We mean
by it always one who is a member of the Great White Brotherhood — a
member at such a level that He is able to take pupils. Now the Great
White Brotherhood is an organization unlike any other in the world,
and for that reason it has often been misunderstood. It has sometimes
been described as the Himalayan or the Tibetan Brotherhood, and the
idea has been conveyed of a body of Indian ascetics residing together
in a
...
monastery in some inaccessible mountain fastness. Perhaps this
has risen largely from the knowledge of the facts that the two
Brothers principally concerned in the foundation and work of the
Theosophical Society happen at the moment to be living in Tibet, and
to be wearing Indian bodies. To comprehend the facts of the case it
may be better to approach its consideration from another point of
view.
Most of our students are familiar with the thought of the
four stages of the Path of Holiness, and are aware that a man who has
passed through them and attained to the level of the Asekha has
achieved the task set before humanity during this chain-period, and
is consequently free from the necessity of reincarnation on this
planet or on any other. Before him then open seven ways among which
he must choose. Most of them take him away from this earth into wider
spheres of activity, probably connected with the solar system as a
whole, so that the great majority of those members of our humanity
who had already reached this goal have passed entirely out of our
ken.
The limited number who are still working directly for us
may be divided into two classes — those who retain physical bodies,
and those who do not. The latter are frequently spoken of under the
name of Nirmanakayas. They hold themselves suspended as it were
between this world and nirvana, and they devote the whole of their
time and energy to the generation of spiritual force for the benefit
of mankind. This force they pour into what may be described as a
reservoir, upon which the Masters and their pupils can draw for the
assistance of their work with humanity. The Nirmanakaya, because he
remains to this extent in touch with the lower planes, has been
called ‘a candidate for woe,’ but that is misleading. What is meant
is that he has not the joy of the higher work, or of the nirvanic
levels. He has chosen to remain upon lower planes in order to help
those who still suffer. It is quite true that to came back from the
higher life into this world is like going down from the fresh air and
glorious sunlight into a dark and evil-smelling dungeon; but the man
who does this to help some one out of that dungeon is not miserable
and wretched while there, but full of the joy of helping,
notwithstanding the greatness of the contrast and the terrible
feeling of bondage and compression. Indeed, a man who refused such an
opportunity of giving aid when it came to him would certainly feel
far more woe
...
- 2 -
afterwards, in the shape of remorse. When we have once
really seen the spiritual misery of the world, and the condition of
those who need such help, we can never again be careless or
indifferent about it, as are those who have not seen.
Fortunately those of us who have seen and realized this have ever
at our command a means whereby we can quite really and definitely
help. Tiny though our efforts may be as compared with the splendid
outpouring of force of the Nirmanakaya, we also can add our little
drops to the great store of force in that reservoir. Every outpouring
of affection or devotion produces a double result — one upon the
being to whom it is sent, and another upon ourselves, who sent it
forth. But if the devotion or affection be utterly without the
slightest thought of self, it brings in its train a third result
also. Ordinary affection or devotion, even of a high kind, moves in a
closed curve, however large that curve may be, and the result of it
comes back upon the sender. But the devotion or affection of the
truly unselfish man moves in an open curve, and though some of its
affects inevitably react upon the sender, the grandest and noblest
part of its force ascends to the Logos Himself, and the response, the
magnificent response of benediction which instantly pours forth from
Him, falls into that reservoir for the helping of mankind. So that it
is within the power of every one of us, even the weakest and the
poorest, to help the world in this most beautiful manner. It is this
adding to the reservoir of spiritual force which is really the truth
that lies et the back of the Catholic idea of works of
supererogation.
The still more limited number of adepts who
retain physical bodies remain in even closer touch with us, in order
to fill certain offices, and to do certain work necessary for our
evolution; and it is to the latter that the names of the Great White
Brotherhood and the Occult Hierarchy have sometimes been given. They
are, then, a very small number of highly advanced men belonging not
to any one nation, but to the world as a whole. On the physical plane
They do not live together, though They are of course in continual
communication on higher planes. Since They are beyond the necessity
of rebirth, when one body wears out They can choose another wherever
it may be most convenient for the work They wish to do, so that we
need not attach any special importance to the nationality of the
bodies which They happen to be wearing at any particular time. Just
now, several of those
...
- 3 -
bodies are Indian, one is Tibetan, one is
Chinese, two at least are English, one is Italian, one Hungarian, and
one Syrian, while one was born in the island of Cyprus. As I have
said, the nationality of these bodies is not a matter of importance,
but I mention these in order to show that it would be a mistake to
think of the ruling Hierarchy as belonging exclusively to one race.
Reverence restrains us from saying much of the great Head of
this Hierarchy, in Whose hands is the fate of the continents, in
Whose name all initiations are given. He is one of the very few now
remaining upon earth of the Lords of the Flame, the Children of the
Fire-mist, the great beings who came down from Venus nearly eighteen
million years ago to help and to lead the evolution of humanity on
our chain. These Great Ones did not take bodies from our then
entirely undeveloped humanity, but made for themselves bodies in
appearance resembling ours by the force of their will, a kind of
permanent materialization. At that period, and for long after it, no
members of our humanity were sufficiently developed to fill any of
the higher offices in this Hierarchy, and consequently we needed and
received this help from without. Gradually, as humanity has evolved,
it has become more and more able to provide for itself, and the great
Lords of the Flame have been set free to go to the help of yet other
evolutions. But one of them still holds this, the highest office of
all — the position of the King who guides and controls all evolution
taking place upon this planet — not only that of humanity and of the
animal, vegetable, mineral and elemental kingdoms below it, but also
of the great non-human kingdoms of the nature-spirits and the devas,
some of which rise so far above it
Under him are various Heads
of Departments, the broad outlines of whose work are more within our
comprehension than His. Though the details are far beyond us, we can
form some slight idea of what must be the manifold responsibilities
and activities of the Manu of a Root-race; and perhaps we can to some
extent image to ourselves the duties of Him who is Minister of
Religion in this world-kingdom — who sends forth religion after
religion, suiting each to the needs of a particular type of people
and to the period of the world' s history in which it is launched,
sometimes deputing one of His subordinates to found it, sometimes
even incarnating Himself for that purpose, as He may see fit. This
Minister of Religion is often called in the East the Bodhisattva —
one who is about to become a Buddha. The previous holder
...
- 4 -
of that high
office was He whom we call the Lord Gautama Buddha. The attainment of
Buddhahood is not simply the gaining of enlightenment; it is
also the taking of a great and definite initiation, and the man who
has taken that step cannot again incarnate upon earth, but hands over
his work to his successor, and usually passes away altogether from
any connection with earth.
The Lord Gautama, however, still
remains to a certain extent within touch of the world, in order that
he may still be able to help it. Once in each year he still shows
himself to the brotherhood of adepts, and pours down his blessing
upon them, to be passed through them to the world at large; and he
may still be reached in certain ways by those who know how. Mrs.
Besant has told us, in some of her recent writings, how he incarnated
over and over again as the great teacher of the earlier sub-races of
the Aryan race, how he was Hermes — the founder of the Egyptian
Mysteries — also the first and greatest Zoroaster, the original
founder of the worship of the sun and fire, and again he was Orpheus,
the founder of the Greek Mysteries. Those mentioned of course were
not his only births, for in the course of our researches into the
past we have seen him as founder of other religions than these.
The statement made in some of the earlier Theosophical works that
he was reborn as Shankaracharya is an error, for from an occult point
of view the two great teachers were on entirely different lines.
There was, however, a certain reason at the back of the statement in
the fact that some of the vehicles prepared by one of them were also
utilized by the other, as Madame Blavatsky has explained in the third
volume of The Secret Doctrine.
The deep reverence and
the strong affection felt for the Lord Gautama all over the East are
due to two facts. One of these is that he was the first of our
humanity to attain to the stupendous height of Buddha-hood, and so he
may be very truly described as the first-fruits and the leader of our
race. (All previous Buddhas had belonged to other humanities, which
had matured upon earlier chains.) The second fact is that for the
sake of hastening the progress of humanity, he took upon himself
certain additional labors of the most stupendous character, the
nature of which it is impossible to comprehend. It is stated that
when the time came at which it was expected that humanity would be
able to provide for itself some one who was ready to fill this
important office, no one
...
- 5 -
could be found who was fully capable of
doing so. But few of our earthly race had then reached the higher
stages of adeptship, and the foremost of these were two friends and
brothers whose development was equal. These two were the mighty Egos
now known to us as the Lord Gautama and the Lord Maitreya, and in his
great love for mankind the former at once volunteered to make the
tremendous additional exertion necessary to qualify Him to do the
work required, while His friend and brother decided to follow him as
the next holder of that office thousands of years later.
In
those far-off times it was the Lord Gautama who ruled the world of
religion and education; but now he has yielded that high office to
the Lord Maitreya, whom western people call the Christ — who took
the body of the disciple Jesus during the last three years of its
life on the physical plane; and those who know tell us that it will
not be long before he descends among us once again, to found another
faith. Anyone whose mind is broad enough to grasp this magnificent
conception of the splendid reality of things will see instantly how
worse than futile it is to set up in one's mind one religion as in
opposition to another, to try to convert any person from one to
another, or to compare depreciatingly the founder of one with the
founder of another. In the last case indeed it is especially
ridiculous, because the two founders are either two pupils of the
same school, or two incarnations of the same person, and so are
entirely in accord as to principles, though They may for the time be
putting forward different aspects of the truth to suit the needs of
those to whom they speak. The teaching is always fundamentally the
same, though its presentation may vary widely. The Lord Maitreya had
taken various births before he came into the office which he now
holds, but even in these earlier days he seems always to have been a
teacher or high-priest.
It is now generally known that the two
Masters who have been most intimately concerned with the foundation
and the work of the Theosophical Society have taken respectively the
offices of temporal and spiritual leader of the new sixth root-race,
which is to come into existence in seven hundred years’ time. The
Manu, or temporal leader, is practically an autocratic monarch who
arranges everything connected with the physical-plane life of the new
race, and endeavors in every way to make it as perfect an expression
as possible of the idea which the Logos has set before him for
realization. The spiritual teacher will be in charge of all the
various aspects of religion in the new race, and also of the
education of its children. It is clear that one of the main objects
of
...
- 6 -
the foundation of the Theosophical Society was that these two
Masters might gather round them a number of men who would be
intelligent and willing co-operators in this mighty work. Round them
will be grouped others who are now their pupils, but will by that
time have attained the level of adeptship.
We may then set
before ourselves as a goal the privilege of being chosen to serve
them in this wonderful work for the world which lies before them.
There will be ample opportunity for the display of all possible
varieties of talent, for the work will be of the most varied
character. Some of us will no doubt be attracted to one side of it
and some to the other, largely according to the predominance of our
affection for one or other of its great Leaders. It has often been
said that the characteristic of one is power, and of the other love
and compassion, and this is perfectly true, though, if it is not
rightly understood, it may very easily prove misleading. One of the
Masters concerned has been a ruler in many incarnations, and was so
even in the earlier part of this one, and unquestionably royal power
shows forth in his every gesture and in the very look of his eyes,
just as surely as the face of his brother adept beams ever with
overflowing love and compassion. They are of different rays or types,
having risen to their present level along different lines, and this
fact cannot but show itself; yet we should mistake sadly if we
thought of the first as in any degree less loving and compassionate
than his brother, or of the second as lacking anything of the power
possessed by the first. Other Masters also will be engaged in this
work, and it may well be that some of us may have made our link
through one of them.
It is probable that even the Masters who
are by name best known to you are not so real, not so clear, not so
well-defined to you as they are to those of us who have had the
privilege of meeting them face to face and seeing them constantly in
the course of our work. Yet you should endeavor by reading and
thinking of them to gain this realization, so that the Masters shall
become to you not vague ideals but living men — men exactly as we
are, though so enormously more advanced in every respect. They are
men most emphatically, but men without failings, and so to us they
seem like gods on account of the power, love and compassion radiating
from them. It is most significant that, in spite of the awe
necessarily produced by the sense of this tremendous power, in their
presence one never feels in the least afraid or embarrassed, but
always uplifted.
The man who stands before one of them cannot
but feel
...
- 7 -
the deepest humility, because of the greatness of the
contrast between himself and the Master. Yet with all this humility
he yet feels a firm confidence in himself, for since the Master, who
is also man, has achieved, that achievement is clearly possible even
for him. In his presence everything seems possible and even easy, and
one looks back with wonder on the troubles of yesterday, unable now
to comprehend why they should have caused agitation or dismay. Now at
least, the man feels, there can never again be trouble, since he has
seen the right proportion of things. Now he will never again forget
that, however dark the clouds may be, the sun is ever shining behind
them. The vibrations of the Masters are so strong that only those
qualities in you which harmonize with them are called out, so that
you will feel the uttermost confidence and love, and the desire to be
always in his presence. It is not that you forget that you have
undesirable qualities in you, but you feel that now you can conquer
them, and you do not in the least mind his knowing all about them,
because you are so certain that he understands perfectly, and to
understand all is to pardon all.
It may perhaps help us to
realize the human side of our Masters if we remember that many of
them in comparatively recent times have been known as historical
characters. The Master K. H., for example, appeared in Europe as the
philosopher Pythagoras. Before that he was the Egyptian priest
Sarthon, and on yet another occasion chief-priest of a temple at
Agade, in Asia Minor, where he was killed in a general massacre of
the inhabitants by a host of invading barbarians who swooped down
upon them from the hills. On that occasion he took immediately the
body of a Greek fisherman, which had been drowned in his attempt to
escape, and in that body the Master journeyed on to Persia, where he
rendered great assistance to the last of the Zoroasters in the
founding of the modern form of the Mazdayaznian religion. Later he
was the flamen of the Temple of Jupiter in Rome, and later still
Nagarjuna, the great Buddhist teacher. We have found him many times
in our researches into the past lives of some members of our group,
but almost always as a priest or teacher.
Again, in these
researches into the remote past we have frequently found the disciple
Jesus, who in Palestine had the privilege of yielding up his body to
the Christ. As a result of that act he received the incarnation of
Apollonius of Tyana, and in the eleventh century he appeared in India
as the teacher
...
- 8 -
Ramanujacharya, who revived the devotional element in
Hinduism, and raised it to so high a level.
No doubt some of
you have heard a good deal about other Masters besides the two who
principally take charge of Theosophical work. Another Master, for
example, dictated for us Light on the Path
and The
Idyll of the White Lotus, while yet another has taken charge of
a great deal of the work in Europe, and has written for us some of
the most splendid works in the whole realm of literary activity. Then
the one who was once the disciple Jesus stands ready especially to
guide the various activities of the Christian Churches. Yet another
looks especially after the work here in India.
Thus it may be
seen that the evolution of the world is by no means left to itself,
to get along as best it may, as people so often rashly suppose; on
the contrary, it is being directed. For this Hierarchy of adepts is
actually managing it, as far as it is possible to manage it while
leaving its inhabitants their own free-will. The members of the
Brotherhood, through Their agents, are constantly trying to work with
the important people of the world, putting advice and suggestions
into their minds, endeavoring to move them onwards towards the great
future of Universal Brotherhood when war shall have disappeared. But
we must remember that the karma of all the people concerned has to be
considered and respected. It would no doubt be easy to force the
world along at a far more rapid rate, but that would not be for the
real advantage of the people concerned. The Master K. H. once said in
a letter which I received from Him: “Of course I could easily
tell you exactly what to do, and of course you would do it, but then
the karma of the act would be mine and not yours, and you would gain
only the karma of prompt obedience.”
Men have to learn to
be not merely intelligent servants; they have to learn to be
co-workers, because they themselves will have the same work to do
some day, and if they are to be fit for greater responsibilities in
the future they must be willing to take up the smaller
responsibilities now. Sometimes, it is true, a really great
opportunity or responsibility of worldwide importance comes to one of
us, but that may perhaps be once in many hundreds of lives. When it
comes we shall take it or miss it, according as we have or have not
been in the habit of taking the smaller opportunities of daily life,
so that we have got into the habit of doing the right thing, and
shall do it automatically at the critical moment.
- 9 -
Our opportunities
of doing good or harm are usually but small as regards the world as a
whole; but when we have learned invariably and automatically to choose
the right in these smaller matters, the Great Brotherhood will feel
it safe to trust us in larger matters.
It is indeed well that
we should try to understand these Great Ones, not as a mere matter of
curiosity and interest, but in order that we may realise them as they
are, and comprehend that they are men just as we are, varying among
themselves just as we vary, although at so much higher a level.
Wisdom, power and love are present in all of them equally, yet they
are by no means all alike. They are individuals just as we are. They
are at the top of the ladder of humanity, but let us not forget that
we are somewhere on its lower rungs, and that one day we also shall
reach their level and stand where they stand.
One important
fact about them is their all-round development. If we examine
ourselves we shall be sure to find that we are to some extent
disproportionate in our development — one-sided in certain respects.
Some of us are full of scientific faculty and intellectual
development, but sadly lacking in devotion and compassion; others are
full of whole-souled devotion, but defective on the intellectual
side. A Master is perfect along both these lines, as may easily be
seen when we think of the splendid intellect of Pythagoras along with
the love and compassion of the Master K. H.
We must not
misunderstand their wonderful knowledge. In order to attain the level
of adeptship They must have cast off among others the fetter of
avidya or ignorance, and it is often said that to cast off ignorance
one must attain all-knowledge. Yet we know from personal acquaintance
with them that this is not so in the mere literal sense; for example,
there are Masters who do not know all languages, others who are not
artists and musicians, and so on. I think that what is really meant
by casting off the fetter of ignorance is the acquisition of a power
by which they can at any moment command any knowledge upon any
subject which they happen to require. They certainly have not all
facts stored within their physical brains but equally certainly they
can very quickly obtain any knowledge of which they have need. As to
the question of languages, for example, if a Master wishes to write a
letter in a language which he does not know, he very frequently
employs the brain of a pupil who is acquainted with that language,
throwing the ideas into that pupil's brain, and then employing the
words in
...
- 10 -
which he sees them clothe themselves. If a man speaks to
them in a language which they do not understand, they can instantly
grasp on the mental plane the thought that lies behind the
incomprehensible words.
It is often asked whether an
ordinary man who met a Master on the physical plane would instantly
recognize him as such. I do not see any reason why he should. he
would certainly find the Adept impressive, noble, dignified, holy and
serene. He could hardly fail to recognize that he was in the presence
of a remarkable man; but to know certainly that that man was an adept
it would be necessary to see his causal body, which of course the
ordinary man could not do. In that causal body the development would
show by its greatly increased size, and by a special arrangement of
the colors, which would differ for each of the seven great types.
But all this would be quite out of the reach of the ordinary man whom
we are postulating.
Adepts have no definite external
peculiarities by which they may be recognized, though there is a
great calmness and benevolence common to them all; their faces are
stamped always with a joyous serenity, the peace which passeth all
understanding. Most of them are distinctly handsome men, because
their physical bodies are perfect, for they live in an absolutely
hygienic way, and above all they never worry about anything. In the
case of most of us there is still a great deal of karma of various
kinds to be worked out and among other things this modifies the
appearance of our physical bodies. In their case all karma is long
ago exhausted, and consequently the physical body is a perfect
expression on the physical plane of the Augoeides or glorified body
of the Ego. Not only therefore is the body of a Master usually
splendidly handsome, but also any new body that he may take in a
subsequent incarnation will be an almost exact reproduction of the
old one, because there is nothing to modify it.
Another
remarkable fact is that hhey are able to preserve hheir physical
bodies very much longer than we can — owing no doubt to the perfect
health and absence of worry which we have already mentioned. Almost
all of the Masters whom we know appear as men in the prime of life,
yet in many cases there is testimony to prove that their physical
bodies must have long passed the ordinary age of man. I have heard
Madame Blavatsky say that her Master as he appears now does not look
a day older than when she first saw him in her childhood sixty years
before. In one case only,
...
- 11 -
that of a Master who has recently attained
adeptship in the body which he is still wearing, there is a certain
ruggedness in the face; which is doubtless the result of some
remainder of past karma brought over into this incarnation, but I
think we may feel sure that when he chooses to take another body that
characteristic will not persist.
Probably they are more silent
than most men; busy people have not much time for casual talk, and
they are out of all proportion the busiest people in the world. Their
pupil Madame Blavatsky was the most brilliant conversationalist that
I have ever met, but she never made talk for the sake of making it.
So with them; a Master never speaks without a definite object in
view, and His object is always to encourage, to help or to warn. He
speaks always gently and with the greatest kindness, though he often
betrays a very keen sense of humor; yet the humor itself is always
of the kindly order, and is used never to wound, but always to
lighten the troubles of the way, or to soften some necessary rebuke.
Certainly a man who has no sense of humor would not be likely to
make much progress in occult matters.
The number of adepts who
retain physical bodies in order to help the evolution of the world is
but small — perhaps some fifty or sixty in all. But it must be
remembered that the great majority of these do not take pupils, as
They are engaged in quite other work. Madame Blavatsky employed the
term adept very loosely, for in one place she actually speaks of
adepts who have been initiated, and adepts who have not been
initiated. In all later writings we have reserved the word
“initiate” for those who have passed at least the first
of the four great stages upon the Path of Holiness, and the word
adept we have restricted to those who have attained the Asekha level,
and so have finished the evolution required of them in this chain of
worlds. The consciousness of the Asekha rests normally upon the
nirvanic or atmic plane while his physical body is awake. But out of
the number who have already attained adeptship only the very small
proportion above-mentioned retain physical bodies, and remain in
touch with the earth in order to help it; and out of this a still
smaller proportion are willing under certain conditions to accept men
as pupils or apprentices; and it is to these last (the smallest
number) only that we give the name of Masters. Yet few though they be
their office is of incalculable importance, since without their aid
it would be impossible for man to enter the portals of initiation.
- 12 -
The Work of the Christ
You ask about the Great One whom we call
the Christ, the Lord Maitreya, and about his work in the past and in
the future. The subject is a wide one — one also about which it is
somewhat difficult for us to speak with freedom, on account of the
restrictions with which we are hedged round. Possibly the suggestion
may be of use to you that there is what we may call a department of
the inner government of the world which is devoted to religious
instruction — the founding and inspiring of religions, and so on. It
is the Christ who is in charge of that department; sometimes he
himself appears on earth to found a great religion and sometimes he
entrusts such work to one of his more advanced assistants. We must
regard him as exercising a kind of steady pressure from behind all
the time, so that the power employed will flow as though
automatically into every channel anywhere and of any sort which is
open to its passage; so that he is working simultaneously through
every religion, and utilizing all that is good in the way of devotion
and self-sacrifice in each.
The fact that these religions may
be wasting their strength in abusing one another upon the physical
plane is of course lamentable, but it does not make much difference
to the fact that whatever is good in each of them is being
simultaneously utilized from behind by the same great Power. This is
true of course of all movements in the world; every ounce of the good
in them is being used as a channel, while the evil in them is in each
case just so much regrettable waste of force which might have been
utilized if the people had been more sensible. The section in
The Secret Doctrine
entitled The Mystery of Buddha
gives a good deal of information as to the relations between the
Heads of this department of Religion, and it may give some useful
hints as to the Christ also. This is a subject of paramount interest
to the members of our Society, since one of our Masters has a
specially close relation with that department.
The future work of the Christ
was decided many thousands of years ago — some of it decided
apparently in minute details, though it would seem that there is a
good deal of flexibility with regard to other points. The utter
certainty with which these Great Ones lay their plans many thousands
of years ahead is one of the most wonderful features of this
stupendous work that they do. Sometimes it is open to those of us who
have been able to develop
...
- 13 -
the faculties of the higher planes to be
allowed a glimpse of their mighty schemes, to witness the lifting of
a tiny corner of the veil which shrouds the future. Sometimes also we
have glimpsed their plans in another way, for in looking back into
the records of the distant past we have found them making prophecies,
the fulfilment of which is even now passing before our eyes.
I
know of nothing more stirring, more absorbingly interesting, than
such a glimpse. The splendor, the colossal magnitude, of their plans
takes away one's breath, yet even more impressive is the calm
dignity, the utter certainty, of it all. Not individuals only, but
even nations are the pieces in this game; but neither nation nor
individual is compelled to play any given part. The opportunity to
play that part is given to it or to him; if he or it will not take it
there is invariably an under-study ready to step in and fill the gap.
But, whoever may be the instrument, this one thing at least is
utterly certain, that the intended end will be achieved; through
whose agency this will be done matters very much to the agent but
nothing at all to the total progress of the world. Nineteen hundred
years ago Appollonius of Tyana was sent out by the Brotherhood upon a
mission, one feature of which was that he was to found, in various
countries, certain magnetic centers. Objects of the nature of
talismans were given to him, which he was to bury at these chosen
spots, in order that the force which they radiated might prepare
these places to be the centers of great events in the future. Some of
those centers have already been utilized, but some have not, and all
these latter are to be employed in the immediate future in connection
with the work of the coming Christ. So that much of the detail of his
work was already definitely planned nearly two thousand years ago,
and arrangements even on the physical plane were being made to
prepare for it. When once we realize this utter certainty, doubt and
hesitation, anxiety and worry, all fade away and we gain a perfect
peace and content, and the most absolute confidence in the Powers who
are governing the world.
The Work of the the Masters
The work of
the Masters on their own planes is not easy for us to comprehend,
though we can readily see that their activity must be tremendous. The
number of adepts still retaining physical bodies is but small, and
yet in their hands is the care of all the evolutions which are taking
place on this globe. As far as humanity
...
- 14 -
is concerned they seem to
divide the world into parishes, but their parishes are continents,
and an adept is appointed to look after each. The Theosophical
Society appears to be rather of the nature of a mission sent out from
Headquarters, so that those who take part in its activities are
working not for any particular parish or any particular form of
religion, but for humanity as a whole; and it is upon humanity as a
whole, or at least upon humanity in the mass, that the Masters
chiefly act. They have a department which devotes itself to
endeavoring to influence in the right direction the important people
of the world — to affect kings and statesmen in the direction of
peace, to impress more liberal ideas upon great preachers and
teachers, to uplift the conceptions of artists, so that through them
the whole world may be made a little happier and a little
better.
But the working of such departments as these
is mainly entrusted to their pupils, they themselves dealing rather
with the egos in their causal bodies; they devote themselves to
pouring spiritual influence upon them — raying out upon them as the
sunlight radiates upon the flowers, and thereby evoking from them all
that is noblest and best in them, and so promoting their growth. Many
people are sometimes conscious of helpful influences of this
description, but are quite unable to trace them to their source. The
causal body of the average man has as yet almost no consciousness of
anything external to itself on its own plane. It is very much in the
condition of the chicken within the egg, which is entirely
unconscious of the source of the heat which nevertheless stimulates
its growth. When any person reaches the stage where he breaks through
his shell, and becomes capable of some sort of response, the whole
process takes on a different form, and is enormously quickened. Even
the group-souls of animals on the lower part of the mental plane are
greatly affected and assisted by such influence, for like sunlight
the force floods the entire plane and affects to some extent
everything which is within its radius. In pouring out this force the
Masters frequently take advantage of special occasions and of places
where there is some strong magnetic center. Where some holy man has
lived and died, or where some relics of such a person create a
suitable atmosphere, they take advantage of such conditions and cause
their own force to radiate along the channels which are already
prepared. When some vast assemblage of pilgrims comes together in a
receptive attitude, again they take advantage of the occasion by
pouring
...
- 15 -
their forces out upon the people through the channels by
means of which they have been taught to expect help and blessing.
It is owing to assistance of this nature given to us from above
that humanity has progressed even to its present position. We are
still in the fourth round, which should naturally be devoted to the
development of desire and emotion, and yet we are already engaged in
the unfolding of the intellect, which is to be the special
characteristic of the fifth round. That this is so is due to the
immense stimulus given to our evolution by the descent of the Lords
of the Flame from Venus, and by the work of the adepts who have
preserved for us that influence and steadily sacrificed themselves in
order that we might make the better progress.
Those who
understand anything of this work, and most especially those of us who
have been privileged to see the Masters doing it, would never for a
moment think of interrupting them in such altruistic labor as this
by propounding any personal requests. The vast importance of the work
which they are doing, and the enormous amount of it, make it
obviously impossible that they should take up personal work with
individuals. In the cases where such work has to be done it is always
delegated to pupils or performed by means of elementals and
nature-spirits. Therefore it becomes emphatically the duty of the
student to fit himself to do some of this lower work, for the very
good reason that if he does not do so, the work will for the present
be left undone, since it would be obviously impossible for the
Masters to turn aside from their far greater work for the whole world
to attend to individual cases. The work of the invisible helpers on
the astral plane would simply not be done unless there were pupils at
the stage where that is the best work that they can do; for so soon
as they pass beyond that stage and can do higher work, the higher
work will certainly be given to them.
People sometimes ask why
the Masters so often work through imperfect instruments; the answer
is obviously because they have not time to do the work themselves,
and they must therefore employ such instruments as they have, or the
work will not be done at all. Take for example the writing of books
for the helping of humanity. It is obvious that the Masters could do
this very far better than any of Their pupils can, and by doing it
they could entirely avoid any possibility of erroneous or imperfect
statements. But they have absolutely no time to devote to such work,
and therefore if it were not done by pupils it would remain
... ...
- 16 -
undone.
Besides, if the Masters did it they would take away the opportunity
of making good karma from those who can do it — certainly not as well
as they, but yet after all well enough for the use of those who know
so very much less.
We must remember that every Master has at
his command only a certain amount of force which, enormous as it
seems to us, is still a limited quantity, and it is his duty to
employ this force to the best possible advantage for the helping of
humanity. Therefore it would, if we may say so without irreverence,
be absolutely wrong for him to waste that force upon anything lower
than the very highest that it can reach, or to spend upon individual
cases, however deserving, that which can be so much better employed
for the welfare of all.
Masters and Pupils
It has already been said that out
of the comparatively small number of adepts who retain their physical
bodies and fill the offices connected with the administration of the
world under the Great Hierarchy, there is a still smaller number who
accept pupils, and to whom therefore we give the name of Masters. Let
us see then what it means to be a pupil of one of these Masters, what
is expected of one who aspires to this position and what is the work
which he has to do.
First let us have it clearly in our minds
that the Masters have absolutely dedicated themselves to the service
of humanity, and that They are utterly absorbed in the work to the
entire exclusion of every other consideration. In speaking to you on
this subject before, I have mentioned that a Master has only a
certain definite amount of force to expend, and that though the
amount of that force seems to us almost incalculable, he is
nevertheless exceedingly careful to use every ounce of it to the best
possible advantage. Obviously to take in hand and instruct a pupil
will make some demand upon his time and upon this store of energy,
and since he regards everything from the standpoint of its use in
regard to the promotion of evolution he will not expend this time and
energy upon any man unless he can see that it is a good investment.
He will take a man as a pupil; or perhaps we should rather
say as an apprentice, when he sees that the amount of time and
strength spent in training him will produce more result eventually
than
...
- 17 -
any other way of expending the same amount — but not otherwise.
For example, a man might have many qualifications which would
make him useful as an assistant, but at the same time some one great
fault which would be a constant obstacle in his way, which would
nullify much of the good that he might otherwise do. No Master would
accept such a man as a pupil; but he might say to him: “Go to
work and conquer that special fault of yours, and when you have
succeeded I will take you as my assistant, and will train you
further.”
So many of our earnest students are full of the
most benevolent and altruistic feeling, and, knowing themselves to be
in this way very different from the majority of mankind, they
sometimes say to themselves, “I am so deeply anxious to work
for humanity; why will not the Master take me in hand and train
me?”
Let us face the facts boldly. The Master will not
train you because you are still full of all sorts of minor
imperfections. It is quite true, as you no doubt feel within
yourselves, that your benevolence, your kindliness, your earnest wish
to be helpful, are far greater things on the credit side of the
account than are all these small faults on the debit side. But try to
realize that there are thousands of people in the world who are
benevolent and well-meaning, and that you differ from them only in
the fact that you happen to have a little more knowledge, and so you
are able to direct your benevolence into more definitely useful
channels than those others. If these were all the qualifications
required for discipleship, each Master might have thousands of
pupils, and his whole time would be taken up in endeavoring to bring
into shape those few thousands of people, with all their petty little
faults on the astral and physical planes, and in the meantime the
Master’s splendid work with the egos on the higher levels would have
to be entirely neglected.
First of all then, to be a pupil of a
Master means that one must look upon life as the Master looks upon
it, solely from the point of view of what is best for the progress of
the world. The pupil must be prepared absolutely to forget
himself, to sink his personality entirely, and he must
understand that this is not a mere poetical figure or a
fashion of speech, but that it means just exactly what it says —
that he must have no personal desires whatsoever, and must be
willing to order the whole of his life according to the work that he
has to do. How many of us are there who are wholeheartedly
...
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willing to
take even this first step towards accepted discipleship?
Think what it means to become a disciple. When any man offers himself
for such a position the Master will at once say whether or not He
considers him fit to enter upon the stage of the probationary pupil.
If the candidate appears to be reasonably near the possession of the
necessary qualifications the Master may take him upon probation,
which means that he will remain for a period of some years under very
close observation. Seven years is the average time of this probation,
but it may be indefinitely lengthened if the candidate should prove
unsatisfactory, or on the other hand it may be much shortened if it
is seen that he has really taken himself in hand. I have known it to
be extended to thirty years; I have known it to be reduced to five
years, and even to three, and in one quite exceptional case it was
only five months. During this period of probation the pupil is not in
any sense in any kind of direct communication with the Master; he is
little likely to hear or to see anything of Him. Nor as a general
rule are any special trials or difficulties put in his way; he is
simply carefully watched in his attitude towards all the little daily
troubles of life. For convenience of observation the Master makes
what is called a “living image” of each such probationary
pupil — that is to say, an exact duplicate of the man's astral and
mental bodies. This image he keeps in a place where he can easily
reach it, and He places it in magnetic rapport with the man
himself, so that every modification of thought or of feeling in the
man' s own vehicles is faithfully reproduced in the image. These
images are examined daily by the Master, who in this way obtains with
the least possible trouble a perfectly accurate record of his
prospective pupil's thoughts and feelings, and from this He is able
to decide when he can take him into the far closer relationship of
the second stage — that of the accepted pupil.
Remember that
the Master is a channel for the distribution of the forces of the
Logos, and not indeed a mere unconscious channel but a keenly
intelligent co-operator; and he is this because he is himself
consciously a part of the Logos. Just in the same way at a lower
level the accepted pupil is a channel of the forces of the Master,
but he, too, must be not an unconscious channel but an intelligent
co-operator, and in order to be this he must also become virtually
part of the consciousness of the Master.
- 19 -
An accepted pupil is
taken into his Master's consciousness to so great an extent that
whatever he sees or hears is within the knowledge of his Master — not
that the Master necessarily sees or hears it at the same moment
(though that often happens) but that it lies within the Master' s
memory exactly as it does within the memory of the pupil. Whatever
the pupil feels or thinks is within the astral and mental bodies of
his Master. When we realize all that this means, we see very clearly
why it would be utterly impossible for the Master to accept any pupil
until the pupil's thoughts and feelings were such as the Master
would wish to harbor within himself.
It unfortunately
sometimes happens that there comes into the mind of the pupil some
thought which is not fit to be harbored by the Master, and as soon
as the Master feels that, he at once erects a barrier and shuts off
from himself that vibration, but to do this diverts his attention for
a moment from his other work, and takes a certain amount of energy.
Once more we see clearly that it would be impossible for a Master to
take into such a relation with himself one who often indulged in
thoughts unfit for the Master’s mind; to have to be continually or
even frequently turned aside from his work in order to shut off
undesirable thoughts or feelings would clearly be a quite intolerable
tax upon the Master’s time and strength.
It is not because of
any lack of compassion or patience that a Master could not take such
a man; it is simply that it would not be a good use either of his
time or his energy, and to make the best possible use of both of them
is his simple duty. If a man feels himself worthy to be accepted as a
pupil, and wonders why this privilege has not already been extended
to him, let him watch himself closely for even a single day, and ask
himself whether during that day there has been in him any single
thought or feeling which would have been unworthy of the Master.
Remember that not only definitely evil or unkind thoughts are
unworthy of him, but also trifling thoughts, critical thoughts,
irritated thoughts — above all, thoughts of self. Who of us is
sufficient for these things?
The effect which the Master seeks
to produce by this wonderfully close association is the harmonizing
and attuning of the pupil's vehicles — the same result which an
Indian teacher tries to gain by keeping his disciples always in the
neighborhood physically. Whatever may be the special kind of
exercises of the special
...
- 20 -
course of study prescribed, in all cases the
principal effect upon the pupil is that produced not by either
exercises or study, but by being constantly in the presence of the
teacher. The various vehicles of the pupil are vibrating at their
accustomed rates — probably each of them at various rates, due to the
constant presence of passing emotions and wandering thoughts of all
kinds. The first and most difficult task of the pupil is to reduce
all this chaos to order — to eliminate the host of minor interests,
and control the wandering thoughts, and this must be achieved by a
steady pressure of the will exercised upon all his vehicles through a
long period of years.
While he still lives in the world the
difficulty of this undertaking is multiplied a hundredfold by the
ceaseless pressure of disturbing waves of thought and emotion, which
give him no moment of rest, no opportunity to collect his forces in
order to make a real effort. This is why in India the man who wishes
to live the higher life retires to the jungle — why, in all countries
and in all ages, there have been men willing to adopt the
contemplative life of the hermit. The hermit at least has
breathing-space, has rest from the endless conflict, so that he can
find time to think coherently. He has little to hinder him in his
struggle, and the calm influences of nature are even to a certain
extent helpful.
But the man who lives perpetually in the
presence of one already upon the Path has a still greater advantage.
Such a teacher has by the hypothesis already calmed his vehicles and
accustomed them to vibrate at a few carefully selected rates instead
of in a hundred promiscuous frenzies. These few rates of vibration
are very strong and steady, and day and night, whether he is sleeping
or waking, they are playing unceasingly upon the vehicles of the
pupil, and gradually raising him to his teacher's key. Nothing but
time and close association will produce this effect; and even then
not with every one, but only with those capable of being attuned.
Many teachers require to see a reasonable proportion of this result
before they will impart their special methods of occult development;
in other words, before teaching a pupil something which may easily do
him much harm if wrongfully used, they wish to be certain by ocular
demonstration that he is a man of the type to which this instruction
is appropriate, and is sufficiently amenable to their influence to be
held in the right way by it when the strain comes. A thousand times
greater are the advantages gained by those whom the Master selects —
who thus
... ...
- 21 -
have the opportunity of such close and intimate contact with
Him.
This then is what is meant by being an accepted pupil
of the Master — that the man becomes a kind of outpost of that
Master' s consciousness, so that the strength of the Great Ones may
be poured out through him, and the world may be definitely the better
for his presence in it. The pupil is so closely in touch with the
Master' s thought that he can at any time see what that thought is
upon any given subject, and in that way he is often saved from error.
The Master can at any moment send a thought through that pupil either
in the form of a suggestion or a message. If, for example, the pupil
is writing a letter or giving a lecture, the Master is subconsciously
aware of that fact, and may at any moment throw into the mind of the
pupil a sentence to be included in that letter or a useful
illustration for that lecture. In earlier stages the pupil is often
unconscious of this, and supposes these ideas to have arisen
spontaneously in his own mind, but he very soon learns to recognize
the thought of the Master. Indeed, it is eminently necessary that he
should learn to recognize it, because there are many other entities
on the astral and mental planes who are very ready in the most
friendly way and with the best intentions to make similar
suggestions, and it is assuredly well that the pupil should learn to
distinguish from whom they come.
We must not, however, confuse
such use by a Master of his pupil's body with the mediumship which
we have so often characterized as objectionable. For example, there
have been some occasions on which one or other of our Masters has
spoken through our President, and it has been stated that on such
occasions sometimes her very voice and manner and even her features
have been changed. But it must be remembered that in all such cases
she has retained the fullest consciousness and has known exactly who
was speaking and why. That is a condition so different from what is
ordinarily understood by mediumship that it would be quite unfair to
call it by the same name. There can be no objection to such use of a
pupil's body, but it is only in the case of a very few pupils that
the Masters have ever done this.
When it happens, the
President's (Mrs. Besant's) consciousness is just as fully active in her physical
brain as ever, but instead of directing her organs of speech herself
she listens while the Master makes use of them. He formulates the
sentences in His own brain and then transfers them to hers. While
this is being done she can use her own brain-power, as it were
passively, to listen, to understand, and to
... ...
- 22 -
admire; but I conceive
that it would hardly be possible for her at absolutely the same
moment to compose a sentence upon some quite different subject. I
suppose that the highest form of spiritualistic control may more or
less approximate to this, but probably very rarely, and hardly ever
completely.
The influence of a Master is so powerful that it
may well shine through to almost any extent, and any one of the
audience who is really impressible might be conscious of his presence
even to the extent of seeing His features or hearing his voice,
instead of those of His pupil. It is not very probable that any
actual physical change takes place, such as would be visible to
non-sensitive spectators. In spiritualism I have indeed seen cases in
which the medium's voice and manner, and even his very features,
were actually physically entirely changed, but that always means a
complete suppression of his ego by the entity speaking through him,
and this would be quite foreign to the system of training adopted by
our Masters.
There is yet a third stage of even more intimate
union, when the pupil becomes what is called the “son” of
the Master. This is accorded only after the Master has had
considerable experience of the man as an accepted pupil, when he is
quite certain that nothing can arise in the mind or astral body of
the pupil which will ever need to be shut off. For that is perhaps
the principal difference which can be readily explained on the
physical plane between the position of the accepted disciple and of
the “son” — that the accepted disciple, though truly a
part of the Master' s consciousness, can still be shut off when it
seems desirable, whereas the “son” is drawn into a union
so close and so sacred that even the power of the Master cannot undo
what has been done to the extent of separating these consciousnesses
even for a moment.
These then are the three stages of the
relation of a pupil to his Master; first, the probationary period,
during which he is not in any real sense a pupil at all; second, the
period of accepted discipleship; third, the period of
“sonship”. It must be clearly understood that these
relations have nothing whatever to do with initiations or steps on
the Path, which belong to an entirely different category, and are
tokens of the man' s relation not to his Master but to the Great
White Brotherhood and to its august Head. One may find a not inapt
symbol of these respective relationships in the position in which an
undergraduate stands with regard to the head of his college and to
the university as a whole. The university as such
...
- 23 -
requires the man to
pass certain examinations, and the precise methods in which he
prepares himself for this, are, comparatively speaking, matters of
indifference to it. It is the university, and not the head of the
college, that arranges the examination and confers the various
degrees; the work of the head of the college is simply to see that
the candidate is duly prepared. In the process of such preparation he
may, as a private gentleman, enter into whatever social or other
relations he may think proper with his pupil; but all that is not the
business of the university.
Just in the same way the Great
White Brotherhood has nothing to do with the relations between the
Master and his pupil; that is a matter solely for the private
consideration of the Master himself. Whenever the Master considers
that the pupil is fit for the first initiation, he gives notice of
that fact and presents him for it, and the Brotherhood asks only
whether he is ready for the initiation , and not what is the
relationship between him and any Master. At the same time it is true
that a candidate for initiation must be proposed and seconded by two
of the higher members of the Brotherhood — that is to say, by two who
have reached the level of adeptship; and it is certain that the
Master would not propose a man for the tests of initiation unless he
had with regard to him the certainty of his fitness, which could only
come from such close identification with his consciousness as that of
which I have already spoken.
When a student hears all this
there naturally arises in his mind the question, “How can I
become the pupil of a Master? What can I do that will attract His
attention?” As a matter of fact it is quite unnecessary that we
should try to attract his attention, for the Masters are ever
watching for those whom they can help to be of use to them in the
great work which they have to do, and we need not have the slightest
fear that we shall be overlooked.
I remember very well an
incident of the early days of my own connection with the Great Ones a
quarter of a century ago. I met on the physical plane a man of great
enthusiasm and of the most saintly character, one who believed
thoroughly in the existence of the Masters, and devoted his life to
the one object of qualifying himself for their service. He seemed to
me a man in every way so entirely suitable for discipleship, so
obviously better than myself in many ways, that I could not
understand how it was that he was not already accepted; and so, being
young in the work and ignorant, one day when a good opportunity
offered itself I very
...
- 24 -
humbly and as it were apologetically mentioned
his name to the Master with the suggestion that he might perhaps
prove a good instrument. A smile of kindly amusement broke out upon
the Master's face, as he said:
“Ah, you need not fear
that your friend is being overlooked; no one can ever be overlooked;
but in this case there still remains a certain karma to be worked
out, which makes it impossible at the moment to accept your
suggestion. Soon your friend will pass away from the physical plane,
and soon he will return to it again, and then the expiation will be
complete and what you desire for him will have become
possible.”
And then, with the gentle kindness which is
always so prominent a characteristic in him, he blended my
consciousness with his in an even more intimate manner, and raised it
to a plane far higher than I could then reach, and from that
elevation he showed me how the Masters look out upon the world. The
whole earth lay before us with all its millions of souls, undeveloped
most of them, and therefore inconspicuous; but wherever amidst all
that mighty multitude there was one who was approaching even at a
great distance the point at which definite use could be made of him,
he stood out among the rest just as the flame of a light-house stands
out in the darkness of the night.
“Now you see,”
said the Master, “how utterly impossible it would be that any
one should be overlooked who is even within measurable distance of
the possibility of acceptance as a probationer.”
We can
do nothing on our side but steadily work at the improvement of our
own character and endeavor in every possible way, by the study of
Theosophical works, by self-development, and by the unselfishness of
our devotion to the interests of others, to fit ourselves for the
honor which we desire, having within our minds the utter certainty
that as soon as we are ready the acceptance will assuredly come. We
can do nothing but fit ourselves, and we have the certainty that as
soon as we are ready we shall be accepted, because we know how great
is the need of helpers. But until we can be utilized economically —
until, that is to say, the force spent upon us will bring forth,
through our action, more result than it would if spent in any other
way, it would be a violation of duty on the part of the Master to
draw us into close relations with him.
We may be quite sure
that there are in reality no exceptions to
...
- 25 -
this rule, even though we
may sometimes think that we have seen some. A man may become a
probationary pupil of the Master while he has still some obvious
faults, but we may be very sure that in such a case there are good
qualities under the surface which far more than counterbalance the
superficial evils. Another thing that must be remembered is that,
like the rest of us, the Great Masters of Wisdom have a long line of
lives behind them, and in those lives, like others, they have made
certain karmic ties, and so sometimes it happens that a particular
individual has a claim on them for some service rendered long ago in
the remote past. In the lines of past lives which we have examined we
sometimes come across instances of such a karmic link.
One
well-known case is that of a certain member who, when a powerful
noble in Egypt six thousand years ago, used his influence with the
authorities of one of the great temples to introduce into it as a
favored student a young man who displayed the keenest interest in
occult matters. That young student took up occultism with the
greatest eagerness and made the most astonishing progress in it, so
that in every life thereafter he continued the studies begun in
ancient Khem. Between then and now that young student has attained
adeptship, and thus passed on far in advance of the friend who then
introduced him to the temple. In the work which he has had to do in
these later days he needed some one to put before the world certain
truths which had to be published, because the time for such
unfoldment was fully ripe. He looked round for an instrument whom he
could use, and he found his old friend and helper of six thousand
years ago in a position in which it was possible to employ him in
this work. At once he remembered his ancient debt and repaid it by
giving to his friend this wonderful privilege of being the channel of
the truth to the world.
Such cases indeed are fairly numerous.
We all know how at a period still far earlier one of the founders of
the Theosophical Society saved the life of the other, who was at that
time the eldest son of him who is now the Master and teacher of both,
and thus established a karmic claim which has drawn those three into
close relationship ever since. Again, on another occasion in the
remote past our President saved the life of her present teacher when
there was a conspiracy to assassinate him; and in yet another
instance one who has but just passed the portals of initiation saved
the life of the Bodhisattva, the great Lord Maitreya himself.
- 26 -
Now all these are unquestionably karmic links, and they constitute
debts which will be fully repaid. So it may happen to any of us that
in some past life we have come into touch with one who is now a
Master, or done him some slight service, and if so, that may well
prove to have been the commencement of an association which will
ripen into discipleship on our side. It frequently happens that
people are drawn together by a strong common interest in occultism,
and in later lives, when some of these have out-distanced the others,
those who were once friends and fellow-students often fall naturally
into the relation of teacher and pupil.
No doubt a man may
attract their attention in many ways; he may bring himself to the
portals of the Path by association with those in advance of him, by
the force of sheer hard thinking, by devotion, or by earnest
endeavor in good works; but all these are after all merely so many
divisions of the one Way, because they all of them mean that he is
making himself fit for one or other department of the work that is to
be done. And so when by any of these methods he reaches a certain
level, he inevitably attracts the attention of the Masters of the
Wisdom and comes in some way into connection with them, though
probably not upon the physical plane. The Master's usual plan is
that he is brought into connection with one or other of their more
prominent pupils, and this is very much the safest way, since it is
impossible for any ordinary person to assure himself of the good
faith of astral communications.
Unless a man has had very wide
experience in connection with mediumship, he would find it very
difficult to realize how many quite ordinary people there are upon
the astral plane who are burning with the desire to pose as great
world-teachers. They are generally quite honest in their intentions,
and really think that they have teaching to give which will save the
world. Now that they are dead they have fully realized the
worthlessness of mere worldly objects, and they feel (quite rightly)
that if they could only impress upon mankind in general the ideas
which they have now acquired, the whole world would immediately
become a very different place. They are also fully persuaded that
they have only to publish their discoveries upon the physical plane
in order at once to convince everybody of their inherent
reasonableness, and so they select some impressionable lady and tell
her that they have chosen her out of all the world to be the medium
of a magnificent revelation.
Now it is rather flattering to the
average person to be told that
...
- 27 -
he or she is the sole medium in all
the world for some mighty entity, the only channel for some exclusive
and transcendent teaching; and even though the communicating entity
should disclaim any special greatness (which he usually does not)
this is put down to praiseworthy modesty on his part, and he is
described as at least an archangel, even if not a still more direct
manifestation of the Deity. What such a communicating entity forgets
is that when he was alive on the physical plane other people were
making similar communications through various mediums, and that then
he never paid the slightest attention to them, nor was in any way
affected by what they said, and so he does not realise that precisely
as he, when immersed in the affairs of this world, declined to be
moved by those very communications, so will all the world now go on
contentedly with its own business and pay no attention to
him.
Often such entities assume distinguished names from
what may almost be called a pardonable motive, for they know human
nature well enough to be aware that if John Smith or Thomas Brown
comes back from the dead and enunciates a certain doctrine it will
have very little chance of acceptance, no matter how excellent and
how entirely true it may be; whereas the same words uttered by George
Washington, Julius Caesar or the Archangel Michael would be at least
respectfully considered and very probably blindly accepted.
Anyone functioning on the astral plane has a certain amount of
insight into the thoughts and feelings of those with whom he is
dealing, and therefore it is not wonderful that when such people come
into contact with the Theosophists, and see their minds to be full of
reverence for the Masters of Wisdom, they should sometimes personate
those very Masters of Wisdom in order to command more ready
acceptance for whatever ideas they wish to promulgate. Also it must
not be forgotten that there are those who bear no good will to our
Masters, and desire to do them any injury which lies within their
power. They cannot of course harm them directly, and therefore they
sometimes try to do so through the pupils whom they love. One of the
easiest ways in which they can produce difficulties is by assuming
the form of the Master who is so strongly revered by their victim,
and in many cases such an imitation is quite perfect, so far as the
physical appearance is concerned, except that it always seems to me
that they can never quite get the right expression into the eyes. One
who has developed
...
- 28 -
the sight of the higher planes cannot be thus
deluded, as it is quite impossible for any of these entities to
imitate the causal body of the Master.
Most assuredly we shall
do well to heed diligently the wise precept
in The Voice of the
Silence, “Seek not thy Guru in those mayavic
regions.” Accept no teaching from some self-appointed preceptor
on the astral plane, but receive all communications and advice which
come thence precisely as you would receive similar advice or remarks
made by a stranger on the physical plane. Take them for what they are
worth, and accept the advice or reject it as your own conscience
dictates, without paying attention to its alleged source. Seek rather
for teaching which satisfies the intellect, and apply the test of
intellect and conscience to any claims which are put forward.
Let it never be forgotten that ours are not the only lines. The
two Masters who are most intimately associated with the work of the
Theosophical Society represent two different rays or methods of
teaching; but there are others besides these. All schools of the
higher teaching give a preliminary training to purify the character,
but the particular teachings given and practices recommended differ
according to the type of the teacher. But all teachers who belong to
the Great White Lodge insist upon the attainment of the highest only
by means of the Path of Holiness, and the quenching of desire by
conquering it and not by gratifying it.
The pupil will be
employed by his Master in many different ways. Some are set to take
up the lines of work indicated in the book Invisible Helpers;
others are employed specifically in assisting the Masters
personally in some piece of work which They happen to have
undertaken; some are set astrally to deliver lectures to audiences of
less developed souls, or to help and teach others who are free
temporarily during sleep, or are permanently after death denizens of
the astral world. When a pupil falls asleep at night he usually
reports himself to his Master, and he is then told if there is any
definite piece of work which he can do. If there happens to be
nothing special he will take up his usual nocturnal work, whatever
that may be. Every invisible helper acquires a number of regular
cases or patients who are put under his charge just exactly as are
those of a doctor on the physical plane; and whenever there is no
unusual work for him to do he simply goes on his ordinary rounds,
visits these cases and does his best for
...
- 29 -
them. So that he has always
plenty of work of this kind to fill up his time when he is not
especially needed, as for some sudden catastrophe which throws out a
large number of souls simultaneously into the astral plane in a
condition of terror. Most of such training in astral work as the
pupils needs is usually given by one of the older pupils of the
Master.
If it is necessary that the pupil should undertake any
special system of psychic development on the physical plane, the
Master will indicate it to him either directly or through one of His
recognized pupils. What is prescribed in this way differs according
to the character and need of the pupil, and it is usually best for us
to wait until we are definitely told before attempting any practices
of this kind. Even when we are told of them it is best that we should
keep them to ourselves, and not discuss them with others, as it is
more than probable that they would be unsuited to anyone else. Here
in India among the hosts of minor teachers each man has his own
methods, the difference depending partly on the different schools of
philosophy to which they belong, and partly upon their different ways
of looking at the same thing. But whatever their methods are, they
usually keep them very secret in order to avoid the responsibility of
their being wrongly used.
The harm that may be done by the
indiscriminate publication of any of these half-physical systems has
been very clearly exemplified in America, where a book by an Indian
teacher has obtained a large circulation. This teacher guardedly
mentioned certain practices, prefacing his teaching with a carefully
expressed warning as to the necessity of preparation by the training
of character. But nevertheless what he has written has caused a great
deal of suffering, because people have uniformly disregarded his
warning as to training and have recklessly tried to carry out the
practices which he described. In a tour a few years ago in that
country I met quite a number of people who through attempting to
follow his directions had made themselves physical wrecks. Some had
become insane, some were subject to fits, and others had fallen under
the spell of various obsessing entities. In order that such practices
as these may be attempted with safety it is absolutely necessary that
they be undertaken (as they always are undertaken in India) in the
actual presence of a teacher who watches the results and at once
interferes when he sees that anything is going wrong. Indeed, in this
country it is usual for the pupil to remain in physical proximity to
his teacher, because here people understand what I mentioned some
time ago — that the
...
- 30 -
first and greatest work which a teacher has to do
is to attune the aura of the pupil to his own — to annul the effect
of the ordinary disturbed conditions which prevail in the world, to
show him how to abandon all that and to live in a world of absolute
calm. One of our own Masters said in one of the earlier letters,
“Come out of your world into ours,” and this of course
refers not to a place but to a condition of mind.
Remember that
everyone who meditates upon the Master makes a definite link with
Him, which shows itself to clairvoyant vision as a kind of line of
light. The Master always subconsciously feels the impinging of such a
line, and sends out along it in response a steady stream of magnetism
which continues to play long after the meditation is over. The
regular practice of such meditation and concentration is of the
utmost help to the aspirant, and the regularity is one of the most
important factors in producing the result. It should be undertaken
daily at the same hour, and we should steadily persevere with it,
even though no obvious effect may be produced. When no effect appears
we must be especially careful to avoid depression, because depression
makes it more difficult for a Master's influence to act upon us, and
it also shows that we are thinking more of ourselves than of the
Master.
The Path of Progress
When we state the great truth that all
evolution came forth from the Divine, and that we ourselves are but
sparks of the divine flame and one day to be reunited to it, people
often ask us two not unnatural questions. First they say, “Why
should the divine Being have sent us forth, since after all we are
part of Him, and so were divine from the beginning? Why in fact did
the Logos manifest Himself in matter at all, seeing that He was
perfect and glorious and all-wise in the beginning? Secondly, if we
emanate from the divine Spirit, why were we sent forth into
wickedness, and how can man, coming forth from so pure a source,
enter into such degradation as we constantly see around us?”
Since these questions recur so often, it is worth while for us to
consider how they may be answered.
Why the Logos manifested
Himself is scarcely our business. It is enough for us to know that He
has chosen to do so, that we are part of His scheme, and that it is
therefore our duty to try to
...
- 31 -
understand that scheme so far as we can,
and to adapt ourselves to it. But if there be any who desire to
speculate upon this mystery, perhaps no better suggestion can be
found for them than that which was given by the Gnostic Doctors:
God is Love, but Love itself cannot be perfect unless it
has those upon whom it can be lavished and by whom it can be
returned. Therefore He put forth of Himself into matter, and He
limited His glory, in order that through this natural and slow
process of evolution we might come into being; and we in turn
according to His will are to develop until we reach even His own
level, and then the very Love of God itself will become more perfect,
because it will then be lavished on those, His own children, who will
fully understand and return it, and so His great scheme will be
realised and His Will will be done.
As to the further
consideration why the emanation should have taken place in this
particular way, that again is not our affair, for we are concerned
only with the facts of evolution, not the reasons for it;
yet there seems little difficulty in at least indicating the lines
along which an answer may be found. It is quite true that man is an
emanation from the substance of the Divine, but it must be remembered
that the substance, when it issues forth, is undifferentiated, and
from our point of view unconscious; that is, it has within it rather
the potentiality of consciousness than anything to which we are in
the habit of applying that term.
In its descent into matter it
is simply gathering round it the matter of the different planes
through which it passes, and it is not until, having reached the
lowest point of its evolution in the mineral kingdom, it turns
upwards and begins its return to the level whence it came, that it
commences to develop that we call consciousness at all. It is for
that reason that man began first of all to unfold his consciousness
on the physical plane, and it is only after fully attaining that that
he begins to be conscious upon the astral and mental planes in turn.
No doubt God might have made man perfect and obedient to the law
by one act of His will, but is it not obvious that such a man would
have been a mere automaton — that the will working in him would have
been God' s will, not his own? What the Logos desired was to call
into existence, from His own substance, those who
...
- 32 -
should be like unto
Him in power and glory, absolutely free to choose and yet absolutely
certain to choose the right and not the wrong, because in addition to
perfect power they would have perfect knowledge and perfect love.
It is not easy to imagine any other way in which this result could
be achieved but that which has been adopted — the plan of leaving man
free and therefore capable of making mistakes. From those mistakes he
learns and gains experience, and although in such a scheme as this it
is inevitable that there should be evil, and therefore sorrow and
suffering, yet when the part these play as factors in man' s
evolution is properly understood we shall see that the Chinese
proverb is true which tells us that evil is but the dark shadow of
good. Most emphatically it is true that, however black the clouds may
look from below, those clouds are by their very nature transient, and
above and behind them all the mighty sun, which will at last
dissipate them, is always shining, so that the old saying is
justified that all things, even the most unlikely-looking,
are in reality working together for good.
This much at least
all who have made any real progress know for themselves as
an absolute certainty; while they cannot hope to prove it to those
who have not as yet had the experience, at least they can bear
testimony to it with no uncertain voice, and that testimony is surely
not without its value for souls who are still struggling towards the
light.
As to the second question, we may fairly point out that
it assumes too much. It is not true to say that we are sent forth
into wickedness and degradation. In fact, strictly speaking, we
are not sent forth at all. What happens is something quite
different. The Logos pours forth into manifestation the stream of
force which we may describe as part of Himself or of His vesture.
This stream contains in potentiality the vast hosts of monads, each
of which, when fully developed, may itself become a Logos. But for
such development it is necessary that it should manifest itself
through matter of various grades, that the individuality should very
slowly and gradually be built up, and then that certain latent
qualities should be brought out. This is the process of evolution,
and all the great laws of the universe are arranged to facilitate
this process. In its earlier stages the manifestation of the monad is
entirely controlled by these laws, not having yet developed any sort
of individuality or soul of its own.
But there comes a stage in
which individuality is attained, and
...
- 33 -
will is beginning to be
developed. The plan of the Logos is to allow a man a certain amount
of freedom (at first a very small amount) in the use of this dawning
will, and naturally enough by the law of averages this primitive
individual uses his will about as often wrongly as rightly, although
he has almost always teachers belonging to earlier evolutions, who
tell him the way, in which he should walk. When he uses his will
wrongly, (that is to say, in a direction opposed to the current of
evolution) the mechanical working of nature's laws brings suffering
as the result of such action. Since this happens over and over again,
the primitive ego at last learns by experience that he must obey the
wiser teaching given to him, and as soon as the determination to do
so has become actually a part of himself a wider field of freedom of
action opens before him.
In this new field in turn he is sure
to act wrongly sometimes as well as rightly, so that the same process
is repeated again and again, always involving suffering where
mistakes have been made. Whatever of “wickedness and
degradation” may exist is always the result of the action of
men who have used their freewill wrongly, and are in process of
learning how to use it rightly, and as soon as that lesson shall have
been universally learned all these evil effects will pass away. It is
therefore obvious that whatever of evil exists in the world is
entirely the doing of its inhabitants, and is in its nature
temporary. However terrible and deeply rooted it may seem to us, it
cannot possibly be permanent, for it is of the essence of things that
it must pass away when its causes are removed. For its existence
while it lasts we must blame, not the great First Cause, but
ourselves, because we are failing to carry out His plan.
We
often exhort people to follow the higher course rather than the
lower, but I think that the truth is that man always follows the
highest about which he is really certain. The difficulty is that in
so many cases the higher teaching seems vague and unreal to many
people, and so although they profess to believe it, and really think
that they do believe it, when it comes to the point of action they
find it too vague to trust their lives to it.
For example, many
people who think themselves religious are yet to be found seeking
position and wealth. That attitude would be entirely reasonable if
they were materialists and if they did not
...
- 34 -
pretend to believe in
anything higher; but when we find a religious man devoted to the
pursuit of worldly objects there is clearly something wrong,
something illogical. The fact is that he does not really believe in
his religion; he is not thoroughly convinced of its truth, for if he
were he could not be following after other things. He is following
that about which he is really sure; he is quite certain, without the
slightest mental reservation, about the desirability of money and
power. He knows that he wants these things, and he thinks he knows
that if he gets them they will make him happy. Therefore he devotes
all his energy and time to their acquisition, and we must remember
that in doing that he is at least developing will and perseverance.
Now if you can in any way manage to make him as sure of the
value of the higher things as he is now about the value of pounds,
shillings and pence, he will at once turn that will and that
perseverance to the service of the higher development, and he will
seek after realities with just the same intensity that he is now
devoting to the pursuit of shadows. This is precisely what the study
of Theosophy will do for him. A man who thoroughly understands
Theosophy knows that he is here for a certain purpose, and that it is
most emphatically his business to devote himself entirely to the
working out of that purpose. He realizes thoroughly that there are
things worth doing and aims worth pursuing, and he devotes himself to
them with the same avidity which he previously displayed in following
the acquisition of money or position.
But in order to do this
it is not sufficient merely to be vaguely interested, merely to read
a few books. The man must really believe it, must be thoroughly and
utterly convinced of its truth. Now the only way in which this utter
conviction can come to a man is by means of realizing some part of
it, however small, for himself and at first-hand. Without going so
far as that, of course, a man may be intellectually convinced of the
truth of the doctrine, and may see that nothing else is logically
possible; but there are very few of us who have the strength to act
upon such a logical conviction about things entirely beyond our ken;
for most of us it is really necessary that at least some small
portion of the doctrine, some sample of it, as it were, should be
definitely seen and known.
We who were the earlier students
felt all this just as keenly as do the students of today, and when
in those early days of twenty-five
...
- 35 -
or twenty-seven years ago we asked
Madame Blavatsky whether it was in any way possible that we could
verify any of these things for ourselves she at once replied in the
affirmative. She told us that if we chose to take the trouble to
develop the requisite faculties we might unquestionably experience
for ourselves the truth of a great deal of the teaching. She warned
us that the way was long and arduous, and that no one could tell
beforehand how long it would take for a man to tread it. But on the
other hand she consoled us by saying that the end was absolutely
certain, and that it was impossible that any man who started to reach
it should fail to attain, though in many cases such attainment might
lie, not in this life, but in some other in the future.
This
was encouraging in one way, and yet somewhat daunting in another way;
but at any rate a certain number of us took her at her word and threw
ourselves heart and soul into the endeavor to live the life which
was prescribed for us, and to do the work that lay before us. The
degrees of our success were very varied, but of all of those who made
this effort and persevered with it I think I may say that there was
not one who did not obtain some result — enough at any rate to show
him that what he had been told was true, and that if the progress
which he made was smaller than he had hoped, the fault lay clearly
with himself and not with the teachers.
There were those among
us, however, who succeeded in verifying for ourselves a large number
of the statements made by the Masters — first of all only in a small
way, with regard to ourselves, our vehicles, our possibilities, and
with regard to the astral life which immediately surrounds us. Then
later on by long continued and more strenuous effort we developed the
faculties of the mental body, and began for the first time really to
understand what had been written for us about the life of the
heaven-world. All this at first we had hopelessly misunderstood,
because with the faculties then at our disposal we were actually
incapable of comprehending it. By a strenuous further effort we
reached the faculties of the causal body, and then the world of
comparative realities began really to open before us.
We were
able then to read the records of the part, and to see from them with
absolute certainty how the great scheme
...
- 36 -
of the Logos is slowly
unfolding itself and working itself out by means of successive births
under the guidance of the great laws of evolution and cause and
effect. We could see clearly then that we were unquestionably
ourselves a part of this great scheme, and therefore it followed that
it was alike our duty, our advantage, our privilege, to throw
ourselves into scheme and co-operate intelligently in its
fulfillment. There was then no doubt for us about the fact of the
great evolution and the future of humanity, for it was clear to us
that we had risen through the lower Kingdoms, and we could see many
stages both below us and above us; all the various stages of human
life arranged themselves for us as steps upon a ladder; we could see
these steps stretching up and down from the point which we ourselves
occupied, and there were being upon every rung of that ladder, beings
who were clearly engaged in climbing it.
The Masters who seemed
to us to stand at its summit assured us that they were men like
ourselves, and that they had passed through the stage where we were
now standing; between us and them there was no break in the
continuity, for every step of the ladder was occupied, and we
ourselves watched the progress of some of those higher than we from
one of these steps to another. When through custom the wonderful
light of the higher planes grew less dazzling to us, we were able to
see that even beyond the stupendous level occupied by the Masters
there arose still greater heights. Above them stood
Manus, Christs,
Buddhas, Lipika,
great Devas,
Dhyan Chohans, and many others of whom
we can know nothing except that they exist, and that they, even at
their ineffable elevation, form part of the same mighty chain.
The whole of the past lies before us; we know the halting-places
on the road, and the side-paths that branch off from it, and
therefore we are justified in our confidence that where these great
ones now stand we also shall one day stand. Seeing and understanding
the inevitableness of our destiny, we also realize that it will be
quite useless to endeavor to resist it. Progress is the law marked
out for us. In progress only is our happiness and our safety. As
regards the progress that lies before us in this particular chain of
worlds the great majority of us are by no means yet what is
technically called “safe” or “saved.” We
reach that desirable position only when we have become members of the
Great
...
- 37 -
To have taken
that step is to have achieved the most important result, to have
passed the most critical point in the whole of human evolution. For
in the course of that evolution three points stand out beyond all
others. The first is the entrance upon humanity, the attainment of
individuality, the gaining of a causal body, the becoming a definite
and apparently separate ego. To gain this individuality was the aim
of the animal evolution, and its development serves a very definite
purpose. The object is to make a strong individual center, through
which eventually the force of the Logos can be poured out. When this
center is first formed it is only a baby ego, still but weak and
uncertain; in order that it may become strong and definite it has to
be fenced round by the intense selfishness of the savage. For many
lives a strong wall of selfishness has to be maintained, in order
that within it the center may grow more and more definite.
We
may regard this selfishness as a kind of scaffolding, which is
absolutely necessary for the erection of the building, but must be
destroyed as soon as the building is completed, in order that it may
be able to subserve the purpose for which it was erected. The
scaffolding is unbeautiful, and if it were left after the building is
finished it would make it uninhabitable, and yet without it the
building could not have been achieved. The object of the creation of
the center is that through it the force of the Logos should radiate
out upon the world, and such radiation would be quite impossible if
the selfishness persisted, and yet without that selfishness a strong
center could never have been made. We see therefore that this most
unlovely of qualities has its place in evolution. Now for us its work
is over, and we ought to have got rid of it. But it is useless to be
angry with the ordinary man for his selfishness, since it simply
means that what was in the savage a necessary virtue is still
persisting into the civilized condition. In point of fact the selfish
man is an anachronism, a survival of prehistoric savagery. He is
hopelessly behind the times.
How then is such a man to make
himself unselfish, to bring himself abreast of the advancing current
of evolution? The methods adopted by nature to secure this end are
many and
...
various, but they are all fundamentally one. For what is
necessary is that the man shall realize the unity of all. And often
he does this by gradually enlarging the self of which he thinks.
Instead of thinking of himself as the unit he begins to regard the
family as the unit for which he is working, and within its limits he
gradually becomes unselfish. Presently he expands his ideas to
include the tribe or clan to which he belongs, and he learns to be
unselfish within its limits, while still absolutely selfish and even
predatory to all who are outside it, whom he usually regards as
natural enemies. Later on in his history he extends his ideas so as
to include, in certain respects at least, the nation to which he
belongs.
It is somewhere in the course of that stage of
transition that the majority of humanity stand at the present moment.
In almost all minor matters the ordinary man is still fighting for
his family against the interests of all other families, but in a few
wider matters he recognizes that his interests are identical with
those of those other families, and so in those matters he develops
what he calls patriotism and national feeling; but even in those
matters he is still absolutely selfish as regards all those other
families who happen to speak different languages and to be born in
different climes. At some time in the future the average man will
extend his ideas of self to include the whole of humanity, and then
at last we may say that he has become by slow degrees unselfish.
While he is thus learning to take a wider view of his relation to
others, he is also learning something with regard to himself. First
he realizes that he is not his physical body, later that he is not
his feelings, and further on still that he is not even his mind. This
brings him eventually to the realization that he is the ego or soul,
and still later on he realizes that even that ego is only apparently
separate, and that there is in reality but one transcendant unity.
Thus the man treads the weary round of the seven hundred and
seventy-seven incarnations, a time of slow and painful progress and
of harrowing uncertainty, but at last after all those struggles the
uncertainty ends with that plunge into the stream that makes the man
safe forever, and so that is the second and still more important
point in his evolution. But before he can take this step the man must
have learned consciously to co-operate with
...
- 39 -
nature, he must
definitely have taken his own evolution in hand. The knowledge of the
unity which makes him unselfish also makes him desire to be useful,
for it gives him an incentive to study and to perfect himself — a
reason for his actions and a criterion by which he can judge the
feelings and thoughts within him, and also the value of all with
which he comes into contact.
How then must he begin this work
of perfecting himself? Obviously he must first pull up the weeds,
that is to say he must eliminate one by one the undesirable qualities
which he finds in himself; then he must seek the good qualities and
cultivate them. He must definitely set himself to practise
helpfulness, even although at first he may be very clumsy in the
unaccustomed work. The formation of character is very slow and
tedious for him, for there are many forces arrayed against his
efforts, forces which he himself has made in the past. He has for
many years been yielding himself to the sway of certain undesirable
qualities, and so they have gained a great momentum.
Take the
case of such a vice as irritability, for example. He has in the past
been in the habit of yielding himself to outbursts of anger, and
every such outburst makes it more difficult for him to control
himself on the next occasion; so a strong habit has been set up, a
vast amount of energy moving in that direction has been accumulated.
This is stored up, not in the ego as an inherent quality, but in the
permanent astral atom*; and when he realizes the inadvisability of
anger and sets himself against it he has to meet this store of force
which he himself has generated during many past lives. Naturally he
finds his task a difficult one, and he meets with many failures and
discouragements; but the important thing for him to bear in mind is
that however many times he may fail, victory is absolutely a
scientific certainty, if only he will persevere.
However great
the amount of force may be which he has stored up, it must be a
finite amount, and every effort which he makes against it reduces it
by just so much. But on his side there is a force which is infinite;
if only his will is strong enough he can go on, if necessary through
many lives, steadily renewing the force for good with which he
combats the evil, and behind him in that effort is the infinite force
of the Logos Himself, because that evolution is in accordance with
His will. Until the man grasps the idea of unity he has no adequate
motive for undertaking the hard ...
* Astral atom — a unit of astrral matter which remains attached to the ego
from one incarnation to the next. Editor.
- 40 -
and distasteful work of
character-building, but when he has seen the necessity of this, the
reason for trying is just as valid even though he has failed a
thousand times as it was in the beginning. No number of failures can
daunt the man who understands the scheme, just because he knows that
however great the struggle may be the forces of infinity are on his
side, and therefore in the end he cannot fail.
To be certain
of remembering this purpose of his from life to life he should raise
his consciousness to the ego; but during the stages when he is as yet
incapable of this he will nevertheless impress that purpose upon the
permanent atoms, and so it will be carried over with them from life
to life. If the ego can be reached, the man will be born with the
knowledge inherent in him; if he can only impress the permanent
atoms, the knowledge will not actually be born with him as part of
his stock-in-trade, but the moment that it comes before him in any
form in his next incarnation he will immediately recognize its truth,
seize upon it, and act accordingly. This steady practice of virtue
and this persistent increase of knowledge will certainly lead him to
the gate of the probationary path, and through that to the great
initiation of which we have spoken.
After that initiation the
third point is sure to follow — the gaining of the further shore of
that stream, in the attainment of adeptship, when the man leaves the
merely human evolution and enters upon that which is superhuman. We
are told that after a man has entered upon the stream it takes him an
average of seven incarnations to reach the fourth step, that of the
arhat, the noble, the venerable, the perfect. That period is more
often lengthened than shortened, and the lives are usually taken
without an intervening stage in the heaven-world. Ordinarily it is
only men of this stage who are able thus to dispense with or renounce
the life of the heaven-world.
At the same time those who are so
happy as to be chosen to take part in the noble task for which the
great Masters are preparing us, that of working under the Manu in
charge of the development of the sixth root-race, will certainly need
many successive incarnations without any intervening periods of
celestial rest. The possibility of this is however conditioned by the
rule that a man must have experienced celestial consciousness before
he can renounce the heaven-life; and furthermore it is not in the
least merely a question of voluntarily renouncing a reward, but of
being sufficiently
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advanced to dispense for a time with that part of
evolution which for the majority comes most usually in the
heaven-life.
When he stands upon the step of arhatship half his
path from the first initiation to adeptship may be said to have been
trodden, for he has then cast off five of the ten great fetters which
hold men back from nirvana. Before him lies the task of casting off
the remaining five, and for that also an average of seven
incarnations is allowed, but it must be understood that this average
is in no sense a rule, for many men take much longer than this,
whereas others with greater determination and perseverance move
through these initiations in very much less time. A case has been
known in which, by beginning very early in life, and by working very
hard, a man has been able to take all four of the great initiations
in one incarnation, but this is excessively rare, and not one in ten
thousand candidates could do it.
It will be remembered that to
stand at the level of the arhat involves the power fully to use the
buddhic vehicle, and it will also be remembered that when a man
raises himself into his buddhic body the causal body vanishes, and he
is under no compulsion whatever ever to re-form it. Clearly therefore
the seven lives which remain to him before he reaches the level of
adeptship need not involve a descent to the physical plane at all,
and therefore they may not be what we ordinarily mean by
incarnations. Nevertheless in the great majority of cases they are
taken upon the physical plane, because the man has work to do upon
that plane for the Great Brotherhood.
The candidate spends
these fourteen lives in passing through the different stages of the
Path of Holiness, and in acquiring all the qualifications which are
described in detail in the concluding chapters of
Invisible
Helpers. One who becomes a disciple
of one of our Masters takes always, not the path to selfish
liberation — the mere balancing of good and evil karma and the
vanishing of all desire, so that the man is no longer forced back
into rebirth — but the path of renunciation in which, having seen the
scheme of the Logos, the man throws himself into it and lives only to
promote the advancement of his fellow-men.
This has been called
“The Path of Woe” because of the constant self-sacrifice
which it involves, but in truth this title is somewhat of a misnomer,
because although it is true that there is suffering, it is always a
suffering of the lower and not of the higher, and if the man should
avoid such suffering by supineness or idleness, and
...
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leave undone the
work which he might have done, there would assuredly be much greater
suffering for him at a far higher level, in the shape of remorse.
Such suffering as is inevitable in this path arises from the fact
that the student is striving to do here and now in the fourth round
what will be natural and easy in the seventh round. All our vehicles
then will be much more developed, and even the very material of which
they are built will be in an entirely different condition, because
the physical atom will then have all its seven spirillae active
instead of only four of them. Therefore to force our present
undeveloped vehicles to do work which will be comparatively easy for
those which in millions of years will be fully developed, involves a
great deal of strain, and this strain is necessarily productive of a
certain amount of suffering.
It is analogous to the suffering
and privation which is cheerfully undergone by an athlete when he
puts himself in training. If he wishes to compete in some great race
or trial of strength, he must make his physical body do more than it
would naturally do, and deny it many things which it greatly likes,
the absence of which unquestionably causes it considerable
discomfort, and perhaps even somewhat of positive suffering. Yet for
the purpose which he has in view the athlete quite cheerfully
undergoes this; indeed if, for the sake of avoiding these
comparatively slight temporary discomforts, he should put aside the
opportunity of taking part in the race or contest, it is quite likely
that afterwards when he saw his comrades passing onward to victory he
would feel a remorse for that self-indulgence, which would involve
keener suffering on a higher plane. The analogy holds good in
reference to the efforts necessary to progress along the path of
renunciation; the man who fell aside from that path because of its
difficulties and hardships would undoubtedly suffer far more in the
long run from remorse when he saw those of his fellow-creatures going
unhelped whom he might have aided, when he saw misery among them
which he knew that he might have relieved if he had been less
self-indulgent.
There is never any pain to the Self, but only
to these lower vehicles, when they are being prematurely adapted. A
good analogy may be taken from the growth of crabs and other
crustaceans. These creatures have their bones outside for protection,
in the form of a shell, while our bones are inside, in the form of a
skeleton. A fatal objection to the crustacean scheme is that when the
creature grows it has to burst the shell and then wait for another
one to grow, which must be both a painful and inconvenient
...
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process.
So in the process of our growth do we make about ourselves shells of
thought, as though we were mental crustaceans. Presently the shell
becomes too small, and then we make a long series of efforts to crowd
the new growth inside it and make it do somehow; but in the end this
always proves impossible, and we have painfully to burst it. This
however is inevitable, so chafe not at karma and at nature's
changeless laws, for you made the shell yourself in the past, and now
you yourself must break it. But if you did not go to the
inconvenience of breaking it, you would suffer far more in the
unsatisfied feeling that no progress had been made.
Many people
are afraid of change, especially of a change of faith, and this
arises not only from inherited prejudice, but also from actual fear
of doubt — fear that if one once lets go one may be unable to find
mental anchorage anywhere. Many a man is quite unable to make
rational defence of his belief, or to answer the problems which
inevitably arise in connection with it, and yet he is afraid to let
it go. Sooner or later he will have to let go, though the widening
out of his faith is sure to be accompanied by pain. Truly there would
be no suffering for us if we never broke our shells, but then on the
other hand there would be no progress.
The life of the disciple
is full of joy — never doubt it an instant. But it is not a life of
ease. The work which he has to do is very hard, the struggle is a
very real one. To compress into a few short lives the evolution of
millions of years — the evolution for which the ordinary process of
nature allows three rounds and a half — is not a mere holiday task.
Our President has written: “Disciples are the crucibles of
nature, wherein compounds that are mischievous are dissociated and
are recombined into compounds that promote the general good.”
It is not necessary for any one to become such a
crucible; perhaps it would be nearer the fact to say that to become
one is a distinction eagerly sought after; nearer still to say that
when once a man has seen the great sacrifice of the Logos
there is no other possibility for him but to throw himself into it —
to do his tiny best to share in it and to help it at whatever cost to
his lower nature. And this is no child's play; it does indeed
involve often a terrible strain. But an earnest student will be able
to realize that a man may so love his work, and may be so full of joy
in it, that outside of it there can be no pleasure worth considering,
even though that work may tax
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almost beyond bearing every faculty and
every vehicle — physical, astral or mental — which he possesses.
It must be remembered that when humanity in general has this work
to do and this evolution to accomplish, it will be far better fitted
for the effort than is the man who is trying now to take a shorter
and steeper road. Many of his difficulties are due to the fact that
he is attempting with a set of fourth-round bodies to achieve the
result for the attainment of which nature will prepare her less
adventurous children by supplying them in the course of the ages with
the splendid vehicles of the seventh round. Of course even to gain
those glorified vehicles these weaker souls will have to do the same
work; but when it is spread over thousands of incarnations it
naturally looks less formidable.
Yet beyond and above all his
struggle the pupil has ever an abiding joy, a peace and serenity that
nothing on earth can disturb. If he had not, he would indeed be a
faithless servant of his Master, for he would be allowing the
temporary strain on the vehicles to overbear his perception of the
Self within; he would be identifying himself with the lower instead
of with the higher.
There is therefore a certain element of.
the ridiculous in describing this Path as one of woe, when it is
clearly evident that there would be much greater woe for the
candidate if this Path were not taken. Indeed, to the man who is
really doing his duty true sorrow is unknown: “Never doth any
who worketh righteousness, O beloved, tread the path of woe.”
(Bhagavad-Gita, vi. 40.)
This is as regards the inner life of the disciple, but if one is
to consider the treatment which he is likely to receive on the
physical plane, the name of the path of woe is by no means
inappropriate, at least if he has to do any sort of public work in
which he tries to help the world. Ruysbroek, the Flemish mystic of
the fourteenth century, writes of those who enter upon the Path:
“Sometimes these unhappy ones are deprived of the good things
of earth, of their friends and relations, and are deserted by all
creatures; their holiness is mistrusted and despised, men put a bad
construction all the works of their life, and they are rejected
disdained by all those who surround them; and sometimes they are
afflicted with divers diseases.” Remember, too, how Madame
Blavatsky writes: “Where do we find in history that
‘Messenger’ grand or humble, an Initiate or Neophyte, who, when he was
made the bearer of some hitherto concealed truth or truths, was not
...
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crucified and rent to shreds by the ‘dogs’ of envy, malice and
ignorance? Such is the terrible Occult law; and he who does not feel
in himself the heart of a lion to scorn the savage barking, and the
soul of a dove to forgive the poor ignorant fools, let him give up
the Sacred Science.” (The Secret Doctrine
, iii.
90.)
The way in which the world usually treats a new truth is
first to ridicule it, then to grow angry about it, and then to adopt
it and pretend that it has always held that view. In the meantime the
first exponent of the new truth has probably been put to death or
died of a broken heart.
It is in the course of the training on
this Path that the consciousness of the candidate passes through the
three halls mentioned in The Voice of the Silence. This
term is used there to indicate the three lower planes. The first,
that of ignorance, is the physical plane, upon which we are born to
live and die, and it is very truly described as a Hall of Ignorance,
for all that we know in it is the merest outside of things. The
second, the Hall of learning, is the astral plane, which is very
truly the place of probationary learning, for when the astral centers
are opened we see so much more of everything than we do on the
physical plane that at first it seems to us that we must indeed be
seeing the whole, though further development soon shows us that this
is not so.
But The Voice of the Silence warns us
that beneath each flower in this region, however beautiful it may be,
lies coiled the serpent of desire — that lower desire, which the
aspirant must stifle in order that he may develop in its place the
higher desire which we call aspiration. In the case of affection, for
example, the lower, the selfish, the grasping affection must be
altogether transcended, but the high, pure, and unselfish affection
can never be transcended, since that is a characteristic of the Logos
Himself, and a necessary qualification for progress upon the Path.
What men should cast aside is such love as thinks always “How
much love can I gain? How much does so and so love me? Does he love
me as he loves some one else?” The love which we need is that which
forgets itself altogether, and seeks only the occasion to pour itself
out at the feet of the loved one.
The astral plane is often
called the world of illusion, yet it is at least one stage, and a
very long stage, nearer to the truth of things than what we see on
the physical plane. It often happens that men are easily deluded upon
the astral plane, because they are as yet much in the position of
babies there, new-born infants with no
...
- 46 -
sense of distance and no
developed capacity for locomotion. We must not forget that in the
normal course of things people very slowly awaken to the realities of
the astral plane, just as a baby awakens to the realities of the
physical plane. But those of us who are deliberately and, as it were,
prematurely entering upon the Path are developing such knowledge
abnormally, and are consequently more liable to error.
Danger
and injury might easily come in the course of our experiments but for
the fact that all pupils who under proper training are endeavoring
to open these faculties are assisted and guided by those who are
already accustomed to the plane. That is the reason for the various
tests which are always applied to one who wishes to become a worker
on the higher planes; that is why also all sorts of horrible sights
are shown to the neophyte, in order that he may understand them and
become accustomed to them. If this were not done, and if he came
across such a thing suddenly, he might receive a shock which would
drive him back into his physical body, and this would not only
prevent his doing any useful work, but might also be a positive
danger to that body. Where the neophyte is deluded on the astral
plane it is his own fault, and not that of the plane, because error
is due only to his unfamiliarity with the surroundings.
The
third hall is the mental plane — the Hall of Wisdom. As soon as a man
is free from attachment to astral things he can pass beyond the
probationary stage of his learning, and begin to acquire knowledge
which is real and definite. Beyond that in turn lies the imperishable
world of the buddhic plane, in which for the first time the man
learns the true unity of all that to the lower vision seems to be
separate.
It has been said, “Thou canst not travel on the
Path before thou hast become that Path itself.” As long as it
is but a Path to us, and we are following it according to directions
received, or because we have seen it and chosen it with the intellect
only, we have not truly entered it at all. This is only a stage,
leading on to the condition when you have become yourself the Law and
the Path, and you fulfil its requirements, instinctively doing the
right merely because it is the right, and because it is inconceivable
that you could do anything else. Then only you have become
the Path.
A man cannot climb if he does not try; though if he
does not climb it is true that he will not fall far. The strong man
often makes serious errors; but the very force which enables him to
...
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make them also enables him to make great progress when he turns his
energies in the right direction. Rapid progress affects the whole
organism and is a great strain upon it, and this inevitably finds out
whatever weak spots there are in the man. The plans of the Hierarchy
will be carried out whatever we may or may not do, for we are but as
pawns in the mighty game which is being played; but if we are
intelligent pawns, and are willing to cooperate, it gives much less
trouble to the authorities, and incidentally to ourselves.
And
what will be the end of it all? The attainment of perfection. Yet
even that is only relatively and not absolutely the end, for when we
have reached in fullest consciousness the Logos of our system and
have unified our consciousness with His, there still remains the
further Path which leads us to union with still higher Powers. A
great authority has told us that at the end of one of the stages of
evolution far beyond adeptship the perfect man will be a decad,
having a body upon each of the sub-planes of the lowest cosmic plane,
the triple Logos outside of time and space constituting his Self, and
thus completing the ten. But this consummation can only be reached
when the man has power to create a body for himself upon each of
these planes.
We have been led to understand that of the total
number of egos which are engaged in this evolution about one-fifth
will fully succeed — that is to say will succeed in attaining the
asekha level before the end of the seventh round. Another fifth will
by that time, have gained the arhat level, and about an equal number
will be on the lower stages of the Path, while a number roughly
stated as the remaining two-fifths will have dropped out of this
evolution altogether at the critical period at the middle of the
fifth round.
All those who have not fully attained the
goal, and completed their evolution, will have to resume it upon the
next chain of globes, and even those who are the failures of the
fifth round will be successes in the next chain. In the same way it
is not improbable that some of those who are adepts and Masters now
may have been among the failures of the moon-chain — that is to say
that They belonged to the humanity of that chain, but were somewhat
backward upon it, and so dropped out there, and came on in the
forefront of this later evolution, exactly as a boy who failed to
pass an examination one year would be likely to be among the first of
his class when he tries the same examination again twelve months
later.
- 48 -
Remember that we are now only just past the middle of an
evolutionary period, and that is why so very few people comparatively
have as yet attained adeptship, just as very few boys in a class
would be already fit to pass the final examination of the year after
only six months of study. In precisely the same way very few animals
are as yet attaining individuality, for the animal who attains
individuality is as far in advance of his fellows as is the human
being who attains adeptship in advance of the average man. Both are
doing at the middle point of evolution what they are expected to be
able to do only at the end of it. Those who achieve only at the
normal time, at the end of the seventh round, will approach their
goal so gradually that there will be little or no struggle.
Undoubtedly to attain in that way is very far easier for the
candidate. But that method has the tremendous drawback that the man
who attains by it will not have been able to give any help to others,
but will on the contrary have required assistance himself. I remember
from the days of my childhood a Christian hymn which gave this idea
very beautifully. It described how a certain soul went to heaven and
enjoyed its bliss, and wandered about there very happily for a time,
but at last he noticed that the crown which he wore differed much in
splendor from many of the others, and for a long time he wondered why
this was so. At last he met the Christ Himself and mustered up
courage to ask Him the reason of this peculiarity; and the answer
given ran thus:
I know thou hast believed on Me,
And Life through Me is thine;
But where are all those
glorious gems
That in thy crown should shine?
Thou seest
yonder glorious throng
With stars on every brow,
For
every soul they led to Me
They wear a jewel now.
“They that are wise shall shine as the brightness of the
firmament, but they that turn many to righteousness as the stars for
ever and ever.”
When we are struggling onwards ourselves
we can help others, and we should do all that we can in this
direction, not because of the result to ourselves (though that is
inevitable) but for the sake
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of helping the world. The man who drifts
with the stream has to be carried along, but when he begins to swim
himself he sets free the force that would otherwise have been spent
in helping him. That can then be used for the helping of others,
quite independently of what he himself may do in that line.
Adeptship sets the man free from the necessity of rebirth, and its
achievement also involves the liberation of forces for the aid of
others. The man who seeks liberation only for himself may balance his
karma perfectly and may kill out desire, so that the law of karma
will not longer compel him to rebirth. But though he thus avoids the
action of the law of karma he does not escape from the law of
evolution. It may be long before he comes under the influence of that
law, because by the hypothesis a man who has already at this stage
set himself free from all desire must be considerably in advance of
the average. There will however inevitably come a time when the slow
and steady advance of the law of evolution will overtake him, and
then its resistless pressure will force him out of his selfish bliss
into rebirth once more, and so he will find himself again upon the
wheel from which he had hoped to escape.
It has often been
asked how the secrets revealed at initiation are protected from those
who are able to read thoughts. There is not the slightest danger that
any of these secrets will ever be disclosed in this manner, for at
the same time that the secret is told to the initiate the means by
which he can guard it is also explained to him. If it could be
possible that an initiate could ever be so false as to think of
betraying what has been confided to him, even then there would be no
danger, for he is in such close touch with the Brotherhood of which
he is a part that they would at once know of his foul intention, and
before he could speak the treacherous words he would have forgotten
utterly that there was anything to betray. There is nothing that is
in any way terrible about these secrets, except that the power which
goes with them might well be terrible if wrongly used. Initiates
always know one another, much in the same way as free-masons do; and,
just as with the latter, any initiate could hide his status from
those below him, but not from those above him.
However sorely
the Brotherhood may be in need of helpers no man can receive
initiation until his character is developed to a stage when he is
ready for it, and in exactly the same way if a man has raised himself
to the level of initiation there is no power which
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can withhold it
from him. It may very often happen, however, that a man is ready in
every respect, save for a lack of some one quality; and that lack may
hold him back for a very long time, which would probably mean that by
the time he acquired the missing quality he would in all other
respects be developed in advance of the requirements. So it must not
be supposed that all initiates standing upon the same level are
invariably equal in all respects. What the world calls a great man is
not necessarily developed all round and fit for initiation. Anything
in the nature of favoritism or neglect is utterly inconceivable. In
this matter no man can give to another that which he has not earned,
nor can any man withhold the due recognition of development won.
The Ancient Mysteries
What I can tell you with regard to the ancient mysteries is
not derived from any special study of old manuscripts, or of the
history of this subject. It happened to me in another life to be born
in ancient Greece, and to become initiated there into some of the
mysteries. Now a man who was initiated in this way in Greece gave a
pledge not to reveal what he had seen, and this pledge is binding,
even though it was given in a former incarnation; but Those who stood
behind those mysteries have since thought fit to give out to the
world much of what was then taught only under the vow of secrecy, and
so They have relieved us from our promise as far as those teachings
go. Therefore I break no pledge when I tell you something about the
instructions which were given in those ancient mysteries. Other
subjects were taught, however, which I am not at liberty to name,
because they have not yet been made public by the Great Ones.
In the first place, I should like to ask you to notice that all
peoples and all religions have had their mysteries, including the
Christian religion. I have often heard people say that in the
Christian religion, at least, nothing was hidden: that everything was
open for the study of the poor and the unlearned. Any one who says
that does not know the history of the Christian Church. Now, indeed,
everything the Church knows is given out, but that is only because it
has forgotten the mysteries which it used to keep hidden. If you
study the earliest history of the Church, you will find that old
writers speak very distinctly of the mysteries, which were taught
only to those who were full members of the Church.
...
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There were many
points on which nothing was said to those who were only
“katechoumenoi,” who had just entered the Church, but
were still candidates for full membership.
Traces of this we
can find still earlier, for you will remember that it is said in the
Gospels that the Christ made known to His disciples many things which
He gave to the multitude only in parables.
But one of the
reasons of the failure of the Christian Church to control her more
intellectual sons, as she should have done, is the fact that she has
forgotten and lost the supernatural and philosophical mysteries which
were the basis of her dogma. To see something of this hidden side of
her teachings you have only to read the works of the great Gnostic
writers. Then you will find that when we take this side as the inner
doctrine for the scholars, and the present form of the Christian
religion as the outer doctrine for the illiterate, we get in the two
combined a perfect expression of the ancient Wisdom. But to take
either of these teachings by itself, and to condemn the other as
heresy, gives us only a one-sided view. So every religion has
instruction for those who do not get beyond its outer form, but has
always also higher instruction for those who penetrate to the inner.
However, when we speak of the ancient mysteries, we generally
mean those which were connected with the great religion of ancient
Greece. Only a few books exist on this subject. There is a book of
Iamblichus, who was himself initiated into the mysteries, and there
is a book written by a countryman of mine, Thomas Taylor, a
Platonist, and also one by a Frenchman, Monsieur P. Foucart. Although
they are very interesting, you will find that they give but little
real information. Much that we think we know about the mysteries (I
mean from an external point of view) comes to us through the writings
of their exponents.
The Christian Church has had the habit —
probably justifiable from her point of view — of destroying all books
which stood for teachings other than her own, and we must not forget
that almost all of our knowledge with regard to early Christian times
comes to us through the hands of the monks of the middle ages. They
were practically the only educated people of that time, and it was
they who copied all the manuscripts. They had very pronounced
opinions about what was useful and what was not; so very naturally
only that part survived which agreed with their views, this being
reported with emphasis, while anything of opposite character was
...
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discarded. Above all, the greater part of the knowledge which is
accessible to the general world about the mysteries is found in the
works of the Church Fathers, who were opposed to them. Without
wishing to accuse the Fathers of having purposely misrepresented, we
may certainly conclude that they tried to put forward their own view
in the best and strongest light. Even at the present day if you
wished to know the whole truth concerning the doctrine of some
Protestant sect, you would not go to Catholic priests for
information; nor, if you wanted good and just explanations concerning
Catholicism, would you go to the Salvation Army to get them.
In regard to the mysteries we are in a similar situation, only
much worse, because of the many and bitter disputes between the
followers of the old religion and its mysteries and the Fathers of
the Christian Church. Therefore we may accept only with considerable
reserve and with great prudence what the Fathers say in regard to
this subject. For example, you will find that they often maintain
that the ancient mysteries contain much that is indecent and
immoral.
Because I have carefully searched clairvoyantly
through the mysteries of Greece, and in a former incarnation was
myself an initiate of them, I can say with perfect certainty that
there is not even a shadow of truth in those statements. There did
exist certain mysteries with which were festivities and a form of
Bacchus-worship, which degenerated later on into something very
objectionable; but this was only in later times, and those mysteries
belonged to quite another branch. They were not in the least related
to the mysteries of Eleusis, but were only an imitation of them on a
small scale, entirely exoteric.
I have, this evening, to treat
a very extensive subject in a short time. I must try to give you a
rough sketch of what those Greek mysteries were and what was taught
to the initiates.
The fact will be known to you that two
divisions are always mentioned: the lesser and the greater mysteries.
Everybody knew that those existed, and the number of persons who were
initiated was indeed quite a large proportion of the whole
population. I think you may read in exoteric books of thirty thousand
initiates gathering at one time, and this also shows that the fact
that a man was initiated need not be kept secret, but that the outer
world knew him as belonging to this numerous class. I mean that,
although certain teachings given in the mysteries were always
...
- 53 -
kept
secret, the whole Greek and Roman world knew that the greater and
lesser mysteries existed, and more or less who belonged to each of
them.
But behind those two degrees, the existence of which was
generally known, there were all the time the real secret mysteries;
and the existence of the third degree, as one might call it, was
unknown to the public. If one thinks of the conditions of that time
one can readily understand the reason for this. Most of the Roman
Emperors, for example, knew of the existence of the lesser and
greater mysteries, and insisted upon being initiated. Now we know
very well from history that many of the Roman Emperors were hardly of
the character to be allowed to play a leading role in a religious
body. But, all the same, it would have been very difficult for the
leaders of the mysteries to refuse entrance to an Emperor of Rome. As
was once said, one cannot argue with the master of thirty legions.
The emperors would certainly have killed anyone who stood in the way
of anything they wished. Thus it was desirable that the existence of
the third degree should not be known, and nobody knew that there was
such a degree before he was deemed, by those who could judge, worthy
to be admitted to it.
The teachings of this third degree were
never given to the public and never will be. But in the common
mysteries, lesser and greater, are many things which can be told. In
the first place, then, we were taught certain pithy sayings, or
apophthegms, and if I quote you some of those you will understand the
nature of the teaching. One of the best known was “Death is
life, and life is death.” This shows us that the higher life on
the other side of death was well known. Another saying was “He
who seeks realities in this life shall also seek realities after
death; and he who seeks unrealities in this life shall also seek
unrealities after death.” A great principle of their teaching
was that the soul had descended from the higher spheres to the
material. The principles of reincarnation were also contained in
their instruction. You will remember that this did not appear in the
external doctrine of the religions either of Greece or of Rome-- that
is to say, it was not taught publicly and in so many words-- but you
will find that this idea of the descent of the soul into matter is
imparted in classic mythology. You will remember the myth of
Proserpina, who was carried to the under-world while picking the
flower of the narcissus.
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Let us recall the myth of Narcissus.
He was a youth of great beauty who fell in love with his own image
reflected in the water, and was therefore changed into a flower and
bound to earth. You need not have studied much Theosophy to see what
that means. We learn in The Secret Doctrine how the Ego
looks down upon the waters of the astral plane and the lower world,
how it reflects itself in the personality, how it identifies itself
with the personality and, falling in love with its image, is bound to
earth. So Proserpina, while picking the narcissus, is dragged away to
the under-world, and afterwards passes half her life under the earth
and half on the earth; that is, as you will see, half in a material
body and half out of it.
In the same way, there are numbers of
other myths of which it is very interesting to hear the Theosophical
explanation. For example, in this old mystery-teaching the minotaur
was held to signify the lower nature in man — the personality which
is half man and half animal. This was eventually slain by Theseus,
who typifies the higher self or the individuality, which has been
gradually growing and gathering strength until at last it can wield
the sword of its Divine Father, the Spirit. Guided through the
labyrinth of illusion which constitutes these lower planes by the
thread of occult knowledge given him by Ariadne (who represents
intuition) the higher self is enabled to slay the lower, and to
escape safely from the web of illusion; yet there still remains for
him the danger that, developing intellectual pride, he may neglect
intuition, even as Theseus neglected Ariadne, and so fail for this
time to realize his highest possibilities.
In ancient Greece
the lesser mysteries were especially celebrated in a little place
called Agrae, and the initiates were called “mystae.”
Perhaps you know that their official dress, the token of their
dignity, was the skin of a fawn, which in the old symbology
represented the astral body.
Its spotted appearance was thought
to be emblematic of the many colors in an ordinary astral body. The
reason why this was considered a fitting dress for those initiated
into the lesser mysteries was because the principal teachings given
in them concerned the astral plane. Those who were admitted learned
what the astral life of man would be after death.
Much time was
spent in making clear by example as well as by teaching what would be
the effect in the astral world of a certain mode of life on earth. In
the first place they taught by illustrations,
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on an extensive scale
by representations in the temples, by a kind of play or drama in
which was shown what, in the astral world, would be the condition of
a man who had been, let us say, avaricious or full of sensual
desires. In the old days of the mysteries, when the leaders were
adepts or pupils of adepts, these representations were something like
materializations. That is to say, the teacher, whoever he was,
produced them by his own power out of astral or etheric matter, and
created a real image for his pupils. But as time advanced, and later
teachers were unable to bring about this phenomenon, they tried to
represent these teachings in other ways — in some cases by what we
should call acting. Members of the priesthood took the roles of
different persons, while in other cases puppets were moved by
machinery.
In addition to the teaching concerning the astral
plane, instructions were also given in the same way as to the system
of world-evolution. Among other things, pupils were taught how our
solar system and its different parts came into existence. You can
easily see how that could be represented, first by materialized
nebulae and globes, and how, when this materialization was no longer
possible, the arrangement of different globes could be made clear by
the use of what we now call an orrery — that is, a model of the solar
system.
One of the most important things connected with the
mysteries was that they explained the outer religion of the people in
quite another way than that given to the general public. If you know
anything about the religion of ancient Greece, you will understand
that there were many things which badly needed some inner
explanation, for certainly their religion does not appear to be very
elevated or very reasonable when looked at from the ordinary
standpoint. It seems to have been the object that all the stories
which made up the outer teaching, many of which seem very
extraordinary, should be learned by the people and retained in their
minds — just a few simple, clear conceptions, and nothing more. But
all earnestminded people joined the mysteries, and learned there the
real meaning of the stories, which gave the whole thing quite another
aspect.
Let me give you an idea of what I mean, by two or three
very simple and short examples. I told you that, for the most part,
the aim of those lesser mysteries was to inform the pupils about the
effects on the astral plane of a certain mode of life here on earth.
You probably know the myth of Tantalus. He was a man condemned
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to
suffer in hell eternal thirst, while water surrounded him on all
sides, but receded from his lips as soon as he tried to drink. The
meaning of this is not difficult to see, when once we know what the
astral life is. Every one who leaves this world of ours full of
sensual desires of any kind — as, for example, a drunkard, or some
one who has given himself up to sensual living in the ordinary
meaning of the word — such a man finds himself on the astral plane in
the position of Tantalus.
He has built up for himself this
terrible desire which governs his whole being. You know how powerful
the desire can be in the case of a drunkard; it conquers his feelings
of honor, his love of his family, and all the better inclinations of
his character. He will take money from his wife and children, will
even take their clothes to sell them and obtain money to drink.
Remember that when a man dies he does not change at all. His
desire is still as powerful as ever. But it is impossible to gratify
it, because his physical body, through which only he could drink, is
gone. There you have your Tantalus, as you see, full of that terrible
desire, always finding that the gratification recedes as soon as he
thinks he has it.
Recall also the story of Tityus, the man who
was tied to a rock, his liver being gnawed by vultures, and growing
again as fast as it was eaten. There you have an illustration of the
effect of yielding to desire: an image of the man who is always
tortured by remorse for sins committed on earth.
As perhaps a
higher example of the same we can take the story of Sisyphus. You
know how he was condemned always to roll a stone up a hill, and how,
when he reached the top, the stone would always roll down again. That
is the condition of an ambitious man after death, a man who has spent
his life in making plans for selfish ends, for attaining glory or
honor. In his case also death brings no change. He goes on making
plans just as he did during life. He works out his plans, he executes
them, as he thinks, till the point of culmination, and then he
suddenly perceives that he has no longer a physical body, and that
all was but a dream. Then be begins again and again, till he has
learned at last that these desires are useless and that ambition must
be killed. So Sisyphus goes on uselessly rolling the stone up the
hill, till at last he learns not to roll it any more. To have learned
that is to have conquered that desire, and he will come back in his
next life without it; without the desire, but of course
not without the weakness
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of character which made that desire
possible.
So you see that conditions that seem terrible are but
the effects in the other world of a wrong life here on earth. That is
nature's method of turning wrong into good. Man does suffer, but
what he suffers is only the effect of his own action and nothing
else; it is not punishment inflicted upon him from outside, but
entirely of his own making. And that is not all. The suffering he has
to bear is the only means by which his qualities can be directed in
the right way for his evolution and progress in another life. This
was a point much emphasized in the teaching of the mysteries.
Now in regard to the greater mysteries. Those were celebrated
principally in the great temple of Eleusis, not far from Athens. The
initiates were named “epoptai,” that is, “they
whose eyes are opened.” Their emblem was the golden fleece of
Jason which is the symbol of the mind-body; for the yellow color in
the human aura indicates the intelligence, as every clairvoyant
knows. In this degree of initiation the teachings of the former
degree were continued. In the first, as you remember, were taught the
effects in the astral world of various ways of living. In the greater
mysteries the pupil was shown what would be the effect in the
heaven-world of a certain line of life, study and aspiration on
earth. The whole history of the evolution of the world and of man, in
its deeper aspect, was expounded in the greater mysteries. The same
method or representation as in the other case was used here; although
it was much more difficult to represent on the physical plane what
belonged to the mental.
In each of these divisions of the
mysteries, the lesser and the greater, there was an inner school
which taught practical development to those who were seen to be ready
for it. In the lesser mysteries theoretical knowledge about the
astral plane was given, but the teachers carefully watched their
pupils, and when they noticed one of whose character they felt sure,
who showed that he was capable of psychic development, they invited
him into the inner circle in which instruction was given as to the
method of using the astral body and consciously functioning in it.
When such a man passed on to the greater mysteries he received not
only the ordinary teaching about the conditions of the mental plane,
but also private instruction as to the development of the mental body
as a vehicle.
Those who were thus received, not only into the
recognized stages of the mysteries but into their inner schools, were
also
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taught at the end of their course that all of this was in truth
but exoteric — that all which they had learned, incalculable as had
been its value, was really only a preparation for the true mysteries
of initiation which would lead them to the feet of the Masters of
Wisdom, and admit them to the Great Brotherhood which rules the
world.
I may explain still further the meaning of some of those
symbols which were used in connection with the mysteries. First, we
will take what was called the thyrsus — that is, a staff with a
pine-cone on its top. In India the same symbol is found, but instead
of the staff a stick of bamboo with seven knots is used. In some
modifications of the mysteries, a hollow iron rod, said to contain
fire, was used instead of the thyrsus. Here again it is not difficult
for the student of occultism to see the meaning. The staff or the
stick with seven knots represents the spinal cord, with its seven
centers, of which we read in the Hindu books. The hidden fire is the
serpent-fire, kundalini, of which you may read in
The Secret
Doctrine. But the thyrsus was not only a symbol; it was also an
object of practical use. It was a very strong magnetic instrument,
used by initiates to free the astral body from the physical when they
passed in full consciousness to this higher life. The priest who had
magnetized it laid it against the spinal cord of the candidate and
gave him in that way some of his own magnetism, to help him in that
difficult life and in the efforts which lay before him. In connection
with these mysteries, a certain set of objects called the toys of
Bacchus are spoken of. When you go over those lists of the toys of
Bacchus you will find them very remarkable.
Whilst the child
Bacchus (the Logos) plays with his toys he is seized by the Titans
and torn to pieces. Later these pieces are put together and built
into a whole. You will understand that this, however clumsy it may
seem to us, is without doubt an allegory, which represents the
descending of the One to become the many, and the re-union of the
many in the One, through suffering and sacrifice. What, then, are the
toys of the child Bacchus when he falls into matter and becomes the
many? In the first place we find him playing with dice. Those dice
are not common dice, but the five platonic solids; a set of five
regular figures, the only regular polygons possible in geometry. They
are given in a fixed series, and this series agrees with the
different planes of the solar system. Each of them indicates, not the
form of the atoms of the different planes, but the lines along which
the power works which surrounds
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those atoms. These polygons are the
tetrahedron, the cube, the octohedron, the dodecahedron, and the
icosahedron. If we put the point at one end and the sphere at the
other we get a set of seven figures, corresponding to the number of
planes of our solar system.
You know that in some of the older
schools of philosophy it was said: “No one can enter who does
not know mathematics.” What do you think is meant by that? Not
what we now call mathematics, but the mathematics which embraced the
knowledge of the higher planes, of their mutual relations and the way
in which the whole is built by the will of God. Plato said,
“God geometrizes,” and it is perfectly true. Those forms
are not conceptions of the human brain; they are truths of the higher
planes. We have formed the habit of studying the books of Euclid, but
we study them now for themselves, and not as a guide to something
higher. The old philosophers pondered upon them because they led to
the understanding of the true science of life. We have lost sight of
the true teaching, and grasp in many cases only the lifeless form.
Another toy with which Bacchus played was a top, the symbol of the
whirling atom of which you will find a picture in Occult
Chemistry. He also plays with a ball which represents the
earth, that particular part of the planetary chain to which the
thought of the Logos is specially directed at the moment. Also he
plays with a mirror. The mirror has always been a symbol of astral
light, in which the archetypal ideas are reflected and then
materialized*. So you see that each of those toys indicates an
essential part in the evolution of a solar system.
A few words
may be said about the way in which people were prepared for the study
of those mysteries by the different schools; for instance, the
Pythagorean school, to which I belonged. In the Pythagorean schools,
the pupils were divided into three classes. The first was called that
of the akoustikoi or hearers. This means that they were
learners, but it is also true that one of the rules was that they
were to keep absolutely silent for two years.
I think this rule
would be regarded as a serious drawback by many who join our Society
at the present time, but in those olden times a great many people,
not only men but women too, submitted ...
* Archetypal ideas are patterns on the highest mental plane
that serve as blueprints for the formation of the manifested world. Editor.
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to this stipulation. The rule
had also another meaning, but it is a fact that during two years the
members of the first class were compelled to keep silence. The other
meaning was that during all the time, however long, that a man stayed
in this class of the akoustikoi, he might not give out any
teaching, but continued to learn. I have wished that we had some such
arrangement in the Theosophical Society, for it sometimes happens
that members who do not yet know much themselves want to teach
others, and the teaching is not always recognizable as Theosophy.
The second class of Pythagoreans was called that of the
mathematikoi. They passed their time in studying geometry,
numbers and music. They brought these different subjects into
relation to one another and worked out the relations between color
and sound, which are very remarkable.
Let us take an example,
which shows how our world is a coherent whole and how we can take
from different parts which do not seem to have any connection
whatever, and bring them into relation with each other. I just spoke
about the five platonic polygons. Every one who knows anything about
music knows that there is a fixed proportion between the length of
the strings which produce certain tones. You know that you can tune a
piano according to a certain system of fifths, and you can express
the relation of the different tones to one another by the number of
vibrations of each tone; so you can express an harmonious chord in
mathematical numbers. This was first discovered simply by experiment;
later the mathematicians found out what the proportions should be,
and again by experiment they were found to be exact. But the
peculiarity is that the set of numbers which produces an harmonious
chord have the same relation to one another as that which exists
between certain parts of these platonic solids. I believe that this
point was worked out some time ago in an article in the
Theosophical Review by one of the English cathedral organists.
It is very remarkable that our scale, so different from the old
Greek scale, which consisted of five tones, can still be deduced from
the proportion of those five platonic figures, which were studied
some thousands of years ago in Greece. One is apt to think that there
cannot be much relation between mathematics and music, but you see
that they are both parts of one great whole.
The third class of
the Pythagorean school was formed of the physikoi — those
who studied physics, the inner connection
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between phenomena,
world-building and metaphysics. They learned the truth about man and
nature and, as far as they could learn it, about Him who made both.
There is still one point in the mysteries which we should not
forget to consider — the life of the disciples. A life of perfect
purity was strictly required. It is a remarkable coincidence that the
life in the Pythagorean school is divided into five periods, almost
similar to the five steps of the preparatory path of the Hindus, as
described by me in Invisible Helpers, and by Mrs. Besant
in The Path of Discipleship. Almost all the forms and
symbols of the present Christian religion are derived from the
Egyptian mysteries. All the symbolism, for example, that is related
to the Latin cross, and to the descent and sacrifice of the Logos, is
taken from the Egyptian mysteries. I have written about this in
The Christian Creed.
Though the mysteries of Greece and
Rome, of Egypt and Chaldaea, are long ago defunct, the world has
never been left without avenues of approach to the inner shrine. Even
in the gross darkness of the middle ages the Rosicrucians and some
other secret societies were ready to teach the truth to those who
were ready to learn; and now in these modern days of hurry and
materialism the Theosophical Society still upholds the banner of true
knowledge, and acts as a gateway by means of which those who are
really in earnest may reach the feet of the Masters of the Wisdom. We
have our grades in the Esoteric Section, just as the mysteries had;
and behind us, as behind them, stand always the officials of the
Great White Brotherhood, who keep in their hands the key to the true
initiations.
You must also remember that many things given in
those old days only under the seal of secrecy are now made public,
and through our Society are given to the world. Many of the greatest
and noblest characters of history have passed years in study and work
to try to find what is now given us so easily and simply in a few
books. Of us is perfectly true what is said in the Bible: “Many
prophets and kings have desired to see those things which ye see, and
have not seen them; and to hear those things which ye hear, and have
not heard them.” (Luke, x. 24.) Because this honor
is reserved for us and this opportunity is given us, it seems to me
that a great responsibility rests upon us, and that we should try to
be worthy of the gift. It is good karma which allows this possibility
to open before us. If we let it pass, we shall not deserve to have
another offered us for thousands of years. If you knew, as I know,
with what difficulties we had to contend in former days to learn all
those things which are laid before us now, perhaps you would
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