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Sri Aurobindo

Letters of Sri Aurobindo

Second Series

Fragment ID: 20888

1935.02

If the Divine were not in essence omnipotent, he could not be omnipotent anywhere – whether in the supramental or anywhere else. Because he chooses to limit or determine his action by conditions, it does not make him less omnipotent. His self-limitation is itself an act of omnipotence....

Why should the Divine be tied down to succeed in all his operations? What if failure suits him better and serves better the ultimate purpose? What rigid primitive notions are these about the Divine!

Certain conditions have been established for the game and so long as those conditions remain unchanged certain things are not done, so we say they are impossible, can’t be done. If the conditions are changed then the same things are done or. at least become licit – allowable, legal according to the so-called laws of Nature, and then we say they can be done. The Divine also acts according to the conditions of the game. He may change them, but he has to change them first, not proceed, while maintaining the conditions, to act by a series of miracles.

The heart has its intuitions as well as the mind and these are as true as any mental perceptions. But neither all feelings nor all perceptions nor all rational conclusions can be true.