Saints
If any human
being can so transform his consciousness as to identify
with the Universal Consciousness, certainly this human
being deserves to be revered. At the same time, you
have madmen who go around posing as elevated beings.
What then are the distinguishing marks between a saint
and a madman?
Saints are intoxicated with the divine ecstasy. Great
spiritual saints, when they attain their spiritual perfection,
are drinking ambrosial nectar. They are living in that
delightful consciousness in which they feel that the
world itself is holding the spiritual ocean of bliss.
Some of them try to bring down that highest delight,
Ananda, from a very high plane where they have received
it, and sometimes they find it difficult. When they
find it difficult to touch the material plane carrying
this bliss, they may lose their inner balance and for
a short time become forgetful of the physical consciousness.
At that time they may not be able to function normally
on the physical plane. A seeker may forget his name,
for example, and others may say he is acting like a
madman.
But an ordinary madman is mentally, vitally or physically
dislocated. He never knows what he should do, what he
should say or how he should act. He has permanently
lost the connection between the physical world and his
own existence on earth. So whenever he says or does
something, there is no harmony with the Universal Consciousness.
That is to say, he cannot project himself into the Universal
Consciousness in which we are all abiding. All of us
are living in the Universal Consciousness, although
we may not be conscious of it. At the same time, we
are not violating the rules of the Universal Consciousness.
A madman is also unaware of the Universal Consciousness,
but at the same time, he is violating the laws of the
Universal Consciousness, owing to his ignorance.