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From Intellect to Intuition - Chapter Five - Stages in Meditation |
The third requirement is obedience to the Master. This is no
servile attention to the commands of some supposed hidden Teacher, or Master, functioning
mysteriously behind the scenes, as so many [97] schools of esotericism claim. It is much
simpler than that. The real Master, claiming our attention and subsequent obedience, is
the Master in the Heart, the Soul, the indwelling Christ. This Master first makes His
presence felt through the "still small voice" of conscience, prompting us to
higher and more unselfish living, and sounding a quick note of warning when there is
deviation from the strict path of rectitude. Later this comes to be known as the Voice of
the Silence, that word that comes from the "Word incarnate," which is ourselves.
Each of us is a Word made flesh. Later still, we call it the awakened intuition. The
student of meditation learns to distinguish accurately between these three. This
requirement, therefore, calls for that implicit obedience which the aspirant renders
promptly to the highest impulse which he can register at all times and at any cost. When
this obedience is forthcoming it calls forth from the soul a downpouring of light and
knowledge, and Christ points this out in the words: "If any man shall do his will, he
shall know..." (John 7, 17.) These three factors - obedience, a search for truth in every form, and a fiery longing for liberation - are the three parts of the stage of aspiration and must precede that of meditation. They need not be expressed in their fulness and completeness, but must be incorporated in the life as working rules of conduct. They lead to detachment, a quality which is emphasized both in the East and in the West. This is the freeing of the soul from the thralldom of the [98] form life, and the subordination of the personality to the higher impulses. Dr. Maréchal expresses the Christian intention along these lines as follows:
Here we have the subordination of the physical, emotional, and mental life to the divine project of achieving unity, emphasized, for capriciousness is a quality of the sensory apparatus, and pride that of the mind. The meditation process is divided into five parts, one part leading sequentially to another. We will take these various stages and study each of them separately, for in their mastery we can trace the steady ascent of the conscious spiritual man out of the realm of feeling into that of knowledge and then of intuitive illumination. These stages might be briefly enumerated as follows: [99]
These five stages, when followed, lead to union with the soul and direct knowledge of divinity. For the majority of those who take up the study of meditation, the stage which should engross their attention for a long time - practically to the exclusion of the others - is that of concentration, the gaining control of the mental processes. Aspiration is presumably present to some degree or there would be no desire to meditate. It should be pointed out, however, that aspiration avails nothing unless it is endorsed by a strong will, a capacity to endure, and patient persistence. |
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