THE HOUR OF GOD

 

SRI AUROBINDO

 

Contents

 

Pre Content

 

Post Content

 

 

I. The Hour of God

4. The Simultaneous and Successive Teaching

The Hour of God

5. The Training of the Senses

Certitudes

6. Sense-Improvement by Practice

Hymn to The Mother of Radiances

7. The Training of the Mental Faculties

 

8. The Training of the Logical Faculty

II. Evolution - Psychology - The Supermind

The National Value of Art

Man a Transitional Being

 

Evolution

VII. Premises of Astrology

Psychology

Chapter I - Elements

Consciousness - Psychology

Chapter II

The Supermind

Chapter III - The Planets

The Seven Suns of the Supermind

 

The Divine Plan

VIII. Reviews

The Tangle of Karma

Mr. Tilak's Book on the Gita

 

Hymns to The Goddess

III. On Yoga

South Indian Bronzes

The Way

About Astrology

The Web of Yoga

Sanskrit Research

Purna Yoga

Rupam

The Supramental Yoga

The Feast of Youth

The Divine Superman

Shama'a

 

God, The Invisible King

IV. Thoughts and Aphorisms

 

Jnana

IX. Dayananda - Bankim - Tilak - Andal - Nammalwar

Karma

Dayananda

Bhakti

Rishi Bankim Chandra

Words of The Master

Bal Gangadhar Tilak

 

A Great Mind, A Great Will

V. Essays Divine And Human

The Men that Pass

Sat

Andal

The Secret of Life - Ananda

Nammalwar

Life

 

The Silence Behind Life

X. Historical Impressions

The Secret Truth

The French Revolution

The Real Difficulty

Napoleon

Towards Unification

Notes on Bergson

The Psychology of Yoga

 

China, Japan and India

XI. Notes From the "Arya"

 

"Arya" - Its Significance

VI. Education and Art

The "Arya's" Second Year

A Preface on National Education

The "Arya's" Fourth Year

A System of National Education :

The News of the Month

1. The Human Mind

 

2. The Powers of the Mind

Bibliographical Notes

3. The Moral Nature

 

 

 

The Supramental Yoga

 

                        ALL Yoga done through the mind alone or through the heart or the will or the vital force or the body ends in some one aspect of the infinite and eternal Existence and rests satisfied there, as the mind imagines for ever. Not through these alone shall thy Yoga move, but through all these at once and, supremely, through that which is beyond them. And the end of thy Yoga shall be the integrality of thy entrance not into one aspect, but into all the Infinite, all the Eternal, all the Divine in all its aspects indivisibly unified together.
         Whatever is beyond mind and life and body is spirit. But spirit can be realised even on these lower levels, in the spiritualised mind, in the spiritualised life-force, even in the spiritualised physical consciousness and body. But if thou rise not up beyond the mind-level, then in these realisations the spirit must needs be modified by the medium through which thou attainest to it, and its supreme truth can only be seized in a reflection, partial even in widest apparent universality, and the utmost essential integrality will escape thy seizure.
         Rise rather into the supramental levels and then all the rest shall remain a part of thy experience, but wonderfully changed, transfigured by a supreme alchemy of consciousness into an element of the supramental glory. All that other Yogas can give thee, thou shalt have, but as an experience overpassed, put in its place in the Divine Whole and delivered from the inadequacy of an exclusive state or experience.

        The Supramental Yoga is at once an ascent towards God and a descent of Godhead into the embodied nature.
The ascent can only be achieved by a one-centred all-gathering upward aspiration of the soul and mind and life and body; the descent can only come by a call of the whole being towards the infinite and eternal Divine. If this call and this aspiration are

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there, or if by any means they can be born and grow constantly and seize all the nature, then and then only a supramental uplifting and transformation becomes possible. ,
        The call and the aspiration are only first conditions; there must be along with them and brought by their effective intensity an opening of all the being to the Divine and a total surrender.

        This opening is a throwing wide of all the nature on all its levels and in all its parts to receive into itself without limits the greater divine Consciousness which is there already above and behind and englobing this mortal half-conscious existence.
        In the receiving there must be no inability to contain, no breaking down of anything in the system, mind or life or nerve or body under the transmuting stress. There must be an endless receptivity, an always increasing capacity to bear an ever stronger and more and more insistent action of the divine Force. Otherwise nothing great or permanent can be done; the Yoga will end in a breakdown or an inert stoppage or a stultifying or a disastrous arrest in a process which must be absolute and integral if it is not to be a failure.
       But since no human system has this endless receptivity and unfailing capacity, the supramental Yoga can succeed only if the Divine Force, as it descends, increases the personal power and equates the strength that receives with the Force that enters from above to work in the nature. This is only possible if there is on our part a progressive surrender of the being into the hands of the Divine; there must be a complete and never-failing assent, a willingness to let the Divine Power do with us whatever is needed for the work that has to be done.
       Man cannot by his own effort make himself more than man; the mental being cannot by his own unaided force change himself into a supramental spirit. A descent of the Divine Nature can alone divinise the human receptacle.
      For the powers of our mind, life and body are bound to their own limitations and, however high they may rise or however widely expand, they cannot rise above their natural ultimate limits or expand beyond them. But still, mental man can open to what is beyond him and call down a supramental Light, Truth and Power to work in him and do what the mind cannot do. If

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mind cannot by effort become what is beyond mind, Supermind can descend and transform mind into its own substance.
           If the Supramental Power is allowed by man's discerning assent and vigilant surrender to act according to its own profound and subtle insight and flexible potency, it will bring about slowly or swiftly a divine transformation of our fallen and imperfect nature.
         This descent, this working is not without its possibility of calamitous fall and danger. If the human mind or the vital desire seizes hold on the descending force and tries to use it according to its own limited and erring ideas or flawed and egoistic impulses, - and this is inevitable in some degree until this lower mortal has learned something of the way of that greater immortal nature, - stumblings and deviations, hard and seemingly insuperable obstacles and wounds and suffering cannot be escaped and even death or utter downfall are not impossible. Only when the conscious integral surrender to the Divine has been learned by mind and life and body, can the way of the Yoga become easy, straight, swift and safe.
        And it must be a surrender and an opening to the Divine alone and to no other. For it is possible for an obscure mind or an impure life-force in us to surrender to undivine and hostile forces and even to mistake them for the Divine. There can be no more calamitous error. Therefore our surrender must be no blind and inert passivity to all influences or any influence, but sincere, conscious, vigilant, pointed to the One and the Highest alone.
       Self-surrender to the divine and infinite Mother, however difficult, remains our only effective means and our sole abiding refuge, - self-surrender to her means that our nature must be an instrument in her hands, the soul a child in the arms of the Mother.

This divinisation of the nature of which we speak is a metamorphosis, not a mere growth into some kind of super-humanity, but a change from the falsehood of our ignorant nature into the truth of God-nature. The mental or vital demi-God, the

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Asura, Rakshasa and Pisacha, - Titan, vital giant and demon, - are superhuman in the pitch and force and movement and in the make of their characteristic nature, but these are not divine and these are not supremely divine, for they live in a greater mind-power or life-power only, but they do not live in the supreme Truth, and only the supreme Truth is divine. Only those who live in a supreme Truth-Consciousness and embody it are inwardly made or else remade in the Divine image.
          The aim of the supramental Yoga is to change into this supreme Truth-Consciousness, but this truth is something beyond mind and this consciousness is far above the highest mind- consciousness. For truth of mind is always relative, uncertain and partial, but this greater Truth is peremptory and whole. Truth of mind is a representation, always an inadequate, most often a misleading representation, and even when most accurate, only a reflection, Truth's shadow and not its body. Mind does not live in Truth or only seeks after it and grasps at best some threads from its robe; the Supermind lives in Truth and its native substance, form and expression; it has not to seek after it, but possesses it always automatically and is what it possesses. This is the very heart of the difference.
             The change that is effected by the transition from mind to Supermind is not only a revolution in knowledge or in our power for knowledge. If it is to be complete and stable, it must be a divine transmutation of our will too, our emotions, our sensations, all our power of life and its forces, in the end even of the very substance and functioning of our body. Then only can it be said that the Supermind is there upon earth, rooted in its very earth-substance and embodied in. a new race of divinised creatures.
            Supermind at its highest reach is the divine Gnosis, the Wisdom-Power-Light-Bliss of God by which the Divine knows and upholds and governs and enjoys the universe.

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