12. Visitations of God |
This earthly existence of ours is
more brittle than the glass bangles
that ladies wear. You can keep glass
bangles for thousands of years if you
treasure them in a chest and let them
remain untouched. But this earthly
existence is so fickle that it may be
wiped out in the twinkling of an eye.
Therefore, whilst we have yet
breathing time, let us get rid of the
distinctions of high and low, purify
our hearts and be ready to face
our Maker when an earthquake or some
natural calamity or death in the
ordinary course overtakes us.
Harijan, 2-2-1934, p. 5
I share the belief with the
whole world– civilized and
uncivilized – that calamities (such as
the Bihar earthquake of 1934) come to
mankind as chastisement for their sins.
When that conviction comes from the
heart, people pray, repent and
purify themselves.... I have but a
limited knowledge of His purpose.
Such calamities are not a mere
caprice of the Deity or Nature. They
obey fixed laws as surely as the planets
move in obedience to laws
governing their movement. Only we
do not know the laws governing
these events and, therefore, call them
calamities or disturbances.
Harijan, 2-2-1934, p. 1
There is a divine purpose behind every
physical calamity. That perfected
science will one day be able to
tell us beforehand when earthquakes will
occur, as it tells us today of
eclipses, is quite possible. It will
be another triumph of the human mind.
But such triumphs even indefinitely
multiplied can bring about no
purification of self without which
nothing is of any value.
Harijan, 8-6-1935, p. 132
I ask those who appreciate the
necessity of inward purification to
join in the prayer that we may read
the purpose of God behind such
visitations, that they may humble us and
prepare us to face our Maker
whenever the call comes, and that we
may be ever ready to share the
sufferings of our fellows whoever
they may be.
Harijan, 8-6-1935, p. 132
When we know that God Himself is
the mystery of mysteries why should
anything that He does perplex us
? If He acted as we would have
Him do or if He acted exactly
like us, we would not be His
creatures and He our Creator.
The impenetrable darkness that surrounds us is not a curse but a blessing. He has given us power to see the step in front of us and it would be enough if Heavenly Light reveals that step to us. We can then sing with Newman ‘One step enough for me’. And we may be sure from our past experience that the next step will always be in view. In other words the impenetrable darkness is nothing so impenetrable as we may imagine. But it seems impenetrable when in our impatience we want to look beyond that one step. And since God is love, we can say definitely that even the physical catastrophes that He sends now and then must be a blessing in disguise and they can be so only to those who regard them as a warning for introspection and self-purification. “My Dear Child”, (1959), pp. 104-05
|