| by Swami Kriyananda
Most people
want to feel that they have some positive impact on the lives of
others. To make a difference in the world, however --isn't that
beyond the reach of anyone? Is our planet so small that any single
influence can have much impact on it?
Maybe so. Yet
influences have a way of spreading like ripples on a pond. If an
idea can change not only people's minds, but also inspire them sufficiently
to change the very way they live, it will have that ripple effect.
Alexander the Great didn't do it, but Buddha did. The Renaissance
didn't do it, but Jesus did. Yes, it can be done!
The change must
come from within ourselves. And it must come from the heights of
that inner being. It cannot come from emotion, or opinion, nor even
from sincerely held belief.
How many public
figures declaim on behalf of good causes! Yet how many of them significantly
change anything? Think of the fads that are embraced by millions,
that fade into nonexistence like waves on the ocean that rise, then
fade back tracelessly into the vast body of water from which they
rose.
To make a significant
difference, we must realize first that it isn't we, individually,
who can make the difference. Truth is what always wins in the end.
There is the
story of Billy Sunday, the evangelist, when he died. He appeared
before the gates of heaven, but St. Peter told him he couldn't come
in since the evangelist's name was not recorded in the book of good
deeds. "But what about all those people I converted,"
expostulated Billy Sunday, "and sent to heaven?" "You
may have sent them," St. Peter replied, "but none have
ever arrived!"
Again, there
is the story of Tansen, chief musician in the court of the great
Indian emperor, Akbar. The emperor often exclaimed to Tansen, "No
one anywhere sings as well as you do!" Tansen replied, "Your
majesty, there is one far greater than I: my own teacher."
For a long time, Akbar dismissed this answer, thinking it merely
an expression of humility. After some time, however, he asked Tansen
to let him hear his teacher sing. "He would never agree to
come to your court, your majesty," Tansen replied. "To
hear him, I must take you to him. Nor will he sing," he continued,
"if he recognizes you as the emperor. You must go disguised
as a common man."
The emperor agreed to go in disguise with his musician. The teacher,
however, though glad to see his pupil again, refused to sing for
his supposed friend. Finally, Tansen tricked him by singing a melody
he'd learned in his student days, deliberately making a mistake
in what he'd learned. At this point, what could the teacher do but
correct his pupil? He sang the melody as it should have been sung.
The emperor
was astounded. When they left, he exclaimed, "You were right!
I never imagined a human being could sing with such a heavenly voice.
How is it that you, whose singing seems humanly perfect, haven't
the power to perform with such sublimity?"
"Your Majesty,"
replied Tansen, "the difference is simply this: I sing to please
you, but my teacher sings only to please God."
To make a real
difference in the world, then, we should serve no one but truth,
and God. Anything less will be but a wave. It may rise for a time,
but very soon it will sink again and be forgotten.
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