THE first and principle thing in the inner life is to
establish a relationship with God, making God the object
with which we relate ourselves, such as the Creator, Sustainer,
Forgiver, Judge, Friend, Father, Mother, and Beloved. In
every relationship we must place God before us, and become
conscious of that relationship so that it will no more remain
an imagination; because the first thing a believer does
is to imagine. He imagines that God is the Creator, and
tries to believe that God is the Sustainer, and he makes
an effort to think that God is a Friend, and an attempt
to feel that he loves God. But if this imagination is to
become a reality, then exactly as one feels for one's earthly
beloved sympathy, love and attachment, so one must feel
the same for God. However greatly a person may be pious,
good or righteous, yet without this his piety or his goodness
it is not a reality to him.
The work of the inner life is to make God a reality,
so that He is no more an imagination; that this relationship
that man has with God may seem more real than any other
relationship in the world; and when this happens, then all
relationships, however near and dear, become less binding.
But at the same time, a person does not thus become cold;
he becomes more loving. It is the godless man who is cold,
impressed by the selfishness and lovelessness of the world,
because he partakes of those conditions in which he lives.
But the one who is in love with God, the one who has established
his relationship with God, his love becomes living; he is
no more cold; he fulfills his duties to those related to
him in this world much more than does the godless man.
Now, as to the way a man establishes this relationship,
which is the most desirable to establish with God, what
should he imagine? God as Father, as Creator, as Judge,
as Forgiver, as Friend, or as Beloved? The answer is, that
in every capacity of life we must give God the place that
is demanded by the moment. When, crushed by the injustice,
the coldness of the world, man looks at God, the perfection
of Justice, he is no more agitated, his heart is no more
disturbed, he consoles himself with the justice of God.
He places the just God before him, and by this he learns
justice; the sense of justice awakens in his heart, and
he sees things in quite a different light.
When man finds himself in this world motherless or fatherless
he thinks that there is the mother and father in God; and
that, even if he were in the presence of his mother and
father, these are only related on the earth. The Motherhood
and Fatherhood of God is the only real relationship. The
mother and father of the earth only reflect a spark of that
motherly and fatherly love which God has in fullness and
perfection. Then man finds that God can forgive, as the
parents can forgive the child if he was in error; then man
feels the goodness, kindness, protection, support, sympathy
coming from every side; he learns to feel that it comes
from God, the Father-Mother, through all.
When man pictures God as the Forgiver, he finds that
there is not only in this world a strict justice, but there
is love developed also, there is mercy and compassion, there
is that sense of forgiveness; that God is not the servant
of law, as is the judge in this world. He is the Master
of law. He judges when He judges; when He forgives He forgives.
He has both powers, He has the power to judge and He has
the power to forgive. He is judge because he does not close
his eyes to anything that man does; He knows, He weighs,
and measures, and He returns what is due to man. And He
is Forgiver, because beyond and above His power of justice
there is His great power of love and compassion, which is
His very being, which is His own nature, and there for it
is more, and in greater proportion, and working with a greater
activity than His power of justice. We, the human beings
in this world, if there is a spark of goodness or kindness
in our hearts, avoid judging people. We prefer forgiving
to judging. Forgiving gives us a naturally greater happiness
than taking revenge, unless a man is on quite a different
path.
The man who realizes God as a friend is never lonely
in the world, neither in this world nor in the hereafter.
There is always a friend, a friend in the crowd, a friend
in the solitude; or while he is asleep. Unconscious of this
outer world, and when he is awake and conscious of it. In
both cases the friend is there in his thought, in his imagination,
in his heart, in his soul.
And the man who makes God his Beloved, what more does
he want? His heart becomes awakened to all the beauty there
is within and without. To him all things appeal, everything
unfolds itself, and it is beauty to his eyes, because God
is all-pervading, in all names and all forms; therefore
his Beloved is never absent. How happy therefore is the
one whose Beloved is never absent, because the whole tragedy
of life is the absence of the beloved; and to one whose
Beloved is always there, when he has closed his eyes the
Beloved is within, and when he has opened his eyes the Beloved
is without. His every sense perceives the Beloved; his eyes
see Him, his ears hear His voice. When a person arrives
at this realization he, so to speak, lives in the presence
of God; then to him the different forms and beliefs, faiths
and communities do not count. To him God is all-in-all;
to him God is everywhere. If he goes to the Christian church,
or to the synagogue, to the Buddhist temple, to the Hindu
shrine, or to the mosque of the Muslim, there is God. In
the wilderness, in the forest, in the crowd, everywhere
he sees God.
This shows that the inner life does not consist in closing
the eyes and looking inward. The inner life is to look outwardly
and inwardly, and to find one's Beloved everywhere.
But God cannot be made a Beloved unless the love element
is awakened sufficiently. The one who hates his enemy and
loves his friend cannot call God his Beloved, for he does
not know God. When love comes to its fullness, then one
looks at the friend with affection, on the enemy with forgiveness,
on the stranger with sympathy. There is love in all its
aspects expressed when love rises to its fullness; and it
is the fullness of love which is worth offering to God.
It is then that man recognizes in God his Beloved, his ideal;
and by that, although he rises above the narrow affection
of this world, he is the one who really knows how to love
even his friend. It is the lover of God who knows love when
he rises to that stage of the fullness of love.
The whole imagery of the Sufi literature in the Persian
language, written by great poets, such as Rumi, Hafiz, and
Jami, is the relationship between man as the lover and God
as the Beloved; and when one reads understanding that, and
develops in that affection, then one sees what pictures
the mystics have made and to what note their heart has been
tuned. It is not easy to develop in the heart the love of
God, because when one does not see or realize the object
of love one cannot love. God must become tangible in order
that one may love Him, but once a person has attained to
that love he has really entered the journey of the spiritual
path.
checked 18-Oct-2005