Love is the Key

Man is so designed that he can derive ananda (bliss), and maintain it, only  through association with his kind. To divest oneself of all contacts with others and tread a lonely path is a sign of weakness, of fear, not of courage. Lively association alone produces morality, justice, compassion, sympathy, love, tolerance, equanimity, and many other qualities that toughen and train character and mold the personality of man. Culture is the consequence of the commingling of hearts and heads. A group of individuals who are charged with hatred or contempt of each other cannot produce any beneficial effect on any of its components. A common outlook, or rather a common inlook, is the essential factor. Sama-chintha—the sameness of beliefs, opinions, and attitudes —is the prime factor. This sama-chintha must result in a flood of bliss that envelops and enthuses the entire group. If the individual knows he is divine and that all others are equally so, that consciousness is the best bond of society; that ananda is the best atmosphere to sustain society. How can a person who knows that all are divine keep away from the God he recognizes? “I am he, he is I, and both I and he are kith and kin in Him.” This awareness is so thrilling, so satisfying, so uplifting that such society is the noblest sathsang (holy company) man can ever come into.

This Universe is enveloped in God

Shutting yourself in a room and offering incense and flowers to a picture or image of God, singing or reciting His glory, are very poor substitutes for the discipline that will liberate you from ignorance. All beings are images of God. All men are His pictures. Then why shut yourselves in? All creation is marching on a pilgrimage to Him. Why then behave as if you are trekking it alone? You believe that the time spent in church or temple or the domestic shrine in adoration and in ritual worship is devoted to God and the rest is spent for other purposes. But you cannot demarcate and delimit the realms of God and man like that. God is ever with you everywhere. “Vasudeva sarvam idam—All this is God.”

Society is the school where this lesson is taught to those who earnestly seek. The sages of this land resorted to the hermitages in the forests and mixed with the steadfast seekers there in scholastic discussion and disciplinary practices. They drew inspiration and instruction from each other and learned the Truth that God is the string on which the worlds are strung. “Isavasyam idam jagath—This universe is enveloped in God.” When man gives up his conceit and becomes nature’s pupil rather than her tyrannical master, he can hear her voice advising, admonishing, and illuminating.

Man has all the resources he needs in himself. He can tap them by identifying them and manifesting them, and by sharing them with others. He is sath, chith, and ananda (being, awareness, bliss); He is Shiva–Shakthi Swarupa (form of divine energy). When man extols himself, he is extolling God. Do not cultivate the conviction that you are mere men; be assured that you are destined for Divinity. When Divinity takes on human form as described in the Ramayana, the Mahabharatha, and the Bhagavatha (all ancient epics), one has to interpret the actions as providing examples and lessons, and not as human stories enacted for entertainment.

Mind must be a garden of flowers

The five Pandava brothers are five qualities in human character, all observing the norms set by the eldest, which is the noblest and the most righteous. Rama is the example of the uncompromising adherent of the principle of righteousness, whatever be the temptation to bypass it. Rama was charged with a love that transcended all considerations of advantage, caste, or creed, and that extended to animals, birds, and human beings. Love is the key to open the doors locked by egoism and greed.

If you allow your behavior toward others to be contaminated by contempt, scorn, cynicism, or hatred, then you are spoiling the fair name of India. Its culture and tradition will not tolerate it. It has proclaimed that God is One and that He is known and can be known through various names and forms. It has declared that God is installed in the heart of every being. Look at the emblem of the Sathya Sai Organization. It tells you that the Hindu, the Muslim, the Parsi, the Buddhist, and the Christian all adore the same God for the same consummation. The mind of man has to be a garden of many-colored flowers. Krishna will certainly delight in dancing there and playing on the enchanting flute in the bowers of that garden.

A heart saturated with love of God can never entertain thoughts of violence. It is sheer hypocrisy to kneel before God and then force men to kneel before you. God is love, God is peace, and God is strength. How can a person be in contact with God and yet be proud and acrimonious or agitated and angry? He is weak and vacillating, and his claim to be in contact with God is only a laughable foible; it cannot be true. A tree is judged by its fruit. Leaders of people have to develop this universal feeling of love and not limit it to political boundaries, which change from decade to decade, or to religious labels that are affixed and erased to suit temporary needs. For centuries, the prayer that rose from millions in this country, from all its temples, holy seafronts, shrines, and altars has been: Sarva janah sukhino bhavantu—“Let all the peoples of the world be happy and prosperous. Lokah samastha sukhino bhavantu—“May all the worlds have peace and prosperity.” So pray for all humanity, for the welfare and happiness, the peace and progress of Russia, China, Africa, Pakistan, all countries of the world, and all beings everywhere.

Source: Sathya Sai Speaks, Vol. XII

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