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Jiddu Krishnamurti on
"Pupil and
Master"
Jiddu Krishnamurti
: "YOU
KNOW, I have been told that I am a pupil of a certain
Master," he began. "Do you think I am? I really want to
know what you think of this. I belong to a society of
which you know, and the outer heads who represent the
inner leaders or Masters have told me that because of my
work for the society I have been made a pupil. I have
been told that I have an opportunity to become a
first-degree initiate in this life." He took all this
very seriously, and we talked at some length.
Reward in any form is extremely gratifying,
especially a so- called spiritual reward when one is
somewhat indifferent to the honours of the world. Or
when one is not very successful in this world, it is
very gratifying to belong to a group especially chosen
by someone who is supposed to be a highly advanced
spiritual being, for then one is part of a team working
for a great idea, and naturally one must be rewarded for
one's obedience and for the sacrifices one has made for
the cause. If it is not a reward in that sense, it is a
recognition of one's spiritual advancement; or, as in a
well-run organization, one's efficiency is acknowledged
in order to stimulate one to do better.

Jiddu
Krishnamurti
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In a world where
success is worshipped, this kind of self-advancement is
understood and encouraged. But to be told by another
that you are a pupil of a Master, or to think that you
are, obviously leads to many ugly forms of exploitation.
Unfortunately, both the exploiter and the exploited feel
elated in their mutual relationship. This expanding
self-gratification is considered spiritual advancement,
and it becomes especially ugly and brutal when you have
intermediaries between the pupil and the Master, when
the Master is in a different country or is otherwise
inaccessible and you are not in direct physical contact
with him.
This inaccessibility and the lack of direct contact
opens the door to self-deception and to grand but
childish illusions; and these illusions are exploited by
the cunning, by those who are after glory and power.
Reward and punishment exist only when there is no
humility. Humility is not an end result of spiritual
practices and denials. Humility is not an achievement,
it is not a virtue to be cultivated. A virtue that is
cultivated ceases to be a virtue, for then it is merely
another form of achievement, a record to be made. A
cultivated virtue is not the abnegation of the self, but
a negative assertion of the self.
Humility is unaware of the division of the superior and
the inferior, of the Master and the pupil. As long as
there is a division between the Master and the pupil,
between reality and yourself, understanding is not
possible. In the understanding of truth, there is no
Master or pupil, neither the advanced nor the lowly.
Truth is the understanding of what is from moment to
moment without the burden or the residue of the past
moment.
Reward and punishment only strengthens the self, which
denies humility. Humility is in the present, not in the
future. You cannot become humble. The very becoming is
the continuation of self-importance, which conceals
itself in the practice of a virtue. How strong is our
will to succeed, to become ! How can success and
humility go together? Yet that is what the "spiritual"
exploiter and exploited pursue, and therein lie conflict
and misery.
"Do you mean to say that the Master does not exist, and
that my being a pupil is an illusion, a make-believe?"
he asked.
Whether the Master exists or not is so trivial. It is
important to the exploiter, to the secret schools and
societies; but to the man who is seeking truth, which
brings supreme happiness, surely this question is
utterly irrelevant. The rich man and the coolie are as
important as the Master and the pupil. Whether the
Masters exist or do not exist, whether there are the
distinctions of Initiates, pupils and so on, is not
important, but what is important is to understand
yourself. Without self-knowledge, your thought, that
which you reason out, has no basis. Without first
knowing yourself, how can you know what is true?
Illusion is inevitable without self-knowledge. It is
childish to be told and to accept that you are this or
that. Beware of the man who offers you a reward in this
world or in the next.
Source: from book
"The
First and Last Freedom" by Jiddu Krishnamurti
Related Article:
"Jiddu Krishnamurti life in words of Osho"
"Jiddu krishnamurti on Need of Guru"
"Classes of Seekers and Points
for Searching for Guru"
"Is
it true that to be in Communion with the master is the Initiation?"
"Fear on coming close to a Living
Master"
"Whenever
you are able to surrender, the teacher will come"
"How will you discriminate between a master and a
teacher?"
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