever been devised. Since power is of its very essence indefinitely expansive, it cannot be checked except by colliding with another power. Hence, any society that values liberty, in the sense of government by law rather than by class interest or personal decree, must see to it that the power of its rulers is divided. National unity means national servitude to a single man and his supporting oilgarchy. Organized and balanced disunity is the necessary con­dition of liberty. His Majesty's Loyal Opposition is the loyalest, because the .most genuinely useful section of any liberty-loving community. Furthermore, since the appetite for power is purely mental and therefore insatiable and im­pervious to disease or old age, no community that values liberty can afford to give its rulers long tenures of office. The Carthusian Order, which was 'never reformed because never deformed,' owed its long immunity from corruption to the fact that its abbots were elected for periods of only a single year. In ancient Rome the amount of liberty under law was in inverse ratio to the length of the magistrates' terms of office. These rules for controlling the lust for power are very easy to formu­late, but very difficult, as history shows, to enforce in practice. They are particularly difficult to enforce at a period like the present, when time-hallowed political machinery is being rendered obsolete by rapid technological change and when the salutary principle of organized and balanced disunity requires to be embodied in new and more appropriate institutions.

Acton, the learned Catholic historian, was of opinion that all great men are bad; Rumi, the Persian poet and mystic, thought that to seek for union with God while occupying a throne was an undertaking hardly less senseless than looking for camels among the chimney-pots. A slightly more optimistic note is sounded by St. François de Sales, whose views on the matter were recorded by his Boswellizing disciple, the young Bishop of Belley.

'Mon Père,' I said one day, 'how is it possible for those who are themselves high in office to practise the virtue of obedience?'

Francois de Sales replied, 'They have greater and more excel­lent ways of doing so than their inferiors.'

As I did not understand this reply, he went on to say, 'Those who are bound by obedience are usually subject to one superior only.. . . But those who are themselves superiors have a wider field for obedience, even while they command; for if they bear in mind that it is God who has placed them over other men, and gives them the rule they have, they will exercise it out of obedi­ence to God, and thus, even while commanding, they will obey. [142]Moreover, there is no position so high but that it is subject to a spiritual superior in what concerns the conscience and the soul. But there is a yet higher point of obedience to which all superiors may aspire, even that to which St. Paul alludes, when he says, "Though I be free from all men, yet have I made myself servant unto all." It is by such universal obedience to everyone that we become "all things to all men"; and serving everyone for Our Lord's sake, we esteem all to be our superiors.'

In accordance with this rule, I have often observed how Fran­cois de Sales treated everyone, even the most insignificant persons who approached him, as though he were the inferior, never repulsing anyone, never refusing to enter into conversation, to speak or to listen, never betraying the slightest sign of weariness, impatience and annoyance, however importunate or ill-timed the interruption. To those who asked him why he thus wasted his time his constant reply was, ' It is God's will; it is what He requires of me; what more need I ask? While I am doing this, I am not required to do anything else. God's Holy Will is the centre from which all we do must radiate; all else is mere weari­ness and excitement.'

Jean Pierre Camus

We see, then, that a 'great man' can be good—good enough even to aspire to unitive knowledge of the divine Ground—provided that, while exercising power, he fulfils two condi­tions. First, he must deny himself all the personal advantages of power and must practise the patience and recollectedness without which there cannot be love either of man or God. And, second, he must realize that the accident of possessing temporal power does not give him spiritual authority, which belongs only to those seers, living or dead, who have achieved a direct insight into the Nature of Things. A society, in which the boss is mad enough to believe himself a prophet, is a society doomed to destruction. A viable society is one in which those who have qualified themselves to see indicate the goals to be aimed at, while those whose business it is to rule respect the authority and listen to the advice of the seers.
[143] In theory, at least, all this was well understood in India and, until the Refor­mation, in Europe, where 'no position was so high but that it was subject to a spiritual superior in what concerned the con­science and the soul.' Unfortunately the churches tried to make the best of both worlds—to combine spiritual authority with temporal power, wielded either directly or at one remove, from behind the throne. But spiritual authority can be exer­cised only by those who are perfectly disinterested and whose motives are therefore above suspicion. An ecclesiastical organi­zation may call itself the Mystical Body of Christ; but if its prelates are slave-holders and the rulers of states, as they were in the past, or if the corporation is a large-scale capitalist, as is the case today, no titles, however honorific, can conceal the fact that, when it passes judgment, it does so as an interested party with some political or economic axe to grind. True, in matters which do not directly concern the temporal powers of the cor­poration, individual churchmen can be, and have actually proved themselves, perfectly disinterested—consequently can possess, and have possessed, genuine spiritual authority. St. Philip Neri's is a case in point. Possessing absolutely no temporal power, he yet exercised a prodigious influence over sixteenth-century Europe. But for that influence, it may be doubted whether the efforts of the Council of Trent to reform the Roman church from within would have met with much success.

In actual practice how many great men have ever fulfilled, or are ever likely to fulfil, the conditions which alone render power innocuous to the ruler as well as to the ruled? Obvi­ously, very few. Except by saints, the problem of powrJr finally insoluble. But since genuine self-government is possible only in very small groups, societies on a nationø - national scale will always be ruled by oligarchical minorities whose members come to power bewill always arise and, since it cannot be solved except by people like Francois de Sales, will always make trouble. 
[144]  And this, in its turn, means that we cannot expect the large-scale societies of the future to be much better than were the societies of the past during the brief periods when they were at their best.

Francis de Sales was a Bishop of Geneva and is revered as a saint in the Catholic Church. He became noted for his deep faith and his gentle approach to the religious divisions in his land resulting from the Protestant Reformation. Wikipedia
Born: 21 August 1567, Château de Sales

Perennial Phil Ch 3 PERSONALITY, SANCTITY, DIVINE INCARNATION [14,8283]

Perennial Phil Ch 3 PERSONALITY, SANCTITY, DIVINE INCARNATION [14,8283]신성한 화신

===

A] Personality -Self
---

IN English, words of Latin origin tend to carry overtones of intellectual, moral and aesthetic 'classiness '—overtones which are not carried, as a rule, by their Anglo-Saxon equiva­lents. 'Maternal,' for instance, means the same as 'motherly,' 'intoxicated' as 'drunk'—but with what subtly important shades of difference! And when Shakespeare needed a name for a comic character, it was Sir Toby Belch that he chose, not Cavalier Tobias Eructation.

The word 'personality' is derived from the Latin, and its upper partials are in the highest degree respectable. For some odd philological reason, the Saxon equivalent of 'personality' is hardly ever used. Which is a pity. For if it were used—used as currently as 'belch' is used for 'eructation'—would people make such a reverential fuss about the thing connoted as certain English-speaking philosophers, moralists and theo­logians have recently done? 

'Personality,' we are constantly being assured, is the highest form of reality with which we are acquainted. But surely people would think twice about mak­ing or accepting this affirmation if, instead of 'personality,' the word employed had been its Teutonic synonym, 'selfness.' For 'selfness,' though it means precisely the same, carries none of the high-class overtones that go with 'personality.' On the contrary, its primary meaning comes to us embedded, as it were, in discords, like the note of a cracked bell. For, as all exponents of the Perennial Philosophy have constantly in­sisted, man's obsessive consciousness of, and insistence on being, a separate self is the final and most formidable obstacle to the unitive knowledge of God. 

To be a self is, for them, the original sin, and to die to self, in feeling, will and intellect, is the final and all-inclusive virtue. It is the memory of these utterances that calls up the unfavourable overtones with which the word 'selfness' is associated. [45 46]   The all too favourable over­tones of 'personality' are evoked in part by its intrinsically solemn Latinity, but also by reminiscences of what has been said about the 'persons' of the Trinity. But the persons of the Trinity have nothing in common with the flesh-and-blood persons of our everyday acquaintance—nothing, that is to say, except that indwelling Spirit, with which we ought and are intended to identify ourselves, but which most of us prefer to ignore in favour of our separate selfness. That this God-eclipsing and anti-spiritual selfness should have been given the same name as is applied to the God who is a Spirit, is, to say the least of it, unfortunate. Like all such mistakes it is probably, in some obscure and subconscious way, voluntary and purposeful. We love our selfness; we want to be justified in our love; therefore we christen it with the same name as is applied by theologians to Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

But now thou askest me how thou mayest destroy this naked knowing and feeling of thine own being. For peradventure [by  chance] thou thinkest that if it were destroyed, all other hindrances were de­stroyed; and if thou thinkest thus, thou thinkest right truly. But to this I answer thee and I say, that without a full special grace full freely given by God, and also a full according ableness on thy part to receive this grace, this naked knowing and feeling of thy being may in nowise be destroyed. And this ableness is nought else but a strong and a deep ghostly sorrow. . . . All men have matter of sorrow; but most specially he feeleth matter of sorrow that knoweth and feeleth that he is. All other sorrows in com­parison to this be but as it were game to earnest. For he may make sorrow earnestly that knoweth and feeleth not only what he is, but that he is. And whoso felt never this sorrow, let him make sorrow; for he bath never yet felt perfect sorrow. This sorrow, when it is had, cleanseth the soul, not only of sin, but also of pain that it bath deserved for sin; and also it maketh a soul able to receive that joy, the which reaveth [
 steal goods] from a man all knowing and feeling of his being.

 47

This sorrow, if it be truly conceived, is full of holy desire; and else a man might never in this life abide it or bear it. For were it not that a soul were somewhat fed with a manner of comfort by his right working, he should not be able to bear that pain that he hath by the knowing and feeling of his being. For as oft as he would have a true knowing and a feeling of his God in purity of spirit (as it may be here), and then feeleth that he may not—for he findeth evermore his knowing and his feeling as it were occupied and filled with a foul stinking lump of himself, the which must always be hated and despised and forsaken, if he shall be God's perfect disciple, taught by Himself in the mount of perfection—so oft he goeth nigh mad for sorrow.

This sorrow and this desire must every soul have and feel in itself (either in this manner or in another), as God vouchsafeth to teach his ghostly disciples according to his good will and their ac­cording ableness in body and in soul, in degree and disposition, ere the time be that they may perfectly be oned unto God in perfect charity—such as may be had here, if God vouchsafeth.


The Cloud of Unknowing
영어 위키백과 
--
[The Cloud of Unknowing (Middle English: The Cloude of Unknowyng) is an anonymous work of Christian mysticism written in Middle English in the latter half of the 14th century. The text is a spiritual guide on contemplative prayer in the late Middle Ages. 
The underlying message of this work suggests that the way to know God is to abandon consideration of God's particular activities and attributes, and be courageous enough to surrender one's mind and ego to the realm of "unknowing", at which point one may begin to glimpse the nature of God.]
---
[이 작품의 근본적인 메시지는 하나님을 아는 길은 하나님의 특별한 활동과 속성에 대한 고려를 포기하고 자신의 마음과 자아를 "무지"의 영역에 내맡길 만큼 용기를 내는 것 임을 암시합니다. 그렇게 하면 신의 본성을 엿보기 시작하게 될지도 모른다. ]

vouchsafe --Grant condescendingly — have focus



What is the nature of this 'stinking lump' of selfness or per­sonality, which has to be so passionately repented of and so completely died to, before there can be any 'true knowing of God in purity of spirit'

The most meagre and non-committal hypothesis is that of Hume. 
'Mankind,' he says, 'are nothing but a bundle or collection of different perceptions, which suc­ceed each other with an inconceivable rapidity and are in a perpetual flux and movement.' 

An almost identical answer is given by the Buddhists, whose doctrine of anatta is the denial of any permanent soul, existing behind the flux of experience and the various psycho-physical skancikas (closely correspond­ing to Hume's 'bundles'), which constitute the more enduring elements of personality, Hume and the Buddhists give a suffi­ciently realistic description of selfness in action; but they fail to explain how or why the bundles ever became bundles.

 Did their constituent atoms of experience come together of their own accord? And, if so, why, or by what means, and within [48] what kind of a non-spatial universe? 
To give a plausible answer to these questions in terms of anatta is so difficult that we are forced to abandon the doctrine in favour of the notion that, 
behind the flux and within the bundles, there exists some kind of permanent soul, by which experience is organized and which in turn makes use of that organized experience to become a particular and unique personality. 

This is the view of the orthodox Hinduism, from which Buddhist thought parted com­pany, and of almost all European thought from before the time of Aristotle to the present day. 

But whereas most contem­porary thinkers make an attempt to describe human nature in terms of a dichotomy of interacting psyche and physique, or an inseparable wholeness of these two elements within particular embodied selves,

all the exponents of the Perennial Philosophy make, in one form or another, the affirmation that man is a kind of trinity composed of body, psyche and spirit. 
Selfness or personality is a product of the first two elements. 
The third element (that quidquid increatum et increabile, as Eckhart called it) is akin to, or even identical with, the divine Spirit that is the Ground of all being. 

Man's final end, the purpose of his existence, is to love, know and be united with the immanent and transcendent Godhead. 
And this identification of self with spiritual not-self can be achieved only by 'dying to' selfness and living to spirit. 
[Definition of godhead - 1: divine nature or essence]

What could begin to deny self, if there were not something in man different from self?
William Law

What is man? An angel, an animal, a void, a world, a nothing surrounded by God, indigent of God, capable of God, filled with God, if it so desires.

Bérulle

The separate creaturely life, as opposed to life in union with God, is only a life of various appetites, hungers and wants, and cannot possibly be anything else. God Himself cannot make a creature [49] to be in itself, or in its own nature, anything else but a state of emptiness. 
The highest life that is natural and creaturely can go no higher than this; it can only be a bare capacity for goodness and cannot possibly be a good and happy life but by the life of God dwelling in and in union with it. And this is the twofold life that, of all necessity, must be united in every good and perfect and happy creature.

William Law
William Law (1686 – 9 April 1761) was a Church of England priest who lost his position at Emmanuel College, Cambridge when his conscience would not allow him to take the required oath of allegiance to the first Hanoverian monarch, King George I.
 

The Scriptures say of human beings that there is an outward man and along with him an inner man.

To the outward man belong those things that depend on the soul, but are connected with the flesh and are blended with it, and the co-operative functions of the several members, such as the eye, the ear, the tongue, the hand and so on.

The Scripture speaks of all this as the old man, the earthy man, the outward person, the enemy, the servant.

Within us all is the other person, the inner man, whom the Scripture calls the new man, the heavenly man, the young person, the friend, the aristocrat.

Eckhart

The seed of God is in us. Given an intelligent and hard-working farmer, it will thrive and grow up to God, whose seed it is; and accordingly its fruits will be God-nature. Pear seeds grow into pear trees, nut seeds into nut trees, and God seed into God.

Eckhart

The will is free and we are at liberty to identify our being either exclusively with our selfness and its interests, regarded as independent of indwelling Spirit and transcendent Godhead (in which case we shall be passively damned or actively fiend­ish), or exclusively with the divine within us and without (in which case we shall be saints), or finally with self at one moment or in one context and with spiritual, not-self at other moments and in other contexts (in which case we shall be average citizens, too theocentric to be wholly lost, and too [50] 
egocentric to achieve enlightenment and a total deliverance). 

Since human craving can never be satisfied except by the unitive knowledge of God and since the mind-body is capable of an enormous variety of experiences,

we are free to identify our­selves with an almost infinite number of possible objects—
  • with the pleasures of gluttony, for example, or intemperance, or sensuality
  • with money, power or fame; 
  • with our family, regarded as a possession or actually an extension and projec­tion of our own selfness; 
  • with our goods and chattels, our hobbies, our collections; with our artistic or scientific talents;
  • with some favourite branch of knowledge, some fascinating 'special subject'; 
  • with our professions, our political parties, our churches; 
  • with our pains and illnesses; with our memories of success or misfortune, our hopes, fears and schemes for the future; and finally 
  • with the eternal Reality within which and by which all the rest has its being. 



And we are free, of course, to identify ourselves with more than one of these things simul­taneously or in succession. Hence the quite astonishingly im­probable combination of traits making up a complex person­ality. 
Thus a man 
can be at once 
  • the craftiest of politicians and the dupe of his own verbiage, 
can have a passion 
  • for brandy and money, and 
  • an equal passion for the poetry of George Meredith 
  • and under-age girls and his mother, 
  • for horse-racing and 
  • detective stories and 
  • the good of his country
  • —the whole accompanied by a sneaking fear of hell-fire, 
  • a hatred of Spinoza and 
  • an unblemished record for Sunday church-going. 

A per­son born with one kind of psycho-physical constitution will be tempted to identify himself with one set of interests and passions, while a person with another kind of temperament will be tempted to make very different identifications. 

But these temptations (though extremely powerful, if the constitutional bias is strongly marked) do not have to be succumbed to; 
people can and do resist them, can and do refuse to identify themselves with what it would be all too easy and natural for them to be; can and do become better and quite other than their own selves. 

In this context the following brief article on 'How Men Behave in Crisis' (published in a recent issue of Harper's Magaine) is highly significant.  [51]   

'A young psychi­atrist, who went as a medical observer on five combat missions of the Eighth Air Force in England, says that in times of great stress and danger men are likely to react quite uniformly, even though under normal circumstances they differ widely in per­sonality. He went on one mission, during which the B-17 plane and crew were so severely damaged that survival seemed impossible. He had already studied the "on the ground" per­sonalities of the crew and had found that they represented a great diversity of human types. Of their behaviour in crisis he reported:

"Their reactions were remarkably alike. During the violent combat and in the acute emergencies that arose during it, they were all quietly precise on the interphone and decisive in action. The tail gunner, right waist gunner and navigator were severely wounded early in the fight, but all three kept at their duties efficiently and without cessation. The burden of emer­gency work fell on the pilot, engineer and ball turret gunner, and all functioned with rapidity, skilful effectiveness and no lost motion. The burden of the decisions, during, but par­ticularly after the combat, rested essentially on the pilot and, in secondary details, on the co-pilot and bombardier. The decisions, arrived at with care and speed, were unquestioned once they were made, and proved excellent. In the period when disaster was momentarily expected, the alternative plans of action were made clearly and with no thought other than the safety of the entire crew. All at this point were quiet, unobtrusively cheerful and ready for anything. There was at no time paralysis, panic, unclear thinking, faulty or confused judgment, or self-seeking in any one of them.

'"One could not possibly have inferred from their behaviour that this one was a man of unstable moods and that that one was a shy, quiet, introspective man. They all became out­wardly calm, precise in thought and rapid in action.

"Such action is typical of a crew who know intimately what fear is, so that they can use, without being distracted by, its physiological concomitants; who are well trained, so that they [51] can direct their action with clarity; and who have all the more than personal trust inherent in a unified team."

We see then that, when the crisis came, each of these young men forgot the particular personality which he had built up out of the elements provided by his heredity and the environ­ment in which he had grown up; that one resisted the normally irresistible temptation to identify himself with his mood of the moment, another the temptation to identify himself with his private day-dreams, and so on with the rest; and that all of them behaved in the same strikingly similar and wholly admirable way. It was as though the crisis and the preliminary training for crisis had lifted them out of their divergent per­sonalities and raised them to the same higher level.

Sometimes crisis alone, without any preparatory training, is sufficient to make a man forget to be his customary self and become, for the time being, something quite different. Thus the most unlikely people will, under the influence of disaster, temporarily turn into heroes martyrs, selfless labourers for the good of their fellows
Very often, too, the proximity of death produces similar results. For example, Samuel Johnson be­haved in one way during almost the whole of his life and in quite another way during his last illness. The fascinatingly complex personality, in which six generations of Boswellians have taken so much delight—the learned boor and glutton, the kind-hearted bully, the superstitious intellectual, the con­vinced Christian who was a fetishist, the courageous man who was terrified of death—became, while he was actually dying, simple, single, serene and God-centred.

Paradoxical as it may seem, it is, for very many persons, much easier to behave selflessly in time of crisis than it is when life is taking its normal course in undisturbed tranquillity. When the going is easy, there is nothing to make us forget our precious selfness, nothing (except our own will to mortifica­tion and the knowledge of God) to distract our minds from the distractions with which we have chosen to be identified; we are at perfect liberty to wallow in our personality to our heart's content. And how we wallow! It is for this reason that all the masters of the spiritual life insist so strongly upon the importance of little things.[53]

God requires a faithful fulfilment of the merest trifle given us to do, rather than the most ardent aspiration to things to which we are not called.

St. François de Sales

There is no one in the world who cannot arrive without difficulty at the most eminent perfection by fulfilling with love obscure and common duties.

J. P. de Caussade

Some people measure the worth of good actions only by their natural qualities or their difficulty, giving the preference to what is conspicuous or brilliant. Such men forget that Christian virtues, which are God's inspirations, should be viewed from the side of grace, not that of nature. The dignity and difficulty of a good action certainly affects what is technically called its acci­dental worth, but all its essential worth comes from love alone.

Jean Pierre Catnus

(quoting St. François de Sales)

============

B] The saint   
---

is one who knows that every moment of our human life is a moment of crisis; for at every moment we are called upon to make an all-important decision—to choose between the way that leads to death and spiritual darkness and the way that leads towards light and life; between interests exclusively temporal and the eternal order; between our personal will, or the will of some projection of our personality, and the will of God

In order to fit himself to deal with the emergencies of his way of life, the saint undertakes appropriate training of mind and body, just as the soldier does. But whereas the objec­tives of military training are limited and very simple, namely, to make men courageous, cool-headed and co-operatively effi­cient in the business of killing other men, with whom, person­ally, they have no quarrel, 
the objectives of spiritual training are much less narrowly specialized. [54]  

  Here the aim is primarily to bring human beings to a state in which, because there are no longer any God-eclipsing obstacles between themselves and Reality, they are able to be aware continuously of the divine Ground of their own and all other beings; 
secondarily, as a means to this end, to meet all, even the most trivial circum­stances of daily living, without malice, greed, self-assertion or voluntary ignorance, but consistently with love and under­standing. Because its objectives are not limited, because, for the lover of God, every moment is a moment of crisis, spiritual training is incomparably more difficult and searching than military training. There are many good soldiers, few saints.

We have seen that, in critical emergencies, soldiers specifi­cally trained to cope with that kind of thing tend to forget the inborn and acquired idiosyncrasies with which they normally identify their being and, transcending selfness, to behave in the same, one-pointed, better-than-personal way. What is true of soldiers is also true of saints, but with this important difference —that the aim of spiritual training is to make people become selfless in every circumstance of life, while the aim of military training is to make them selfless only in certain very special circumstances and in relation to only certain classes of human beings. 
This could not be otherwise; for all that we are and will and do depends, in the last analysis, upon what we believe the Nature of Things to be. 
The philosophy that rationalizes power politics and justifies war and military training is always (whatever the official religion of the politicians and war makers) some wildly unrealistic doctrine of national, racial or ideo­logical idolatry, having, as its inevitable corollaries, the notions of Herrenvolk and 'the lesser breeds without the Law.'
the German nation as considered by the Nazis to be innately superior to others.

The biographies of the saints testify unequivocally to the fact that spiritual training leads to a transcendence of personal­ity, not merely in the special circumstances of battle, but in all circumstances and in relation to all creatures, so that the saint 'loves his enemies' or, if he is a Buddhist, does not even recognize the existence of enemies, but treats all sentient beings, sub-human as well as human, with the same compassion and disinterested goodwill.  
[55] 

Those who win through to the unitive knowledge of God set out upon their course from the most diverse starting points. 
One is a man, another a woman; one a born active, another a born contemplative. No two of them inherit the same temperament and physical constitution, and their lives are passed in material, moral and intellectual environ­ments that are profoundly dissimilar. Nevertheless, in so far as they are saints, in so far as they possess the unitive knowledge that makes them 'perfect as their Father which is in heaven is perfect,' they are all astonishingly alike. 
Their actions are uniformly selfless and they are constantly recollected, so that at every moment they know who they are and what is their true relation to the universe and its spiritual Ground. 
Of even plain average people it may be said that their name is Legion—much more so of exceptionally complex personalities, who identify themselves with a wide diversity of moods, cravings and opinions. Saints, on the contrary, are neither double-minded nor half-hearted, but single and, however great their intellectual gifts, profoundly simple
The multiplicity of Legion has given place to one-pointedness—not to any of those evil one-pointednesses of ambition or covetousness, or lust for power and fame, not even to any of the nobler, but still all too human one-pointednesses of art, scholarship and science, regarded as ends in themselves, but to the supreme, more than human one-pointedness that is the very being of those souls who consciously and consistently pursue man's final end, the knowledge of eternal Reality. 
In one of the Pali scriptures there is a significant anecdote about the Brahman Drona who, 'seeing the Blessed One sitting at the foot of a tree, asked him, "Are you a deva?" And the Exalted One answered, "I am not." "Are you a gandizarva?" "I am not." "Are you ayaksha?" "I am not." "Are you a man?" "I am not a man." On the Brahman asking what he might be, the Blessed One replied, "Those evil influences, those cravings, whose non-destruction would have individualized me as a deva, a gand/zarva, a yaks/ia (three types of supernatural being), or a man, I have completely annihilated. Know therefore that I am Buddha."[56]

Here we may remark in passing that it is only the one-pointed who are truly capable of worshipping one God. Monotheism as a theory can be entertained even by a person whose name is Legion. But when it comes to passing from theory to practice, from discursive knowledge about to imme­diate acquaintance with the one God, there cannot be mono­theism except where there is singleness of heart. Knowledge is in the knower according to the mode of the knower. 
Where the knower is poly-psychic the universe he knows by imme­diate experience is polytheistic. 
The Buddha declined to make any statement in regard to the ultimate divine Reality. All he would talk about was nirvana, which is the name of the experience that comes to the totally selfless and one-pointed. 

To this same experience others have given the name of union with Brahman, with Al Haqq, with the immanent and tran­scendent Godhead
Maintaining, in this matter, the attitude of a strict operationalist, the Buddha would speak only of the spiritual experience, not of the metaphysical entity presumed by the theologians of other religions, as also of later Buddhism, to be the object and (since in contemplation the knower, the known and the knowledge are all one) at the same time the subject and substance of that experience.

When a man lacks discrimination, his will wanders in all direc­tions, after innumerable aims. Those who lack discrimination may quote the letter of the scripture; but they are really denying its inner truth
They are full of worldly desires and hungry for the rewards of heaven. 
They use beautiful figures of speech; they teach elaborate rituals, which are supposed to obtain pleasure and power for those who practise them. 
But, actually, they understand nothing except the law of Karma that chains men to rebirth.

Those whose discrimination is stolen away by such talk grow deeply attached to pleasure and power. And so they are unable to develop that one-pointed concentration of the will, which leads a man to absorption in God.[57]

B/agavaa'-Gitc

Among the cultivated and mentally active, hagiography is now a very unpopular form of literature. 

hagiography /ˌhaɡɪˈɒɡrəfi/
noun - the writing of the lives of saints.
a biography that treats its subject with undue reverence.

The fact is not at all sur­prising. The cultivated and the mentally active have an in­satiable appetite for novelty, diversity and distraction. 
But the saints, however commanding their talents and whatever the nature of their professional activities, are all incessantly pre­occupied with only one subject—spiritual Reality and the means by which they and their fellows can come to the unitive knowledge of that Reality. 
And as for their actions—these are as monotonously uniform as their thoughts; for in all circum­stances they behave selflessly, patiently and with indefatigable charity. No wonder, then, if the biographies of such men and women remain unread. For one well-educated person who knows anything about William Law there are two or three hundred who have read (James) Boswell's life of his younger contem­porary. Why? Because, until he actually lay dying, (Samuel) Johnson indulged himself in the most fascinating of multiple personali­ties; whereas Law, for all the superiority of his talents, was almost absurdly simple and single-minded. Legion prefers to read about Legion. It is for this reason that, in the whole repertory of epic, drama and the novel, there are hardly any representations of true theocentric saints.


O Friend, hope for Him whilst you live, know whilst you live,
understand whilst you live; for in life deliverance abides. If your bonds be not broken whilst living, what hope of deliverance in death?
It is but an empty dream that the soul shall have union with Him because it has passed from the body;
If He is found now, He is found then;
If not, we do but go to dwell in the City of Death.


Kabir

This figure in the form of a sun (the description is of the engraved frontispiece to the first edition of The Rule of Perfection) repre­sents the will of God. 
The faces placed here in the sun represent souls living in the divine will. 
These faces are arranged in three concentric circles, showing the three degrees of this divine will. 
  • The first or outermost degree signifies the souls of the active life;
  •  the second, those of the life of contemplation; 
  • the third, those of the life of supereminence. 
Outside the first circle are many tools, such as pincers and hammers, denoting the active life. But round the second circle we have placed nothing at all, in order to signify that in this kind of contemplative life, without any other specula­tions or practices, one must follow the leading of the will of God. The tools are on the ground and in shadow, inasmuch as outward works are in themselves full of darkness. These tools, however, are touched by a ray of the sun, to show that works may be enlightened and illuminated by the will of God. [58]

The light of the divine will shines but little on the faces of the first circle; much more on those of the second; while those of the third or innermost circle are resplendent. The features of the first show up most clearly; the second, less; the third, hardly at all. 
This signifies that the souls of the first degree are much in themselves; those of the second degree are less in themselves and more in God; those in the third degree are almost nothing in themselves and all in God, absorbed in his essential will. All these faces have their eyes fixed on the will of God.

Benet of Canfield

It is in virtue of his absorption in God and just because he has not identified his being with the inborn and acquired elements of his private personality, that the saint is able to exercise his entirely non-coercive and therefore entirely beneficent in­fluence on individuals and even on whole societies. 
Or, to be more accurate, it is because he has purged himself of selfness that divine Reality is able to use him as a channel of grace and power. 
'I live, yet not I, but Christ—the eternal Logosliveth in me.' 
True of the saint, this must afortiori be true of the Avatar, or incarnation of God. If, in so far as he was a saint, St. Paul was 'not I,' then certainly Christ was 'not I'; [59] and 
to talk, as so many liberal churchmen now do, of worship­ping 'the personality of Jesus,' is an absurdity. 
For, obvi­ously, had Jesus remained content merely to have a person­ality, like the rest of us, he would never have exercised the kind of influence which in fact he did exercise, and it would never have occurred to anyone to regard him as a divine incarnation and to identify him with the Logos. 
That he came to be thought of as the Christ was due to the fact that he had passed beyond selfness and had become the bodily and mental conduit through which a more than personal, super­natural life flowed down into the world.

Souls which have come to the unitive knowledge of God are, in Benet of Canfield's phrase, 'almost nothing in them­selves and all in God.' 

Benet Canfield, also known as Father Benet, Benoit of Canfield, or Benoît de Canfeld, (1562–1610), was an English Recusant and mystic. His Rule of Perfection served as a manual two or three generations of mystics.[1] For his influence on Madame Acarie, Pierre de Bérulle, André Duval, and Vincent de Paul he has been called the "Masters of masters".[2]

This vanishing residue of selfness per­sists because, in some slight measure, they still identify their being with some innate psycho-physical idiosyncrasy, some acquired habit of thought or feeling, some convention or un­analysed prejudice current in the social environment. Jesus was almost wholly absorbed in the essential will of God; but in spite of this, he may have retained some elements of self-ness. To what extent there was any 'I' associated with the more-than-personal, divine 'Not-I,' it is very difficult, on the basis of the existing evidence, to judge. 
For example, did Jesus interpret his experience of divine Reality and his own spon­taneous inferences from that experience in terms of those fascin­ating apocalyptic notions current in contemporary Jewish circles? 
Some eminent scholars have argued that the doctrine of the world's imminent dissolution was the central core of his teaching. 
Others, equally learned, have held that it was attri­buted to him by the authors of the Synoptic Gospels, and that Jesus himself did not identify his experience and his theo­logical thinking with locally popular opinions. 
Which party is right? Goodness knows. 
On this subject, as on so many others, the existing evidence does not permit of a certain and unambiguous answer.

The moral of all this is plain. The quantity and quality of the surviving biographical documents are such that we have no means of knowing what the residual personality of Jesus was really like. 
But if the Gospels tell us very little about the 'I' which was Jesus, they make up for this deficiency by telling us inferentially, in the parables and discourses, a good deal about the spiritual 'not-I,' whose manifest presence in the mortal man was the reason why his disciples called him the Christ and identified him with the eternal Logos.6o 

The biography of a saint or avatar is valuable only in so far as it throws light upon the means by which in the circum­stances of a particular human life, the 'I' was purged away so as to make room for the divine 'not-I.

The authors of the Synoptic Gospels did not choose to write such a biography, and no amount of textual criticism or ingenious surmise can call it into existence. In the course of the last hundred years an enormous sum of energy has been expended on the attempt to make documents yield more evidence than in fact they con­tain. However regrettable may be the Synoptists' lack of interest in biography, and whatever objections may be raised against the theologies of Paul and John, there can still be no doubt that their instinct was essentially sound.

 Each in his own way wrote about the eternal 'not-I' of Christ rather than the historical 'I'; each in his own way stressed that element in the life of Jesus, in which, because it is more-than-personal, all persons can participate. (The nature of selfness is such that one person cannot be a part of another person. A self can contain or be contained by something that is either less or more than a self, it can never contain or be contained by a self.)

=====
C] Incarnation
===
The doctrine that God can be incarnated in human form
is found in most of the principal historic expositions of the Perennial Philosophy—in Hinduism, in Mahayana Buddhism [?] , in Christianity and in the Mohammedanism of the Sufis, by whom the Prophet was equated with the eternal Logos.61

When goodness grows weak,
When evil increases,
I make myself a body.
In every age I come back To deliver the holy,
To destroy the sin of the sinner,
To establish righteousness.

He who knows the nature
Of my task and my holy birth Is not reborn
When he leaves this body; He comes to Me.
Flying from fear,
From lust and anger,
He hides in Me,
His refuge and safety.
Burnt clean in the blaze of my being,
In Me many find home.

B/i agavad-Gita

Then the Blessed One spoke and said: 'Know, Vasetha, that from time to time a Tathagata is born into the world, a fully Enlightened One, blessed and worthy, abounding in wisdom and goodness, happy with knowledge of the worlds, unsurpassed as a guide to erring mortals, a teacher of gods and men, a Blessed Buddha. He thoroughly understands this universe, as though he saw it face to face. . . . The Truth does he proclaim both in its letter and in its spirit, lovely in its origin, lovely in its progress, lovely in its consummation. A higher life doth he make known in all its purity and in all its perfectness.

Tevigga Sutta

Krishna is an incarnation of Brahman, Gautama Buddha of what the Mahayanists called the Dharmakaya, Suchness, Mind, the spiritual Ground of all being
The Christian doctrine of the incarnation of the Godhead in human form differs from that of India and the Far East inasmuch as it affirms that there has been and can be only one Avatar.

A term, dharmakaya, was coined to describe a more metaphorical body, a body or collection of all the Buddha's good qualities or dharmas, such as his wisdom, his compassion, his fortitude, his patience.

dharmakaya | Buddhist concept | Britannica



What we do depends in large measure upon what we think, and 
if what we do is evil, there is good empirical reason for supposing that our thought-patterns are inadequate to material, mental or spiritual reality. 

Because Christians believed that there had been only one Avatar, 
Christian history has been dis­graced by more and bloodier crusades, interdenominational wars, persecutions and proselytizing imperialism than has the history of Hinduism and Buddhism. 
Absurd and idolatrous doctrines, affirming the quasi-divine nature of sovereign states and their rulers, have led oriental, no less than Western, peoples into innumerable political wars; 
but because they have not believed in an exclusive revelation at one sole instant of time, or in the quasi-divinity of an ecclesiastical organization, 
oriental peoples have kept remarkably clear of the mass murder for religion's sake, which has been so dreadfully frequent in Chris­tendom. 
And while, in this important respect, the level of public morality has been lower in the West than in the East, the levels of exceptional sanctity and of ordinary individual morality have not, so far as one can judge from the available evidence, been any higher. 
If the tree is indeed known by its fruits, Christianity's departure from the norm of the Perennial Philosophy would seem to be philosophically unjustifiable.[62]

logos, (Greek: “word,” “reason,” or “plan”) plural logoi, in ancient Greek philosophy and early Christian theology, the divine reason implicit in the cosmos, ordering it and giving it form and meaning. 



The Logos passes out of eternity into time for no other purpose than to assist the beings, whose bodily form he takes, to pass out of time into eternity. If the Avatar's appearance upon the stage of history is enormously important, this is due to the fact that by his teaching he points out, and by his being a channel of grace and divine power he actually is, the meons by which human beings may transcend the limitations of his­tory. 

The author of the Fourth Gospel affirms that the Word became flesh; but in another passage he adds that the flesh profiteth nothing—nothing, that is to say, in itself, but a great deal, of course, as a means to the union with immanent and transcendent Spirit.

 In this context it is very interesting to consider the development of Buddhism.

 'Under the forms of religious or mystical imagery,' writes R. E. Johnston in his Buddhist China, 
the Mahayana expresses the universal, 
whereas [63] 
Hinayana cannot set itself free from the domination of histor­ical fact.' 
In the words of an eminent orientalist, Ananda K. Coomaraswamy, 
'The Mahayanist believer is warned—pre-cisely as the worshipper of Krishna is warned in the Vaishna-vite scriptures 
that the Krishna Lila is not a history, but a process for ever unfolded in the heart of man—that matters of historical fact are without religious significance' 
(except, we should add, in so far as they point to or themselves constitute the means—whether remote or proximate, whether political, ethical or spiritual—by which men may come to deliverance from selfness and the temporal order.)

----
In the West, the mystics went some way towards liberating Christianity from its unfortunate servitude to historic fact (or, to be more accurate) to those various mixtures of contemporary record with subsequent inference and phantasy, which have, at different epochs, been accepted as historic fact). 

From the writings of Eckhart, Tauler and Ruysbroeck, of Boehme, William Law and the Quakers, it would be possible to extract 
a spiritualized and universalized Christianity, 
whose narratives should refer, not to history as it was, or as someone afterwards thought it ought to be, 
but to 'processes forever unfolded in the heart of man.' 

But unfortunately the influence of the mystics was never powerful enough to bring about a radical Mahayanist revolution in the West. 

In spite of them, Chris­tianity has remained a religion in which the pure Perennial Philosophy has been overlaid, now more, now less, by an idolatrous preoccupation with events and things in time—events and things regarded not merely as useful means, but as ends, intrinsically sacred and indeed divine. 
---

Moreover, such improvements on history as were made in the course of cen­turies were, most imprudently, treated as though they them­selves were a part of history—a procedure which put a power­ful weapon into the hands of Protestant and, later, of Rational­ist controversialists
How much wiser it would have been to admit the perfectly avowable fact that, when the sternness of Christ the Judge had been unduly emphasized, men and women felt the need of personifying the divine compassion in a new [64] form, with the result that the figure of the Virgin, mediatrix to the mediator, came into increased prominence. 
And when, in course of time, the Queen of Heaven was felt to be too awe-inspiring, compassion was re-personified in the homely figure of St. Joseph, who thus became mediator to the mediatrix to the mediator. 

===

In exactly the same way Buddhist worshippers felt that the historic Sakyamuni, with his insistence on recollectedness, discrimination and a total dying to self as the prin­cipal means of liberation, was too stern and too intellectual. 
The result was that the love and compassion which Sakyamuni had also inculcated came to be personified in Buddhas such as Amida and Maitreya—divine characters completely removed from history, inasmuch as their temporal career was situated somewhere in the distant past or distant future. 
Here it may be remarked that the vast numbers of Buddhas and Bodhis-attvas, of whom the Mahayanist theologians speak, are com­mensurate with the vastness of their cosmology. Time, for them, is beginningless, and the innumerable universes, every one of them supporting sentient beings of every possible variety, are born, evolve, decay and die, only to repeat the same cycle--again and again, until the final inconceivably remote consummation, when every sentient being in all the worlds shall have won to deliverance out of time into eternal Suchness or Buddhahood. 

This cosmological background to Buddhism has affinities with the world picture of modern astronomy—especially with that version of it offered in the recently published theory of Dr. Weiszäckcr regarding the formation of planets. If the Weiszäcker hypothesis is correct, the production of a planetary system would be a normal epi­sode in the life of every star. There are forty thousand million stars in our own galactic system alone, and beyond our galaxy other galaxies, indefinitely. If, as we have no choice but to believe, spiritual laws governing consciousness are uniform throughout the whole planet-bearing and presumably life-supporting universe, then certainly there is plenty of room, and at the same time, no doubt, the most agonizing and desperate need, for those innumerable redemptive incarnations of Suchness, upon whose shining multitudes the Mahayanists love to dwell.[6]

For my part, I think the chief reason which prompted the invis­ible God to become visible in the flesh and to hold converse with men was to lead carnal men, who are only able to love carnally, to the healthful love of his flesh, and afterwards, little by little, to spiritual love.
St. Bernard

St. Bernard's doctrine of 'the carnal love of Christ' has been admirably summed up by Professor Lienne Gilson in his book, The Mystical Theology of St. Bernard. 'Knowledge of self already expanded into social carnal love of the neighbour, so like oneself in misery, is now a second time expanded into a carnal love of Christ, the model of compassion, since for our salvation He has become the Man of Sorrows. 

Here then is the place occupied in Cistercian mysticism by the meditation on the visible Humanity of Christ. It is but a beginning, but an absolutely necessary beginning.... 
Charity, of course, is essen­tially spiritual, and a love of this kind can be no more than its first moment. 
It is too much bound up with the senses, unless we know how to make use of it with prudence, and to lean on it only as something to be surpassed.
In expressing himself thus, Bernard merely codified the teachings of his own experi­ence; for we have it from him that he was much given to the practice of this sensitive love at the outset of his "conversion"; later on he was to consider it an advance to have passed beyond it; not, that is to say, to have forgotten it, but to have added another, which outweighs it as the rational and spiritual out­weigh the carnal. Nevertheless, this beginning is already a summit.

'This sensitive affection for Christ was always presented by St. Bernard as love of a relatively inferior order. It is so pre­cisely on account of its sensitive character, for charity is of a purely spiritual essence.
 In right the soul should be able to enter directly into union, in virtue of its spiritual powers, with a God Who is pure spirit.[66]   The Incarnation, moreover, should be regarded as one of the consequences of man's transgression, so that love for the Person of Christ is, as a matter of fact, bound up with the history of a fall which need not, and should not, have happened. 
St. Bernard furthermore, and in several places, notes that this affection cannot stand safely alone, but needs to be supported by what he calls "science." He had examples before him of the deviations into which even the most ardent devotion can fall, when it is not allied with, and ruled by, a sane theology.'

Can the many fantastic and mutually incompatible theories of expiation and atonement, which have been grafted on to the Christian doctrine of divine incarnation, be regarded as indis­pensable elements in a 'sane theology'? 

I find it difficult to imagine how anyone who has looked into a history of these notions, as expounded, for example, by the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, by Athanasius and Augustine, by Anseim and Luther, by Calvin and Grotius, can plausibly answer this ques­tion in the affirmative.

 In the present context, it will be enough to call attention to one of the bitterest of all the bitter ironies of history. For the Christ of the Gospels, lawyers seemed further from the Kingdom of Heaven, more hopelessly imper­vious to Reality, than almost any other class of human beings except the rich. 

But Christian theology, especially that of the Western churches, was the product of minds imbued with Jewish and Roman legalism. In all too many instances the immediate insights of the Avatar and the theocentric saint were rationalized into a system, not by philosophers, but by specu­lative barristers and metaphysical jurists.   
Why should what Abbot John Chapman calls 'the problem of reconciling (not merely uniting) Mysticism and Christianity' be so extremely difficult? 

Simply because so much Roman and Protestant thinking was done by those very lawyers whom Christ re­garded as being peculiarly incapable of understanding the true Nature of Things. 'The Abbot (Chapman is apparently refer­ring to Abbot Marmion) says St. John of the Cross is like a sponge full of Christianity. You can squeeze it all out, and the full mystical theory (in other words, the pure Perennial Philo­sophy) remains.67 
Consequently for fifteen years or so I hated St. John of the Cross and called him a Buddhist. I loved St. Teresa and read her over and over again. She is first a Chris­tian, only secondarily a mystic. Then I found I had wasted fifteen years, so far as prayer was concerned.'

Now see the meaning of these two sayings of Christ's. 
  • The one, 'No man cometh unto the Father but by me,' that is through my life. 
  • The other saying, 'No man cometh unto me except the Father draw him'; 
that is, he does not take my life upon him and follow after me, except he is moved and drawn of my Father, that is, of the Simple and Perfect Good, of which St. Paul saith, 'When that which is perfect is come, that which is in part shall be done away.'

Theologia Germanica

In other words, there must be imitation of Christ before there can be identification with the Father; and there must be essen­tial identity or likeness between the human spirit and the God who is Spirit in order that the idea of imitating the earthly behaviour of the incarnate Godhead should ever cross any­body's mind. 

Christian theologians speak of the possibility of 'deification,' but deny that there is identity of substance between spiritual Reality and the human spirit
In Vedanta and Maha­yana Buddhism, as also among the Sufis, spirit and Spirit are held to be the same substance; Atman is Brahman; That art thou.

When not enlightened, Buddhas are no other than ordinary beings; when there is enlightenment, ordinary beings at once turn into Buddhas.

Hid Neng

Every human being can thus become an Avatar by adoption, but not by his unaided efforts. 
He must be shown the way, and he must be aided by divine grace. 
That men and women may be thus instructed and helped, the Godhead assumes the form of an ordinary human being, who has to earn deliverance and enlightenment in the way that is prescribed by the divine Nature of Things—namely, by charity, by a total dying to self and a total, one-pointed awareness. 68    

Thus enlightened, the Avatar can reveal the way of enlightenment to others and help them actually to become what they already potentially are. 
Tel qu'en Lui-même enfin l'éternité le change.

('Such as into Himself at last eternity changes him'),
Mallarmé poem in honor of Edgar Allan Poe.

 And of course the eternity which transforms us into Ourselves is not the experience of mere persistence after bodily death. There will be no experience of timeless Reality then, unless there is the same or a similar knowledge within the world of time and matter. By precept and by example, the Avatar teaches that this transforming knowledge is possible, that all sentient beings are called to it and that, sooner or later, in one way or another, all must finally come to it.