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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Core of the Teaching.htm
IV
THE CORE OF THE TEACHING
WE
KNOW the divine Teacher, we see the human disciple; it remains to form a clear conception of the doctrine. A clear conception
fastening upon the essential idea, the central heart of the teaching is
especially necessary here because the Gita with its rich and manysided thought, its synthetical grasp of different aspects of the spiritual
life and the fluent winding motion of its argument lends itself, even
more than other scriptures, to one-sided misrepresentations born
of a partisan intellectuality. The unconscious or half-conscious wresting of fact and word and idea to suit a preconceived notion or the
doctrine or
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Theory of Vibhuti.htm
IX
THE THEORY OF THE VIBHUTI
THE IMPORTANCE
of this chapter of the Gita is very much greater
than appears at first view or to an eye of prepossession which is looking into the text only for the creed of the last transcendence and the
detached turning of the human soul away from the world to a distant
Absolute. The message of the Gita is the gospel of the Divinity in
man who by force of an increasing union unfolds himself out of the
veil of the lower Nature, reveals to the human soul his cosmic spirit,
reveals his absolute transcendences, reveals himself in man and in
all beings. The potential outcome here of this union, this divine
Yoga, man grow
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Secret of Secrets.htm
IV
THE SECRET OF SECRETS
ALL THE truth that has developed itself at this length step by step,
each bringing forward a fresh aspect of the integral knowledge and
founding on it some result of spiritual state and action, has now to
take a turn of immense importance. The Teacher therefore takes care
first to draw attention to the decisive character of what he is about to
say, so that the mind of Arjuna may be awakened and attentive. For
he is going to open his mind to the knowledge and sight of the integral
Divinity and lead up to the vision of the eleventh book, by which the
warrior of Kurukshetra becomes conscious of the author and upholder
of hi
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Core of the Gita's Meaning.htm
-47_the core of the gita's meaning.htm
XXIII
THE CORE OF THE GITA'S MEANING
WHAT THEN is the message of the Gita and what its working value,
its spiritual utility to the human mind of the present day after the long
ages that have elapsed since it was written and the great subsequent
transformations of thought and experience? The human mind moves
always forward, alters its viewpoint and enlarges its thought substance, and the effect of these changes is to render past systems of
thinking obsolete or, when they are preserved, to extend, to modify
and subtly or visibly to alter their value. The vitality of an ancient
doctrine consists in the extent to which it naturally lends
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Way and the Bhakta.htm
XII
THE WAY AND THE BHAKTA
IN THE eleventh chapter of the Gita the original object of the teaching has been achieved and brought up to a certain completeness.
The command to divine action done for the sake of the world and
in union with the Spirit who dwells in it and in all its creatures and
in whom all its working takes place, has been given and accepted by
the Vibhuti. The disciple has been led away from the old poise of the
normal man and the standards, motives, outlook, egoistic consciousness of his ignorance, away from all that had finally failed him in
the hour of his spiritual crisis. The very action which on that standing he had rejec
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Beyond the Modes of Nature.htm
XXII
BEYOND THE MODES OF NATURE
So FAR then extends the determinism of Nature, and what it
amounts to is this that the ego from which we act is itself an instrument of the action of Prakriti and cannot therefore be free from the
control of Prakriti; the will of the ego is a will determined by Prakriti,
it is a part of the nature as it has been formed in us by the sum of its
own past action and self-modification, and by the nature in us so
formed and the will in it so formed our present action also is determined. It is said by some that the first initiating action is always free
to our choice however much all that follows may be determined by
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Works and Sacrifice.htm
XI
WORKS AND SACRIFICE
THE YOGA of the intelligent will and its culmination in the Brahmic
status, which occupies all the close of the second chapter, contains
the seed of much of the teaching of the Gita,—its doctrine of desireless works, of equality, of the rejection of outward renunciation, of
devotion to the Divine; but as yet all this is slight and obscure. What
is most strongly emphasised as yet is the withdrawal of the will from
the ordinary motive of human activities, desire, from man's normal temperament of the sense-seeking thought and will with its passions and
ignorance, and from its customary habit of troubled many-branching
ideas a
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Towards the Supreme Secret.htm
XXI
TOWARDS THE SUPREME SECRET *
THE TEACHER has completed all else that he needed to say, he has
worked out all the central principles and the supporting suggestions
and implications of his message and elucidated the principal doubts
and questions that might rise around it, and now all that rests for him
to do is to put into decisive phrase and penetrating formula the one
last word, the heart itself of the message, the very core of his gospel.
And we find that this decisive last and crowning word is not merely
the essence of what has been already said on the matter, not merely a
concentrated description of the needed self-discipline, the
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Message of The Gita.htm
XXIV
THE MESSAGE OF THE GITA
THE SECRET of action," so we might summarise the message o£ the Gita, the word of its divine Teacher, "is one with the secret of all life
and existence. Existence is not merely a machinery of Nature, a wheel of law in
which the soul is entangled for a moment or for ages; it is a
constant manifestation of the Spirit. Life is not for the sake of life
alone, but for God, and the living soul of man is an eternal portion
of the Godhead. Action is for self-finding, for self-fulfilment, for
self-realisation and not only for its own external and apparent fruits
of the moment or the future. There is an inner law and meanin
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Two Natures.htm
BOOK TWO–PART I
THE SYNTHESIS OF WORKS, LOVE AND
KNOWLEDGE
THE TWO NATURES *
THE
FIRST six chapters of the Gita have been treated as a single block of
teachings, its primary basis of practice and knowledge; the remaining twelve may
be similarly treated as two closely connected blocks which develop the rest of
the doctrine from this primary basis. The seventh to the twelfth chapters lay
down a large metaphysical statement of the nature of the Divine Being and on
that foundation closely relate and synthetise knowledge and devotion, just as
the first part of the Gita related and synthetised works and knowledge. The
vision of the World-P