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CHAPTER
XVII
The Divine Soul
He whose self has become all existence, for he has the knowledge,
how shall he be deluded, whence shall he have grief, he who sees,
everywhere oneness?
Isha Upanishad 1
He whose self has become all existences, for he has the knowledge, how shall he be deluded, whence shall he have
grief, he who sees everywhere oneness? Isha Upanishad.¹
By the conception we have formed of the Supermind, by its opposition to the mentality on which our human existence is
based, we are able not only to form a precise instead of a vague idea of divinity and the divine life,—expressions which we
are otherwise condemned to use with looseness and as the vague wording of a large but almost impalpable aspiration,—but
also to give these ideas a firm basis of philosophical reasoning, to put them into a clear relation with the humanity and the
human life which is all we at present enjoy and to justify our hope and aspiration by the very nature of the world and of our
own cosmic antecedents and the inevitable future of our evolution. We begin to grasp intellectually what is the Divine, the
eternal Reality, and to understand how out of it the world has come. We begin also to perceive how inevitably that which
has come out of the Divine must return to the Divine. We may now ask with profit and a chance of clearer reply how we
must change and what we must become in order to arrive there in our nature and our life and our relations with others and
not only through a solitary and ecstatic realisation in the profundities of our being. Certainly, there is still a defect in our premisses; for we have so far been striving to define for ourselves what the Divine is in its descent towards limited Nature,
whereas what we ourselves actually are is the Divine in the individual ascending back out of limited Nature to its own
proper divinity. This difference of movement must involve a difference between the life of the gods who have never known
the fall and the life of man redeemed, conqueror of the lost godhead and bearing within him the experience and it may be
the new riches gathered by him from his
¹ Verse 7.
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acceptance of the utter descent. Nevertheless, there
can be no difference of essential characteristics, but only of mould
and colouring. We can already ascertain on the basis of the conclusions
at which we have arrived the essential nature of the
divine life towards which we aspire.
What then would be the existence of a divine soul, not descended into the ignorance by the fall of Spirit into Matter and
the eclipse of soul by material Nature? What would be its consciousness, living in the original Truth of things, in the
inalienable unity, in the world of its own infinite being, like the Divine Existence itself, but able by the play of the Divine
Maya and by the distinction of the comprehending and apprehending Truth-Consciousness to enjoy also difference from God
at the same time as unity with Him and to embrace difference and yet oneness with other divine souls in the infinite play of
the self-multiplied Identical?
Obviously, the existence of
such a soul would be always self-contained in the conscious play of
Sachchidananda. It
would be pure and infinite self-existence in its being; in its becoming
it would be a free play of immortal life uninvaded by
death and birth and change of body because unclouded by ignorance and
not involved in the darkness of our material being.
It would be a pure and unlimited consciousness in its energy, poised in
an eternal and luminous tranquillity as its foundation,
yet able to play freely with forms of knowledge and forms of conscious
power, tranquil, unaffected by the stumblings of
mental error and the misprisions of our striving will because it never
departs from truth and oneness, never falls from the
inherent light and the natural harmony of its divine existence. It
would be, finally, a pure and inalienable delight in its eternal
self-experience and in Time a free variation of bliss unaffected by our
perversions of dislike, hatred, discontent and suffering
because undivided in being, unbaffled by erring self-will, unperverted
by the ignorant stimulus of desire.
Its consciousness would not be shut out from any part of the infinite truth, nor limited by any poise or status that it might
assume in its relations with others, nor condemned to any loss of self-knowledge by its acceptance of a purely phenomenal
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individuality and the play of practical differentiation. It would in its self-experience live eternally in the presence of the
Absolute. To us the Absolute is only an intellectual conception of indefinable existence. The intellect tells us simply that
there is a Brahman higher than the highest,¹
an Unknowable that knows itself in other fashion than that of our knowledge; but the intellect cannot bring us into its
presence. The divine soul living in the Truth of things would, on the contrary, always have the conscious sense of itself as a
manifestation of the Absolute. Its immutable existence it would be aware of as the original “self-form”
² of
that Transcendent,—Sachchidananda; its play of conscious being it would
be aware of as manifestation of That in forms
of Sachchidananda. In its every state or act of knowledge it would be
aware of the Unknowable cognising itself by a form
of variable self-knowledge; in its every state or act of power, will or
force aware of the Transcendence possessing itself by
a form of conscious power of being and knowledge; in its every state or
act of delight, joy or love aware of the
Transcendence embracing itself by a form of conscious self-enjoyment.
This presence of the Absolute would not be with it
as an experience occasionally glimpsed or finally arrived at and held
with difficulty or as an addition, acquisition or
culmination superimposed on its ordinary state of being: it would be
the very foundation of its being both in the unity and the
differentiation; it would be present to it in all its knowing, willing,
doing, enjoying; it would be absent neither from its timeless
self nor from any moment of Time, neither from its spaceless being nor
from any determination of its extended existence,
neither from its unconditioned purity beyond all cause and circumstance
nor from any relation of circumstance, condition and
causality. This constant presence of the Absolute would be the basis of
its infinite freedom and delight, ensure its security in
the play and provide the root and sap and essence of its divine being.
Moreover, such a divine
soul would live simultaneously in the two terms of the eternal
existence of Sachchidananda, the
two inseparable poles of the self-unfolding of the Absolute which
¹ parātpara.
²svarūpa.
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we call the One and the Many. All being does really
so live; but to our divided self-awareness there is an incompatibility,
a
gulf between the two driving us towards a choice, to dwell either in
the multiplicity exiled from the direct and entire
consciousness of the One or in the unity repellent of the consciousness
of the Many. But the divine soul would not be
enslaved to this divorce and duality. It would be aware in itself at
once of the infinite self-concentration and the infinite
self-extension and diffusion. It would be aware simultaneously of the
One in its unitarian consciousness holding the
innumerable multiplicity in itself as if potential, unexpressed and
therefore to our mental experience of that state non-existent
and of the One in its extended consciousness holding the multiplicity
thrown out and active as the play of its own conscious
being, will and delight. It would equally be aware of the Many ever
drawing down to themselves the One that is the eternal
source and reality of their existence and of the Many ever mounting up
attracted to the One that is the eternal culmination
and blissful justification of all their play of difference. This vast
view of things is the mould of the Truth-Consciousness, the
foundation of the large Truth and Right hymned by the Vedic seers; this
unity of all these terms of opposition is the real
Adwaita, the supreme comprehending word of the knowledge of the
Unknowable.
The divine soul will be aware of all variation of being, consciousness,
will and delight as the outflowing, the extension,
the diffusion of that self-concentrated Unity developing itself, not
into difference and division, but into another, an extended
form of infinite oneness. It will itself always be concentrated in
oneness in the essence of its being, always manifested in
variation in the extension of its being. All that takes form in itself
will be the manifested potentialities of the One, the Word
or Name vibrating out of the nameless Silence, the Form realising the
formless essence, the active Will or Power proceeding
out of the tranquil Force, the ray of self-cognition gleaming out from
the sun of timeless self-awareness, the wave of
becoming rising up into shape of self-conscious existence out of the
eternally self-conscious Being, the joy and love welling
for ever out of the eternal still Delight. It will be the Absolute
biune in its
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self-unfolding, and each relativity in it will be absolute to itself because aware of itself as the Absolute manifested but
without that ignorance which excludes other relativities as alien to its being or less complete than itself.
In the extension the divine
soul will be aware of the three grades of the supramental existence,
not as we are mentally
compelled to regard them, not as grades, but as a triune fact of the
self-manifestation of Sachchidananda. It will be able to
embrace them in one and the same comprehensive self-realisation,—for a
vast comprehensiveness is the foundation of the
truth-conscious Supermind. It will be able divinely to conceive,
perceive and sense all things as the Self, its own self, one
self of all, one Self-being and Self-becoming, but not divided in its
becomings which have no existence apart from its own
self-consciousness. It will be able divinely to conceive, perceive and
sense all existences as soul-forms of the One which
have each its own being in the One, its own standpoint in the One, its
own relations with all the other existences that people
the infinite unity, but all dependent on the One, conscious form of Him
in His own infinity. It will be able divinely to
conceive, perceive and sense all these existences in their
individuality, in their separate standpoint living as the individual
Divine, each with the One and Supreme dwelling in it and each therefore
not altogether a form or eidolon, not really an
illusory part of a real whole, a mere foaming wave on the surface of an
immobile Ocean,—for these are after all no more
than inadequate mental images,—but a whole in the whole, a truth that
repeats the infinite Truth, a wave that is all the sea, a
relative that proves to be the Absolute itself when we look behind form
and see it in its completeness.
For these three are aspects of the one Existence. The first is based
upon that self-knowledge which, in our human realisation of the Divine,
the Upanishad describes as the Self in us becoming all existences; the
second on that which is
described as seeing all existences in the Self; the third on that which
is described as seeing the Self in all existences. The
Self becoming all existences is the basis of our oneness with all; the
Self containing all existences is the basis of our oneness
in difference; the
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Self inhabiting all is the basis of our
individuality in the universal. If the defect of our mentality, if its
need of exclusive
concentration compels it to dwell on any one of these aspects of
self-knowledge to the exclusion of the others, if a realisation
imperfect as well as exclusive moves us always to bring in a human
element of error into the very Truth itself
and of conflict and mutual negation into the all-comprehending unity,
yet to a divine supramental being, by the essential
character of the Supermind which is a comprehending oneness and
infinite totality, they must present themselves as a triple
and indeed a triune realisation.
If we suppose this soul to
take its poise, its centre in the consciousness of the individual
Divine living and acting in
distinct relation with the “others”, still it will have in the
foundation of its consciousness the entire unity from which all
emerges and it will have in the background of that consciousness the
extended and the modified unity and to any of these it
will be capable of returning and of contemplating from them its
individuality. In the Veda all these poises are asserted of the
gods. In essence the gods are one existence which the sages call by
different names; but in their action founded in and
proceeding from the large Truth and Right Agni or another is said to be
all the other gods, he is the One that becomes all; at
the same time he is said to contain all the gods in himself as the nave
of a wheel contains the spokes, he is the One that
contains all; and yet as Agni he is described as a separate deity, one
who helps all the others, exceeds them in force and
knowledge, yet is inferior to them in cosmic position and is employed
by them as messenger, priest and worker,—the creator
of the world and father, he is yet the son born of our works, he is,
that is to say, the original and the manifested indwelling
Self or Divine, the One that inhabits all.
All the relations of the
divine soul with God or its supreme Self and with its other selves in
other forms will be
determined by this comprehensive self-knowledge. These relations will
be relations of being, of consciousness and
knowledge, of will and force, of love and delight. Infinite in their
potentiality of variation, they need exclude no possible
relation of soul with soul
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that is compatible with the preservation of the
inalienable sense of unity in spite of every phenomenon of difference.
Thus in
its relations of enjoyment the divine soul will have the delight of all
its own experience in itself; it will have the delight of all
its experience of relation with others as a communion with other selves
in other forms created for a varied play in the
universe; it will have too the delight of the experiences of its other
selves as if they were its own—as indeed they really are.
And all this capacity it will have because it will be aware of its own
experiences, of its relations with others and of the
experiences of others and their relations with itself as all the joy or
Ananda of the One, the supreme Self, its own self,
differentiated by its separate habitation of all these forms
comprehended in its own being but still one in difference. Because
this unity is the basis of all its experience, it will be free from the
discords of our divided consciousness, divided by ignorance
and a separatist egoism; all these selves and their relations will play
consciously into each other's hands; they will part and
melt into each other as the numberless notes of an eternal harmony.
And the same rule will apply to the relations of its being, knowledge,
will with the being, knowledge and will of others.
For all its experience and delight will be the play of a self-blissful
conscious force of being in which, by obedience to this
truth of unity, will cannot be at strife with knowledge nor either of
them with delight. Nor will the knowledge, will and delight
of one soul clash with the knowledge, will and delight of another,
because by their awareness of their unity what is clash and
strife and discord in our divided being will be there the meeting,
entwining and mutual interplay of the different notes of one
infinite harmony.
In its relations with its
supreme Self, with God, the divine soul will have this sense of the
oneness of the transcendent
and universal Divine with its own being. It will enjoy that oneness of
God with itself in its own individuality and with its other
selves in the universality. Its relations of knowledge will be the play
of the divine omniscience, for God is Knowledge, and
what is ignorance with us will be there only the holding back of
knowledge in the repose of conscious self-awareness so that
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certain forms of that self-awareness may be brought
forward into activity of Light. Its relations of will will be there the
play
of the divine omnipotence, for God is Force, Will and Power, and what
with us is weakness and incapacity will be the
holding back of will in tranquil concentrated force so that certain
forms of divine conscious-force may realise themselves
brought forward into form of Power. Its relations of love and delight
will be the play of the divine ecstasy, for God is Love
and Delight, and what with us would be denial of love and delight will
be the holding back of joy in the still sea of Bliss so
that certain forms of divine union and enjoyment may be brought in
front in an active upwelling of waves of the Bliss. So
also all its becoming will be formation of the divine being in response
to these activities and what is with us cessation, death,
annihilation will be only rest, transition or holding back of the
joyous creative Maya in the eternal being of Sachchidananda.
At the same time this oneness will not preclude relations of the divine
soul with God, with its supreme Self, founded on the
joy of difference separating itself from unity to enjoy that unity
otherwise; it will not annul the possibility of any of those
exquisite forms of God-enjoyment which are the highest rapture of the
God-lover in his clasp of the Divine.
But what will be the
conditions in which and by which this nature of the life of the divine
soul will realise itself? All
experience in relation proceeds through certain forces of being
formulating themselves by an instrumentation to which we
give the name of properties, qualities, activities, faculties. As, for
instance, Mind throws itself into various forms of
mind-power, such as judgment, observation, memory, sympathy, proper to
its own being, so must the Truth-Consciousness
or Supermind effect the relations of soul with soul by forces,
faculties, functionings proper to supramental being; otherwise
there would be no play of differentiation. What these functionings are,
we shall see when we come to consider the psychological conditions of
the divine Life; at present we are only considering its metaphysical
foundations, its essential nature and principles. Suffice it at present
to observe that the absence or abolition of separatist egoism and of
effective division in consciousness is the
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one essential condition of the divine Life, and therefore
their presence in us is that which constitutes our mortality and our fall from
the Divine. This is our “original sin”, or rather let us say in a more
philosophical language, the deviation from the Truth and Right of the Spirit,
from its oneness, integrality and harmony that was the necessary condition for
the great plunge into the Ignorance which is the soul's adventure in the world
and from which was born our suffering and aspiring humanity.
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