MYSTICISM: ITS NATURE AND FUNCTION
DR. P. NAGARAJA RAO
Professor
of Philosophy,
What
is mysticism? It is religion in the most acute, intense, and living sense. It
is an immediate awareness, a direct and intimate consciousness, of God. It is
religious experience, neither theological knowledge nor metaphysical
perspicacity. It is first hand knowledge, and not information derived second
hand. It is not a relational type of knowledge. It is the restful and living
contemplation of the Divine. It is ineffable. It is a bonafide
discovery of the ground of Reality and the goal of life.
Mysticism
is latent in the depths of the world’s sub-consciousness. It has developed
under the shade of every great religion, sometimes outside the church and at
times inside the church. It has a long and respectable intellectual ancestry in
the East as well as the West. In the East all the philosophical systems are the
results of the spiritual experience of the sages who propounded them. In the
West, on the contrary, many philosophers have refused to pass beyond the
frontiers of the mind. They look with suspicion at those systems that base
their doctrines on spiritual experience. The dominance
of the rational is the chief note in Western thought. In the words of Dr. Radhakrishnan, the Western tradition stands for critical
intelligence and the East for creative intuition. Some thinkers,
however, argue that Indian philosophers have accepted unreasoned intuition and
thus mixed up philosophy and religion. Students of the Indian system of
philosophy who have looked into the philosophical classics and the polemical
tracts know how much of subtle reasoning is present in the systems. The logical
acuteness present in the works, regales the most
ardent lover of logic and baffles the inexpert.
Mysticism,
in the first place, is realization. It is not mere knowing Brahman but
being Brahman. It is trans-intellectual and trans-relational. It is also self-evident. It cannot be
faithfully and adequately expressed in terms of human language. Only symbols
are to be employed. The Upanishad declares that mind and
speech return without comprehending it. The height is unscalable.
Another Upanishad compares it to lightning. Plato in the Seventh Epistle says:
“There is no writing of mine on this subject, nor ever shall be. It is not
capable of expression like other branches of study. If I thought these things
could be adequately written down and stated to the World, what finer occupation
could I have had in life than to write what would be of great service to
mankind?”
Mysticism
takes its stand on experience, not dogmas, creeds, or contingent fancies. It
rejects all the forms of external authority common to denominational, dogmatic,
and exclusive theologies, i. e., belief in an
infallible revelation or book, or an infallible church or prophet. It shifts
the centre of gravity in religion from authority to
experience. This makes mysticism place religion on an objective, empirical and
scientific basis. It is the bold and experimental approach to religion. This
insistence on experience as the ultimate testimony makes it rational. In the eloquent words of Dr. Radhakrishnan.
“It takes its stand on verifiable truth and not correct solutions of credal puzzles. It is not opposed to science or reason. It is not contingent on any event past or future. No scientific criticism or historical discovery can refute it, as it is not dependent on any impossible miracles or unique historical revelations. Its only apologetic is the testimony of spiritual experience. It is not committed to the authenticity of any documents or truth of any stories about the beginning of the world or prophecies of its end.”
In
the popular mind, mysticism is identified with and believed to consist in
locutions, weepings, trances, stigma, apparitions,
visions, and auditions. They are not the indispensable conditions of mysticism.
They are some of the passing stages, not the core. They represent only the
‘psychical aspect’ and not the ‘spiritual side, of mysticism in the words of
Mysticism
takes up the contemporary challenge to Religion, posed by Naturalism.
Naturalism regards the methods of religion as dogmatic and not scientific. The
mystic takes his stand on experience and not a mere dogma. Mysticism is based
on the experimental realization A Reality.
Another
enemy of spiritual religion is the dogmatic theologian. He claims exclusive,
total and special disclosure of divinity to him with the result, each prophet
abrogates the truths of the creeds other than his own. Each says, “Thou shalt have no other God but mine, no prophet but me.” A
sharply defined and fully described anthropomorphism is inconsistent with any catholocity of outlook. It does not tolerate any rival. No
other approach is approved. This leads to wars, proselytisms, conflicts, and
persecution. Enthusiasm is mis-spent in rivalling one another in the art of competitive indoctrination.
“It brutalizes men by its rites and shrivelling
terrors of superstition” and the practical record of its misdeeds is
depressing. Fundamentalism, intolerance, fanaticism, and bigotry are the
results of closed theologies.
The
spiritual religion of mystics avoids the pitfall of dogmatic theologies because
the Transcendent Reality cannot be described in any one form completely. It is
described differently by different men. The different pictures of God are the
different intellectual formulations of one indescribable Reality. None of them
is the exclusive picture of Reality. All are different attempts to represent
the one from different perspectives. Such a view promotes fellowship of faiths.
It makes for peace and makes impossible the cruelty practised
in the name of religion. The God of one religion does not conflict with the God
of another religion. There is no need for proselytism or persecution. Tolstoy
in his Confession writes: “I read and studied these books of traditional
religion and theology, and here is the feeling I have carried away from that
study. If I had not been led by life to the inevitable necessity of
faith; and if I had not seen that this faith formed the foundation of the life
of men; if this feeling, shattered by life, had not been strengthened anew in
my heart….if there were within me only the faith of which theology speaks, I,
after reading these books, not only would have turned atheist, but should have
become the malignant enemy of every faith, because I found in these doctrines
not only nonsense, but the conscious life of men who had chosen the faith as
the means for obtaining certain ends.” Elsewhere he writes, “I intended to go
to God and found my way into a stinking bog.” To the theologians he cries: “Go yourselves to your father, the devil….You are not speaking
of God, but of something else. The God of religion is not the God of dogmatic
theology.”
Swami
Vivekananda in one of his American addresses said
that the Upanishads and the Gita are the only scriptures that declare that “by
scripture alone we cannot attain Moksha.” .The
final authority is experience. “This Self-cannot be known by the study of the
Vedas, nor by intellect, nor even by much hearing the
sacred scriptures.” 1
Mysticism is not, as
some think, a mere way of feelings. It is not a matter of emotions or the
subject of psychology. It is not the experience of people who are highly
suggestible and have a disordered mind and an intemperate imagination. It is
not ‘the distressing appearance of entirely sophisticated and reflective
persons cudgelling themselves into an attitude of
lisping childishness.” Freud described religious experience as “an illusion and
as a mental comfort and rest, based on an infantile part of our nature. It is a
regress, a stepping back to the attitude of little children coming up against
the problems of life and death.” All these lines of attack are elaborations of
the criticism that mysticism is a subjective state of feeling.
Mysticism
is an attempt to realize the living God in the soul of man in thought, and
feeling. In the words of Goethe, “it is the scholastic of the heart, the
dialectic of the feelings.”
The mystics of the world exhibit a striking unanimity in their confessions. “They form an invariable brotherhood scattered through all lands and times. Though separated by space and time, they reach hands to each other and agree in saying that God and man are separated only in outer appearance, both are indissolubly one.” Dean Inge writes that “mysticism is singularly uniform in all times and places. The communion of the soul with God has found much the same expression whether the mystic is a Neo-Platonic Philosopher like Plotinus, or a Mohammadan Sufi, or a Catholic Monk, or a Quaker. Mysticism which is the living heart of religion springs from a deeper level than the differences which divide the churches, the cultural changes which divide the ages of history.”
It
is not purely subjective. It is the genuine discovery of an object and is not
opposed to reason though it transcends it. It is not discontinuous with
knowledge. It is the concentration of all faculties, will, intellect and
feeling, upon God. It is the logic of the whole personality that is at work and
not the mere reason.” “The human mind,” says Macarius, “is the throne of Godhead.”
The Cambridge Platonist, Whichcote, writes to Tweckney: “I oppose not rational to the spiritual. The
spirit of man is the candle of the Lord.” The author of the Gita asks us to
take resort in the Buddhi. McTaggart writes that a mysticism which ignores the claims
of understanding is doomed.
The
mystic’s knowledge has none of the limitations of sense or rational knowledge.
It transcends them. It is not ‘contrological’. It is
called Saksatkara, Samyag-darsana,
sub specie etemitatis view. Among
the seven gifts of the spirit, wisdom and understanding are prominent.
“Mysticism is reverent thought and not unrestrained feeling.” It is true
integral knowledge. It transforms men into little Gods and makes them work hard
for the establishment of the world-community. The mystics possess greater power
than normal men.
Another
criticism is that the mystics are an indolent lot and lazy. We can see that
this is not true when we consider the great work of the active mystics, the
crusaders of God. They incorporate and incarnate the values of religion in the
life and the institutions of men. They build the new social order in the image
of honesty, truth, and love. They are not escapists. They realize the
experience and spread the light in every age. They suffer martyrdom and bear
witness to their experience.
The
tenets of mysticism are two: The unity of all existence. In order to know God,
man must be the partaker of the Divine. ‘What we are, that we behold’, and
‘what we behold, that we are’. We are consubstantial with the uncreated ground
of the deity. Plotinus said that “Every man is a
double,” meaning that one side of his soul is in contact with the intelligible,
the other with the sensible, world. It is in His light we see the light. Though
we are made in the image of God, our likeness to God only exists potentially.
God is not wholly other to man. Spinoza declared: “We
feel and know that we are eternal.” Man is not an irremediably fallen creature
of sin, tied down to a body of lust, with no glimmer of divinity in him. He is
‘imprisoned splendour’, in the words of Browning. The
Kingdom of God is not hither or thither, it is in us. It can be realized here
and now, in the mortal frame, not at some distant date after death. It is the
birthright of all without any distinction. The mystics affirm the dignity and
divinity of man. It is humanism par excellence. The mystics affirm the unity of
God and man. They do not admit any barrier in between the two. Man does not
need any intermediary between him and God. “Such as men themselves are, such
will God Himself seem to them to be.” He is closer to us than breathing, and
nearer than hands and feet. St. Paul writes that ‘God hath sealed in us and has
given us the earnest of the spirit in our heart.’ If God is not found in man,
He is unfindable. “All things that are yonder are
also here.” We need not search for His footprints in nature, when we can behold
His face in ourselves.
The
Ethics of Mysticism: “Love God and do what you like,” said
St. Augustine. It is impossible, to love God and do bad to men. It is hypocrisy
to take the name of the Lord in vain. Good life is indispensable for godly
life. The mystic gives up all those activities that forbid unity. Without
holiness no man can see God. “Blessed” are the pure in heart for they shall see
God.” “One who has not desisted from bad conduct, whose senses are not under
control, whose mind is not concentrated, whose mind is not free from anxiety,
cannot attain this Self through knowledge.”
The
mystics have sunny confidence in the ultimate triumph of Good. They seek not atmakalyana but the good of society. Some
think that Eastern mysticism is world-negating and not life affirming. Eastern
mystics regard the world as an illusion and the only thing we can do with it is
to wake up from it. They do not dominate life but try to escape from it. Theirs
is a personality destroying mysticism. Some critics hold that Buddhist and
Hindu ethics are not born from a feeling of compassion but from the idea of
keeping undefiled by the world.
The
truth is that the mystic outlook combines in fine and proper proportion, the executive
and reflective aspects of life. The two centralities of religion are
energy and vision. The exclusive domination of one leads to
savagery and the domination of the other leads to dwelling in cloud land. The
Gita paradox of ‘action in inaction’ is resolved in the personality of the
mystic who combines the vision of the Yogi and the executive ability of the
commissar, the bow of Arjuna and the grace of
Krishna.
The
mystic experience is the common path of religious light. It is the steel frame
behind all types of religious structures. The skeleton is the same, the flesh
covering it varies in texture and the skin above the flesh varies in colour. They express themselves in symbols. Some regard God
as a personality, others as spirit. The human mind resorts to symbols to
express its experience. Thomas Aquinas says that all language about God must
necessarily be analogical. Professor A. N. Whitehead writes: “Mankind, it seems,
has to find a symbol in order to express itself. Indeed expression itself is
symbolism…..Symbolism is no mere idle fancy or corrupt degeneration; it is
inherent in the very texture of human life. Language is itself symbolism.”
Symbols suggest but do not express. They provide support for experience which
lies beyond the power of words. Berdyaer writes in a
his book Spirit and Reality: “We
cannot dispense with symbolism in language, and thought, but we can do without
it in the primary consciousness. In describing spiritual and mystical
experience man will have recourse to spatial symbols such as height and depth,
to symbols of this or another world. But in real spiritual experience these
disappear, there are not symbols of height and depth, of this or another world.
The primal creative act is realistic and non-symbolic; it is free from
conceptual elaboration.” Religious Experience is, in the words of Bergson, “the crystalization
brought about by the scientific process of cooling what mysticism had poured
white hot into the soul of man. Through religion all men can get what a few
privileged souls possessed in full.”
1 Kathopanishad:
Nayamatma
pravacanena labhyo
Na medhaya na
bahuna srutena.