Thought is all important for "what we think   we become."  There was once a Sannyasin, a holy man, who sat under   a tree and taught the people.  He drank milk, and ate only fruit,   and made endless 'Pranayamas,' and felt himself to be very holy.     In the same village lived an evil woman.  Every day the   Sannyasin went and warned her that her wickedness would lead her to hell.    The poor woman, unable to change her method of life which was her only   means of livelihood, was still much moved by the terrible future depicted by the   Sannyasin.  She wept and prayed to the Lord, begging Him to forgive   her because she could not help herself.    
                By and by both the holy   man and the evil woman died.  The angels came and bore her to   heaven, while the demons claimed the soul of the Sannyasin.  "Why   is this!" he exclaimed, "have I not lived a most holy life, and preached   holiness to everybody? Why should I be taken to hell while this wicked woman is   taken to heaven?"  "Because," answered the demons, "while she was   forced to commit unholy acts, her mind was always fixed on the Lord and she   sought deliverance, which has now come to her.  But you, on the   contrary, while you performed only holy acts, had your mind always fixed on the   wickedness of others.  You saw only of sin, and thought only of   sin, so now you have to go to that place where only sin is."  The   moral of the story is obvious: The outer life avails little.  The   heart must be pure and the pure heart sees   only good, never evil.  We should never try to be guardians of   mankind, or to stand on a pedestal as saints reforming sinners.    Let us rather purify ourselves and the result must be that in so doing we   shall help others. 
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