SRI AUROBINDO
KARMAYOGIN
POLITICAL WRITINGS AND SPEECHES - 1909-1910
Vol.I. Saturday 17th July 1909 No.4
It is strange to find a philosopher like our contemporary parading in this
twentieth century the ancient and hollow platitude that such a doctrine, however
true, ought not to be applied to individual conduct because it will abrogate
morality and personal responsibility.
This is a strange answer, too, to an
argument



which simply sought to confirm the faith and endurance of our people in calamity
by the belief that our confidence in our future was not mistaken and that these
calamities were necessary for God's high purpose.
The evil we spoke of was not
moral evil, but misfortune and calamity.
But we do not shrink from the doctrine
that sin also is turned to His purposes and, so far as that goes, we do not see
how such a doctrine abrogates morality.
The wisdom and love of God in turning
our evil into His good does not absolve us of our moral responsibility.
Our
contemporary shows this want of connection between the two positions himself
when he asks whether one should not in that case play the traitor in order to
assist the progress of the tendency.
The gibe shows up the absurdity not of our
faith but of his argument.
Our selfish or sinful acts, our persistence in
ignorance or perversity are for the best in this obvious sense that God makes
out of them excellent material for the work He is about, which always tends to
the good of humanity.
The persecution of Christianity by the powers of the
ancient world was utterly evil, but it was for the best; without it there could
not have been that noble reaction of sublime and exalted suffering which finally
permeated the human mind with the impulse of sacrifice for high ideals, and by
introducing a mental soil fit for the growth of altruism sowed the seeds of
love, sweetness and humanity in that hard selfish lust-ridden European world.
The
Bengalee no doubt would have counselled the Christian martyrs not to be
so rash and unreasoning but to demand from God a balance of profit and loss for
each individual sacrifice and only after mature deliberation decide whether to
obey the voice of God in their conscience or offer flowers to Venus and divine
homage to Nero.
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