There is a lie men have been fed since childhood.
That the spiritual man sits in stillness. That he owns nothing, wants nothing, and measures his virtue by what he has surrendered. That God, or consciousness, or enlightenment, is found only in poverty of ambition. And that the man who pursues power, who moves capital, who builds empires of influence, is
somehow lesser. Corrupted. Hollow inside.
It is one of the most effective lies ever constructed. Because it keeps dangerous men docile.
The truth is older than the priests who buried it.
The False Divide
The separation of spiritual and material is not an ancient truth. It is a political invention.
The early church needed obedient peasants. Obedient peasants require a theology that makes suffering sacred
and ambition sinful. The monk who renounces the world becomes the model of virtue. The merchant, the general, the strategist, becomes suspect. The world is fallen. Leave it to the powerful, and wait for heaven.
It worked. Brilliantly.
But go further back, before that architecture of control was built, and you find something different entirely.
Chanakya, writing the Arthashastra in 300 BCE, never
separated the pursuit of artha (wealth and power) from the pursuit of dharma (duty, cosmic order) or moksha (liberation). They were integrated. A king who failed to master wealth and strategy failed his spiritual duty to his people. Weakness was the sin. Mastery was the path.
Persian statecraft, from which so much of modern governance descends, viewed the ruler's expansion of
power as a sacred act. The king was the axis