All love, indeed, that is adoration has a spiritual force behind

it, and even when it is offered ignorantly and to a limited object,

something of that splendour appears through the poverty of the

rite and the smallness of its issues. For love that is worship is at

once an aspiration and a preparation: it can bring even within

its small limits in the Ignorance a glimpse of a still more or

less blind and partial but surprising realisation; for there are

moments when it is not we but the One who loves and is loved

in us, and even a human passion can be uplifted and glorified

by a slight glimpse of this infinite Love and Lover. It is for this

reason that the worship of the god, the worship of the idol,

the human magnet or ideal are not to be despised; for these are

steps through which the human race moves towards that blissful

passion and ecstasy of the Infinite which, even in limiting it,

they yet represent for our imperfect vision when we have still to

use the inferior steps Nature has hewn for our feet and admit

the stages of our progress. Certain idolatries are indispensable

for the development of our emotional being, nor will the man

who knows be hasty at any time to shatter the image unless he

can replace it in the heart of the worshipper by the Reality it

figures. Moreover, they have this power because there is always

something in them that is greater than their forms and, even

when we reach the supreme worship, that abides and becomes

a prolongation of it or a part of its catholic wholeness. Our

knowledge is still imperfect in us, love incomplete if even when

we know That which surpasses all forms and manifestations, we

cannot still accept the Divine in creature and object, in man, in

the kind, in the animal, in the tree, in the flower, in the work

of our hands, in the Nature-Force which is then no longer to us

the blind action of a material machinery but a face and power

of the universal Shakti: for in these things too is the presence of

the Eternal.


Sri Aurobindo , The Synthesis of Yoga , page 149 , vol - 20 ,SABCL