During
his stay in England in 1931, when the Columbia Gramophone Company requested him
to make a record for them, Gandhi pleaded his inability to speak politics, and
added that, at the age of sixty two, he could make his first and last record
which should, if wanted, make his voice heard for all time.
Confessing
his anxiety to speak on the spiritual matters, on October 20, 1931 he read out
his old article “On God”: “There is an indefinable mysterious power that
pervades everything, I feel it though I do not see it. It is this unseen power
which makes itself felt and yet defies all proof, because it is so unlike all
that I perceive through my senses.
It
transcends the senses. But it is possible to reason out the existence of God to
a limited extent. Even in ordinary affairs we know that people do not know who
rules or why and how He rules and yet they know that there is a power that
certainly rules. In my tour last year in Mysore I met many poor villagers and I
found upon inquiry that they did not know who ruled Mysore. They simply said
some God ruled it. If the knowledge of these poor people was so limited about
their ruler I who am infinitely lesser in respect to God than they to their
ruler need not be surprised if I do not realize the presence of God – the King
of Kings.
Nevertheless,
I do feel, as the poor villagers felt about Mysore, that there is orderliness
in the universe, there is an unalterable law governing everything and every
being that exists or lives. It is not a blind law, for no blind law can govern
the conduct of living being and thanks to the marvelous researches of Sir J. C.
Bose it can now be proved that even matter is life. That law then which governs
all life is God. Law and the law-giver are one. I may not deny the law or the
law-giver because I know so little about it or Him. Just as my denial or
ignorance of the existence of an earthly power will avail me nothing even so my
denial of God and His law will not liberate me from its operation, whereas humble
and mute acceptance of divine authority makes life’s journey easier even as the
acceptance of earthly rule makes life under it easier.
I
do dimly perceive that whilst everything around me is ever changing, ever dying
there is underlying all that change a living power that is changeless, that
holds all together, that creates, dissolves and recreates. That informing power
of spirit is God, and since nothing else that I see merely through the senses
can or will persist, He alone is. And is this power benevolent or malevolent ?
I see it as purely benevolent, for I can see that in the midst of death life
persists, in the midst of untruth truth persists, in the midst of darkness
light persists.
Hence
I gather that God is life, truth, light. He is love. He is the supreme Good.
But He is no God who merely satisfies the intellect, if He ever does. God to be
God must rule the heart and transform it. He must express himself in every
smallest act of His votary. This can only be done through a definite
realization, more real than the five senses can ever produce. Sense perceptions
can be and often are false and deceptive, however real they may appear to us.
Where there is realization outside the senses it is infallible. It is proved
not by extraneous evidence but in the transformed conduct and character of
those who have felt the real presence of God within. Such testimony is to be
found in the experiences of an unbroken line of prophets and sages in all
countries and climes. To reject this evidence is to deny oneself.
This
realization is preceded by an immovable faith. He who would in his own person
test the fact of God’s presence can do so by a living faith and since faith
itself cannot be proved by extraneous evidence the safest course is to believe
in the moral government of the world and therefore in the supremacy of the
moral law, the law of truth and love. Exercise of faith will be the safest
where there is a clear determination summarily to reject all that is contrary
to truth and love. I confess that I have no argument to convince through
reason. Faith transcends reason. All that I can advise is not to attempt the
impossible.”
No comments:
Post a Comment