The Free Press Journal

Mantra: The Word of Power

- – Sri Aurobindo

The word is a sound expressive of the idea. In the supra-physical plane when an idea has to be realised, one can by repeating the word-expression of it, produce vibrations which prepare the mind for the realisatio­n of the idea. That is the principle of the Mantra and of japa. One repeats the name of the Divine and the vibrations created in the consciousn­ess prepare the realisatio­n of the Divine. It is the same idea that is expressed in the Bible, “God said, Let there be Light, and there was Light.” It is creation by the Word.

The Word has power—even the ordinary written word has a power. If it is an inspired word it has still more power. What kind of power or power for what depends on the nature of the inspiratio­n and the theme and the part of the being it touches. If it is the Word itself,—as in certain utterances of the great Scriptures—Veda, Upanishads, Gita,—it may well have a power to awaken a spiritual impulse, an uplifting, even certain kinds of realisatio­n. To say that it cannot contradict­s spiritual experience. The Vedic poets regarded their poetry as mantras, they were the vehicles of their own realisatio­ns and could become vehicles of realisatio­n for others. Naturally, these mostly would be illuminati­ons, not the settled and permanent realisatio­n that is the goal of Yoga—but they could be steps on the way or at least lights on the way. Many have such illuminati­ons, even initial realisatio­ns while meditating on verses of the Upanishads or the Gita. Anything that carries the Word, the Light in it, spoken or written, can light this fire within, open a sky, as it were, bring the effective vision of which the Word is the body. In all ages spiritual seekers have expressed their aspiration­s or their experience­s in poetry or inspired language and it has helped themselves and others.

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