Spiritual meditation is the pathway
to Divinity. It is the mystic ladder which reaches
from earth to heaven, from error to Truth, from pain
to peace. Every saint has climbed it; every sinner
must sooner or later come to it, and every weary pilgrim
that turns his back upon self and the world, and sets
his face resolutely toward the Father’s Home,
must plant his feet upon its golden rounds. Without
its aid you cannot grow into the divine state, the
divine likeness, the divine peace, and the fadeless
glories and unpolluting joys of Truth will remain
hidden from you.
Meditation is the intense dwelling,
in thought, upon an idea or theme, with the object
of thoroughly comprehending it, and whatsoever you
constantly meditate upon you will not only come to
understand, but will grow more and more into its likeness,
for it will become incorporated into your very being,
will become, in fact, your very self. If, therefore,
you constantly dwell upon that which is selfish and
debasing, you will ultimately become selfish and debased;
if you ceaselessly think upon that which is pure and
unselfish you will surely become pure and unselfish.
Tell me what that is upon which you
most frequently and intensely think, that to which,
in your silent hours, your soul most naturally turns,
and I will tell you to what place of pain or peace
you are traveling, and whether you are growing into
the likeness of the divine or the bestial.
There is an unavoidable tendency to
become literally the embodiment of that quality upon
which one most constantly thinks. Let, therefore,
the object of your meditation be above and not below,
so that every time you revert to it in thought you
will be lifted up; let it be pure and unmixed with
any selfish element; so shall your heart become purified
and drawn nearer to Truth, and not defiled and dragged
more hopelessly into error.
Meditation, in the spiritual sense
in which I am now using it, is the secret of all growth
in spiritual life and knowledge. Every prophet,
sage, and savior became such by the power of meditation.
Buddha meditated upon the Truth until he could say,
“I am the Truth.” Jesus brooded upon
the Divine immanence until at last he could declare,
“I and my Father are One.”
Meditation centered upon divine realities
is the very essence and soul of prayer. It is
the silent reaching of the soul toward the Eternal.
Mere petitionary prayer without meditation is a body
without a soul, and is powerless to lift the mind
and heart above sin and affliction. If you are
daily praying for wisdom, for peace, for loftier purity
and a fuller realization of Truth, and that for which
you pray is still far from you, it means that you
are praying for one thing while living out in thought
and act another. If you will cease from such
waywardness, taking your mind off those things the
selfish clinging to which debars you from the possession
of the stainless realities for which you pray:
if you will no longer ask God to grant you that which
you do not deserve, or to bestow upon you that love
and compassion which you refuse to bestow upon others,
but will commence to think and act in the spirit of
Truth, you will day by day be growing into those realities,
so that ultimately you will become one with them.
He who would secure any worldly advantage
must be willing to work vigorously for it, and he
would be foolish indeed who, waiting with folded hands,
expected it to come to him for the mere asking.
Do not then vainly imagine that you can obtain the
heavenly possessions without making an effort.
Only when you commence to work earnestly in the Kingdom
of Truth will you be allowed to partake of the Bread
of Life, and when you have, by patient and uncomplaining
effort, earned the spiritual wages for which you ask,
they will not be withheld from you.
If you really seek Truth, and not
merely your own gratification; if you love it above
all worldly pleasures and gains; more, even, than happiness
itself, you will be willing to make the effort necessary
for its achievement.
If you would be freed from sin and
sorrow; if you would taste of that spotless purity
for which you sigh and pray; if you would realize wisdom
and knowledge, and would enter into the possession
of profound and abiding peace, come now and enter
the path of meditation, and let the supreme object
of your meditation be Truth.
At the outset, meditation must be
distinguished from idle reverie. There
is nothing dreamy and unpractical about it. It
is a process of searching and uncompromising thought
which allows nothing to remain but the simple and
naked truth. Thus meditating you will no longer
strive to build yourself up in your prejudices, but,
forgetting self, you will remember only that you are
seeking the Truth. And so you will remove, one
by one, the errors which you have built around yourself
in the past, and will patiently wait for the revelation
of Truth which will come when your errors have been
sufficiently removed. In the silent humility of
your heart you will realize that
“There is an inmost
centre in us all
Where Truth abides in fulness;
and around,
Wall upon wall, the gross
flesh hems it in;
This perfect, clear perception,
which is Truth,
A baffling and perverting
carnal mesh
Blinds it, and makes all error;
and to know,
Rather consists in opening
out a way
Whence the imprisoned splendour
may escape,
Than in effecting entry for
a light
Supposed to be without.”
Select some portion of the day in
which to meditate, and keep that period sacred to
your purpose. The best time is the very early
morning when the spirit of repose is upon everything.
All natural conditions will then be in your favor;
the passions, after the long bodily fast of the night,
will be subdued, the excitements and worries of the
previous day will have died away, and the mind, strong
and yet restful, will be receptive to spiritual instruction.
Indeed, one of the first efforts you will be called
upon to make will be to shake off lethargy and indulgence,
and if you refuse you will be unable to advance, for
the demands of the spirit are imperative.
To be spiritually awakened is also
to be mentally and physically awakened. The sluggard
and the self-indulgent can have no knowledge of Truth.
He who, possessed of health and strength, wastes the
calm, precious hours of the silent morning in drowsy
indulgence is totally unfit to climb the heavenly
heights.
He whose awakening consciousness has
become alive to its lofty possibilities, who is beginning
to shake off the darkness of ignorance in which the
world is enveloped, rises before the stars have ceased
their vigil, and, grappling with the darkness within
his soul, strives, by holy aspiration, to perceive
the light of Truth while the unawakened world dreams
on.
“The heights by great
men reached and kept,
Were not attained
by sudden flight,
But they, while their companions
slept,
Were toiling upward
in the night.”
No saint, no holy man, no teacher
of Truth ever lived who did not rise early in the
morning. Jesus habitually rose early, and climbed
the solitary mountains to engage in holy communion.
Buddha always rose an hour before sunrise and engaged
in meditation, and all his disciples were enjoined
to do the same.
If you have to commence your daily
duties at a very early hour, and are thus debarred
from giving the early morning to systematic meditation,
try to give an hour at night, and should this, by
the length and laboriousness of your daily task be
denied you, you need not despair, for you may turn
your thoughts upward in holy meditation in the intervals
of your work, or in those few idle minutes which you
now waste in aimlessness; and should your work be
of that kind which becomes by practice automatic, you
may meditate while engaged upon it. That eminent
Christian saint and philosopher, Jacob Boehme, realized
his vast knowledge of divine things whilst working
long hours as a shoemaker. In every life there
is time to think, and the busiest, the most laborious
is not shut out from aspiration and meditation.
Spiritual meditation and self-discipline
are inseparable; you will, therefore, commence to
meditate upon yourself so as to try and understand
yourself, for, remember, the great object you will
have in view will be the complete removal of all your
errors in order that you may realize Truth. You
will begin to question your motives, thoughts, and
acts, comparing them with your ideal, and endeavoring
to look upon them with a calm and impartial eye.
In this manner you will be continually gaining more
of that mental and spiritual equilibrium without which
men are but helpless straws upon the ocean of life.
If you are given to hatred or anger you will meditate
upon gentleness and forgiveness, so as to become acutely
alive to a sense of your harsh and foolish conduct.
You will then begin to dwell in thoughts of love,
of gentleness, of abounding forgiveness; and as you
overcome the lower by the higher, there will gradually,
silently steal into your heart a knowledge of the
divine Law of Love with an understanding of its bearing
upon all the intricacies of life and conduct.
And in applying this knowledge to your every thought,
word, and act, you will grow more and more gentle,
more and more loving, more and more divine. And
thus with every error, every selfish desire, every
human weakness; by the power of meditation is it overcome,
and as each sin, each error is thrust out, a fuller
and clearer measure of the Light of Truth illumines
the pilgrim soul.
Thus meditating, you will be ceaselessly
fortifying yourself against your only real
enemy, your selfish, perishable self, and will be establishing
yourself more and more firmly in the divine and imperishable
self that is inseparable from Truth. The direct
outcome of your meditations will be a calm, spiritual
strength which will be your stay and resting-place
in the struggle of life. Great is the overcoming
power of holy thought, and the strength and knowledge
gained in the hour of silent meditation will enrich
the soul with saving remembrance in the hour of strife,
of sorrow, or of temptation.
As, by the power of meditation, you
grow in wisdom, you will relinquish, more and more,
your selfish desires which are fickle, impermanent,
and productive of sorrow and pain; and will take your
stand, with increasing steadfastness and trust, upon
unchangeable principles, and will realize heavenly
rest.
The use of meditation is the acquirement
of a knowledge of eternal principles, and the power
which results from meditation is the ability to rest
upon and trust those principles, and so become one
with the Eternal. The end of meditation is, therefore,
direct knowledge of Truth, God, and the realization
of divine and profound peace.
Let your meditations take their rise
from the ethical ground which you now occupy.
Remember that you are to grow into Truth by
steady perseverance. If you are an orthodox Christian,
meditate ceaselessly upon the spotless purity and
divine excellence of the character of Jesus, and apply
his every precept to your inner life and outward conduct,
so as to approximate more and more toward his perfection.
Do not be as those religious ones, who, refusing to
meditate upon the Law of Truth, and to put into practice
the precepts given to them by their Master, are content
to formally worship, to cling to their particular
creeds, and to continue in the ceaseless round of
sin and suffering. Strive to rise, by the power
of meditation, above all selfish clinging to partial
gods or party creeds; above dead formalities and lifeless
ignorance. Thus walking the high way of wisdom,
with mind fixed upon the spotless Truth, you shall
know no halting-place short of the realization of
Truth.
He who earnestly meditates first perceives
a truth, as it were, afar off, and then realizes it
by daily practice. It is only the doer of the
Word of Truth that can know of the doctrine of Truth,
for though by pure thought the Truth is perceived,
it is only actualized by practice.
Said the divine Gautama, the Buddha, He who gives himself up
to vanity, and does not give himself up to meditation, forgetting the real aim
of life and grasping at pleasure, will in time envy him who has exerted himself
in meditation, and he instructed his disciples in the following Five Great
Meditations":
“The first meditation is the
meditation of love, in which you so adjust your heart
that you long for the weal and welfare of all beings,
including the happiness of your enemies.
“The second meditation is the
meditation of pity, in which you think of all beings
in distress, vividly representing in your imagination
their sorrows and anxieties so as to arouse a deep
compassion for them in your soul.
“The third meditation is the
meditation of joy, in which you think of the prosperity
of others, and rejoice with their rejoicings.
“The fourth meditation is the
meditation of impurity, in which you consider the
evil consequences of corruption, the effects of sin
and diseases. How trivial often the pleasure
of the moment, and how fatal its consequences.
“The fifth meditation is the
meditation on serenity, in which you rise above love
and hate, tyranny and oppression, wealth and want,
and regard your own fate with impartial calmness and
perfect tranquillity.”
By engaging in these meditations the
disciples of the Buddha arrived at a knowledge of
the Truth. But whether you engage in these particular
meditations or not matters little so long as your object
is Truth, so long as you hunger and thirst for that
righteousness which is a holy heart and a blameless
life. In your meditations, therefore, let your
heart grow and expand with ever-broadening love, until,
freed from all hatred, and passion, and condemnation,
it embraces the whole universe with thoughtful tenderness.
As the flower opens its petals to receive the morning
light, so open your soul more and more to the glorious
light of Truth. Soar upward upon the wings of
aspiration; be fearless, and believe in the loftiest
possibilities. Believe that a life of absolute
meekness is possible; believe that a life of stainless
purity is possible; believe that a life of perfect
holiness is possible; believe that the realization
of the highest truth is possible. He who so believes,
climbs rapidly the heavenly hills, whilst the unbelievers
continue to grope darkly and painfully in the fog-bound
valleys.
So believing, so aspiring, so meditating,
divinely sweet and beautiful will be your spiritual
experiences, and glorious the revelations that will
enrapture your inward vision. As you realize the
divine Love, the divine Justice, the divine Purity,
the Perfect Law of Good, or God, great will be your
bliss and deep your peace. Old things will pass
away, and all things will become new. The veil
of the material universe, so dense and impenetrable
to the eye of error, so thin and gauzy to the eye of
Truth, will be lifted and the spiritual universe will
be revealed. Time will cease, and you will live
only in Eternity. Change and mortality will no
more cause you anxiety and sorrow, for you will become
established in the unchangeable, and will dwell in
the very heart of immortality.
STAR OF WISDOM
Star that of the birth of
Vishnu,
Birth of Krishna, Buddha,
Jesus,
Told the wise ones, Heavenward
looking,
Waiting, watching for thy
gleaming
In the darkness of the night-time,
In the starless gloom of midnight;
Shining Herald of the coming
Of the kingdom of the righteous;
Teller of the Mystic story
Of the lowly birth of Godhead
In the stable of the passions,
In the manger of the mind-soul;
Silent singer of the secret
Of compassion deep and holy
To the heart with sorrow burdened,
To the soul with waiting weary:
Star of all-surpassing brightness,
Thou again dost deck the midnight;
Thou again dost cheer the
wise ones
Watching in the creedal darkness,
Weary of the endless battle
With the grinding blades of
error;
Tired of lifeless, useless
idols,
Of the dead forms of religions;
Spent with watching for thy
shining;
Thou hast ended their despairing;
Thou hast lighted up their
pathway;
Thou hast brought again the
old Truths
To the hearts of all thy Watchers;
To the souls of them that
love thee
Thou dost speak of Joy and
Gladness,
Of the peace that comes of
Sorrow.
Blessed are they that can
see thee,
Weary wanderers in the Night-time;
Blessed they who feel the
throbbing,
In their bosoms feel the pulsing
Of a deep Love stirred within
them
By the great power of thy
shining.
Let us learn thy lesson truly;
Learn it faithfully and humbly;
Learn it meekly, wisely, gladly,
Ancient Star of holy Vishnu,
Light of Krishna, Buddha,
Jesus.