WHERE IS GOD?
Bhau Kalchuri
On the morning of the 28th of August, during the usual talks
with the men mandali, Baba abruptly started asking each one
in the room, "Where is God?...Where is God?"
All replied spontaneously. Jehangir Wankadia, a scholar of
Eastern philosophy, and who had come with Adi Sr. from
Meherabad on the 23rd, said, "Everywhere."
Nilu pointed to his chest and said, "In the heart!"
Vishnu said, "In the soul!"
One expressed his inability to give the proper answer, saying,
"It is the eternal question."
Finally, Baba asked Donkin, who replied, "In Baba! Baba is
God."
For a moment all were taken aback. Donkin's answer was so
simple, so natural. Baba then spelled out, explaining:
If you take me as your Master and believe me perfect
and one with the Infinite, if you believe this in all faith,
then Don's is the only correct and logical answer.
God is where you are not! By you is meant your false
"I," your illusory life as Kaka, Adi, Eruch, Baidul.
Where you are, God is not! To think yourself separate
from God is all imagination. Your false ego makes you
think you are such and such and leads you to believe
that God can never reside within you! When your false
ego disappears and your "I" goes, God comes!
Referring to the group's various answers, Baba further explained:
To say God is everywhere is a generality and nothing
new. Pundits and priests the world over say that, and
Vedanta is full of this explanation. To merely say it is
of no use. You must seek God everywhere, find God
everywhere, feel God everywhere and experience God
everywhere.
To say that God is in the heart, is again only part of
the truth. If God is everywhere, as you all know and
say, then why should you confine Him within the limits
of your cardiovascular system? Why can't He be in
your head, your finger, your toe? Why should you try
to see Him in one particular part and not in another?
It is a common mistake and characteristic human
weakness to raise the eyes to the skies and try to
view the Highest and most Beloved and revered up
above, somewhere in the heavens. Or, when sought
in the body, to find Him only in the parts men like best:
that is, in the heart or the eye, as if He did not exist
equally elsewhere in other parts in the back or
bones, in the nails or flesh. Is God in the rose and not
in the thorn? Or in flowers and not in dirt?
This weakness of seeing God in things you like and
shuddering at the idea of His existence in things you
don't like or abhor must be overcome. It is only when
you rise above all these ideas of good and bad and
recognize, see and feel flowers and dirt alike, and find
God equally in all, that you could be said to have known
and learned something real. Otherwise, it is all
parrot-like, a false conception, an illusion.
Besides, taking it for granted that the best and most
ideal abode for God to dwell in the human body is the
heart, it must be remembered clearly that even in this
best abode dedicated by human beings for God to
dwell, He who is the Purest of the Pure would not
come in unless that abode of the heart, however
spontaneously and lovingly offered, is absolutely clean,
empty and devoid of any foreign element. The slightest
defilement and obstruction in the form of impurities of
mind or body prevents Him from entering! Therefore,
those who truly want God to dwell in their hearts must
have them utterly clean and empty, devoid of selfish
desires, lust, anger, greed, hatred empty of all desires
either good or bad.
To say that God is in the soul is again incomplete,
vague and high sounding, unless and until it is actually
experienced. Vishnu tells others that Baba is God. He
says it wholeheartedly and with depth of feeling; but
when I myself ask him, "Where is God?" he points to
the soul!
This is all philosophy, dry and of little use. Vedanta
is full of it. The pundits everywhere babble it to the
orthodox sections of each community, who tenaciously
cling to their pet beliefs and do not want to go beyond
the four walls of rites and rituals. The pundits die babbling,
without the slightest clue about the real meaning of their
words. And the masses are so misled by their blind faith
in the clergy that they refuse even to talk or listen to the
facts from ones who have actual experience, and consider
it blasphemy even to think of it. They are only interested
in philosophical talks and learned discourses and are
quite satisfied with them. That is why I say it is all pure
humbug without experience. It is all dry philosophy and
of no use. One must try not only to learn and know, but
to feel and experience.
Wankadia again states, "It is an eternal struggle to
realize God!" This is true. But this does not mean one
should sit idle and not try! One should not grow
despondent thinking the problem is impossible to achieve
and make no efforts to attain it. The struggle and search
for God should be continued with added energy,
determination and vigor at every step. And the longing
should become so intense that there should be no other
thought of anything else in the world, except of seeking
Him. The aspirant should go forward to achieve this aim,
leaving no stone unturned in investigating all sources of
Enlightenment.
But the best, easiest and quickest way is to find a
Master who has realized God. This, however, is not easy
for all since some, before coming across a Perfect
Master, come under the influence of false gurus and
saints. Yet, if the longing for that eternal search is kept
up in all faith and with all enthusiasm, the aspirant
assuredly finds the Perfect One who leads him straight
to the Goal.
Those living in the company of a Master should not
feel content and merely say that they have found
everything because they are staying with a living
Master. For, even though it is true, they lack the actual
experience of Realization. And without effort, the
experience of Realization is never gained. So try, all
of you, to see your Master as he really is and not as
he appears to you. Even in your Master try to find that
Infinite Existence that pervades everywhere.
Baba then asked each, "Where is God not ?...Where does
God not exist?"
This set them thinking again, and none could give a satisfactory
reply. At last Chanji said, "Nowhere!"
Baba explained, "God is not there where you are! God does
not exist where there is duality!"
This discussion about God had arisen because Wankadia
wished to question Baba about philosophical and theological
topics. But before he could ask him, Baba replied to all his
questions.
LORD MEHER, vol. 6 & 7, pp. 2448-2451
1994 © Avatar Meher Baba Perpetual Public Charitable Trust
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