The Teaching of Hazrat Inayat Khan1

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Topic

Archetypes

Astrology

Attainment

Chakras

Character

Christ

Compassion

Dervish

Desire and renunciation

Destiny and Free Will

Dimensions

Discipleship

Dreams

Duties and debts

Ego

Elements

God

Guidance

Healers

Healing

Health

Heart

Immortality

Initiation

Light and Love

Lovers

Magnetism

Mastery

Material life

Meditation

Message

Mind

Physical Body

Planes

Poets

Power

Prayers

Purpose

Reconstruction of World

Relationships

Religions

Saints

School

Scientists

Sexuality

Sleep

Speaking

Stages

Stories

Sufism

Teaching Style

Voice

Women

World

Wounds of the Heart

Sub-Topic

About the Five Planes

Descending & Ascending Planes

Evolution 2

Five Stages of Consciousness

Floors

Four Personal Magnetisms

Jinn Sphere

Last 5 planes

Manifestation

Manifestation, Gravitation

No turning back

Phases of Consciousness

Soul

Soul and Body

Spirit and Soul

The Development of Creation

The Intelligent One

Three Plane of Vedanta

Three Spheres

Two from One

Vol. 7, In an Eastern Rose Garden

The Planes

Man wishes to know about God, about heaven, about the things unknown, and about the world unseen, and he thinks he can see them from the first floor. He is not ready to believe there is anything on the seventh floor; he thinks there is no such thing as a seventh floor, nothing but the first. If he were freed from this delusion, and if he were allowed to go to the other floors, then he would be able to see what the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh floors contain. And then he would know there is something through which one can gain a knowledge of past, present, and future.

Suppose on the third floor there was a machine which produced instruments, one would know that on the first floor there must be a store of materials, and on the second floor they must be assembled in groups; on the third floor they are turned into usable appliances; and one can guess what is likely to be on the fourth floor.

Thus it is said in the Hadith that God sent His servant the Prophet in the middle of the night to the sphere of heaven, where He showed him such signs as He desired to show him. In other words, God wants the one who wishes to realize Him, to know life; it is His desire that he may see the signs that God previously makes and arranges, and also the things which can be seen by rising to the third and fourth floors.

The floors represent planes of existence. We do not exist only on the earthly or physical plane. Being absorbed in this plane makes us awake to it, but blind to the others. Language fails to explain the things of heaven. Those who have the experience of such things are bound to be silent, because there is no language to express them.

As a matter of fact all the floors are really here; but as long as we are not able to see these floors, we are only on the first. Then, too, this mortal part must die; but we can die in this respect now, and pass on now to a perception that is beyond. The several floors are nothing but clothing. In this life the light is hidden under a bushel; the bushel is the physical body. The light cannot be disclosed until the mortal part is removed.

If we depend on our eyes for sight, and our ears for hearing, and our mouth for speech, we are still dead. But we sometimes experience in life that which we see without eyes, hear without ears, and express without speech. If we have once seen without eyes, does it not show that we can see without eyes? Can we not see in a dream without eyes? Therefore the faculty of seeing and hearing is in us; but as we always depend on the physical body, on the physical eyes and ears, we become helpless and subject to death.

The teaching of immortality is to awaken. We must rise above physical and material conditions if we are to live at all. We must aim at being independent of physical sight and hearing. We know that if we really want to understand a thing, we close our eyes because we can see it better. If we are thinking in this manner, it means that we are listening to some thought corning from some other plane. At such a time we want to cut off and stop outward sound or sight. All the meditations and concentrations of the mystics, as well as their dreams, are their journeys to the inner planes. It is necessary, if the soul has the desire to know the past, the present, and the future, to satisfy its desire by a contemplative life. The more tired and exhausted the mind, the more is meditation needed.

Sages, such as St. Francis, have spoken with rocks, birds, and animals, not as we talk, but by means of an insight into things; and every object expressed itself to them, speaking to them about its past, its present, and its future.

How wonderful that the animals and birds also know the future! Horses, dogs, cats know when someone is going to die; and yet man does not know it. Why should he not know it? Because his soul is so absorbed in the earth plane and in earthly things which the birds and beasts and animals are free from; for they sit quietly, and meditate and concentrate. Man never sits quietly; and therefore the animals and birds, through their silence, are capable of knowing what man does not know. All man's activity brings death and decay much sooner; intuition is stifled.

The soul has a tendency to look forward to what is going to be, or at what has been in the past. It is the light of our soul, the intelligence, that does this. Intelligence working through physical means is no greater than intellect, but intelligence working freely and independently from physical means is wisdom. And wisdom is not cleverness, but infinitely superior to it. Wisdom works independently of the physical means, and therefore requires intuition. The clever person works by means of his physical body, but the wise person works independently of it.

Palmistry, astrology, and the like, are they the best means of knowing the future? All these means are right, none is wrong. There is always truth everywhere. The eye must look, and at whatever it looks, the seer will see. It is not necessary for the vision to be in a certain symbol or tea-cup; it is as open as a book wherever the seer looks.

The master knows everything that goes on in a factory, but the workers only know what goes on just where they are working. The master sees all. One person sees a square, another a street, another a house, another less still. But the one at the top of the tower will see all of these. The seer will see all in his consciousness, and wherever he casts his glance he will see still more clearly.

As Sa'di says, "Each leaf of a tree becomes a book of revelation to the one who sees; and he reads the whole of nature as a book."