Autobiography of a Yogi
Paramhansa Yogananda
Chapter 30
The Law of Miracles
Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35
The great
novelist Leo Tolstoy wrote a delightful story, The Three Hermits. His friend Nicholas
Roerich has summarized
the tale, as follows:
"On an
island there lived three old hermits. They were so simple that the only prayer they used
was: 'We are three; Thou art Threehave mercy on us!' Great miracles were manifested
during this naive prayer.
"The
local bishop came to hear
about the three hermits and their inadmissible prayer, and decided to visit them in order
to teach them the canonical invocations. He arrived on the island, told the hermits that
their heavenly petition was undignified, and taught them many of the customary prayers.
The bishop then left on a boat. He saw, following the ship, a radiant light. As it
approached, he discerned the three hermits, who were holding hands and running upon the
waves in an effort to overtake the vessel.
"'We
have forgotten the prayers you taught us,' they cried as they reached the bishop, 'and
have hastened to ask you to repeat them.' The awed bishop shook his head.
"'Dear
ones,' he replied humbly, 'continue to live with your old prayer!'"
How did the
three saints walk on the water?
How did
Christ resurrect his crucified body?
How did
Lahiri Mahasaya and Sri Yukteswar perform their miracles?
Modern
science has, as yet, no answer; though with the advent of the atomic bomb and the wonders
of radar, the scope of the world-mind has been abruptly enlarged. The word
"impossible" is becoming less prominent in the scientific vocabulary.
The ancient
Vedic scriptures declare that the physical world operates under one fundamental law of
maya, the principle of relativity and duality. God, the Sole Life, is an Absolute Unity;
He cannot appear as the separate and diverse manifestations of a creation except under a
false or unreal veil. That cosmic illusion is maya. Every great scientific discovery of
modern times has served as a confirmation of this simple pronouncement of the rishis.
Newton's Law
of Motion is a law of maya: "To every action there is always an equal and contrary
reaction; the mutual actions of any two bodies are always equal and oppositely
directed." Action and reaction are thus exactly equal. "To have a single force
is impossible. There must be, and always is, a pair of forces equal and opposite."
Fundamental
natural activities all betray their mayic origin. Electricity, for example, is a
phenomenon of repulsion and attraction; its electrons and protons are electrical
opposites. Another example: the atom or final particle of matter is, like the earth
itself, a magnet with positive and negative poles. The entire phenomenal world is under
the inexorable sway of polarity; no law of physics, chemistry, or any other science is
ever found free from inherent opposite or contrasted principles.
Physical
science, then, cannot formulate laws outside of maya, the very texture and structure of
creation. Nature herself is maya; natural science must perforce deal with her ineluctable
quiddity. In her own domain, she is eternal and inexhaustible; future scientists can do no
more than probe one aspect after another of her varied infinitude. Science thus remains in
a perpetual flux, unable to reach finality; fit indeed to formulate the laws of an already
existing and functioning cosmos, but powerless to detect the Law Framer and Sole Operator.
The majestic manifestations of gravitation and electricity have become known, but what
gravitation and electricity are, no mortal knoweth.
To surmount
maya was the task assigned to the human race by the millennial prophets. To rise above the
duality of creation and perceive the unity of the Creator was conceived of as man's
highest goal. Those who cling to the cosmic illusion must accept its essential law of
polarity: flow and ebb, rise and fall, day and night, pleasure and pain, good and evil,
birth and death. This cyclic pattern assumes a certain anguishing monotony, after man has
gone through a few thousand human births; he begins to cast a hopeful eye beyond the
compulsions of maya.
To tear the
veil of maya is to pierce the secret of creation. The yogi who thus denudes the universe
is the only true monotheist. All others are worshiping heathen images. So long as man
remains subject to the dualistic delusions of nature, the Janus-faced Maya is his goddess;
he cannot know the one true God.
The world
illusion, maya, is individually called avidya, literally, "not-knowledge,"
ignorance, delusion. Maya or avidya can never be destroyed through intellectual conviction
or analysis, but solely through attaining the interior state of nirbikalpa samadhi. The
Old Testament prophets, and seers of all lands and ages, spoke from that state of
consciousness. Ezekiel says (43:1-2): "Afterwards he brought me to the gate, even the
gate that looketh toward the east: and, behold, the glory of the God of Israel came from
the way of the east: and his voice was like a noise of many waters: and the earth shined
with his glory." Through the divine eye in the forehead (east), the yogi sails his
consciousness into omnipresence, hearing the Word or Aum, divine sound of many waters or
vibrations which is the sole reality of creation.
Among the
trillion mysteries of the cosmos, the most phenomenal is light. Unlike sound-waves, whose
transmission requires air or other material media, light-waves pass freely through the
vacuum of interstellar space. Even the hypothetical ether, held as the interplanetary
medium of light in the undulatory theory, can be discarded on the Einsteinian grounds that
the geometrical properties of space render the theory of ether unnecessary. Under either
hypothesis, light remains the most subtle, the freest from material dependence, of any
natural manifestation.
In the
gigantic conceptions of Einstein, the velocity of light186,000 miles per
seconddominates the whole Theory of Relativity. He proves mathematically that the
velocity of light is, so far as man's finite mind is concerned, the only constant in a
universe of unstayable flux. On the sole absolute of light-velocity depend all human
standards of time and space. Not abstractly eternal as hitherto considered, time and space
are relative and finite factors, deriving their measurement validity only in reference to
the yardstick of light-velocity. In joining space as a dimensional relativity, time has
surrendered age-old claims to a changeless value. Time is now stripped to its rightful
naturea simple essence of ambiguity! With a few equational strokes of his pen,
Einstein has banished from the cosmos every fixed reality except that of light.
In a later
development, his Unified Field Theory, the great physicist embodies in one mathematical
formula the laws of gravitation and of electromagnetism. Reducing the cosmical structure
to variations on a single law, Einstein reaches across
the ages to the rishis who proclaimed a sole texture of creationthat of a protean
maya.
On the
epochal Theory of Relativity have arisen the mathematical possibilities of exploring the
ultimate atom. Great scientists are now boldly asserting not only that the atom is energy
rather than matter, but that atomic energy is essentially mind-stuff.
"The
frank realization that physical science is concerned with a world of shadows is one of the
most significant advances," Sir Arthur Stanley Eddington writes in The Nature of the
Physical World. "In the world of physics we watch a shadowgraph performance of the
drama of familiar life. The shadow of my elbow rests on the shadow table as the shadow ink
flows over the shadow paper. It is all symbolic, and as a symbol the physicist leaves it.
Then comes the alchemist Mind who transmutes the symbols. . . . To put the conclusion
crudely, the stuff of the world is mind-stuff. . . . The realistic matter and fields of
force of former physical theory are altogether irrelevant except in so far as the
mind-stuff has itself spun these imaginings. . . . The external world has thus become a
world of shadows. In removing our illusions we have removed the substance, for indeed we
have seen that substance is one of the greatest of our illusions."
With the
recent discovery of the electron microscope came definite proof of the light-essence of
atoms and of the inescapable duality of nature. The New York Times gave the following
report of a 1937 demonstration of the electron microscope before a meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science:
"The
crystalline structure of tungsten, hitherto known only indirectly by means of X-rays,
stood outlined boldly on a fluorescent screen, showing nine atoms in their correct
positions in the space lattice, a cube, with one atom in each corner and one in the
center. The atoms in the crystal lattice of the tungsten appeared on the fluorescent
screen as points of light, arranged in geometric pattern. Against this crystal cube of
light the bombarding molecules of air could be observed as dancing points of light,
similar to points of sunlight shimmering on moving waters. . . .
"The
principle of the electron microscope was first discovered in 1927 by Drs. Clinton J.
Davisson and Lester H. Germer of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, New York City, who found
that the electron had a dual personality partaking of the characteristic of both a
particle and a wave. The wave quality gave the electron the characteristic of light, and a
search was begun to devise means for 'focusing' electrons in a manner similar to the
focusing of light by means of a lens.
"For his
discovery of the Jekyll-Hyde quality of the electron, which corroborated the prediction
made in 1924 by De Broglie, French Nobel Prize winning physicist, and showed that the
entire realm of physical nature had a dual personality, Dr. Davisson also received the
Nobel Prize in physics."
"The
stream of knowledge," Sir James Jeans writes in The Mysterious Universe, "is
heading towards a non-mechanical reality; the universe begins to look more like a great
thought than like a great machine." Twentieth-century science is thus sounding like a
page from the hoary Vedas.
From science,
then, if it must be so, let man learn the philosophic truth that there is no material
universe; its warp and woof is maya, illusion. Its mirages of reality all break down under
analysis. As one by one the reassuring props of a physical cosmos crash beneath him, man
dimly perceives his idolatrous reliance, his past transgression of the divine command:
"Thou shalt have no other gods before Me."
In his famous
equation outlining the equivalence of mass and energy, Einstein proved that the energy in
any particle of matter is equal to its mass or weight multiplied by the square of the
velocity of light. The release of the atomic energies is brought about through the
annihilation of the material particles. The "death" of matter has been the
"birth" of an Atomic Age.
Light-velocity
is a mathematical standard or constant not because there is an absolute value in 186,000
miles a second, but because no material body, whose mass increases with its velocity, can
ever attain the velocity of light. Stated another way: only a material body whose mass is
infinite could equal the velocity of light.
This conception
brings us to the law of miracles.
The masters
who are able to materialize and dematerialize their bodies or any other object, and to
move with the velocity of light, and to utilize the creative light-rays in bringing into
instant visibility any physical manifestation, have fulfilled the necessary Einsteinian
condition: their mass is infinite.
The
consciousness of a perfected yogi is effortlessly identified, not with a narrow body, but
with the universal structure. Gravitation, whether the "force" of Newton or the
Einsteinian "manifestation of inertia," is powerless to compel a master to
exhibit the property of "weight" which is the distinguishing gravitational
condition of all material objects. He who knows himself as the omnipresent Spirit is
subject no longer to the rigidities of a body in time and space. Their imprisoning
"rings-pass-not" have yielded to the solvent: "I am He."
"Fiat
lux! And there was light." God's first command to His ordered creation (Genesis 1:3)
brought into being the only atomic reality: light. On the beams of this immaterial medium
occur all divine manifestations. Devotees of every age testify to the appearance of God as
flame and light. "The King of kings, and Lord of lords; who only hath immortality,
dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto."
A yogi who
through perfect meditation has merged his consciousness with the Creator perceives the
cosmical essence as light; to him there is no difference between the light rays composing
water and the light rays composing land. Free from matter-consciousness, free from the
three dimensions of space and the fourth dimension of time, a master transfers his body of
light with equal ease over the light rays of earth, water, fire, or air. Long
concentration on the liberating spiritual eye has enabled the yogi to destroy all
delusions concerning matter and its gravitational weight; thenceforth he sees the universe
as an essentially undifferentiated mass of light.
"Optical
images," Dr. L. T. Troland of Harvard tells us, "are built up on the same
principle as the ordinary 'half-tone' engravings; that is, they are made up of minute
dottings or stripplings far too small to be detected by the eye. . . . The sensitiveness
of the retina is so great that a visual sensation can be produced by relatively few Quanta
of the right kind of light." Through a master's divine knowledge of light phenomena,
he can instantly project into perceptible manifestation the ubiquitous light atoms. The
actual form of the projectionwhether it be a tree, a medicine, a human bodyis
in conformance with a yogi's powers of will and of visualization.
In man's
dream-consciousness, where he has loosened in sleep his clutch on the egoistic limitations
that daily hem him round, the omnipotence of his mind has a nightly demonstration. Lo!
there in the dream stand the long-dead friends, the remotest continents, the resurrected
scenes of his childhood. With that free and unconditioned consciousness, known to all men
in the phenomena of dreams, the God-tuned master has forged a never-severed link. Innocent
of all personal motives, and employing the creative will bestowed on him by the Creator, a
yogi rearranges the light atoms of the universe to satisfy any sincere prayer of a
devotee. For this purpose were man and creation made: that he should rise up as master of
maya, knowing his dominion over the cosmos.
"And God
said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over
the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the
earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth."
In 1915,
shortly after I had entered the Swami Order, I witnessed a vision of violent contrasts. In
it the relativity of human consciousness was vividly established; I clearly perceived the
unity of the Eternal Light behind the painful dualities of maya. The vision descended on
me as I sat one morning in my little attic room in Father's Gurpar Road home. For months
World War I had been raging in Europe; I reflected sadly on the vast toll of death.
As I closed
my eyes in meditation, my consciousness was suddenly transferred to the body of a captain
in command of a battleship. The thunder of guns split the air as shots were exchanged
between shore batteries and the ship's cannons. A huge shell hit the powder magazine and
tore my ship asunder. I jumped into the water, together with the few sailors who had
survived the explosion.
Heart
pounding, I reached the shore safely. But alas! a stray bullet ended its furious flight in
my chest. I fell groaning to the ground. My whole body was paralyzed, yet I was aware of
possessing it as one is conscious of a leg gone to sleep.
"At last
the mysterious footstep of Death has caught up with me," I thought. With a final
sigh, I was about to sink into unconsciousness when lo! I found myself seated in the lotus
posture in my Gurpar Road room.
Hysterical
tears poured forth as I joyfully stroked and pinched my regained possessiona body
free from any bullet hole in the breast. I rocked to and fro, inhaling and exhaling to
assure myself that I was alive. Amidst these self-congratulations, again I found my
consciousness transferred to the captain's dead body by the gory shore. Utter confusion of
mind came upon me.
"Lord,"
I prayed, "am I dead or alive?"
A dazzling
play of light filled the whole horizon. A soft rumbling vibration formed itself into
words:
"What
has life or death to do with Light? In the image of My Light I have made you. The
relativities of life and death belong to the cosmic dream. Behold your dreamless being!
Awake, my child, awake!"
As steps in
man's awakening, the Lord inspires scientists to discover, at the right time and place,
the secrets of His creation. Many modern discoveries help men to apprehend the cosmos as a
varied expression of one powerlight, guided by divine intelligence. The wonders of
the motion picture, of radio, of television, of radar, of the photo-electric cellthe
all-seeing "electric eye," of atomic energies, are all based on the
electromagnetic phenomenon of light.
The motion
picture art can portray any miracle. From the impressive visual standpoint, no marvel is
barred to trick photography. A man's transparent astral body can be seen rising from his
gross physical form, he can walk on the water, resurrect the dead, reverse the natural
sequence of developments, and play havoc with time and space. Assembling the light images
as he pleases, the photographer achieves optical wonders which a true master produces with
actual light rays.
The lifelike
images of the motion picture illustrate many truths concerning creation. The Cosmic
Director has written His own plays, and assembled the tremendous casts for the pageant of
the centuries. From the dark booth of eternity, He pours His creative beam through the
films of successive ages, and the pictures are thrown on the screen of space. Just as the
motion-picture images appear to be real, but are only combinations of light and shade, so
is the universal variety a delusive seeming. The planetary spheres, with their countless
forms of life, are naught but figures in a cosmic motion picture, temporarily true to five
sense perceptions as the scenes are cast on the screen of man's consciousness by the
infinite creative beam.
A cinema
audience can look up and see that all screen images are appearing through the
instrumentality of one imageless beam of light. The colorful universal drama is similarly
issuing from the single white light of a Cosmic Source. With inconceivable ingenuity God
is staging an entertainment for His human children, making them actors as well as audience
in His planetary theater.
One day I
entered a motion picture house to view a newsreel of the European battlefields. World War
I was still being waged in the West; the newsreel recorded the carnage with such realism
that I left the theater with a troubled heart.
"Lord,"
I prayed, "why dost Thou permit such suffering?"
To my intense
surprise, an instant answer came in the form of a vision of the actual European
battlefields. The horror of the struggle, filled with the dead and dying, far surpassed in
ferocity any representation of the newsreel.
"Look
intently!" A gentle voice spoke to my inner consciousness. "You will see that
these scenes now being enacted in France are nothing but a play of chiaroscuro. They are
the cosmic motion picture, as real and as unreal as the theater newsreel you have just
seena play within a play."
My heart was
still not comforted. The divine voice went on: "Creation is light and shadow both,
else no picture is possible. The good and evil of maya must ever alternate in supremacy.
If joy were ceaseless here in this world, would man ever seek another? Without suffering
he scarcely cares to recall that he has forsaken his eternal home. Pain is a prod to
remembrance. The way of escape is through wisdom! The tragedy of death is unreal; those
who shudder at it are like an ignorant actor who dies of fright on the stage when nothing
more is fired at him than a blank cartridge. My sons are the children of light; they will
not sleep forever in delusion."
Although I
had read scriptural accounts of maya, they had not given me the deep insight that came
with the personal visions and their accompanying words of consolation. One's values are
profoundly changed when he is finally convinced that creation is only a vast motion
picture, and that not in it, but beyond it, lies his own reality.
As I finished
writing this chapter, I sat on my bed in the lotus posture. My room was dimly lit by two
shaded lamps. Lifting my gaze, I noticed that the ceiling was dotted with small
mustard-colored lights, scintillating and quivering with a radiumlike luster. Myriads of
pencilled rays, like sheets of rain, gathered into a transparent shaft and poured silently
upon me.
At once my
physical body lost its grossness and became metamorphosed into astral texture. I felt a
floating sensation as, barely touching the bed, the weightless body shifted slightly and
alternately to left and right. I looked around the room; the furniture and walls were as
usual, but the little mass of light had so multiplied that the ceiling was invisible. I
was wonder-struck.
"This is
the cosmic motion picture mechanism." A voice spoke as though from within the light.
"Shedding its beam on the white screen of your bed sheets, it is producing the
picture of your body. Behold, your form is nothing but light!"
I gazed at my
arms and moved them back and forth, yet could not feel their weight. An ecstatic joy
overwhelmed me. This cosmic stem of light, blossoming as my body, seemed a divine replica
of the light beams streaming out of the projection booth in a cinema house and manifesting
as pictures on the screen.
For a long
time I experienced this motion picture of my body in the dimly lighted theater of my own
bedroom. Despite the many visions I have had, none was ever more singular. As my illusion
of a solid body was completely dissipated, and my realization deepened that the essence of
all objects is light, I looked up to the throbbing stream of lifetrons and spoke
entreatingly.
"Divine
Light, please withdraw this, my humble bodily picture, into Thyself, even as Elijah was
drawn up to heaven by a flame."
This prayer
was evidently startling; the beam disappeared. My body resumed its normal weight and sank
on the bed; the swarm of dazzling ceiling lights flickered and vanished. My time to leave
this earth had apparently not arrived.
"Besides,"
I thought philosophically, "the prophet Elijah might well be displeased at my
presumption!"