This, in short, is the demand made on us, that we should turn
our whole life into a conscious sacrifice. Every moment and
every movement of our being is to be resolved into a contin-
uous and a devoted self-giving to the Eternal. All our actions,
not less the smallest and most ordinary and trifling than the
greatest and most uncommon and noble, must be performed
as consecrated acts. Our individualised nature must live in the
single consciousness of an inner and outer movement dedicated
to Something that is beyond us and greater than our ego. No
matter what the gift or to whom it is presented by us, there must
be a consciousness in the act that we are presenting it to the
one divine Being in all beings. Our commonest or most grossly
material actions must assume this sublimated character; when
we eat, we should be conscious that we are giving our food to
that Presence in us; it must be a sacred offering in a temple and
the sense of a mere physical need or self-gratification must pass
away from us. In any great labour, in any high discipline, in any
difficult or noble enterprise, whether undertaken for ourselves,
for others or for the race, it will no longer be possible to stop
short at the idea of the race, of ourselves or of others. The
thing we are doing must be consciously offered as a sacrifice of
works, not to these, but either through them or directly to the
One Godhead; the Divine Inhabitant who was hidden by these
figures must be no longer hidden but ever present to our soul,
our mind, our sense. The workings and results of our acts must
be put in the hands of that One in the feeling that that Presence
is the Infinite and Most High by whom alone our labour and
our aspiration are possible. For in his being all takes place; for
him all labour and aspiration are taken from us by Nature and
offered on his altar. Even in those things in which Nature is
herself very plainly the worker and we only the witnesses of her
working and its containers and supporters, there should be the
same constant memory and insistent consciousness of a work
and of its divine Master. Our very inspiration and respiration,
our very heart-beats can and must be made conscious in us as
the living rhythm of the universal sacrifice.
It is clear that a conception of this kind and its effective practice must carry in them three results that are of a central importance for our spiritual ideal. It is evident, to begin with, that, even if such a discipline is begun without devotion, it leads straight and inevitably towards the highest devotion possible; for it must deepen naturally into the completest adoration imag- inable, the most profound God-love. There is bound up with it a growing sense of the Divine in all things, a deepening com- munion with the Divine in all our thought, will and action and at every moment of our lives, a more and more moved conse- cration to the Divine of the totality of our being. Now these implications of the Yoga of works are also of the very essence of an integral and absolute Bhakti. The seeker who puts them into living practice makes in himself continually a constant, active and effective representation of the very spirit of self-devotion, and it is inevitable that out of it there should emerge the most engrossing worship of the Highest to whom is given this service. An absorbing love for the Divine Presence to whom he feels an always more intimate closeness, grows upon the consecrated worker. And with it is born or in it is contained a universal love too for all these beings, living forms and creatures that are habitations of the Divine — not the brief restless grasping emotions of division, but the settled selfless love that is the deeper vibration of oneness. In all the seeker begins to meet the one Object of his adoration and service. The way of works turns by this road of sacrifice to meet the path of Devotion; it can be itself a devotion as complete, as absorbing, as integral as any the desire of the heart can ask for or the passion of the mind can imagine.
It is clear that a conception of this kind and its effective practice must carry in them three results that are of a central importance for our spiritual ideal. It is evident, to begin with, that, even if such a discipline is begun without devotion, it leads straight and inevitably towards the highest devotion possible; for it must deepen naturally into the completest adoration imag- inable, the most profound God-love. There is bound up with it a growing sense of the Divine in all things, a deepening com- munion with the Divine in all our thought, will and action and at every moment of our lives, a more and more moved conse- cration to the Divine of the totality of our being. Now these implications of the Yoga of works are also of the very essence of an integral and absolute Bhakti. The seeker who puts them into living practice makes in himself continually a constant, active and effective representation of the very spirit of self-devotion, and it is inevitable that out of it there should emerge the most engrossing worship of the Highest to whom is given this service. An absorbing love for the Divine Presence to whom he feels an always more intimate closeness, grows upon the consecrated worker. And with it is born or in it is contained a universal love too for all these beings, living forms and creatures that are habitations of the Divine — not the brief restless grasping emotions of division, but the settled selfless love that is the deeper vibration of oneness. In all the seeker begins to meet the one Object of his adoration and service. The way of works turns by this road of sacrifice to meet the path of Devotion; it can be itself a devotion as complete, as absorbing, as integral as any the desire of the heart can ask for or the passion of the mind can imagine.
Next, the practice of this Yoga demands a constant inward remembrance of the one central liberating knowledge, and a con- stant active externalising of it in works comes in too to intensify the remembrance. In all is the one Self, the one Divine is all; all are in the Divine, all are the Divine and there is nothing else in the universe, — this thought or this faith is the whole background until it becomes the whole substance of the consciousness of the worker. A memory, a self-dynamising meditation of this kind, must and does in its end turn into a profound and uninterrupted vision and a vivid and all-embracing consciousness of that which we so powerfully remember or on which we so constantly meditate. For it compels a constant reference at each moment to the Origin of all being and will and action and there is at once an embracing and exceeding of all particular forms and appearances in That which is their cause and upholder. This way cannot go to its end without a seeing vivid and vital, as concrete in its way as physical sight, of the works of the universal Spirit everywhere. On its summits it rises into a constant living and thinking and willing and acting in the presence of the Supramental, the Transcendent. Whatever we see and hear, whatever we touch and sense, all of which we are conscious, has to be known and felt by us as That which we worship and serve; all has to be turned into an image of the Divinity, perceived as a dwelling-place of his Godhead, enveloped with the eternal Omnipresence. In its close, if not long before it, this way of works turns by communion with the Divine Presence, Will and Force into a way of Knowledge more complete and integral than any the mere creature intelligence can construct or the search of the intellect can discover.
Lastly, the practice of this Yoga of sacrifice compels us to
renounce all the inner supports of egoism, casting them out of
our mind and will and actions, and to eliminate its seed, its
presence, its influence out of our nature. All must be done for
the Divine; all must be directed towards the Divine. Nothing
must be attempted for ourselves as a separate existence; nothing
done for others, whether neighbours, friends, family, country or
mankind or other creatures merely because they are connected
with our personal life and thought and sentiment or because
the ego takes a preferential interest in their welfare. In this way
of doing and seeing all works and all life become only a daily
dynamic worship and service of the Divine in the unbounded
temple of his own vast cosmic existence. Life becomes more and
more the sacrifice of the eternal in the individual constantly self-
offered to the eternal Transcendence. It is offered in the wide
sacrificial ground of the field of the eternal cosmic Spirit; and
the Force too that offers it is the eternal Force, the omnipresent Mother. Therefore is this way a way of union and communion
by acts and by the spirit and knowledge in the act as complete
and integral as any our Godward will can hope for or our soul’s
strength execute.
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