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135 bytes removed ,  20:13, 16 August 2018
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: #0066cc;"><ref><u>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-divine-and-the-undivine#p19</u></ref></span>
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: #000000;">For an age out of sympathy with the ascetic spirit—and throughout all the rest of the world the hour of the Anchorite may seem to have passed or to be passing—it is easy to attribute this great trend to the failing of vital energy in an ancient race tired out by its burden, its once vast share in the common advance, exhausted by its many-sided contribution to the sum of human effort and human knowledge. But we have seen that it corresponds to a truth of existence, a state of conscious realisation which stands at the very summit of our possibility. In practice also the ascetic spirit is an indispensable element in human perfection and even its separate affirmation cannot be avoided so long as the race has not at the other end liberated its intellect and its vital habits from subjection to an always insistent animalism.</span><span style="background-color: transparent; color: #0066cc;"><ref><u>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/21/the-two-negations-the-refusal-of-the-ascetic#p23</u></ref></span>
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: #000000;">No man is perfect; the vital is there and the ego is there to prevent it. It is only when there is the total transformation of the external and the internal being down to the very subconscient, that perfection is possible. Till then imperfection will remain as our common heritage.</span><ref><u>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/31/the-subconscient-and-the-integral-yoga#p2</u></ref></span>
<span style="background-color: transparent; color: #000000;">The Master of our works respects our nature even when he is transforming it; he works always through the nature and not by any arbitrary caprice. This imperfect nature of ours contains the materials of our perfection, but inchoate, distorted, misplaced, thrown together in disorder or a poor imperfect order. All this material has to be patiently perfected, purified, reorganised, new-moulded and transformed, not hacked and hewn and slain or mutilated, not obliterated by simple coercion and denial. This world and we who </span><span style="background-color: transparent; color: #000000;">live in it are his creation and manifestation, and he deals with it and us in a way our narrow and ignorant mind cannot understand unless it falls silent and opens to a divine knowledge. In our errors is the substance of a truth which labours to reveal its meaning to our groping intelligence. The human intellect cuts out the error and the truth with it and replaces it by another half-truth half-error; but the Divine Wisdom suffers our mistakes to continue until we are able to arrive at the truth hidden and protected under every false cover. Our sins are the misdirected steps of a seeking Power that aims, not at sin, but at perfection, at something that we might call a divine virtue. Often they are the veils of a quality that has to be transformed and delivered out of this ugly disguise: otherwise, in the perfect providence of things, they would not have been suffered to exist or to continue. The Master of our works is neither a blunderer nor an indifferent witness nor a dallier with the luxury of unneeded evils. He is wiser than our reason and wiser than our virtue.</span><span style="background-color: transparent; color: #0066cc;"><ref><u>http://incarnateword.in/cwsa/23/the-master-of-the-work#p6</u></ref></span>
== Imperfection to Perfection ==
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