Today’s post comes from The Royal Science of God Realization.
The devotee who sits in a good posture and meditates at the point between the eyebrows (the natural seat of will and concentration, and of divine perception, in the body) learns to practice yoga, the uniting of ego and soul; in deep concentration, he finds his mind and heart (chitta, feeling) free from sensory distractions and emotional likes and dislikes. With the mergence of the ego into the taintless soul, he engages in the ultimate “self-purification.”
The beginner should find a balance between divine activities and deep meditation. He who, in a balanced way, tries to be both human and divine will automatically find that he experiences equal joy whether he is in the state of human activity or in the state of deep meditation.
The nature-born dualities of good and evil (judgement) are the “impurities” from which the soul must be freed in order to express its true nature.
When one is able to hold one’s concentration steady in the state of inner calmness, one perceives the soul. By further perseverance one enters into ecstatic bliss and realizes the Spirit.