THE NEED OF GURU
Every soul is destined to be
perfect, and every being, in the end, will attain the state of perfection.
Whatever we are now is the result of our acts and thoughts in the past; and
whatever we shall be in the future will be the result of what we think end do
now. But this, the shaping of our own destinies, does not preclude our
receiving help from outside; nay, in the vast majority of cases such help is
absolutely necessary. When it comes, the higher powers and possibilities of the
soul are quickened, spiritual life is awakened, growth is animated, and man
becomes holy and perfect in the end.
This quickening impulse cannot
be derived from books. The soul can only receive impulses from another soul,
and from nothing else. We may study books all our lives, we may become very
intellectual, but in the end we find that we have not developed at all
spiritually. It is not true that a high order of intellectual development
always goes hand in hand with a proportionate development of the spiritual side
in Man. In studying books we are sometimes deluded into thinking that thereby
we are being spiritually helped; but if we analyse the effect of the study of
books on ourselves, we shall find that at the utmost it is only our intellect
that derives profit from such studies, and not our inner spirit. This
inadequacy of books to quicken spiritual growth is the reason why, although
almost every one of us can speak most wonderfully on spiritual
matters, when it comes to action and the living of a truly spiritual life, we
find ourselves so awfully deficient. To quicken the spirit, the impulse must
come from another soul.
The person from whose soul such
impulse comes is called the Guru — the teacher; and the person to whose soul
the impulse is conveyed is called the Shishya — the student. To convey such an
impulse to any soul, in the first place, the soul from which it proceeds
must possess the power of transmitting it, as it were, to another; and in the
second place, the soul to which it is transmitted must be fit to receive it.
The seed must be a living seed, and the field must be ready ploughed; and when
both these conditions are fulfilled, a wonderful growth of genuine religion
takes place. "The true preacher of religion has to be of wonderful
capabilities, and clever shall his hearer be" and when both of these are
really wonderful and extraordinary, then will a splendid spiritual awakening
result, and not otherwise. Such alone are the real teachers, and such alone are
also the real students, the real aspirants. All others are only playing with
spirituality. They have just a little curiosity awakened, just a little
intellectual aspiration kindled in them, but are merely standing on the outward
fringe of the horizon of religion. There is no doubt some value even in that,
as it may in course of time result in the awakening of a real thirst for
religion; and it is a mysterious law of nature that as soon as the field is
ready, the seed must and does come; as soon as the soul
earnestly desires to have religion, the transmitter of the religious
force must and does appear to help that soul. When the power
that attracts the light of religion in the receiving soul is full and strong,
the power which answers to that attraction and sends in light does come as a
matter of course.
There are, however, certain
great dangers in the way. There is, for instance, the danger to the receiving
soul of its mistaking momentary emotions for real religious yearning. We may
study that in ourselves. Many a time in our lives, somebody dies whom we loved;
we receive a blow; we feel that the world is slipping between our fingers, that
we want something surer and higher, and that we must become religious. In a few
days that wave of feeling has passed away, and we are left stranded just where
we were before. We are all of us often mistaking such impulses for real
thirst after religion; but as long as these momentary emotions are thus mistaken,
that continuous, real craving of the soul for religion will not come, and we
shall not find the true transmitter of spirituality into our nature. So
whenever we are tempted to complain of our search after the truth that we
desire so much, proving vain, instead of so complaining, our first duty ought
to be to look into our own souls and find whether the craving in the heart is
real. Then in the vast majority of cases it would be discovered that we were
not fit for receiving the truth, that there was no real thirst for spirituality.
There are still greater dangers
in regard to the transmitter, the Guru. There are many who, though
immersed in ignorance, yet, in the pride of their hearts, fancy they know
everything, and not only do not stop there, but offer to take others on their
shoulders; and thus the blind leading the blind, both fall into the ditch.
"Fools dwelling in
darkness, wise in their own conceit, and puffed up with vain knowledge, go
round and round staggering to and fro, like blind men led by the blind." —
(Katha Up., I. ii. 5). The world is full of these. Every one wants to be a
teacher, every beggar wants to make a gift of a million dollars! Just as these
beggars are ridiculous, so are these teachers.
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