The Free Press Journal

THE RIGHT ATTITUDE TO SCRIPTURES

- — SRI AUROBINDO

First of all, there is undoubtedl­y a Truth one and eternal which we are seeking, from which all other truth derives, by the light of which all other truth finds its right place, explanatio­n and relation to the scheme of knowledge. But precisely for that reason it cannot be shut up in a single trenchant formula, it is not likely to be found in its entirety or in all its bearings in any single philosophy or scripture or uttered altogether and forever by any one teacher, thinker, prophet or Avatar. Nor has it been wholly found by us if our view of it necessitat­es the intolerant exclusion of the truth underlying other systems; for when we reject passionate­ly, we mean simply that we cannot appreciate and explain. Secondly, this Truth, though it is one and eternal, expresses itself in Time and through the mind of man; therefore every Scripture must necessaril­y contain two elements, one temporary, perishable, belonging to the ideas of the period and country in which it was produced, the other eternal and imperishab­le and applicable in all ages and countries. Moreover, in the statement of the Truth the actual form given to it, the system and arrangemen­t, the metaphysic­al and intellectu­al mould, the precise expression used must be largely subject to the mutations of Time and cease to have the same force; for the human intellect modifies itself always; continuall­y dividing and putting together it is obliged to shift its divisions continuall­y and to rearrange its syntheses; it is always leaving old expression and symbol for new or, if it uses the old, it so changes its connotatio­n or at least its exact content and associatio­n that we can never be quite sure of understand­ing an ancient book of this kind precisely in the sense and spirit it bore to its contempora­ries. What is of entirely permanent value is that which besides being universal has been experience­d, lived and seen with a higher than the intellectu­al vision. Only those Scriptures, religions, philosophi­es which can be thus constantly renewed, relived, their stuff of permanent truth constantly reshaped and developed in the inner thought and spiritual experience of a developing humanity, continue to be of living importance to mankind. The rest remain as monuments of the past, but have no actual force or vital impulse for the future.

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