As man grows through the inner life, so he feels a freedom
of thought, speech and action which comes as a natural course
through his spiritual journey. And the reason why this freedom
comes and whence it comes can be explained by the fact that
there is a spirit of freedom hidden within man, covered
by outward conventionalities. When man grows out of the
outward conventionalities, then the spirit of freedom, which
was closed in so far, becomes manifest.
The laws given to humanity are given by those far from
such laws, the Elder Ones. As for children, certain laws,
certain rules are necessary, so those who have not yet evolved
to look at life from the higher point of view are fixed
under certain laws which are taught to them as religion;
and these are as necessary for mankind as the rules given
to the children in the home. If there were no rules given,
the children would become unruly; but when the children
become grown-up, then they begin to see for themselves the
reason why rules were given to them and the benefit that
these rules were to them; then they can make such rules
for themselves as suit them best.
The inner life helps a soul to grow up; when the soul
evolves from subjection to mastery, then it makes rules
for itself. In the East, therefore, no one tries to criticize
a spiritual person; no one stands up to judge his action
or to accuse him of something which he himself calls wrong.
For this reason Jesus Christ has said, 'Judge not'. But
this teaching has been given to point out that 'judge not'
applies to your equal; for the one who is still more advanced
no one can judge. When man has the tendency to judge one
more advanced then himself, the consequence is that spiritual
advancement deteriorates; because however advanced he may
be those who have not yet advanced pull him down. Therefore
humanity, instead of going forward, goes backward. What
happened in the case of Jesus Christ? He was judged. The
liberated soul, the soul that was made free by divine nature,
was judged at the court of man. The less advanced men considered
themselves sufficiently learned to judge Christ, and not
only to judge, but also to give sentence.
In whatever period of civilization, therefore, the tendency
has shown itself to judge the one who is advanced, there
has always come a collapse of the whole civilization. Sarmad,
a great Sufi saint who lived in Gwalior, was asked by the
Emperor Aurangzeb to attend the mosque, for it was against
the rules of the time that anyone kept away from the regular
prayers which took place in the mosque of the State. Sarmad,
being a man of ecstasy, living every moment of his day and
night in union with God, being God-conscious himself, perhaps
forgot or refused. A certain time of prayer or a certain
place for prayer to him was nothing; every place to him
was a place of prayer; every time was a time of prayer;
his every breath was a prayer. As he refused to attend prayers
he was beheaded for breaking the rules which were made for
everyone. The consequence was that the Mogul Empire declined
and its downfall can be dated from that time; the entire
Mogul civilization, unique in its period, fell to pieces.
The Hindus have always known this philosophy, for the
reason that they had a perfect religion, a religion in which
one aspect of God was characterized as human; and their
various Devas are nothing but various characteristics of
human nature, each of them adored and worshipped. In this
way not only God, but the whole human nature in all its
aspects, was adored and worshipped. It is that which makes
the Hindu religion perfect. When people say, 'This place
is sacred, and that other place is not sacred; that particular
thing is holy, and all other things not holy,' in this way
they divide life into many pieces, the life which is one,
the life which cannot be divided.
Therefore those who rise above the ordinary conventionalities
of life by their inner development come to another consciousness.
For them worldly laws are the laws for the children. Those
who begin to see this difference between the laws they set
before themselves and the laws that are observed by mankind,
at first sometimes condemn and then disregard the common
laws. They criticize them, and ask, 'What is it all for?'
But those who come to the fuller realization of the inner
laws, show respect even for the laws of the children; knowing
that they are the laws for the children and not for
the grown-up yet they respect them, for they know that it
cannot be otherwise. The laws which they know can only manifest
to the one whose soul rises to that realization; but before
that soul rises it must have some law by which to live in
harmony. Therefore advanced souls regard such laws with
respect, and observe them when they are in the community.
They do not condemn them; they will not criticize them.
They realize that harmony is the principal thing in life,
and that we cannot be happy through life if we cannot harmonize
with all those around us. Whatever be our grade of evolution,
whatever be our outlook on life, and whatever be our freedom,
we must have regard for the laws of the majority.
Now the question is, do those who are spiritually advanced
have any special conception of morals? Indeed they have;
and their morals are great morals, much greater than the
average human being can conceive. It is not that by becoming
free spiritually from the laws of the generality, they become
free from their own laws. They have their own laws to bind
them; and these are much higher and much greater laws. No
doubt their way of looking at things may be criticized and
may not be generally understood. Yet their law is more akin
to nature; their laws are in harmony with the spirit. Their
laws have their effect as phenomena. And by regarding two
morals which are contrary to each other, the morals of the
generality and their own morals, they arrive at a plane
and a condition where their hands and feet are nailed. That
is the symbolical meaning of the nailing of Christ to the
cross.
checked 18-Oct-2005