Cosmic Consciousness by Ali Nomad
page 30 of 256 (11%)
page 30 of 256 (11%)
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old and unloved and I have sought refuge in self-destruction; I have lived
a thousand lives of sorrow and strife and of fear, and O, my Master, I would that I could efface this anguish from the heart of the world." The _guru_ looked in wonder upon the young priest and he said, "It is well, my son. Soon thou shalt know that the burden is lifted." Great compassion, the attribute of the Lord Buddha, was the key which opened to this young student priest, the door of _mukti_, and although his compassion was not less, after he had entered into that blissful realization, yet so filled did he become with a sense of bliss and inexpressible realization of eternal love, that all consciousness of sorrow was soon wiped out. This condition of effacement of all identity, as it were, with sorrow, sin, and death, seems inseparable from the attainment of liberation, and has been testified to by all who have recorded their emotions in reaching this state of consciousness. In other respects, the acquisition of this supra-consciousness varies greatly with the initiate. In all instances, there is also an overwhelming conviction of the transitory character of the external world, and the emptiness of all man-bestowed honors and riches. A story is told of the Mohammedan saint Fudail Ibn Tyad, which well illustrates this. The Caliph Harun-al-Rashid, learning of the extreme simplicity and asceticism of his life exclaimed, "O, Saint, how great is thy self-abnegation." To which the saint made answer: "Thine is greater." "Thou dost but jest," |
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