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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Sankhya and Yoga.htm
VIII
SANKHYA AND YOGA
IN THE moment of his turning from this first and summary answer
to Arjuna's difficulties and in the very first words which strike the
keynote of a spiritual solution, the Teacher makes at once a distinction
which is of the utmost importance for the understanding of the Gita,
—the distinction of Sankhya and Yoga. "Such is the intelligence (the
intelligent knowledge of things and will) declared to thee in the
Sankhya, hear now this in the Yoga, for it thou art in Yoga by this
intelligence, 0 son of Pritha, thou shalt cast away the bondage o£
works." That is the literal translation of the words in which the Gita announces the distinc
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Divine Worker.htm
XVIII
THE DIVINE WORKER
TO
ATTAIN to the divine birth,—a divinising new birth o£ the soul
into a higher consciousness,—and to do divine works both as a means
towards that before it is attained and as an expression of it after it is
attained, is then all the Karmayoga of the Gita. The Gita does not try
to define works by any outward signs through which it can be recognisable to an external gaze, measurable by the criticism of the world; it deliberately renounces even the ordinary ethical distinctions by
which men seek to guide themselves in the light of the human reason.
The signs by which it distinguishes divine works are all profoundly
intimate and
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Works Devotion and Knowledge.htm
VI
WORKS, DEVOTION AND KNOWLEDGE
THIS THEN is the integral truth, the highest and widest knowledge.
The Divine is supracosmic, the eternal Parabrahman who supports
with his timeless and spaceless existence all this cosmic manifestation
of his own being and nature in Space and Time. He is the supreme
Spirit who ensouls the forms and movements of the universe, Paramatman. He is the supernal Person of whom all self and nature, all
being and becoming in this or any universe are the self-conception
and the self-energising, Purushottama. He is the ineffable Lord of
all existence who by his spiritual control of his own manifested Power
in Nature u
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Above the Gunas.htm
XIV
ABOVE THE GUNAS*
THE DISTINCTIONS between the Soul and Nature rapidly drawn in
the verses of the thirteenth chapter by a few decisive epithets, a few
brief but packed characterisations of their separate power and functioning, and
especially the distinction between the embodied soul subjected to the action of Nature by its enjoyment of her gunas, qualities
or modes and the Supreme Soul which dwells enjoying the gunas,
but not subject because it is itself beyond them, are the basis on which
the Gita rests its whole idea of the liberated being made one in the
conscious law of its existence with the Divine. That liberation, that
oneness, that putting
XI
THE VISION OF THE WORLD-SPIRIT *
THE DOUBLE ASPECT
EVEN WHILE
the effects of the terrible aspect of this vision are still
upon him, the first words uttered by Arjuna after the Godhead has
spoken are eloquent of a greater uplifting and reassuring reality behind this face of death and this destruction. "Rightly and in good
place," he cries, "0 Krishna, does the world rejoice and take pleasure
in thy name, the Rakshasas are fleeing from thee in terror to all the
quarters and the companies of the Siddhas bow down before thee in
adoration. How should they not do thee homage, 0 great Spirit? For
thou art the original Creator and Doer
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Principle of Divine works.htm
CHAPTER XIV
THE PRINCIPLE OF DIVINE WORKS
THIS THEN is the sense of the Gita's doctrine of sacrifice. Its full
significance depends on the idea of the Purushottama which as yet
is not developed,—we find it set forth clearly only much later in the
eighteen chapters,—and therefore we have had to anticipate, at whatever cost of infidelity to the progressive method of the Gita's exposition, that central teaching. At present the Teacher simply gives a hint,
merely adumbrates this supreme presence of the Purushottama and
his relation to the immobile Self in whom it is our first business, our
pressing spiritual need to find our poise of perfec
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Lord of the Sacrifice.htm
XIII
THE LORD OF THE SACRIFICE
WE HAVE, before we can proceed further, to gather up all that has
been said in its main principles. The whole of the Gita's gospel o£
works rests upon its idea of sacrifice and contains in fact the eternal
connecting truth of God and the world and works. The human mind
seizes ordinarily only fragmentary notions and standpoints of a manysided eternal truth of existence and builds upon them its various
theories of life and ethics and religion, stressing this or that sign or
appearance, but to some entirety of it must always tend to reawaken
whenever it returns in an age of large enlightenment to any entire
and s
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/God in Power of Becoming.htm
VIII
GOD IN POWER OF BECOMING
A
VERY important step has been reached, a decisive statement of its
metaphysical and psychological synthesis has been added to the development of the Gita's gospel of spiritual liberation and divine works.
The Godhead has been revealed in thought to Arjuna; he has been
made visible to the mind's search and the heart's seeing as the supreme
and universal Being, the supernal and universal Person, the inwarddwelling Master of our existence for whom man's knowledge, will
and adoration were seeking through the mists of the Ignorance. There
remains only the vision of the multiple Virat Purusha to complete the
revelat
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/The Gist of the Karmayoga.htm
XXIV
THE GIST OF THE KARMAYOGA
THE FIRST six chapters of the Gita form a sort of preliminary block
of the teaching; all the rest, all the other twelve chapters are the
working out of certain unfinished figures in this block which here
are seen only as hints behind the large-size execution of the main
motives, yet are in themselves of capital importance and are therefore
reserved for a yet larger treatment on the other two faces of the work.
If the Gita were not a great written Scripture which must be carried
to its end, if it were actually a discourse by a living teacher to a
disciple which could be resumed in good time, when the disciple was
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/Other Editions/Essays on the Gita_1950 Edn/Nirvana and Works in the World.htm
XXIII
NIRVANA AND WORKS IN THE WORLD
THE UNION of the soul with the Purushottama by a Yoga of the
whole being is the complete teaching of the Gita and not only the
union with the immutable Self as in the narrower doctrine which follows the
exclusive way of knowledge. That is why the Gita subsequently, after it has effected the reconciliation of knowledge and
works, is able to develop the idea of love and devotion, unified with
both works and knowledge, as the highest height of the way to the
supreme secret. For if the union with the immutable Self were the
sole secret or the highest secret, that would not at all be possible; for then at