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as if they were afraid of ideas being unalike. So they remain all at the same pitch;
and if any man has a tendency to go forward he is considered a dreamer, an
eccentric, strange. There is no encouragement for individual development, and
therefore society keeps the progress of the whole within certain limits and does not
allow it to develop further.
And now the question arises, if God is absolute, then what is the use of worship, or
prayer, or of believing in God in some form or other as King, or Judge, or Creator,
or the Superior Being? What is the use of it? It is very easy to read in a book that it
is the absolute that is God, that it is the abstract. This means no one and nothing, or
all and everything! Indeed, there is some truth, in this. But the idea of God being the
absolute is larger than man's mind. The mind wants to understand, but the brain
cannot grasp it. Many intellectual people have lost their way by reading somewhere
that God is abstract. It means nothing to them, for they have not yet arrived at that
stage of evolution where they can assimilate such an idea. Before getting to that
stage they have swallowed a pill they can never digest. On top of this come people
who have new ideas and thoughts, who give lessons about these. They say, 'You are
God'. In their way their insolence becomes greater and greater. The lofty ideal of
God, the ideal which uplifted the seekers of all ages, is being lost. Those who have
arrived at realization do not speak about such things in connection with the Godideal; they realize it in their hearts and keep quiet. But those who have the Godideal only in the brain, who speak about it and want to touch it, do not touch the
ideal. And where do they get to? Nowhere.
Man can only conceive of an idea in the way he is able to conceive of a thing. For
instance, if one speaks about fairies no one will think of them as trees or plants but
as human beings. If an artist is told to paint an angel he will paint it in the form of a
human being. He will conceive it in the form to which he is accustomed, which is
near and dear his mind.
Naturally every man conceives the idea of God differently. One conceives God as the
Judge; he does not see justice in the world, so he sees it in God. Another conceives
God as the Creator; man knows himself to be a creator, so he thinks that God is the
perfect creator. It is natural for man to make God that which he thinks to be best;
therefore whether people belong to the same religion or nation or not, each one of
them has his own God, depending on the way he looks upon Him. To have one's own
belief is the first step on the spiritual path. It is not right for a person to say, 'Believe
in my God.' Someone else may not be capable of believing in the same way he does.
He believes in his own way, so let him believe in that way. After all it is a first belief;
it is nothing but a garb, a garb made by one's own imagination. In order to kindle
that tendency to imagine, to idealize, to worship, the wise in olden times said to
those who were not capable of imagination, 'Here is a statue of God.' Those who
worship these statues, the Chinese, the Greeks, the Hindus, were they mistaken? No,
each person's God is as he looks upon Him; and if one says that there are as many
gods as there are people in the world, that is true also. Behind it is God, one and the
same God of all. First there is the conception, the imagination, and in this way
everyone proceeds. And if someone wanted to use another person's imagination the
wise said, 'Well, take this little picture; there is your God.'
It is a pity that it was not only in the past that people were primitive: today people's
imagination is even worse. Man has become a machine, toiling from morning till
evening. He has very little time to imagine; if he had he would be another being. Any
scientific discovery that is made is thought most wonderful, but it must be expressed
in a simple statement. Formerly things were expressed in terms of poetry, in the
form of music, in symbolic pictures, so that a person might think and penetrate and
understand, so that his soul might be touched after it unfolded itself by the fineness
of what he saw or heard. All the great scriptures of the past were given in such a
form, never in a crude form.
Today a man comes and says, 'will you tell me about truth. I want truth in simple
words.' But truth is never told in simple words; besides, that which can be spoken of
in simple words cannot be truth. Truth should be distinguished from facts; it is
something that must be realized, discovered. Sometimes when I meet those who
want to find tangible truth I feel inclined to write on a piece of stone TRUTH, and to
give it to them and say, 'hold it fast; here is tangible truth!'
How does one benefit by a belief in God? How is the knowledge of God acquired if
belief in God is sufficient? The thousands and millions of people who believe in God,
are they all progressive and happy? It is not so. Belief is the first step; the second
step is to know the relationship between God and man. In order to understand this,
one must be able to concentrate, to contemplate, to meditate, so as to forget the false
identity, which one has conceived in one's mind from the time one was born on
earth. All the different methods that sages and seers have taught humanity are to
help one to forget that false conception of self. And the method one can adopt to
discover truth is the knowledge of God, and by making proper use of this in one's
prayers, in one's concentration, in one's practices. In these one benefits by means of
the God-ideal and one comes in this way to the self-realization, which is the
fulfillment of life's purpose.