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THE divine Spirit is known by the mystics of all ages
as the Sun; and therefore in all ancient mystical symbols
the sun has been pictured as the sign of God. This conception
gives further help in the knowledge of metaphysics. The
sun is that aspect of the Absolute God in which He begins
to manifest, and the first step towards manifestation is
contraction. That contraction is seen in all living beings
and in all objects. It is first contraction that takes place,
and then expansion, which comes as a matter of course as
a reaction. The former tendency is the desire of inhalation,
and the latter exhalation. The contraction and expansion
which are seen in all aspects of life come from God Himself.
The Omnipresent Light by this tendency becomes concentrated;
and it is this concentrated Light of Intelligence which
is the sun recognized by the mystics. As Shams-i Tabriz
has said, 'When the Sun of His countenance became manifest,
the atoms of both worlds began to appear; as its light fell
every atom donned a name and a form.' The Hindus have called
it in the Vedanta Chaitanya, the Spirit or the Light
of God. In the Quran it is mentioned, 'we have made thy
light out of Our Light, and of that Light we have made the
Universe.' In plain words this means that when there was
nothing – no form, no name, no person, no object – except
Intelligence; and it is the contraction of that intelligence;
which brought its essence into a form of light which is
called the divine Spirit; and the expansion of the same
light has been the cause of the whole of manifestation.
Creation is the exhalation of God; and what is called destruction
is absorption, which is the inhalation of God.
The divine Spirit spreads itself; this we call creation
and it consists of various names and forms. There arises
a conflicting condition or entanglement of the Breath of
God, disorder in its rhythm, which manifests in destruction,
and culminates in what is called by Hindus Pralaya,
the end of the world. For this many blame God many judge
Him, and many think it is unfair on the part of God to create,
and to destroy; but for God, who is the only Being, this
is the natural condition, by which He eternally lives. The
beginning and the end of the world is only His one Breath,
the duration of which is numberless years. During this one
Breath myriads of beings have been born, have lived and
died, and experienced both this world and the next. Souls
therefore are the rays of this Sun, which is called in Sanskrit
Brahma. The nature of the ray is to extend and withdraw,
to appear and disappear; and the duration of its existence
is short when compared with the duration of the eternal
God the divine Spirit. There are living creatures, small
germs, worms and insects who live no longer than a moment;
and there are other beings whose life is a hundred years;
and some live longer still; and yet even if it were a thousand
years it is a moment compared with eternity. Time, as man
knows it, is in the first place discerned by the knowledge
of his own physical constitution.
From the Sanskrit word Pala, which means moment,
has come the word 'pulse'; that which is pulsation. This
knowledge has been completed to some extent by the study
of nature, the changes of the seasons, and the journeys
the world makes round the sun. Many wish to limit divine
law to this man-made conception of time, and they make speculations
about it; but the tendency of the mystic is to bend his
head low in worship, as the thought of the eternal life
of God, the only Being, comes to his mind. Instead of questioning
why and what, he contemplates the being of God, and so raises
his consciousness above the limitations of time and space,
thus liberating his soul by lifting it to the divine spheres.
The soul, which is the ray of the divine Sun in one sphere,
the sphere in which it does not touch any earthly being,
is called Malak or angel. Therefore every soul passes
through the angelic heavens; in other words, every soul
is an angel before it touches the earthly plane. The angels
it is who become human beings; and those who do not become
human beings, remain angels. The human being, therefore,
is a grown-up angel; or an angel is a soul who has not grown
sufficiently. Infants who come on earth with their angelic
qualities, and sometimes pass away without having experienced
the life of the grown-up man, show us the picture of the
original condition of the soul.
The idea that the angels are nearer to God is right according
to this doctrine. Souls who have not journeyed farther are
naturally close to the divine Spirit; they are angels. Someone
asked the Prophet why man was greater than the angels; man,
who causes all the bloodshed on the earth, while the angels
are always occupied in the praise of God. It is said in
the Quran that the angels knew nothing of the earth; they
knew God. And so they occupied themselves with God; but
man is greater, for when he comes on earth he has much in
the world to be occupied with, and still he pursues God.
That angelic sphere is free from passions and emotions,
which are the source of all wrong and sin; souls pure of
all greed and desires given by the denseness of earth are
angels who know nothing else but happiness; for happiness
is the real nature of the soul.
The Hindus call the angels Suras; Sura also means
breath and breath means life. Suras, therefore, mean pure
lives, lives that live long. In the Hindu scriptures there
is another word used: Asura, meaning lifeless; in
other words, not in tune with the infinite. Man may retain
angelic qualities even in his life on the earth as a human
being; and it is the angelic quality which can be traced
in some souls who show innocence and simplicity in their
lives. This is not necessarily weakness; it only shows the
delicacy of a flower in the personality, together with fragrance.
Angelic souls on the earth-plane are inclined to love,
to be kind, to be dependent upon those who show them love.
They are ready to believe, willing to learn, inclined to
follow that which seems to them for the moment good, beautiful
and true. The picture of the angels that we read of in the
scriptures as sitting upon clouds and playing harps is but
an expression of a mystical secret. Playing the harp is
vibrating harmoniously; the angels have no actual harps,
they themselves are the harps; they are living vibrations;
they are life itself.
One can see in a person who is vibrating harmoniously
that his presence becomes the inspiration of music and poetry.
The person whose heart is tuned to the pitch of the angelic
heavens will show on earth heavenly bliss; therefore the
wise seek the association of spiritual beings. And sitting
on clouds means that the angels are above all clouds; clouds
are for the beings of the dense earth; the angels are free
both from transitory pleasures and from constant spells
of depression; clouds do not surround them, for they are
above clouds. Such souls, who are in direct touch with the
spirit of God, and who have no knowledge of the false world
which is full of illusion, who live and know not death,
whose lives are happiness, whose food is divine light, make
around 'Arsh, the divine Spirit, an aura which is
called the Highest Heaven.
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The souls in the angelic heavens are all goodness; and
this shows that goodness is natural, and what is contrary
to our nature we call evil. Souls in the angelic heavens
are innocent; this also shows that innocence is the natural
condition of the soul, and the lack of innocence is a foreign
element which the soul acquires after coming upon earth,
In the angelic spheres the souls are happy; this shows that
unhappiness does not belong to the soul. It is something
which is foreign to it; therefore in the experience of man
the discomfort coming out of life gives unhappiness. Souls
on the earth retain something of the angelic quality; therefore
they readily respond and are attracted without resistance
to the innocence, happiness, and goodness of another person.
If they knew that it is because this is the original quality
of the soul they would develop the same in their own being.
As Rumi has said, 'People are drawn to me, and they shed
tears with my cries, and yet they know not what it is in
me that attracts them.'
Seeking after goodness, innocence, and happiness helps
the angelic qualities to develop in a soul. Spirituality,
therefore, is the development of the angelic quality; and
love of spirituality is the longing for the angelic heavens;
it is homesickness.
Does death frighten the spiritual being? No; death for
the spiritual soul is only a gate through which it enters
into that sphere which every soul knows to be its home.
Souls who become conscious of the angelic heavens, even
in the smallest degree, hear the call of that sphere; and
if they have any discomfort in this world it is that of
the homesickness which the call of the angelic heavens gives.
The soul may be likened to a ray of the sun; so the souls
of the angels, being not adorned with a physical garb, are
as flames themselves. The scriptures therefore say that
the angels are made of Nur or light; Nur is specially that
light which comes from the divine Sun, the spirit of God.
All souls are made of that essence which is the essence
of the whole manifestation; and the quality of that essence
is that it absorbs all that is around it, and in time develops
so that it will merge into its own element, which is the
divine.
The soul going towards manifestation which is still in
the angelic heavens is free from all the differences and
distinctions which are the conditions of the soul's life
on earth. The dual aspect starts even in the angelic heavens;
God alone is above duality; in all other conditions and
aspects of life this is to be seen; though it is more distinct
on the earth-plane. In the angelic heavens it is not distinguishable.
People often question if the angels are in touch with those
on earth; and the answer is that their life does not necessitate
any communication with human life on earth, except in the
case of some who are destined to perform a certain duty
on the earth.
It is mentioned in the ancient scriptures that angels
came with messages to the prophets of Beni Israel; but the
explanation of this from the metaphysical point of view
is quite different from what an ordinary person would imagine.
No man on earth is capable of communicating with the angels
in heaven, nor is an angel from heaven inclined to communicate
with man. But in the exceptional lives of the prophets what
happens is, that they rise above all the planes which keep
man removed from the angelic heavens, and by doing so they
are able to touch these heavens. And being charged with
the ever-glowing fire of inspiration from the angelic spheres,
where they come into touch with angels they descend to the
plane of the earth; and it is then that their words become
tongues of flame, as spoken of in the scriptures. This means
that every word of theirs becomes a torch given into the
hands of those who listen, to illuminate their paths through
life. Specially is this so in the lives of the Great Ones
who have given a divine message, a religion, to the world;
their souls have never been disconnected in any way with
the angelic world; and it is this current, which linked
their souls with the souls of the angels, that always kept
them in contact with both heaven and earth. The soul of
the prophet is therefore a link between heaven and earth;
it is a medium by which God's message can be received.
Then there are some spiritual souls who have had the
experience in their lives of having been helped or warned
by an angel. It is such souls who have kept a thread unbroken
which they brought with them from the angelic world; they
may be conscious of it or not, but there is a telegraphic
wire which connects their souls with the souls of the angels,
and they are conscious of having had contact with the angels.
Common disease is called normal health; when many cannot
experience something which is rare, they think the person
who can experience such a rare thing has gone mad. Therefore
it is the law of the mystics to see all things, to experience
all things, either of heaven or earth, and yet to say little;
for the souls incapable of understanding the possibility
of their reach will ridicule them.
There is another aspect of the contact with the angels,
and that is at the time of death. Many have seen in their
lives the angels of death, yet when death's call comes some
have seen them in human form. Others have not seen them,
but have heard them speak. The reason is that there are
some souls who have already departed from the earth-plane,
though the breath is still connecting the soul with the
body; and such souls experience the angelic spheres while
still on the earth at the time of their death. They see
angels clad in the form of their own imagination and hear
the words of the angels in their own language. The reason
is that a person who has lived on the earthly plane has
to clothe a being of the higher planes in earthly garments,
and to interpret the language of the higher spheres in his
own words. For instance, the angel Gabriel spoke to Moses
in the Hebrew language, and to Muhammad in Arabic. One would
ask, which was the language of the angel Gabriel, Arabic
or Hebrew? Neither Arabic nor Hebrew was the language of
Gabriel; His language was the language of the soul and the
soul knows the language of the soul; it is when a person
interprets what he hears, even to himself, that he clothes
the words he hears in his own language. When the Spirit
descended upon the twelve apostles they began to speak all
languages, and the meaning of this is, that when they were
inspired by the angelic world, by the divine Sun or the
Holy Ghost, they knew the language of languages; that is
they knew the language of the soul, which means that they
heard the voice of the soul before men spoke to them in
earthly words. They were able to hear the voice of every
soul through that inspiration. It would not give any special
credit to the apostles if one said they knew all the languages
in the world instantly; for there are people even now to
be found whose genius as linguists is so great that they
know more than twenty or thirty languages. There is only
one language, which may be called all languages and that
is the language of the soul. Before the illuminated soul
all souls stand as written letters.
The Guardian Angel is a term known to many. This angelic
protection comes to some souls on earth; souls who are walking
on the earth, and yet are linked in some way or other with
the heavenly spheres. Often one sees an innocent child being
saved from an accident; and often a person is warned to
save a child at the moment when it is in danger. This guardian
angel also appears in the same form as the angels sent to
people on various duties. There are recording angels, who
take a record of our good and bad actions; and the most
interesting thing is that those who keep the record of the
good actions do not keep the record of the bad actions.
Those who keep a record of the bad actions are other angels;
and there is a further explanation given by the prophet
on this subject: that often a discussion takes place between
those who keep a record of the good deeds and those who
record the evil deeds. The former do not believe in the
evil deeds because they are only conscious of man's goodness;
they cannot believe that one who is good can be bad also.
Also those who record the good points want their record
to be filled and the other angels want their record to be
filled, and so there is a great rivalry between them. Is
this not the condition which we see in human nature? There
is no person living on earth of whom all say good things;
and there is no person living about whom all say bad things
and no one says any good; and the most interesting point
for a keen observer of life is how each tries to prove his
argument to be correct.
In Sufi terms these two are called the angels of Khair
and of Khar, and the difference in the spelling is
very small. This suggests how little difference there is
between goodness and badness. As Omar Khayyam says:
A hair perhaps divides the false and true;
Yes, and a single Alif were the clue,
Could you but find it – to the treasure house,
And, peradventure, to the Master too.
The ancient belief is that immediately after a dead person
is buried these two kinds of angels come to his grave with
their records and dispute about him. But do we not see in
human nature the same thing? People do not even wait until
after death; they begin to say things about the people they
know, about their friends and foes, and dispute about them
even during their lifetime. The ancient belief was that
after a dead person is put into his grave and buried, two
angels come to ask him questions, and by this cross examination
to prove their arguments for and against. Their names are
Munkir and Nakir. There is a story in the
Bible that Jacob wrestled with an angel all night; and before
the breaking of the dawn Jacob won, and the angels asked
his name, blessed him, and gave him a new name. The interpretation
of this is that the illuminated souls of the angels coming
into contact with earthly beings are in conflict, and that
conflict ends when man has given up his earthly point of
view and has adopted the heavenly point of view. Then there
is no more conflict, but a blessing. And the asking of the
name is a paradox, for when once the false ego is crushed,
the soul does not know what its real name is; for the old
name belongs to the false ego, and he is given the true
name, Israel, the great Name of God. In reality there is
only one kind of angel; but their relation with human beings,
and their desire to experience life through human beings,
divides them into nine degrees. Then there is a belief that
there are angels who are the inhabitants of heaven, and
others who live in the contrary place; Those of the heaven
are called Nur, light, and the others Nar
which means fire in Arabic. This is an extreme point of
view; in reality, they can be distinguished as two kinds,
Jalal and Jamal, Angels of Power and Angels
of Beauty. A question arises as to why the angels who descend
on earth as angels do not come as human beings, for every
human being was originally an angel. The angels who are
related with human beings are souls now in the angelic world,
and they keep connection with human beings because of their
wish; and now that they have returned from the earthly regions
to the angelic heavens, they still keep in touch with the
earth, either being on a certain duty or because of their
own pleasure.
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The angelic spheres, the highest heavens, are the spheres
of light which are called Nur; and that current of power
which runs through the divine Sun causes rays to spread,
each ray being an angel or a soul. It is the divine current,
which is really Nafs, the breath, or the ego. Breath
is the ego, and ego is the breath. When the breath has left
the body, the ego has gone. The nature of this current,
which spreads as a ray and which is a life current, is to
collect and to create. It collects the atoms of the sphere
through which it is running; and it creates out of itself
all that it can create. Therefore in the angelic heavens,
which is the sphere of radiance, the soul collects the atoms
of radiance. A Sufi poet of Persia has given a most beautiful
expression of this idea in a verse: 'A glow garbed with
a flame came.' Before the angels were conceived by artists
in the form of human beings they were symbolized as burning
lamps; from this comes the custom of lighting candles in
religious services, showing thereby to some extent what
the angels were like before they became human souls.
In the ancient scriptures it is mentioned that human
beings produced angels by their virtues; but this is only
a symbolical expression; it is not that human beings produced
angels by their virtues, but that their virtues lifted their
souls to the angels. One may ask, 'If the souls who have
settled in the angelic heaven are angels, then what makes
them come to the earth? The answers that it is not the angels
who have settled in the angelic heaven who come to the earth;
for these rays have finished their creative power in manifesting
as angels. If they had had a greater power they would certainly
have gone farther, even to the physical plane, and would
preferably have manifested as human beings; for the desire
of every soul is to reach the culmination in manifestation,
and that culmination is the stage of the human plane.
It is the work of the souls who return from the earth
to communicate with the earth very often, and it is such
angels who are generally known to man. Angels, who have
never manifested as men on earth, only experience life on
earth by the medium of other minds and bodies which by their
evolution come closer to the angelic heavens. They take
these as their instruments, and at times reflect themselves
in them, and at times have them reflected in themselves.
This is not obsession, but inspiration.
Souls in the angelic heavens live as a breath. The soul
in its nature is a current; a current the nature of which
is to envelop itself with all that may come along and meet
it on its way. The soul collects all that comes to it; therefore
it becomes different from its original condition. Yet in
its real being the soul is a vibration, the soul is a breath,
the soul is intelligence, and the soul is the essence of
the personality.
The question very often arises, If an angel comes from
above, does it descend outwardly before a person; or, manifest
within a person in the heart?' The 'lift' which brings a
soul down and takes it back to heaven is situated within;
that 'lift' is the breath; the soul comes to earth with
the breath, and with the same breath it returns. Those among
human beings who are not even aware of their own breath,
how can they know who comes within themselves and who goes
out? Many seem wide-awake to the life without, but asleep
to the life within; and though the chamber of their heart
is continually visited by the hosts of heaven, they do not
know their own heart; they are not there.
There is a very interesting story told in the Arabic
scriptures. It is that God made Iblis the chief among the
angels, and then told him to bring some clay that he might
make out of it an image. The angels, under the direction
of Iblis, brought the clay and made an image; then God breathed
into that image, and asked the angels to bow before it.
All the angels bowed; but Iblis said, 'Lord, Thou hast made
me chief of all angels, and I have brought this clay at
Thy command, and made with my own hands this image which
Thou commandest me to bow before.' The displeasure of God
arose and fell on his neck as the sign of the outcast.
This story helps us to understand what Jesus Christ meant
when He said, 'Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit
the earth.' What Iblis denied was the reflection of God
in man; and one can observe the same law in every direction
of life. A person may be rich in wealth or high in position,
but he still must obey the policeman; it is not the rank
and wealth which the latter has, but in him is reflected
the power of the government, and when a man takes no heed
of the policeman, he refuses to obey the law of the state.
In everything small or great it is the same law; and in
every person there is a spark of this tendency of Iblis;
the tendency which we know as egotism, the tendency to say,
'No, I will not listen; I will not give in; I will not consider.
Because of what? Because of 'I'; because 'I am.' 'But there
is only one 'I' – the perfect 'I'. He is God, whose power
is mightier than any power existing in the world, whose
position is greater than that of anyone; and He shows it
in answer to the egotistic tendency of man, who is limited.
This is expressed in the saying, 'Man proposes, but God
disposes.' It is this thought which teaches man the virtue
of resignation, which shows him that the 'I' he creates
is a much smaller 'I', and that there is no comparison between
this 'I' and the 'I' of the great Ego, God.
Another story tells how frightened the soul was when
it was commanded to enter the body of clay; it was most
unwilling, not from pride, but from fear. The soul, whose
nature is freedom, whose dwelling-place is heaven, whose
comfort it is to be free and to dwell in all the spheres
of existence, for that soul to dwell in a house made of
clay, was most terrifying. Then God asked the angels to
play and sing, and the ecstasy that was produced in the
soul by hearing that music made it enter the body of clay
where it became captive to death.
The interpretation of this idea is, that the soul, which
is pure intelligence and angelic in its being, had not the
least interest in dwelling in the physical plane, which
robs it of its freedom and makes it limited. But what interested
the soul, and made it come into the body, is what this physical
world offers to the senses; and this produces such an intoxication
that it takes away for the moment the thought of heaven
from the soul and so the soul becomes captive in the physical
body. What is Cupid? Is not Cupid the soul? It is the soul;
the angel going towards manifestation, the angel which has
arrived at its destination, the human plane; and before
it manifests there is Cupid.
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The soul, which has passed through the angelic heavens
in its descent to earth, comes next into the sphere of the
Jinn or genius. This is the sphere of mind, and may be called
the spiritual sphere, for it is mind and soul which make
spirit. The souls who halt in this sphere, being attracted
by its beauty, settle there; also the souls who have no
power to go further into outer manifestation become the
inhabitants of this sphere. Therefore there are three kinds
of souls who touch this sphere on their way to manifestation:
the souls who are attracted to this sphere, and who decide
to remain there; the souls who are unable to go farther,
and who have to settle there; and the souls who are continuing
their journey towards the earth-plane, and who are there
on their way to the earth.
The jinn is an entity with a mind; but not a mind like
that of man; a mind more pure, more clear, and illuminated
by the light of intelligence. The mind of the jinn is deeper
in perception and in conception, because it is empty, not
filled with the thoughts and imaginations as is that of
man. It is the mind of the jinn which may be called the
'empty cup'; a cup into which knowledge can be poured, in
which there is accommodation. It is for this reason that
the Teachers on the spiritual path appreciate the quality
of the jinn in the minds of their pupils, in which they
find accommodation for knowledge. A cup which is already
filled, or even partly filled, does not give free accommodation
for that knowledge which the Teacher wishes to pour into
the heart of his pupil. As the jinns are keen in perception
and conception so they are keen in expression either in
word or deed. The action of the jinn extends as far as the
mind can reach; and the word of the jinn reaches even farther
than the voice, for it takes as its route the mental sphere
which is above the airwaves.
The jinn comes closer to man than the angel; for in the
jinn there is something like the mind which is completed
in man. All the intuitive and inspirational properties are
possessed by the jinn, because that is the only source that
the jinn have of receiving its knowledge. Subjects such
as poetry, music, art, inventive science, philosophy and
morals are akin to the nature of the jinn. The artist, the
poet, the musician and the philosopher show in their gifts
throughout their lives the heritage of the jinn. The words
genius and jinn come from a Sanskrit word Jnana,
which means knowledge. The jinns. Therefore, are the beings
of knowledge; whose hunger is for knowledge, whose joy is
in learning, in understanding, and whose work is in inspiring,
and bring light and joy to others. In every kind of knowledge
that exists, the favorite knowledge to a jinn is the knowledge
of truth, in which is the fulfillment of its life's purpose.
The sphere of the jinn is the universe of minds. It may
be called a mental world; and yet the soul is with the mind.
The soul with the mind is called spirit, and therefore it
may also be called a spiritual world. The questions, 'What
are the jinns like? What do they look like?' may be answered
in the same way as in explaining the forms of angels: that
things are not always as they are, but as we see them. Man
always pictures the beings he imagines and cannot see with
his physical eyes as something like himself; or man's imagination
may gather together different forms: for instance, wings
from the birds. Horns from the oxen, hooves from horses
and paws from tigers. He puts them all together and makes
a new form.
It is beyond possibility to explain exactly what the
jinn looks like. And yet there is no being who lives without
a form. There is much that can be said in support of man's
imagination, which pictures the angels or jinn more or less
in the form of man. For everything in the world proves on
examination that it is striving to culminate in the form
of man. Rocks, trees, fruits, flowers, mountains and clouds,
all show a gradual development towards the image of man.
A keen observer of nature will prove this a thousand times;
there is everything in the world to support this argument.
Every form shows either a part of the human form or an undeveloped
outline of it. As it is with material things and with the
lower creation, so it is that even the form of the jinn
and the angel is growing towards the human form. It is this
idea which is expressed in the words of the scriptures.
'We have made man in our own image.' If I were to add a
word of explanation I would say, 'We have made all forms
in order to complete the image of man. 'The world of the
jinns is the world of mind; yet the minds of the jinns are
not so developed as the minds of men. The reason for this
is that the experience of life on the earth completes the
making of mind. In the world of the jinns the mind is only
a design, an outline; a design which is not yet embroidered.
'What is the occupation of the jinns? What does the world
of the jinns look like? One may give a thousand explanations,
but nothing can explain it fully. For instance, if a person
were to ask me what China looks like, I would say, 'Most
wonderful, most interesting,' but if he said, 'What is wonderful
in China?' I would say, 'Go and take a tour through China
in order that you may see it fully.'
We have not adequate words to explain what the jinn is
like, or what the world of the jinn is; but what little
can be said that it is a world of music, art, poetry; a
world of intelligence, cheerfulness and joy; a world of
thought, imagination and sentiment; a world that a poet
would long for and a musician would crave to dwell in. The
life of the jinn is an ideal life for a thinker; a life
which is free from all illness, pure from all bitterness
of human nature, free to move about through space without
any hindrance. This sphere is a most joyful place, where
the sun of intelligence shines; where the trouble of birth
and death is not so severe, life not so short as on the
earth. If there is any paradise it is the world of the jinn.
Hindus have called it Indra-Loka, and picture
Gandharvas and Apsaras to be there; it is a paradise,
of which every prophet has spoken to his followers in the
way in which they could understand it.
The question, how does a prophet know of this? May be
answered by saying that the soul of the prophet is like
a fruit which by its weight touches the ground; it has not
dropped on to the earth like other fruits; it is still connected
with the branch to which it is attached, the branch which
droops through all the planes of existence; and so he, in
his experience of the different planes, so to speak, touches
all worlds. It is this mystery which is hidden behind the
life of the prophet. It is through this branch that the
fruit is connected with the stem. Therefore, though on earth,
he calls aloud the name of God. While to many God is an
imagination, to him God is the reality.
v
The soul is a current. We may call it an electric current,
yet one unlike the electric current we know on this physical
plane, different from it in its power and phenomena; a current
which runs more speedily then anything we know; a current
which is beyond time and space; a current which runs through
all the planes of life. If manifestation is the breath of
God, souls are breaths of God. According to the conception
of the Yogi, there is one Breath, and there are many breaths.
The one, or central, Breath is called by Yogis Prana,
and all other breaths which have a certain part to play
in the mechanism of the human body are lesser breaths; and
again Prana and all other breaths when put together make
one Breath, which man calls life. Souls therefore are the
different breaths of God. This idea may be pictured as a
tree which has a stem and various branches; each branch
in its place representing the stem.
The elements of every sphere are different. Just as the
air, the water and the earth of every part of the world
are different in their effect upon the human being. So the
atoms of every plane are different; their nature and character
are as different as their effect. Therefore the form of
the angel cannot be compared in any way with the form of
the jinn; neither can the form of the jinn be compared with
the form of man, for the atoms of which the jinn is made
belong to another sphere.
A man who is accustomed to physical forms cannot very
well grasp the idea of the forms of the jinns. This shows
us that the soul shoots forth and functions in a body which
that particular sphere offers it. The heavens, for instance,
offer that luminous body to the soul which in the Sufi term
is called Nur, because heaven consists of luminous atoms;
it is all illumination. It was recognition of that angelic
body in the Buddha which caused his disciples to make the
statue of Buddha in gold. Often artists have had the conception
of painting angels in gold, for gold represents light.
The soul that goes as far as the sphere of the jinn as
a current coming from the heavens functions in a body of
the sphere of jinn. The question is, a soul which comes
from the heavens, through the world of angels, does it come
to the world of the jinns without a body? It comes with
a body, the angelic body; yet it becomes necessary for the
soul coming with the angelic body into the world of jinns
to adopt a body of that particular world in order to withstand
the weather of that plane. Animals which live in cold countries
have a different skin from those that live in a tropical
climate. That is the condition for going into any other
sphere. Even if a person were journeying, going from a tropical
country to another tropical country, and on the way he had
to pass through a cold climate, he would need suitable garments
for that climate. The body is a garment of the soul; the
soul wears this garment in order to stand the conditions
of that particular sphere.
Souls which are passing through the sphere of the jinns
towards the physical plane, and who do not stop in that
sphere, meet with other travelers who are on their journey
back home, and they learn from them a great many things.
There is give and take, there is buying and selling, there
is learning and teaching; but who teaches the most? The
one with most experience, the one who is going back home.
This latter gives the map of the journey to the soul
traveling towards manifestation. It is from this map that
the traveling soul strikes his path rightly or wrongly.
One soul may have one kind of instruction, another soul
may have another kind; one soul may be clear, another may
be confused. Yet they all go forward as the travelers of
a caravan, taking with them all the precious information,
all the things which they have learned from the others on
the journey.
It is for this reason that every child born on earth
possesses, besides what he has inherited from his parents
and ancestors, a power and knowledge quite peculiar to himself
and different from that which his parents and ancestors
possessed; yet he knows not whence he received it, or who
gave him the knowledge; but he shows from the beginning
of his life on earth signs of having known things which
he has never been taught.
One soul is more impressionable than another, one soul
is perhaps more impressed by the angelic heavens, and that
impression has remained more deeply with it throughout the
whole journey; another is more impressed by the sphere of
the jinns, and that impression lasts through the whole journey.
Then there is another soul who is not deeply impressed with
the angelic heavens or the world of the jinn, and that soul
does not know of these worlds; he comes through blindly,
and is only interested in things of the earth when he reaches
it.
One generally finds among artists, poets, musicians,
thinkers, as well as among philosophers, great politicians
and inventors, souls of the world of the jinns, who have
brought with them to the earth some deep impression which
causes them in their lives to be what men term great geniuses.
Impression is a great phenomenon in itself: as a man thinketh
so is he.
And what does man think? He thinks of that with which
he is most impressed; and whatever he is most impressed
with he himself is. Do we not see in our life on earth that
people, who are deeply impressed with a certain personality,
wish, thought, or feeling, become in time the same? If this
is true, what is man? Man is his impression. The soul impressed
deeply in the world of the jinns by some personality coming
back from the earth, an impression deeply engraved upon
that soul, which it can never throw away, certainly becomes
that personality with which it is impressed. Suppose a soul
is impressed in the world of the jinn with the personality
of Beethoven; when born on earth he is Beethoven in thought,
feeling, tendency, inclination and knowledge. Only in addition
to that personality he has the heritage of his parents and
of his ancestors. As the son of a certain family is called
by the name of that family, so the impression of a certain
personality may rightfully be called by that name. Therefore
if Shankaracharya claims to be the reincarnation of Krishna,
there is every reason for his claim, and this theory stands
in support of it. Life from the beginning to the end is
a mystery. The deeper one dives in order to investigate
the truth the more difficulty one finds in distinguishing
what is called individuality. But it is not the aim of the
wise to hold on to individuality. Wisdom lies in understanding
the secret of individuality, its composition or its decomposition,
which resolves in the end onto one individuality, the individuality
of God. As it is written, 'There is one God; none exists
save He,'
Souls who are impressed in the world of the jinns by
the personalities of those they meet on their way towards
manifestation receive different kinds of impressions. Some
are deeply impressed by one personality, and some are slightly
impressed by one personality. Some souls receive many impressions
on that plane, and it is hardly distinguishable which impression
has more effect and which less. However, it is certainly
true that in reality one impression is predominant in every
soul. The soul, so to speak, conceives this impression;
an impression which is not only the outline of the personality
which impresses it, but is the very essence of that personality.
A soul cannot be compared with an object, for the soul is
all the life there is; therefore it not only takes an impression
like a photographic plate, but it becomes nurtured by it.
The soul is creative; therefore it expresses all that it
has absorbed on its way.
The question whether a jinn is sent on earth on a mission
to human beings, may be answered by saying that whether
it be angel, jinn or man, all are intended to play their
part in the scheme of working of the whole universe; and
all are used by the wisdom of God for the purpose for which
they were created. No doubt the angels are primarily for
the angelic heavens and the jinns for the sphere of the
jinn, yet in a house the inhabitants of the second or third
floor are sometimes sent to the ground floor on an errand
when it is necessary. The most remarkable thing that one
notices in all those planes of existence is that the beings
of these separate planes are not imprisoned there by the
Creator. They become captive themselves, just as a man who
lives in a village passes his whole life in the same place,
and when he is told of the history of the neighboring county
it is another world to him. He never tries to leave his
village, and the neighboring county is foreign to him. He
has heard the name of the next village all through his life.
But he has never tried to visit it.
It is this nature of the soul which arises from its ignorance
that limits that which is, in point of fact, limitless.
How does the soul of a jinn communicate with human beings
on earth? It focuses itself upon the heart of man, and experiences
all that the man experiences, and knows all that the man
knows. It is easy for a jinn to do this, because its mind
is clear like crystal, and it can accommodate and reflect
all that falls within its range of vision.
One might ask, 'If the souls on their return journey
from the earth give their experience to the souls coming
from above, what do the souls coming from above give to
the souls on their return journey?' They can do a great
deal too; for they know the forgotten ways through which
they have recently traveled, and the laws and customs of
the way that the souls on the return journey need to learn.
Besides this they give to them that light and life which
is necessary to those worn out and withered souls, who have
probably given most of themselves to the ever-robbing and
consuming plane of the earth. In this way a man is helped
towards his goal by the soul he meets on his own return
journey.
The question in what manner the jinns can help man on
the earth may be answered by saying that they are capable
of inspiring man, not with a definite knowledge of things.
But with the sense of the knowledge; especially of the knowledge
of art, beauty, tone and rhythm; with knowledge of the inventive
nature, and sometimes with a sense of knowledge that might
help to accomplish great things in life. But though they
meet as inhabitants of different countries, who do not know
the language, it is the language of the heart which becomes
the medium of communication; heart talks to heart, and soul
speaks to soul.
checked 18-Oct-2005