The
Divine Truth – Its Name and Form THE divine truth at the heart of things, people have called by all kinds of names, everyone presenting it from his own angle of experience. But always it is the one Reality. There are millions of ways leading towards it; but one thing is certain, you can find it, whatever the way you follow, what-ever the form you give it: the result is the same, the final experience is identical. If all have touched the thing, they touch the same thing always. And the proof that they have touched the thing is that it is the same for all; if it is not the same thing, then they have not touched it. You can give it any name you like: a name is only a word. What
is the value of a word, after all? Have you not noticed that there are people
who do not understand you, however clearly you speak to them. There are others
again who understand you if you utter only two words. The external form – the
sound of a word – has a meaning, if there is a force of thought behind; the
greater the force of thought, the more powerful and precise and clear it is,
and greater the chance of people receiving the force and understanding the word
that carries the force. But if someone speaks without thinking, usually it is
impossible to understand him; he would seem to you to make only a noise. You
must have noticed also that people who have lived together and are habituated
to each other's thought and talk, do not require any definition of the words
they use or even a large use to understand each other. There has been a mental
adjustment and the words are only an excuse for the inner contact, the contact
between brain and brain which underlies or even precedes the words.
Page – 316 But when you meet a new person, it takes you time to adapt and adjust yourself to understand the words he uses. It is the meaning, the thought behind the word that is important. When the thought is powerfully thought, it produces a vibration of which the word is only a carrier, an intermediary. Indeed, you can develop the thought-power to such an extent that you are able to establish a direct material contact with the minimum or even no words at all. Naturally this requires a strong power of concentration. But you will find that the bodily mechanism is only a mechanical means; it is an instrument, but not always important or indispensable. When
we are conscious of the Divine, do we see Him in all things in some particular
form? You
expect to see a divine form in each and all things? It may happen so. But I am
not sure; I have the impression that there is a large part of imagination in
such experiences. You may, for example, see the form of
Page – 317 essence of the experience:
the form gives after all a limitation to the experience, takes away from it its
universality and a large measure of its power.
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