17
results found in
189 ms
Page 1
of 2
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/The Quiet Mind.htm
CHAPTER II
THE QUIET MIND
Remember first that an inner quietude,
caused by the purification of the restless mind and vital, is the first
condition of a secure sadhana.
Bases of
Yoga, pp. 21-22.
Aspire especially for quietness, peace, a calm faith, an increasing steady
wideness, for more and more knowledge, for a deep and intense but quiet
devotion.
Ibid., p. 16.
The path of Yoga is always beset with inner and outer difficulties and the
sadhaka must develop a quiet, firm and solid strength to meet them.
Ibid., p. 17.
Not only a truer knowledge, but a greater power comes to one in the quietude and
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/Preface.htm
PREFACE
It would be impossible at this close range to his life to assess with
completeness the significance of anyone so prodigiously endowed with gifts, both
spiritual and intellectual, as Sri Aurobindo. Although his stature as a
philosopher and mystic has now received sufficient acclaim in India, Europe and
America to establish him as one of the greatest figures of our times, if not, as
some believe, the greatest, his real achievement will only be measured
adequately by the future, when the goal that he saw humanity must conquer if it
is to advance is either realized or has drawn appreciably nearer.
He may be said to occupy a position unique among c
CHAPTER IV
KNOWLEDGE, WORKS AND LOVE:
The Way of
the Karmayogin
To see nothing but the Divine, to be at every moment in union with him, to love
him in all creatures and have the delight of him in all things is the whole
condition of his (the spiritual man's) existence. His God-vision does not
divorce him from life, nor does he miss any of the fulness of life; for God
himself becomes the spontaneous bringer to him of every good....The joy of
heaven and the joy of earth are only a small shadow of his possessions; for as
he grows into the Divine, the Divine too flows out upon him with all the light,
power and joy of an infinite existence.
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/The Divine Presence.htm
CHAPTER VII
THE DIVINE PRESENCE
Live always as if you were under the. very eye of the Supreme.
More Lights on Yoga, p. 80.
It would be impossible in an introduction to Integral Yoga, such as this
attempts to be, to touch-in more than the salient points in its practice and to
indicate some of the problems the aspirant may encounter in his development.
The endeavour that Yoga—and particularly this Yoga —sets before the sadhaka
is an immense one, full of difficulties and dangers and problems of personal
application, far too many in number for anyone to do more than indicate in a
limited way in a small book
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/Work, Meditation and Concentration.htm
CHAPTER IV
WORK. MEDITATION AND CONCENTRATION
All work done for the Divine, from poetry and art and. music to carpentry or
baking or sweeping a room, should be made perfect even in its smallest external
detail as well as in the spirit in which it is done; for only then is it an
altogether fit offering.
Letters, Vol. III (On Poetry and Literature), p. 290.
I mean by work action done for the Divine and more and more in union with the
Divine—for the Divine alone and nothing else. Naturally that is not easy at the
beginning, any more than deep meditation and luminous knowledge are easy or even
true love and bhakti are easy.
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/The individual Centre.htm
CHAPTER II
THE INDIVIDUAL CENTRE
The supreme Self is one, but the souls of the Self are many.
The Life Divine: passim.
The one infinitely variable Spirit in things carries all of himself into each
form of his omnipresence; the self, the Being is at once unique in each, common
in our collectivities and one in all beings. God moves in many ways at once in
his own indivisible unity.
The Problem
of Rebirth, p. 60.
The Divine is always in the inner heart and does not leave it.
Letters, Vol. IV, p. 178.
The Divine
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/Foreword.htm
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/In Difficulty.htm
CHAPTER V
IN DIFFICULTY
The goal of Yoga is always hard to reach, but this one is more difficult than
any other, and it is only for those who have the call, the capacity to face
everything and every risk, even the risk of failure, and the will to progress
towards an entire selflessness, desirelessness and surrender.
Bases of Yoga, pp. 69-70.
The road of Yoga is long, and every inch of ground has to be won against much
resistance, and no quality is more needed by the sadhaka than patience and
single-minded perseverance with a faith that remains firm through all
difficulties, delays and apparent failures.
Ibid., p. 46.
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/The Luminous Crypt of the Soul.htm
CHAPTER III
THE LUMINOUS CRYPT OF THE SOUL
When people do sadhana, there is a higher Nature that works within, the psychic
and spiritual, and they have to put their natures under the influence of the
psychic being and the higher spiritual self or of the Divine.
More Lights
on Yoga, p. 27.
The important thing is... to live always in the psychic being, your true being.
The psychic will, in due time, awaken and turn to the Divine all the rest of the
nature, so that even the outer being will feel itself in touch with the Divine
and moved by the Divine in all it is and feels and does.
Letters, Vol. I, pp. 228-9.
Resource name: /E-Library/Authors from Other Centers/Morwenna Donnelly/English/Founding the Life Divine/Divine Source and Divine Meaning.htm
PART I
Approaching the Yoga
CHAPTER 1
DIVINE SOURCE AND DIVINE MEANING
I am concerned with the earth consciousness, not with worlds beyond for their
own sake; it is terrestrial realization that I seek and not a flight to distant
summits. All other Yogas regard life as an illusion or a passing phase: the
supramental (i.e. Integral) Yoga alone regards it as a thing created by the
Divine for a progressive manifestation and takes fulfilment of the life and body
for its object.
Letters,
Vol. Ill, p. 327.
This Yoga accepts the value of cosmic existence and holds it to be a reality;