1. Belief and Superstition
Every country seems to have certain beliefs which are
called beliefs by the believers and superstitions by those
who do not believe. There are beliefs which arise from some
subtle experiences of life, and some which spring from intuition,
and they are believed by some who are inclined to believe
and they are mocked at by some who cannot understand their
meaning, and often by those who do not wish to trouble themselves
to investigate the truth in them. It is easy to laugh at
things, and it takes patience to endure and tolerate things
that cannot appeal to one's reason. And it is difficult
to investigate the truth of such beliefs, for it requires
something more than reason to probe the depths of life.
Those from whom the beliefs come, naturally could not give
the explanation of those beliefs to everybody; for the man
who is capable of believing a thing is not necessarily capable
of understanding it by an analytical explanation. There
are natures which would be willing to believe a thing if
it is for their good, if it comes from someone whom they
trust, but it is too much trouble for them to go deeply
into the matter. For some among them it is better that they
should not have an analytical knowledge of a belief, for
to some the belief is helpful but its explanation confusing.
It is a certain grade of evolution that enables man to understand
a certain belief, and a man must not be told what he is
incapable of understanding, for, instead of helping him,
it puts him off.
There is a great deal of psychic law which can be traced
in such beliefs, and in time such beliefs turn into customs.
There is a vast field of knowledge in the beliefs of Indians.
India has been a country where beliefs have existed for
thousands of years unchanged, and some beliefs have become
customs. At first sight an intellectual person who cannot
look any further than the surface of things is apt to think
that people in India are full of superstitions. Their whole
life seems based on them; not only in religion do they have
beliefs, but even in their domestic affairs. In their everyday
life every move they make, every word they say is in accordance
with some underlying belief.
No doubt a tendency of taking interest in superstition
should always be avoided; for the more thought one gives
to superstitions, the more he seems to be drowned in the
thought of superstitions. Wherever the superstitious man
looks he gets an impression of some fear, some doubt, some
suspicion, which generally leads to confusion. But for the
wise a disregard of superstitions is not satisfactory, for
by wisdom man becomes capable of understanding them, and
understanding them is better than to mock at them or even
than to believe in them. For the one who believes in superstitions
is, so to speak, in the water, and knows that he is in the
water; but he who mocks at them is in the water, but he
does not know that he is in the water. By understanding
them man is capable of swimming in the water, and by mastering
them he walks on the water. The man who knows all things
and acts according to his knowledge becomes the master of
life.
2. Belief
The term 'belief' is used of an idea that one believes
and for which one cannot give reason. When such ideas are
of an ordinary nature they are termed superstitions, and
when they are of a sacred nature they are call beliefs.
Often man confuses belief with truth. Many people, without
understanding their own belief hold it not as a truth but
as the truth, and thereby ignore every other belief
which seems to them different from the truth they possess.
In reality belief is not the truth nor is the truth a belief.
When a person has risen to the understanding of the truth
it is no more a belief for him, it is a conviction.
The beliefs of a sacred nature, which come in the realm
of religion, are as steps towards the goal which is called
truth, and when man stops at a belief the belief holds him
and he holds the belief. Neither can the belief push him
onward nor can he advance. In many cases belief, which should
serve as wings on which to soar toward the height, becomes
as nails fixing man onto the earth. Every belief in the
beginning is a step in the dark, but as man draws nearer
to the goal, he at every step becomes more and more illuminated.
Therefore there is hope for the believer, but the case of
the unbeliever is hopeless.
There are souls who are capable of believing, even capable
of understanding their belief, who yet for some reason or
other are not willing to believe and reject a belief before
the understanding comes. The wise course in life would be
to try to become a pupil, a pupil of one teacher as well
as a pupil of all beings; it is then that one will become
the pupil of God. Then the wise course would be to investigate
the truth of belief instead of giving up one's belief, also
to be patiently tolerant of the belief of another until
one see from his point of view the truth of his belief.
When man sees only from his own point of view, he sees with
one eye and the other eye is close. The complete view is
in seeing from both points of view, however contrary they
may be. It is this tendency which will balance things and
will give the right idea of things. In order to view a building
one must stand in the street and view it, instead of standing
inside it and wanting to see the outside.
In understanding beliefs one must be able to neutralize
one's spirit, and to the extent to which it is neutralized
man becomes capable of seeing the belief in its right sense.
When man says, on hearing something from another, 'That
is not what I believe', he shows his weakness, he show his
incapacity to view the belief of the other from the point
of view of that other. Knowledge comes by readiness to learn,
and when we refuse it in life it is by lack of readiness.
No matter from what source knowledge may seem to come, it
is from one source in reality, and when the mind becomes
a free receptacle knowledge flows freely into the heart.
There is some truth hidden in every religious belief, and
often it is of greater value than it may seem to be. And
believing in a thing without understanding is a first step
forward to knowledge, and refusing to believe when a belief
is presented means taking a step backward. When a person
is content with his belief that is a comfortable state of
being, but it is the understanding of the belief which is
ideal.
3. Customs (1)
There are many customs that have existed in different
countries for ages which have some psychical significance,
and yet scarcely anybody knows about it. Customs in the
form of greeting one another, and asking after one another's
health, even such habits as that of talking about the weather,
arise from a psychical basis. This shows that the ancient
people, in the East or in the West, had more magic in their
lives than the man of today. The world has lost the magical
charm, so to speak, which was the inheritance of the human
race, owing to the ever increasing material life and the
ignorance of things that are beyond matter.
It is of late that science is discovering some psychological
truths in human life. The process that science follows in
discovering these truths is contrary to that of the mystic.
The scientist wishes to climb the mountain from the level
ground. The mystic, by the way of meditation, tries to reach
the summit of the mountain, and from there he sees the whole
beauty of the mountain. Therefore, naturally, the horizon
before the eyes of the mystic is incomparably wider than
the horizon before the scientist. Yes, the scientist may
see things clearly, distinctly, and in detail, whereas the
mystic has a general idea of things. Often the vision of
the mystic is vague in comparison with the analytical examination
of a scientist. And yet, while the mystic sees through objects
the scientist can reach as for as their surface.
Owing to the greater activity in Western life all things
change more quickly in the West, while in the East changes
come very slowly. Therefore, one finds many customs of ancient
origin in the East which show the development of Eastern
people in psychical things. Even ordinary customs, such
as that of shaking hands, or rising from one's seat to receive
someone, bowing, bending, waving the hands, or clapping
the hands, have a psychical significance. When two people
shake hands with one another magnetism is exchanged between
them and a balance of life-force is made between them. The
one who lacks strength, energy, or magnetic power gains,
and through the one from who they overflow they are used
for a better purpose. By rising to show respect to a person,
and by walking a few steps to receive a person, a man makes
himself ready to withstand the forces of the one who is
coming. By standing up and walking a step or two he makes
his pulsation regular and puts his circulation in order,
thus making himself psychically and morally ready to defend
himself if the one who is coming should happen to be a foe,
and ready to meet him harmoniously and on the same level,
physically, mentally, and morally, if he happens to be a
friend. Bending the head in a bow quickens not only the
circulation in the head but also the magnetic current in
it, for the head is the chief moral and spiritual factor
in man. You will always find that a person with a tendency
to bow is thoughtful, and it often happens that the one
who keeps his head erect and avoids bowing is foolish. Man's
life depends upon rhythm, rhythm in his breath, in the pulsation,
in the beats of the heart and head, and it is irregularity
of the rhythm of his heart or of his pulse that shows disorder
in his health. It is regularity of rhythm that keeps man
in a fit stage to go on through life. And when people applaud
a speaker, a singer, or a player, it is a suggestion for
him to continue his rhythm, physical, mental, or moral.
Even the waving of the hand in parting from a friend suggests
the same meaning: continue to be in a fit state to live
and enjoy life. There is a custom in the East that when
a person is yawning a friend by his side claps his hands
or snaps his fingers. Yawning naturally makes the rhythm
slow, it is going down, so to speak, and the clapping of
the hands or the snapping of the fingers on the part of
the friend is suggestive of continuing the same rhythm as
before. Different peoples have different customs, and customs
that one is not in the habit of seeing seem not only strange
and meaningless but often also ridiculous. It is the work
of the seer to see into things and it is this way of viewing
that is called insight.
4. Customs (2)
There are different customs in greeting, and in every
custom there is some suggestion that explains some psychical
meaning behind it. The Hindus greet by joining the palms
of the hands, which has the significance of perfection,
since the right hand represents the positive power and the
left hand the negative power, and when the positive and
negative are joined together this sums up in perfection.
The idol of Buddha, which is worshipped by millions of people
in the world, signifies perfection – sitting crosslegged
with the two palms joining, the eyes closed, all of which
shows that the negative and positive powers are united and
made into one. The greeting of the Chinese is the clasping
of the hands, either touching the clasped hands of the other,
which means that the perfection of power from both should
meet. And for the same reason the Arabs shake hand with
both hands, for giving one hand is like giving half of one's
magnetism, but by giving both hands you show that you keep
nothing back. The Persians touch the heart, which suggests
the friendly feeling expressed from the bottom of the heart,
that the greeting is not merely superficial, that it comes
from the very depth of feeling. Among a great many people
belonging to different parts of the world there is a custom
of greeting by embracing one another, and no doubt there
is a great psychical meaning in this. The two arms are the
two directions of magnetic power, positive and negative,
and in the breast is the center of these two powers. And
the custom is that they embrace twice, distinctly on the
right and left sides. This is also the exchange of Prana,
the very life, the center of which is in the breast. There
is a custom in Persia and in India that when a younger person
greets an older one he bows his head, bringing it closer
to his breast, and the elder person, taking his arms, raises
him up, as if the younger person wanted from the elder person,
love, light and life, and the elder person gives it to him
and raises him with it. It also suggests a sentiment of
modesty and humility on the part of the one, and help and
encouragement on the part of the other.
Customs have sometimes been much exaggerated, and yet,
if the sentiment is a true one, no external expression can
ever be an exaggeration. Among people of religion and culture
in all periods of civilization there has been a custom of
kissing the hand. The custom has originated from a natural
instinct in life. What smells good the animal wants to bite
first, and everything that interests the infant it puts
in its mouth first. That shows that the lips are the most
sensitive part in man and they are capable of giving and
taking life, which may be called magnetism. Therefore the
greatest fondness that one can show to another in greeting
can be shown by kissing the hands. This custom can be seen
all over the world, in the East and in the West.
If a skeleton plan of man's spirit be drawn one can draw
it as a sun in the midst and five rays shooting out around,
one straight upwards, two at the sides rising upwards, and
two downwards, and it is this which make the five-pointed
star. Man's head, two arms, and two legs are the outward
expression of these rays. The idea of the Hindus in touching
the holy feet of the saint is to reach first the rays that
can first be reached, and when one reaches these first two
rays, the three other rays naturally fall over his head,
when the saint puts his arms over his head and bends his
head while blessing, looking at the center of the head of
the one who is blessed.
5. Hanuman
There is a custom in the East of offering oil to Hanuman,
the idol that is pictured in the image of a monkey, and
this idol is worshipped by pouring oil upon it. This custom
can be seen also at Indian weddings; maidens anoint with
oil the head, shoulders, arms and hands, and knees and feet
of the bride and bridegroom. One sees this custom in some
churches, for instance in the Catholic church. In Russia
there was a custom of anointing the Tsar's forehead with
oil on the day of his coronation.
Oil has the significance of softening. Leather, iron
or steel is made softer or smoother by putting oil on it.
Anointing, as is done in India, is a psychical suggestion
to the bride and bridegroom that the hands and feet of each
shall be ready to serve the other, and that they shall not
show themselves stiff, one to the other, that if there were
any hardness in their nature it should be softened, since
harmony is the blessing of a home; it teaches that forgiveness
is required for becoming friends and keeping friendship;
as one's mate is not so flexible and docile as one's own
imagination conceives.
The idol of Hanuman is suggestive of primitive nature
in man, and in the pouring of oil in the service of Hanuman
there is a lesson for the worshipper to learn. However great
your evolution may be, regard and consideration for the
primitive nature is necessary, for all adjusts itself in
the wider scheme of nature. When man stands with his hands
folded in humility before the image of a monkey, there is
in this some lesson for him to learn: that life is such
that with all your evolution you lack something if you have
no regard to the primitive nature that is in man. Christ
has taught, 'Resist not evil', and 'If one sue thee for
thy coat, give him thy cloak also'. This teaches the same
lesson, that life becomes difficult without regard and consideration
for the primitive nature. By resentment one partakes of
it, by rebelling against it one gives fuel to that fire.
One would soften it in oneself and in another by wisdom,
patience, and gentleness.
The anointing of the forehead of the king signifies that
he should have an easy expression, not frowning brows and
a puckered face, but a smiling forehead, as the Persian
phrase is. Poor and rich, all must come to the king in their
troubles and difficulties, and his glance must comfort them
and bring them ease. The great lesson one can learn from
this custom is that the great education in life is to soften
one's feelings, one's thoughts, words and actions, that
they may give ease to ourselves and that we may create an
atmosphere of ease that may benefit all who come in contact
with us.
6. Bells and Gongs
The secret of the religious custom of having gongs and
bells in temples and churches lies in the great science
of the Hindus, which is Mantra Yoga. In the first place,
this custom unites several religions, since bells are rung
in Christian churches, in the temples of the Hindus, and
in Buddhist pagodas. Many think that it is a call to prayer,
but from a mystical point of view it is something more than
that. The idea of the mystic is to make his heart capable
of resonance, that every voice that rises on earth or descends
from heaven may have its re-echo in his heart. The Sufi
prepares himself by his exercises of zikr and
fikr to make his heart capable of producing that resonance
that may be caused on earth or descend from heaven. When
the centers of the body and faculties of the mind are prepared
to produce that resonance, then they respond to every sound,
and every time the bell is rung it has its re-echo in the
heart of the mystic, and every center of his being begins
to think of God and to feel God. Vibration is a greater
stimulant than wine. Wine gives intoxication to the brain,
but vibration produces ecstasy in the heart. Therefore Sufis
have called it wine.
The custom of having flowers in the house of prayer and
the custom of burning incense in the place of worship also
exists in almost all religions and has existed in almost
all periods. Color and beauty also have a power, an influence
upon the mind and body, and those who can enjoy the beauty
of color and the delicacy of the flower receive help by
the way of the eyes. Its effect opens the heart, which then
responds to the blessing from above. This shows that the
beauty of the earth can be best used to obtain the blessing
from heaven. The perfume of flowers or incense has a deeper
effect still, because color and beauty are only reflected
upon the heart through the eyes, but perfume and incense,
rising through the breath, touch the heart, making it capable
of spiritual exaltation. But nothing has a greater influence
on the human soul than sound. Therefore hymns are sung in
all churches, prayers are offered, and chants are recited,
all in order to wake the spirit within to life, which enables
the soul to respond to the perfection of God.
7. The Custom of Drinking the Health of
Friends
This custom has a psychological meaning. Wine has an
influence that takes away the worries and anxieties of life
and makes one unconscious of one's environment, and this
only may be called the proper condition for concentration.
Those who cannot concentrate will realize by studying the
condition of their mind that they are either worried or
anxious about something, or they are conscious of the environments
of their life; it is that which keeps them back from concentration.
All those who have become great in the worldly, artistic
or spiritual aspects of life have arrived at their destination
by the power of concentration. It is by concentration that
a person, from being poor becomes wealthy, it is by concentration
that one invents things that the world has never known,
it is by concentration that one arrives at a desired position
in life, and it is by the power of concentration that man
enters the world unseen.
The custom of drinking somebody's health therefore proves
to be based on a psychological idea, the idea that one holds
a wish in one's mind at a time when one's mind is in a state
of concentration, so that during the time that the mind
is in that state the thought of the friend's health will
be predominant.
There is a custom of touching glasses, which is supposed
to be a promise of friendship. It can be defined symbolically
in this way that the cup is the symbol of the heart, for
in the heart there is the capacity of holding the divine
love, which is the sacred wine. So the cup touching the
cup means heart united with heart. According to the mystical
view it is two becoming one.
8. The Origin of the Custom of the Seclusion
of Women
The custom of the seclusion of women has its source in
mystical thought. There used to be the mystical orders of
people in the East who contemplated in solitude and lived
in seclusion. The magnetism and power of influence that
they developed by seclusion was in itself a marvel. This
gave power to their gaze, power in their word, and influence
in their atmosphere. This custom of seclusion was then imitated
by the kings and people of high rank.
They had two ways of veiling themselves when away from
home. One was to put a covering over the back of the head,
which was made to hang down in front, so that the eyes could
be half-covered; and the other was to put a veil over the
face. It was a sort of mantle that they put on their head.
Every prophet of Beni Israel had this. In the ancient pictures
of the prophets of the Semitic race one will always see
the head covered with a mantle. In the Hindu race also many
orders of Buddhists and Yogis wore a mantle over the head.
The veil which the kings also used, which was called
Makna, later became customary in the East, and ladies
of high rank wore what is called in Turkish the Yashmak.
For thousands of years it has been the custom among Parsis
that during their religious services the priest covers his
head with a turban together with a mantle, and the Parsi
women have kept the custom of covering the head with a white
cloth, though it is less observed at the present time. In
India, among Hindus as well as among Muslims, there is a
custom at weddings of veiling the faces of bride and bridegroom
with a veil of jasmine flowers.
Under all these different customs of veiling the head
and face one finds a mystical significance. Man's form is
considered by Sufis as consisting of two parts, the head
and the body, the body for action and the head for thought.
Since the head is for thought its radiance is incomparably
greater than that of the body, and the hairs are as rays
of that radiance in a physical form. It is a constant outpouring
of light that one observes in man's life. Every action of
looking, or breathing, or speaking, robs so much of the
radiance out of man's life. By preserving this radiance
the mystic develops within him that influence, power and
magnetism which in the average person are wasted. For instance,
closing the eyes, which is a custom among mystics, not only
helps in concentration and repose of mind, but during the
moment when the eyes are closed, it preserves the radiance
from flowing out. These customs were helpful to the kings
and commanders for developing their power and influence,
and they were valued for ladies of rank for preserving their
beauty and charm. We learn by this that a life but little
exposed to the outer world, whether through seclusion, or
silence, or a perfect state of repose with the closed eyes,
clasped hands and crossed legs, has a great influence.
9. The Custom of the Seclusion of Women
(1)
The custom of the seclusion of the mystics remains only
in the mystical Orders, but one finds the seclusion of women
prevalent in the East. When a custom takes root in a section
of society certainly it can be used and abused as people
may choose. No doubt jealousy, which is in human nature,
is a proof of love, but jealousy can be the source of a
great many crimes. Man has always guarded the treasures
that he values most in all sorts of coverings, and since
that which man can love most is woman he has often ignorantly
tried to guard her in the same way as all things of value
and importance. And the custom of seclusion has been in
his hand a means that has enabled him to control his household
in the manner he likes.
However, it is not true that this custom was the outcome
of the teaching of the Prophet. There are only two places
in the records where an utterance of the Prophet on the
subject is to be found. In one place it is told that when
some coarse dances were going on among the peasants of his
land, he said that women must be clad properly. In the other
place that when the ladies of the Prophet's household were
returning home after taking care of the Prophet and his
army during a battle, they were disinclined to look at the
battle-field and to show themselves to their enemies, and
the only thing that could be advised by the Prophet was
that now that peace had been made if they did not like to
show themselves they might veil their faces.
In India one sees the custom that an aged woman covers
her face, a widow covers her face and a bride veils her
face. There is some little psychological meaning in it.
It is the nature of every soul to wish to hide its sorrow,
and by veiling her face the widow veils her sorrow from
others. And the veil that one sees on the face of an aged
woman is there for the reason that in age the emotions become
more visible and one has little control so as to hide them
from others, and when the heart has become softened at
every little touch, however gentle, it is easily moved,
and the covering is as a shield over it. On the face of
a bride the veil is for the preservation of her charm,
of magnetism; at the same time the finest beauty in human
nature is modesty, in whatever form it appears.
10. The Custom of the Seclusion of Women
(2)
From the physical as well as the occult point of view,
woman is more impressionable than man. The task of woman
as a mother is of a greater importance than that of man
on any position. Woman with her thought and feeling molds
the character of the child, and as she is susceptible to
outward impressions, her impressions always have their influence
on her child. During the period before motherhood very great
care must be taken, for any word spoken to her reaches the
depth of her being, and it re-echoes in the soul of the
child. If a word made her bitter at the time or cross at
a moment, it can create bitterness or crossness in the child.
Especially during that period woman is more sensitive and
susceptible to all impressions, beautiful or ugly. Anything
striking impresses her soul deeply. A color, lightning,
thunder, storm, all make impressions upon her. Conditions
of life, misery or joy, all tell upon her more than on every
person. Having this in consideration, the custom of seclusion
has been kept in the East, and still exists among certain
communities.
No doubt there is another side to consider: that home
and state are not two separate things. Home is the miniature
of the state; and if woman performs a part equally important
at home, why must she not perform an equally important part
in the outward life. No doubt these ancient customs, even
with their psychological importance, often make an iron
bar before the progress of the generality. In the East,
for the maid and mistress both, there are days set apart
for rest in every month, in all different religions, among
Hindus, Parsis, and Muslims. The life in the world is a
constant battle, and a hard battle one has to fight, if
one has any fineness of feeling, any decency of manner.
The position of woman in this battle is worse than that
of man. It greatly robs her of her womanly fineness and
delicacy of sentiment. Man is more dependent upon woman
than woman on man. From the first moment any child, whether
boy or girl, opens his eyes in the world, he seeks the protection
of woman. Woman, as his mother, sister, daughter, friend,
or wife, in every form, is the source of his happiness,
comfort and peace. In whatever form man may express it –
in a crude custom like the seclusion in the East or in many
different ways – to guard her against the hard knocks which
fall on every soul living in this world of selfishness is
the first duty of a thoughtful man.
checked 6-nov-2015