ChaptersChapter 13Page 1,879

Chapter 13: Nasik & Cannes

1937Page 1,879 of 5,444
A yogi can do all the jugglery by using psychic powers. He can abstain from food, go without sleep, leave the body at will, or stop his breathing, et cetera. Spiritually considered, a simple, [ordinary] human, good man who works in the world selflessly for others is much better and stands higher than many yogis with all their occult powers of performing miracles, which are nothing but jugglery without any spiritual importance at all; because whatever a yogi does is for his own individual self, and hence he is not selfless. He overcomes one illusion by creating another, which differs fundamentally from the teaching and work of a Perfect Master.
A Perfect Master, who has to take upon himself the burdens of the world in order to absorb them, must necessarily have physical reactions and, consequently, must suffer physically like an ordinary human being.
Krishna, Muhammad and Jesus were Perfect. By submitting themselves to the law of action and reaction they established that law of karma, and were selflessly and willingly subject to it. But, in spite of subjecting themselves to this law, they stand above the law. They could, in a second, have cured themselves or rid themselves from actions and reactions. What then would be the meaning and purpose of action and reaction?
Perfect Masters absorb the dual effect of the universal illusion by taking humanity out of the illusion through liberating mankind from the bonds of action and reaction. The Perfect Master absorbs duality in his true Existence in order to sublimate it.
Ramakrishna had cancer and he could, in an instant, have cured it with his infinite powers. Jesus fainted on the cross several times which he could have avoided, but it was a necessary demonstration for the good of humanity.
I have abstained from fish, eggs and meat not for my benefit but to create and impress upon humanity an example which later, when I speak, will become an established law.
After final instructions for Nonny and Elizabeth to come to India after four months, and directing Irene Billo to return to Switzerland with the dogs, Kippy and Canute, Baba left Cannes for Marseilles early on Tuesday, 2 November 1937. Elizabeth drove him, the women mandali and Kitty. Chanji, Kaka, Baidul and Mohammed followed by train with Rano and Norina. In Marseilles, they met up and stayed overnight at the Hotel Continental.
In Marseilles, Baba sent Norina out to a pharmacy to buy him some mineral water.
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