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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Principle of Divine Works.htm
'Essays on the Gita' by Sri Aurobindo— Page 1 of 50
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
Title:
XX
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/Swabhava and Swadharma.htm
XX
Swabhava and Swadharma 1
IT IS then by a liberating development of the soul out of this lower nature of the triple gunas into the supreme divine
nature beyond the three gunas that we can best arrive at spiritual perfection and freedom. And this again can best be
brought about by an anterior development of the predominance of the highest sattwic quality to a point at which sattwa also
is overpassed, mounts beyond its own limitations and breaks up into a supreme freedom, absolute light, serene power of the
conscious spirit in which there is no determination by conflicting gunas. A highest sattwic faith and aim new-shaping what we are
according to the
Title:
IX
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Theory of the 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
Title:
V
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V
Kurukshetra
BEFORE we can proceed, following in the large steps of the Teacher of the Gita, to watch his tracing of the triune path
of man, — the path which is that of his will, heart, thought raising themselves to the Highest and into the being of that which
is the supreme object of all action, love and knowledge, we must consider once more the situation from which the Gita arises, but
now in its largest bearings as a type of human life and even of all world-existence. For although Arjuna is himself concerned only
with his own situation, his inner struggle and the law of action he must follow, yet, as we have seen, the particula
Title:
II
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Divine Teacher.htm
II
The Divine Teacher
THE PECULIARITY of the Gita among the great religious
books of the world is that it does not stand apart as a work by itself, the
fruit of the spiritual life of a creative personality like Christ, Mahomed or
Buddha or of an epoch of pure spiritual searching like the Veda and Upanishads,
but is given as an episode in an epic history of nations and their wars and men
and their deeds and arises out of a critical moment in the soul of one of its
leading personages face to face with the crowning action of his life, a work
terrible, violent and sanguinary, at the point when he must either recoil from
it altogether or carry it through
Title:
XIX
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XIX
Equality
SINCE knowledge, desirelessness, impersonality, equality,
the inner self-existent peace and bliss, freedom from or at least superiority to the tangled interlocking of the three
modes of Nature are the signs of the liberated soul, they must accompany it in all its activities. They are the condition of that
unalterable calm which this soul preserves in all the movement, all the shock, all the clash of forces which surround it in the
world. That calm reflects the equable immutability of the Brahman in the midst of all mutations, and it belongs to the indivisible
and impartial Oneness which is for ever immanent in all the multiplicities
Title:
X
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Yoga of the Intelligent Will.htm
X
The Yoga of the Intelligent Will
I HAVE had to deviate in the last two essays and to drag the
reader with me into the arid tracts of metaphysical dogma, — however cursorily and with a very insufficient and superficial
treatment, — so that we might understand why the Gita follows the peculiar line of development it has taken, working out first a
partial truth with only subdued hints of its deeper meaning, then returning upon its hints and bringing out their significance until
it rises to its last great suggestion, its supreme mystery which it does not work out at all, but leaves to be lived out, as the later
ages of Indian spirituality tried to l
Title:
VII
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Supreme Word of the Gita.htm
VII
The Supreme Word of the Gita
WE HAVE now got to
the inmost kernel of the Gita's Yoga, the whole living and breathing centre of
its teaching. We can see now quite clearly that the ascent of the limited human
soul when it withdraws from the ego and the lower nature into the immutable Self
calm, silent and stable, was only a first step, an initial change. And now too
we can see why the Gita from the first insisted on the Ishwara, the Godhead in
the human form, who speaks always of himself,
"aham, mām," as of some great secret and omnipresent Being, lord
of all the worlds and master of the human soul, one who is greater even than
that immutable s
Title:
XVI
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Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Fullness of Spiritual Action.htm
XVI
The Fullness of Spiritual Action
THE DEVELOPMENT of the idea of the Gita has reached
a point at which one question alone remains for solution, — the question of our nature bound and defective and
how it is to effect, not only in principle but in all its movements, its evolution from the lower to the higher being and from the
law of its present action to the immortal Dharma. The difficulty is one which is implied in certain of the positions laid down
in the Gita, but has to be brought out into greater prominence than it gets there and to be put into a clearer shape before our
intelligence. The Gita proceeded on a psychological knowledge which
Resource name: /E-Library/Works of Sri Aurobindo/English/CWSA/Essays On The Gita/The Gunas, Faith and Works.htm
'Essays on the Gita' by Sri Aurobindo— Page 1 of 50
XVIII
The Gunas, Faith and Works 1
THE GITA has made a distinction between action according to the licence of personal desire and action done
according to the Shastra. We must understand by the latter the recognised science and art of life which is the outcome
of mankind's collective living, its culture, religion, science, its progressive discovery of the best rule of life,
— but mankind
still walking in the ignorance and proceeding in a half light towards knowledge. The action of personal desire belongs to the
unregenerated state of our nature and is dictated by ignorance or false knowledge a