Divine Presence
It hides from the ignorant eye its ever-present magnificence!
His laughter of beauty breaks out in green trees, His moments of beauty triumph in a flower; The blue sea's chant, the rivulet's wandering voice Are murmurs falling from the Eternal's harp.
This world is God fulfilled in outwardness.
Sri Aurobindo, Savitri - II: The Debate of Love and Death
It is intended by the word Presence to indicate the sense and perception of the Divine as a Being, felt as present in one's existence and consciousness or in relation with it, without the necessity of any farther qualification or description. Thus of the "ineffable Presence" it can only be said that it is there and nothing more can or need be said about it, although at the same time one knows that all is there, personality and impersonality, Power and Light and Ananda and everything else, and that all these flow from that indescribable Presence. The word may be used sometimes in a less absolute sense, but that is always the fundamental significance,—the essential perception of the essential presence supporting everything else.
Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga - I: Terminology
It is the Divine Presence that gives value to life. This Presence is the source of all peace, all joy, all security.
The Mother, Words of the Mother - II: The Divine is with You
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