14. Service of God |
I cannot imagine anything
nobler or more national than
that for, say, one hour in the day,
we should all do the labour that the
poor must do, and thus identify
ourselves with them and through
them with all mankind. I cannot
imagine better worship of God
than that in His name I should
labour for the poor even as they do.
Young India, 20-10-1921, p. 329
Religion is service of the
helpless. God manifests Himself
to us in the form of
the helpless and the stricken.
Young India, 14-8-1924, p. 267
Daridranarayana is one of
the millions of names by which
humanity knows God who is unnameable,
and unfathomable by human
understanding, and it means God of
the poor, God appearing in the
hearts of the poor.
Young India, 4-4-1929, p. 110
And no one can see God face to face
who has aught of the I in him. He
must become a cypher if he would
see God. Who shall dare say
in this storm-tossed universe,
‘I have won’? God triumphs in
us, never, we.
Young India, 25-6-1925, p. 223
A life of service must be one
of humility. He, who would
sacrifice his life for others, has
hardly time to reserve for
himself a place in the sun.
Inertia must not be mistaken
for humility, as it has been in
Hinduism. True humility means most
strenuous and constant endeavour
entirely directed towards the
service of humanity. God is
continuously in action without
resting for a single moment. If we
would serve Him or become one
with Him, our activity must be
as unwearied as His.
From Yeravda Mandir, (1945), p.
47
There may be momentary rest in
store for the drop which is
separated from the ocean, but not
for the drop in the ocean,
which knows no rest. The same is
the case with ourselves. As soon as
we become one with the ocean
in the shape of God, there is no
more rest for us, nor indeed do we
need rest any longer. Our very sleep
is action. For we sleep with the
thought of God in our hearts.
This restlessness constitutes
true rest. This never-ceasing
agitation holds the key to
peace ineffable. This supreme state
of total surrender is difficult to
describe, but not beyond the
bounds of human experience. It has
been attained by many dedicated
souls, and may be attained by
ourselves as well.
From Yeravda Mandir, (1945), pp.
47-48
Self-realization I hold to be
impossible without service of and
identification with the poorest.
Young India, 21-10-1926, p. 364
Man’s ultimate aim is the
realization of God, and all his
activities, social, political,
religious, have to be guided by
the ultimate aim of the vision
of God. The immediate service of all
human beings becomes a necessary
part of the endeavour,” simply
because the only way to find God
is to see Him in His creation and be
one with it. This can be only done
by service of all. I am part and
parcel of the whole, and I
cannot find Him apart from the rest
of humanity. My countrymen are
my nearest neighbours. They
have become so helpless, so
resource-less, so inert that I
must concentrate on serving
them. If I could persuade myself
that I should find Him in a
Himalayan cave I would proceed
there immediately. But I know that
I cannot find Him apart from
humanity.
Harijan, 29-8-1936, p. 226
|