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WRITINGS BY THE MOTHER
© Sri Aurobindo Ashram Trust

Perfection

... From the true point of view, perfection is the whole (Mother makes a global gesture), and it is precisely the fact that there can be nothing outside the whole. It is impossible that anything should be missing, because it is impossible for anything not to form part of the whole. There can be nothing which is not in the whole. Let me explain. A given universe may not contain everything, for a universe is a mode of manifestation; but there is every possible kind of universe. So I always come back to the same thing: there can be nothing which does not form part of the whole.

Therefore one can say that each thing is in its place, exactly as it should be, and that relations between things are exactly as they should be. [old p. 105]

But perfection is only one special way of approaching the Divine; it is one side, and in the same way there are innumerable sides, angles or aspects, innumerable ways of approaching the Divine, for example: will, truth, purity, perfection, unity, immortality, eternity, infinity, silence, peace, existence, consciousness, etc. The number of approaches is almost unlimited. With each one you approach or draw near or enter into contact with the Divine through one aspect and if you really do it, you find that the difference is merely in the most external form, but the contact is identical. It is as if you were turning around a centre, a globe, and seeing it from many different angles as in a kaleidoscope; but once the contact is made, it is the same thing.

Perfection is therefore a global way of approaching the Divine: everything is there and everything is as it should be[new p. 105]--"should be", that is to say, a perfect expression of the Divine; one cannot even say of His Will, for if you say "His Will" it is still something outside Him.

One can also say--but this is far, far below it--that He is what He is and exactly as He wants to be--with this "exactly as He wants to be", one has come down by a considerable number of steps! But this is to give you the point of view of perfection.

Besides, divine perfection implies infinity and eternity; that is to say, everything coexists outside time and space.

It is like the word "purity"; one could hold forth interminably on the difference between divine purity and what people call purity. The divine purity, at the lowest, allows no influence other than the divine influence--at the lowest. But that is already very much distorted; the divine purity means that there is only the Divine, nothing else--it is perfectly pure, there is only the Divine, there is nothing other than Him.

And so on.

7 July 1961

Collected Works of The Mother, First Edition, Volume10, pp. 104-05