Concept of Perfection in
integral yoga
WHEN the
self is purified of the wrong and confused action of the instrumental Nature
and liberated into its self-existent being, consciousness, power and bliss and
the Nature itself liberated from the tangle of this lower action of the
struggling gunas and the dualities into the high
truth of the divine calm and the divine action, then spiritual perfection
becomes possible. Purification and
freedom are the indispensable antecedents of perfection. A spiritual self-perfection can only mean a
growing into oneness with the nature of divine being, and therefore according
to our conception of divine being will be the aim, effort and method of our
seeking after this perfection. To the Mayavadin the highest or rather the only real truth of
being is the impassive, impersonal, self-aware Absolute and therefore to grow
into an impassive calm, impersonality and pure self-awareness of spirit is his
idea of perfection and a rejection of cosmic and individual being and a
settling into silent self-knowledge is his way. To the Buddhist for whom the highest truth is
a negation of being, a recognition of the impermanence
and sorrow of being and the disastrous nullity of desire and a dissolution of
egoism, of the upholding associations of the Idea and the successions of Karma
are the perfect way. Other ideas of the
Highest are less negative; each according to its own idea leads towards some
likeness to the Divine, sādŗśya,
and each finds its own way, such as the love and worship of the Bhakta and the growing into the likeness of the Divine by
love. But for the integral Yoga
perfection will mean a divine spirit and a divine nature which will admit of a
divine relation and action in the world; it will mean also in its entirety a divinising of the whole nature, a rejection of all its
wrong knots of being and action, but no rejection of any part of our being or
of any field of our action. The approach
to perfection must be therefore a large and complex
movement and its results and workings will have an infinite and varied
scope. We must fix in order to find a
clue and method on certain essential and fundamental elements and requisites of
perfection, siddhi; for if these are secured,
all the rest will be found to be only their natural development or particular
working. We may cast these elements into
six divisions, interdependent on each other to a great extent but still in a
certain way naturally successive in their order of attainment. The movement will start from a basic equality
of the soul and mount to an ideal action of the Divine through our perfected
being in the largeness of the Brahmic unity.
The first necessity is some
fundamental poise of the soul both in its essential and its natural being
regarding and meeting the things, impacts and workings of Nature. This poise we shall arrive at by growing into
a perfect equality, samatā. The
self, spirit or Brahman is one in all and therefore one to all; it is, as is
said in the Gita which has developed fully this idea
of equality and indicated its experience on at least one side of equality, the
equal Brahman, samam brahma; the Gita even
goes so far in one passage as to identity equality and yoga, samatvam yoga ucyate.
This is to say, equality is the sign of unity with the Brahman, of
becoming Brahman, of growing into an undisturbed spiritual poise of being in
the Infinite. Its importance can hardly
be exaggerated; for it is the sign our having passed beyond the egoistic
determinations of our nature, of our having conquered our enslaved response to
the dualities, of our having transcended the shifting turmoil of the gunas, of our having entered into the calm and peace of
liberation. Equality is a term of
consciousness which brings into the whole of our being and nature the eternal tranquillity of the Infinite. Moreover, it is the condition of a securely
and perfectly divine action; the security and largeness of the cosmic action of
the Infinite is based upon and never breaks down or forfeits its eternal tranquillity. That
too must be the character of the perfect spiritual action; to be equal and one
to all things in spirit, understanding, mind, heart and natural consciousness,
— even in the most physical consciousness, — and to make all their workings,
whatever their outward adaptation to the thing to be done, always and imminuably full of the divine equality and calm must be its
inmost principle. That may be said to be
the passive or basic, the fundamental and receptive side of equality, but there
is also an active and possessive side, an equal bliss which can only come when
the peace of equality is founded and which is the beatific
flower of its fullness.
The
next necessity of perfection is to raise all the active parts of the human
nature to that highest condition and working pitch of their power and capacity,
śakti, at which
they become capable of being divinised into true
instruments of the free, perfect, spiritual and divine action. For practical purposes we may take the
understanding, the heart, the Prana and the body as
the four members of our nature which have thus to be prepared, and we have to
find the constituent terms of their perfection.
Also there is the dynamical force in us (vīrya) of the
temperament, character and soul nature, svabhāva, which
makes the power of our members effective in action and gives them their type
and direction; this has to be freed from its limitations, enlarged, rounded so
that the whole manhood in us may become the basis of a divine manhood, when the
Purusha, the real Man in us, the divine Soul, shall
act fully in this human instrument and shine fully through this human
vessel. To divinise
the perfected nature we have to call in the divine Power or Shakti
to replace our limited human energy so that this may be shaped into the image
of and filled with the force of a greater infinite engery,
daivī prakŗti, bhāgavatī
śakti. This
perfection will grow in the measure in which we can surrender ourselves, first,
to the guidance and then to the direct action of that Power and of the Master
of our being and our works to whom it belongs, and for this purpose faith is
the essential, faith is the great motor-power of our being in our aspirations
to perfection, — here, a faith in God and the Shakti
which shall begin in the heart and understanding, but shall take possession of
all our nature, all its consciousness, all its dynamic motive-force. These four things are the essentials of this
second element of perfection, the full powers of the members of the
instrumental nature, the perfected dynamics of the soul nature, the assumption
of them into the action of the divine Power, and a perfect faith in all our
members to call and support that assumption, śakti,
vīrya, daivī prakŗti, śraddhā.
But
so long as this development takes place only on the highest level of our normal
nature, we may have a reflected and limited image of perfection translated into
the lower terms of the soul in mind, life and body, but not the possession of
the divine perfection in the highest terms possible to us of the divine Idea
and its Power. That is to be found
beyond these lower principles in the supramental gnosis; therefore the next
step of perfection will be the evolution of the mental into the gnostic being. This
evolution is effected by a breaking beyond the mental limitation, a stride
upward into the next higher plane or region of our being hidden from us at
present by the shining lid of the mental reflections and a conversion of all
that we are into the terms of this greater consciousness. In the gnosis itself, vijñāna, there are several gradations
which open at their highest into the full and infinite Ananda. The gnosis once effectively called into
action will progressively take up all the terms of intelligence, will,
sense-mind, heart, the vital and sensational being and
translate them by a luminous and harmonising
conversion into a unity of the truth, power and delight of a divine
existence. It will lift into that light
and force and covert into their own highest sense our
whole intellectual, volitional, dynamic, ethical, aesthetic, sensational, vital
and physical being. It has the power
also of overcoming physical limitations and developing a more perfect and
divinely instrumental body. Its light
opens up the fields of the super-conscient and darts its rays and pours its
luminous flood into the subconscient and enlightens
its obscure hints and withheld secrets.
It admits us to a greater light of the Infinite than is reflected in the
paler luminosity even of the highest mentality.
While it perfects the individual soul and nature in the sense of a diviner
existence and makes a full harmony of the diversities of our being, it founds
all its action upon the Unity from which it proceeds and takes up everything
into that Unity. Personality and
impersonality, the two eternal aspects of existence, are made one by its action
in the spiritual being and Nature body of the Purushottama.
The gnostic perfection, spiritual in its nature, is to be
accomplished here in the body and takes life in the physical world as one of
its fields, even though the gnosis opens to us possession of planes and worlds
beyond the material universe. The
physical body is therefore a basis of action, pratişţhā, which
cannot be despised, neglected or excluded from the spiritual evolution: a
perfection of the body as the outer instrument of a complete divine living on
earth will be necessarily a part of the gnostic
conversion. The change will be effected
by bringing in the law of the gnostic Purusha, vijñānamaya
puruşa, and of that into which it opens, the Anandamaya, into the physical consciousness and its
members. Pushed to its highest
conclusion this movement brings in a spiritualising
and illumination of the whole physical consciousness and a divinising
of the law of the body. For behind the gross physical sheath of this materially
visible and sensible frame there is subliminally supporting it and discoverable
by a finer subtle consciousness a subtle body of the mental being and spiritual
or causal body of the Gnostic and bliss soul in which all the perfection of a
spiritual embodiment is to be found, a yet unmanifested
divine law of the body. Most of the physical siddhis
acquired by certain Yogins are brought about by some
opening up of the law of the subtle or a calling down of something of the law
of the spiritual body. The ordinary
method is the opening up of the Chakras by the
physical processes of Hathayoga (of which something
is also included in the Rajayoga) or by the methods
of the Tantric discipline. But while these may be optionally used at
certain stages by the integral Yoga, they are not indispensable; for here the
reliance is on the power of the higher being to change the lower existence, a
working is chosen mainly from above downward and not the opposite way, and
therefore the development of the superior power of the gnosis will be awaited
as the instrumentative change in this part of the Yoga.
There
will remain, because it will then only be entirely possible, the perfect action
and enjoyment of being on the gnostic basis. The Purusha enters
into cosmic manifestation for the variations of his infinite existence, for
knowledge, action and enjoyment; the gnosis brings the fullness of spiritual
knowledge and it will found on that the divine action and cast the enjoyment of
world and being into the law of the truth, the freedom and the perfection of
the spirit. But neither action nor
enjoyment will be the lower action of the gunas and
consequent egoistic enjoyment mostly of the satisfaction of rajasic
desire which is our present way of living.
Whatever desire will remain, if that name be given, will be the divine
desire, the will to delight of the Purusha enjoying
in his freedom and perfection the action of the perfected Prakriti
and all her members. The Prakriti will take up the whole nature into the law of her
higher divine truth and act in that law offering up the universal enjoyment of
her action and being to the Anandamaya Ishwara, the Lord of existence and works and Spirit of
bliss, who presides over and governs her workings. The individual soul will be the channel of
this action and offering, and it will enjoy at once its oneness with the Ishwara and its oneness with the Prakriti
and will enjoy all relations with Infinite and finite, with God and the
universe and beings in the universe in the highest terms of the union of the
universal Purusha and Prakriti.
All
the gnostic evolution opens up into the divine
principle of Ananda, which is the foundation of the
fullness of spiritual being, consciousness and bliss of Sachchidananda
or eternal Brahman. Possessed at first
by reflection in the mental experience, it will be possessed afterwards with a
greater fullness and directness in the massed and luminous consciousness, cidghana, which comes by the gnosis. The Siddha or
perfected soul will live in union with the Purushottama
in this Brahmic consciousness, he will be conscious
in the Brahman that is the All, sarvam
brahma, in the Brahman infinite in being and infinite in
quality, anantam
brahma, in Brahman as self-existent consciousness and
universal knowledge, jñānam
brahma, in Brahman as the self-existent bliss and its
universal delight of being, ānandam
brahma. He will
experience all the universe as the manifestation of
the One, all quality and action as
the play of his universal and infinite energy, all knowledge and conscious
experience as the out-flowing of that consciousness, and all in the terms of
that one Ananda.
His physical being will be one with all material Nature, his vital being
with the life of the universe, his mind with the cosmic mind, his spiritual
knowledge and will with the divine knowledge and will both in itself and as its
pours itself through these channels, his spirit with the one spirit in all
beings. All the variety of cosmic
existence will be changed to him in that unity and revealed in the secret of
its spiritual significance. For in this
spiritual bliss and being he will be one with That
which is the origin and continent and inhabitant and spirit and constituting
power of all existence. This will be the
highest reach of self-perfection.