He who can live up to his ideal is the king of life; he who cannot
live up to it is life's slave.
Bowl of Saki, by Hazrat Inayat Khan
Commentary by Pir-o-Murshid Inayat Khan:
The ideal life is at least to try to live up to one's ideal. But in
order to have an ideal one must first awaken to an ideal. Not
everyone possesses an ideal; many people do not know of it. It is no
exaggeration to say that the wars and disasters we have gone through,
the unrest that all feel, and the disagreement among the people which
is sometimes seen and sometimes not seen, are all caused by one thing
and that is the lack of an ideal.
Is it power which is the object of the spiritual person, or is it
inspiration after which he seeks? It is in fact neither of these
things which he pursues, but all such things as power and inspiration
follow him as he proceeds on his path towards the spiritual goal. The
goal of the spiritual person is self-realization, and his journey is
towards the depth of his own being, his God, his ideal.
God is the ideal that raises mankind to the utmost reach of
perfection. ... There is no ideal that can raise the moral standard
higher than the God-ideal, although love is the root of all and God
is the fruit of this. Love's expansion and love's culmination and
love's progress all depend upon the God-ideal.
That which makes us esteem those whom we esteem is their ideal. That
which raises man from earth to heaven is his ideal. And that which
pulls man down from the heavens to the earth is also his ideal. When
he does not live up to his ideal, he falls to earth. And when he
raises his ideal he goes from earth to heaven. He can rise to any
height, according to the stature of his ideal.
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