Theosophy - Modern Theosophy by Claude Falls Wright
MODERN
THEOSOPHY
An Outline of Its
Principles
by CLAUDE
FALLS WRIGHT
- Fellow
of The Theosophical Society [FTS]
CONTENTS
Introduction
Preface
Chapter -1-
The
Arcane Philosophy
Chapter -2-
Cosmological
The
Dawn of the Manvantara
The
Ultimate Law of the Universe
Spirit
and Matter
The
Astral Light
Chapter 3-
The Planetary
World
The
Sisters of the Earth
Planetary
Evolution
The
Mystery of the Moon
The
Seven Races
Chapter 4-
Anthropological
The
Constitution of Man
Life
and Death
Death
and After
Karma
and Reincarnation
Prehistoric
Races
The
Monad
Nirvana
Chapter 5-
Masters
of Wisdom
Chapter 6-
The
Theosophical Society
Chapter 7-
Conclusion
This work was
originally written for a well-known publishing house in New York. Prolonged
delays in issuing the work and the eventual assignment of the house forced the
author to withdraw the manuscript. It is now issued with some slight additions.
February 1894 -
Claude Falls Wright
CLAUDE
FALLS WRIGHT last
visited Toronto in August, 1922. He was called in the January following to Nicaragua
on a business trip, and left with the expectation of returning within a short
time. He left his personal effects in his New York lodgings, and after his death
by accidental drowning, as no one claimed his property and time passed on, his
landlady sold what there was for the rent due. Among these effects were many
books and manuscripts. The story of their dispersion may be told another time,
but we are only concerned with Mr. Wright's book, Modern Theosophy. It was published
in 1894, or attempted to be published, but only a few copies comparatively got
into circulation. Most of them were destroyed in a fire. Mr. Wright had every
intention of republishing the book with revisions, and we talked it over with
him on his last visit to Toronto. Mr. Roy Mitchell, who was naturally interested
in the sale of Mr. Wright's books and papers, when he heard where they were
being disposed of, went and examined them and was fortunate enough to find a
ragged old book with a cover pasted over it with the title "Gupta Vidya"
taken from another volume. It covered Mr. Wright's own revised copy of Modern
Theosophy. Mr. Mitchell bought it and has very kindly placed this corrected
copy at our disposal, and the book will be reprinted in the pages of The Canadian
Theosophist during the next ten months or so. It is a comprehensive though concise
exposition of Theosophy as Madam Blavatsky presented it to the world in her
writings, and will be appreciated by all students who desire such a lucid and
effective account of the Divine Wisdom as Mr. Wright has written.
Editor Canadian Theosophist
November 1928
INTRODUCTION
The subject
of Theosophy is so vast, and the tools of language are so inadequate, that any
popular exposition of its doctrines must fall short of conveying to the ordinary
reader, for whom it is written, a complete and satisfactory answer. This is
not because the writer is unable to express himself, but in consequence of the
newness of the subject to the mind of the day. This strangeness throws around
the subject a mystery that is not inherent, a vagueness and remoteness which
invade even the use of ordinary words. For as Theosophy opens up a new and vast
vista for the thoughts to roam through, and reveals a scheme of cosmic and human
evolution including the smallest detail, the language of the Anglo-Saxon has
to be used in a double sense nearly all the time. But the new and wider scope
that words thus acquire will reveal itself to those who read this book.
It brings forward
no new scheme of either religion or science. No claims are made to original
discovery, nor even to new arrangement It is simply a new attempt to tell again
of that which the never dying Brotherhood- the elder brothers of the "Great
Orphan Humanity"- have preserved till now: the system which furnishes the
key to every religion wherein is buried the truth about our nature and our destiny.
And as a young servant of the great band of Silent Workers, the author has only
followed in the steps of others who, like him, would wish the western nations
to know themselves and to some extent the plan of that small portion of Cosmos
in which this little globe swing round the sun.
So, with whatever
faults, many or few, this book may have, both the author and I are glad of its
appearance, for we firmly believe that this is but once more the sounding the
same call to our fellows that we helped to sound before in prior lives on this
poor globe, the least significant of the seven. For if through this volume but
three immortal pilgrims shall be turned to the light held out by the great Brothers,
they will be three more gained for the Army of the Future.
The hope of the author
of this work- shared by many other earnest members of the Theosophical Society-
is in the future, and in a brotherhood which includes within its bonds many
living men, who, tough unseen by the ordinary man, are powerful and wise enough
to affect the progress of the races. They are the elder brothers of the great
Human Brotherhood. They do not seek the applause of men nor a vindication for
their policy. Many people do not believe that such things exist at all, but
there are those members of the Theosophical Society, among them the author and
myself, who hold firmly to the conviction that the highest examples of human
development are not among the schools of Sciences, or Art, or Medicine, or Literature,
or Statecraft, but indeed among the Unseen Brotherhood, and we have the courage
to wait for the visible appearance, in a higher or better civilization, of some
of these glorious Adepts. And that consummation we are approaching. The outer
materialistic prophets of a civilization based on selfishness scoff at such
a theory, but we, being firmly convinced of progress from within by repeated
incarnations of the immortal Ego, must be preparing for a new Day. This book,
then, is by way of such preparation.
William Q. Judge
New York, June 1892
PREFACE
The Author
particularly desires to disclaim credit for originality of thoughts in this
work. Fragments from the mass of mystical literature which has crept out from
its hiding place with the advance of theosophical thought have merely been put
in order and rendered perhaps somewhat clearer by the freshness of rewriting.
The doctrine which
it has been his effort to outline is not brought forward as a novelty, save
in so far as the form or clothing in which old but forgotten truths are put
may exact such denomination. Portions of it are to be found embedded in the
substratum of truth upon which every form of religion is reared; its existence
can readily be traced in the mysticism and philosophy which have graced human
thought in every age. Therefore, also, it cannot be regarded as as a "revelation".
It does not even profess completeness, except to the extent to which, up to
the present, it has been disclosed; this for the reason that as its dealing
is with nature, a wholeness of divulgement would necessitate the breaking of
all her seals- and there are many scrolls that cannot be opened until the time
is ripe.
Briefly, it is the
tragedy of the Soul; it hints at its origin, sketches its journeyings, shows
the wherefore of its sufferings, and points to the when and how its apotheosis
may be achieved. It is also the science of life; for its endeavour is to plunge
into the profundities of nature, and to grapple with the mystery of Being. It
may be called Truth herself; since it unveils all things to indicate her presence.
The age is a black
one; and even if the light of Christianity be divine, it has failed nevertheless
to disperse the Cimmerian darkness. Religious disputations and theological warfare,
bigotry and hypocrisy, dogmatism and unholy discord have left their melancholy
tokens, and many centuries must elapse ere they can be altogether washed away.
Nor has materialistic science succeeded better. Invaluable to the age as the
catalogue of facts presented by her votaries must be, yet the unhealthy disagreement
between some of their most vital hypotheses has not failed greatly to damage
the confidence reposed in them by their less learned brethren. A conflict of
mind with mind, terminating in sectarian hostility, is the order of the hour,
while the consequent drift of the masses to materialism and atheistic thought
is leaving its impress on the times in nihilism and anarchistic reform. But
as Night's darkest hour heralds the approach of Dawn, itself the messenger of
the trans-plendent Noontide, so it is here and now that the true philosopher
will look for the establishing of a brighter epoch; and Theosophy has stepped
forward, as it does from age to age, to lay the foundation-stone.
The work which follows
records the outline of some of the more important doctrines of the theosophical
philosophy, which several years' personal instruction from Madame Blavatsky
and a study of her works have taught the author. Well-knowing how many there
are whose independence of thought forbids their acceptance of any of the various
religious dogmas, and who are yet too spiritually-minded to descend to a materialistic
view of existence, he has written it in the hope that it may be read by a few
whom other theosophical works have failed to reach; and as a slight tribute
to the memory of one who made more sacrifices for Humanity than the age can
appreciate.
Claude Falls Wright
144 Madison Avenue,
New York City
May 1892
CHAPTER
ONE
THE
ARCANE PHILOSOPHY
This
not a matter of today,
Or yesterday, but hath been from all times
And none hath told us when it came, or how
Sophocles |
Divine
origin does not mean here a revelation from
an anthropomorphic God, on a mount amidst thunder and lightning;
but as we understand it, a language
and a system of science imparted
to
the early mankind by a more
advanced mankind, so much higher
as to be divine in the sight of that infant humanity.
H.P.Blavatsky |
The Theosophical
Society is an attempt to form the nucleus of a brotherhood at once fair and
honorable, and just to all, depending for its very life on its kindliness, straightforwardness
and catholicity. Its aim is to unite all systems of thought and thus develop
a philosophy that will include every phase of existence.
In this essay, it
examines all views of life, seeking the good in each. The Hindu, the Buddhist
and the Christian receive equally their just share of approval, their right
proportion of condemnation. The merits and demerits of the materialistic schools
are discussed side by side with the merits and demerits of the most idealistic
and mystical. Hypnotism and even spiritualism receive a respectful and honorable
attention.
It is hardly to be
wondered at that with regard to such a society misconceptions prevail. The large
majority of persons glean their general knowledge from the columns of the daily
newspapers, which, however commendable for their zeal and candour, are hardly
to be expected adequately to explain philosophy. Only those occurrences which,
in the annals of Theosophy, might be construed as sensational, have been voiced
by them, and therefore the masses have become more acquainted with its strangeness
than with its truths. Some persons think the Society an organized propaganda
of Buddhism; others connect with Hinduism or Mohammedanism. There are those
who maintain it to be a Christian reform movement; others have asserted its
anti-Christian nature. It has been regarded as a spiritualistic community. While
some say that Theosophists are dreamers and idealists who utterly ignore practical
life and work, others affirm them to be materialists and atheists. They have
been called astrologers, alchemists, magicians, sorcerers, socialists, vegetarians.
In almost the same breath the Society has been spoken of as a philanthropic
institution and as an organization of impostors, dupes and charlatans, of thaumaturgists
and agents of the devil. It may certainly have attempted the vindication of
a few slandered beliefs and have tried to point out that there was sometimes
to be found, under a mountain of fiction, a basis of truth; that it should,
however, directly or indirectly have proclaimed itself as wholly in agreement
with any one view of life to the exclusion of all others is entirely fallacious.
The note struck by the philosophy is synthesis. The endeavour of its adherents
is to gather truth from all sides, to unite all peoples and religions by the
holy bond of brotherhood. But to show the public that the aim of an enlightened
socialism, however mistaken its policy may be, is not altogether evil; to prove
that the philosophy of Gautama Buddha had as much sincerity of purpose as the
Christian religion; to hold that magic was not always the fable it now appears,
does not in itself entitle one to the denomination of Socialist, Buddhist or
Magician. Hence it has come about that the Theosophical Society, because it
regards with consideration and tolerance all men's opinions, endeavouring to
extract the good therefrom, has been associated with many a movement it has
not upheld, many a notion it has not approved.
However, closely
identified with it, the Theosophical Society is not a promulgator of Theosophy.
It is organized on such lines that it cannot represent any particular philosophy
or religion. To be sure, its members, almost without exception, recognize Theosophy
as the only system of knowledge that adequately explains the difficulties of
the age; but the society which bears its name has no opinions of its own, and
ever holds itself in a position to examine fairly and without bias every new
view of life presented. Yet, strange as it may seem, while embodying fairly
definite statements as to nature and man, Theosophy is perfectly in accord with
the spirit of the Theosophical Society. Its essential principles are those common
to every philosophy, and almost the first rule for its successful study is that
the mind of the student be held open to receive knowledge and truth, no matter
what the source. The philosophy, and its vehicle, the Society, are thus intimately
related to each other. The Theosophical Society is an attempt to free men from
the degrading influences of superstition, materialism, and the selfishness inculcated
by our civilization, while Theosophy represents in general the position the
mind naturally takes when thus emancipated. The philosophy has now to be explained.
Theosophy comes to
us from the Orient- the birthplace of religions. For centuries this wisdom,
the fruitage of the studies of greater nations that have passed out of existence
or fallen into decay,- of the ancient Chinese, Egyptians, Hindus, Greeks, has
been hidden from the younger peoples of the earth, jealously guarded by the
Arahats or wise men of the East. At rare and long intervals a nation more favoured,
because more advanced, has through the intercession of some high priest or seer
or the work of some great sage been permitted the custody of a few of the lesser
secrets for the benefit of its peoples. The knowledge that has thus from time
to time leaked out into the world has been the origin of our countless religions,
all of which, notwithstanding their hostile relationships, have yet sprung from
the one source.
Across the snowcapped
range of mountains that separates Nepal from Tibet, in haunts absolutely inaccessible
to ordinary man, there is a body of philosophers, men who have passed beyond
the stage of the normally human,- semi-divine beings, who hold in their mighty
keeping the records of all the learning of the past, know the last word concerning
the evolution of our globe, have solved the mystery of being and who possess
a power over nature and knowledge of her secret laws not dreamed of as possible
in our prosaic West. It is to Them, the true Founders of the Theosophical Society,
that we are indebted for the philosophy which has been roughly outlined in the
following pages, and which has already produced so great an effect in the world
of thinking men. This is the oriental philosophy, the arcane wisdom of the East,
some of the teachings of which have now, under the name of Theosophy, for the
first time in all the ages been presented to the world at large, it having reached
a stage of development when as a whole it was prepared to understand them. For
long ages this wisdom has been the heritage of only the more spiritually advanced
of the nations, or the elect of other less-evolved peoples who had struggled
to a stage of progress beyond their brethren-- bound, however, under the strictest
pledges of secrecy not to reveal their knowledge. India, for instance, at one
time the most intelligent and civilized country of the globe, teems with works
containing references to the wisdom of her ancestors, and even at this remote
date much of the ancient science is to be found spread through her literature.
But for the most part the learning has been kept very secret. Now, however,
it, or a portion of it, is given to all nations.
Owing to the fact
that the philosophy now given out has been kept so long secret, the names employed
to designate it have caused confusion in the minds of some. This, therefore,
requires some explanation.
The esoteric philosophy,
secret doctrine, occult science, or whatever name we may employ when speaking
of Theosophy, cannot properly be said to be esoteric, secret or occult once
it has been given to the world. But such titles as these really contain deeper
meanings than those they may superficially present. Theosophy or the wisdom-religion
is still esoteric, inasmuch as it has not all been made exoteric, and so long
as this is the case, so long as any of it remains hidden from humanity, so long
may the doctrine be called the esoteric or secret one. This will be the case
while the race remains unfitted to receive all of the bright truths which are
its heritage. It has ever been so. Each of the world's religions embodies but
a different statement or expression of the arcane doctrine as given to different
races and under different circumstances in all periods of time in accordance
with man's needs for wisdom, by the guardians of that wisdom. There has always
been a secret philosophy. Every true religion, eastern or otherwise, has had
a dual existence from the moment of its birth to the hour of its decay; an external,
conventional aspect for the masses, embodying little more than a code of ethics,
and giving a few general facts concerning the origin of the world and the destiny
of man- and an internal esoteric school, containing the real teaching or the
science, from which the exoteric doctrine was extracted. Indeed it is a significant
fact that all beliefs, when their outer garb of public superstition has been
stripped off, and the naked frame restored in its original purity, are found
to embody identical doctrines. This is only explainable by postulating the existence
of a system of wisdom from which all the world religions have sprung, such a
system at the same time affording a key to all of the various beliefs, and explaining
the many allusions to a secret school which are to be found in the sacred books
of all nations and scattered through thousands of volumes in every tongue.
Likewise is Theosophy
still occult, because its science deals much with the inner, hidden nature of
man. And this raises not a little difficulty in the mind of the western student.
We in the west are so opposed to secrecy in any form, even in thought, that
we find it almost impossible to believe anything true which bears this imprint.
That anything should be "occult" seems to us improper. But there are
some things which cannot be said, and others which it is impossible to explain,
and such are the only ones which are truly occult. Thus music becomes occult
or hidden to one who can hear in the harmony of its progressive chords only
a rumble or a noise, and drawings and photographs equally so to those who perceive
nothing save a forest of lines in the one, or a variety of shades in the other-
as was actually the case which some Fiji Islanders. And the language of the
soul must ever remain a mysterious lore to those who are unable to penetrate
its depths or even believe in its existence.
The following pages
contain a brief exposition of the philosophy as it is at present before the
world. Purely eastern in its origin, the reader must bear with me if he finds
it here presented more or less in eastern fashion- that is, without immediate
attempt to prove , as we proceed, every assertion made. The eastern methods
of teaching and of learning are as distinct from our own, as are the respective
ideas of civilization in the occident and orient; for while we insist upon the
pupil's being led up in his studies through a mass of facts and series of verifications
to the full knowledge arrived at by his particular school, the oriental instructor,
conceiving wisdom to be a result of the expansion of the mind rather than a
training of the memory, contents himself with presenting his scholar with a
general outline of the mass of learning to be achieved, forcing him to teach
himself by filling in the detail. The master thus becomes a director or adjuster
rather than a teacher, and having started the learner in the right way, leaves
him to grow naturally and to reach what knowledge he can by his own aspirations
and exertions.
This is, whatever
one may say, precisely the method adopted in learning any exact science. If
we would be taught mathematics, for instance, we have to adopt the conclusions
of our teacher, to believe in their verity, before we can proceed in our studies.
We begin with general principles and descend to details. And in occult study
the pupil is only given the broad principles of the science, the laws, and is
then left by the master to teach himself. The secret doctrine strikes only a
few notes; it tells us a few of the fundamental laws by which nature is governed,
and shows in a variety of ways how they may be observed in their action in the
different departments of Being. So that it must not be imagined that the philosophy
is without proof. On the contrary, its tenets once fully grasped, abundant proof
will be found in every field of nature and experience; and the author believes
it to contain the only key to the many vital problems which in this age confronts
us on all sides.
This leads us to
the question "Whence the Secret Doctrine?", the answer to which we
must preface by a short history of prehistoric man, clipped from the arcane
records.
In ages past, when
peoples far different from our present race walked the earth, greater in science,
greater in art, greater in civilization, the one desire which held the human
soul was the unquenchable thirst for wisdom. Earthly desires chained it not.
It lived within the tabernacle of clay, not as prisoner, but as king, seeking
only knowledge and power- to understand the laws and nature of the universe
and to control its workings. The solemn and mighty nations who then ruled the
earth made no difference between science and religion. They fathomed the mysteries
of creation, not only by analysis, but by spiritual perception. They cultivated
those ethereal parts of their natures which we now would fain destroy, and sought
truth in spiritual regions at present barred to the human wanderer by ten thousand
gates. Living in the body, they sojourned among the stars; reading the language
of the mighty universe, they listened to the music of the spheres.
Yet man sought to
learn too much. He tried to wrest from nature secrets she was not then prepared
to give him- and fell; fell to depths of degradation as great as the heights
to which he had previously attained. The present humanity is the descendant
of those fallen ones, whose wisdom has been lost, their knowledge scattered
to the winds, leaving only a few husks of their once brilliant sciences. A few,
however, remaining true to their Godlike natures, retained their purity and
power. These, sorrowing beyond measure at the sight of their fallen brethren,
formed themselves into a body, resolving that they would not know rest until
they had succeeded in restoring Man again to his true position as divine ruler
of the planet. They or their descendants still walk the earth unnoticed and
unknown by ordinary humanity, engaged in their life's work. Holding that everyone
has latent in him all the power and greatness of his ancestors, and that any
one who succeeds in purifying himself of his animal tendencies may rise to the
position of a god, they have never lost hope of success. They have, up to the
present, managed at intervals to swell their ranks by single individuals; which,
added to the fact that the knowledge and power they possess has given them the
ability to extend their lives considerably over the time usually allotted to
man, has kept their school alive.
Once every hundred
years, or thereabout, owing to the removal of certain restrictions imposed upon
their labour by natural forces, these sages are able to work freely for the
space of about twenty-five years, to send messengers from their Brotherhood
to teach the masses and to raise the standard of mankind. At such times their
work is effected in accordance with the exigencies of the age, and a glance
back over the history of the world's progress will show distinct traces of what
has been done in this direction about the close of each century. At certain
of these periods, however, the restrictions are farther withdrawn than at others;
then greater teachers are sent by the school. Of such were Jesus and Gautama
Buddha who did their work in times of great opportunity, and the effect of whose
missions lives to this day. The close of the nineteenth century is one of these
periods, and opportunities have afforded themselves among western nations, not
before equalled for many an age. Hence the establishment the Theosophical Society,
and hence the extreme energy with which the class of literature which sprang
up with its formation has been spread the world over. The increasing refinement
and spirituality of the world has entitled it as a whole to regain some of its
lost knowledge, and much of that which up to now was secret has become public
property, it remaining with the world as to how far it will profit by the chance
offered.
All this will seem,
no doubt, very fanciful to the reader. It will hardly appear credible to him
that while our scientists and philosophers are busily engaged in endeavouring
to solve the problems which must necessarily arise in the search for knowledge,
there should actually exist all the while men who not only had attained to the
knowledge, but who had long ago solved the problems. The fact is, however, that
our western civilization is exceedingly young; we are scarcely developed. And
as children are liable to fancy their knowledge as exceeding that of their elders,
so the more modern nations,, not having reached their majority, look with scorn
upon the older countries-China, India and so forth. But for all we can tell
there may records among these containing some of the profoundest secrets known
to man. Almost all our present-day knowledge has come from the East. We have
to thank the older oriental nations for by far the greater part of our information
concerning astronomy, chemistry, geometry; and indeed, anything we at present
know is but a development of the few seeds of wisdom sown amongst us by our
eastern brethren.
The flood of light
that has been let in upon the origin of religions by oriental research has led
not a few to fancy that there might have been at one time a single philosophy
from which all creeds have sprung. It is worthy of note that although most creeds
owe their origin to one teacher, yet in no case does that particular teacher
start the creed afterwards associated with his name. He merely reforms an old
one. Thus Buddha readjusts the Brahmanical doctrine of the time, and endeavours
to purify it by doing away with caste; while Jesus comes to fulfill, not to
destroy, the law of Moses.
The records of the
eastern esoteric schools of Philosophy state that there was at one time such
a universal system, and as evidence of their statement point to (a) the fact
that all doctrines entitled to be called "religions", in contradistinction
to mere ethical associations, maintain the tradition of mankind as at one time
pure, but since fallen and degraded; and to (b) the underlying similarity of
all creeds. Cleared of their dross of public error, all religions will be found
to embody in essence precisely identical teachings; Brahmanism, Buddhism, Taoism,
Christianity, Gnosticism, the philosophy of the ancient Egyptians, the Chaldeans,
the Hebrews, the Babylonians, the Assyrians, the Greeks and all the systems,
both ancient and modern, are more or less portions of the one arcane Secret
Doctrine.
Ex oriente lux! It
is to the East we have to look for what remains of the primeval philosophy;
for the guardians of the secret wisdom. And we are not without statements from
high-caste Hindus that all the knowledge which at one time belonged to the whole
world has not yet rebecome our property. "When a prominent Cinghalese priest
assured the writer (H.P.Blavatsky) that it was well known that the most important
Buddhist tracts belonging to the sacred canon were stored away in countries
and places inaccessible to the European pundits, the late Swami Dayanand Sarasvati,
the greatest Sanskritist of his day in India, assured some members of the Theosophical
Society of the same fact with regard to ancient Brahmanical works. When told
that Professor Max Muller had declared to the audiences of his "Lectures"
that the theory- "that there was a primeval preternatural revelation granted
to the fathers of the human race, finds but few supporters at present,' - the
holy and learned man laughed. His answer was suggestive. 'If Mr. Moksh Mooler,'
as he pronounced the name, 'were a Brahman, and came with me, I might take him
to a gupta cave ( a secret crypt) near Okhee Math in the Himalayas, where he
would soon find out that what crossed the Kalapani (the black waters of the
ocean) from India to Europe, were only the bits of rejected copies of some passages
from our sacred books. There was a 'primeval revelation', and it still exists;
nor will it be ever lost to the world, but will reappear; though the Mlechchbas
will of course have to wait'. Questioned further on this point, he would say
no more. This was at Meerut, in 1880".
The "brothers",
as the guardians of the secret wisdom are called, work in in various ways to
produce the desired results in the uplifting and purifying of humanity. Owing
to the fact that the masses tend to constantly materialize philosophical conceptions,
to turn what are intended to be pure abstractions into concrete images, the
necessity for periodically redirecting and reforming their religious ideas must
be apparent, and we therefore find men coming forward- generally from the East-
age after age, purifying the old religion, and starting it anew upon a more
spiritual basis. The necessity for maintaining this purity for as long a while
as possible has led each great teacher to divide his teachings into inner and
outer schools. So that we find in Egypt and in Greece the greater and lesser
mysteries of the temples, and in India the esoteric and exoteric philosophies;
Buddha and Pythagoras teaching their direct disciples mysteries not revealed
to the masses, and Jesus adopting a like course, just as Moses did with the
elders and the people.
The teachings of
these inner schools have always been identical; although their nomenclature
may have varied, yet they have always been under the direct supervision of the
same central school. The esoteric doctrines of any one religion will be found
to be the same as those of all the others. Of all creeds, however, that which
has most nearly retained in its outer organization its original purity, is the
Buddhistic, this mainly owing to the fact that Gautama worked among a nation
the most spiritual, and at that time the most highly civilized in the world.
Hence Theosophy, because it upholds most of the Buddhistic tenets, and has to
some extent adopted its terminology, has constantly been accused of being but
Gautama's philosophy revived, and reappearing in another garb. It does not deny
the accusation; it is the same as the real Buddhist creed, but it is also the
same as the real Christian creed, and no more one than the other, and no more
either, than it is Chaldean or Egyptian. The philosophy it upholds is to be
found hidden under the glyph and symbol o every religion, and in the sacred
books of every nation, distorted, perhaps, but still there.
This is its whole
assertion. Like Jesus', its mission is to fulfill, not to destroy, to establish
unity rather than division and discord; unity, not alone of religion with religion,
and sect with sect, but of religion with science, and of philosophy with both.
The Theosophical Society is then unique at least in this, that while other factions
cry aloud that with them alone "truth" is to be found, it seeks rather
to vindicate the truth of all, and, uniting them into one harmonious whole,
to demonstrate a true Brotherhood of man.
We now approach the
difficult task of placing upon paper in as clear a manner as is possible in
a popular work, a sketch of the secret doctrine as revealed to the present day.
In this we propose to commence with the general laws of life as laid down by
the philosophy, following with a sketch of the nature of the universe and of
the planets, and ending with an outline of the constitution, development and
history of man. By such means we hope to escape the great difficulty hitherto
experienced in putting forward the philosophy- that of arrangement. The subject
is so vast, embraces so many different fields of thought, that one scarcely
knows where to begin, and it might really be written equally well from almost
any point of view. But then it could only be understood from the point of view
from which it was written, whereas the object here is to make it clear to all.
Besides, as shown before, this is the eastern method- to commence with the general
and descent to the particular, which of itself would be sufficient reason for
employing it when writing on an eastern philosophy.
CHAPTER
TWO
COSMOLOGICAL
Everything
harmonizes with me which is harmonious to thee, O Cosmos. Nothing for me is
too early or too late which is due time for thee. Everything is fruit to me
which thy seasons bring, O Nature. From thee are all things, in thee are all
things, to thee all things return.
- Marcus Aurelius
Antoninus, IV, 23
As few persons
in the west take interest in discussing pure metaphysics, it is to some extent
regrettable that we shall at first have to lead the reader into that domain;
yet at the outset it is absolutely necessary so to do, that a correct idea may
be formed of the fundamental conceptions upon which the doctrine rests.
Occult sciences teaches
that we comprehend the nature of things outside our individual consciousness
only in so far as we understand our own natures; that we, as well as all other
beings, reflect in ourselves the whole cosmos, and that the closer we examine
into the details of this reflection, the nearer we shall come to a clear understanding
of the whole. To have a really just notion of what life is, we must draw our
conclusions respecting it from a survey of our own position. Such is the only
road to success in these matters; to travel any other will only lead to hopeless
confusion and despair.
Individual consciousness
is not possible without the two factors of subject and object, thinker and thought,
perceiver and perception, or whatever we may choose to call them, and the oriental
philosophy holds that similar factors must operate in universal consciousness.
These must have come into play simultaneously at the very genesis of the cosmos-
"in the beginning". What lies behind, what produced them, is a mystery
as great as that which produced us, and cannot be immediately known. It is the
abstraction of Being- Beness - and is something like the Absolute of modern
metaphysics. Theosophists, adopting most of their terminology from the Hindus,
know it under the name of Parabrahm - that which lies behind or beyond Brahm
or the first cause- and it might well correspond to the impersonal God of some
thinkers.
In the history of
the Cosmos according to Occultism, the life-drama is opened with the coming
into action of two principles, out of which interaction all else proceeds. These
two are called in their universal sense, Spirit and Matter, the Hindus naming
them Purusha and Prakriti- "Divine Thought" and "Primordial Substance".
Their interaction weaves the whole fabric of universes, planets and beings,
and finally effects individual existence. In other words, Divine Thought thinks
out the plan upon which the cosmos will be constructed, and out of Substance
it is fashioned.
We here must break
for a moment the thread of our remarks to guard the reader against an error
which will probably arise unless he be very exact in his mode of thinking. Arguments
such as these have reference to purely metaphysical concepts, not to material,
physical things. One of the principal reasons for establishing the Theosophical
Society and for giving out the teaching the west has received through it, was
to do away as much as possible with the tendency of the masses to materialize
the most spiritual ideas. The realistic, sensuous, non-imaginative, and iron
method of regarding things, fashionable among our modern scholars,- a reaction
from the superstition of the Black Ages,- is to be observed quite as much among
exponents of religion as among those whom we dub "atheists". Entirely
forgetting that spiritual knowledge and religion have their source in the faculties
of intuition, imagination and veneration, they have sought to reduce the perceptions
of the soul to the analytical thought of the brain. For example, the "Divine
Thought" of Esoteric Philosophy is the same as the "Spirit of God"
which is said to brood over the face of the waters in the genesis of the world
according to the Hebraic philosophy- water in this, as in every religious system,
being the same as Matter in its first condition, or "Primordial Substance",
- and this "God" has now been materialized into a great Man! Truly
an illustration of the "letter that killeth" the spirit (Romans 6,6;
Corinthians 3,6). The "Matter" which is conceived of in Occultism
as coming into existence with the dawn of life is only so-called for the want
of a better name; it is Matter only in the sense of objectivity, not what we
now know as such, as Spirit also is such only in the sense of subjectivity.
Basically, they are one and the same thing- Parabrahm- and merely represent
its two poles. The north pole of the magnet only exists because of the existence
of the south pole; they are mutually dependent on one another. Spirit, or the
root of subjective or thinking existence, only knows active life because of
its opposite- substance, the root of material objective life: that of which
these are the two poles is abstract Being- Parabrahm. Similar poles, call them
by what name we will, must exist likewise in every entity in the cosmos. If
we are to start fairly in tracing the "becoming" of the universe,
we must begin with the most metaphysical ideas, materializing them later as
is permissible when in the descending scale of thought we approach our own state
of consciousness.
The two factors necessary
for existence having been taken into account, the first picture of the panorama
may be brought forward and the gradual construction of the universe shown. But
before doing so we should answer a question which will by this time have formulated
itself in the reader's mind. Granting the impossibility of understanding existence
per se, granting that all that can be said of it is that it "was, is, and
ever shall be", that we know nothing about its Cause, yet a survey of the
shifting scenes around us shows everywhere constant birth, growth, decay and
death, and it would be reasonable to conclude that this everlasting change was
inherent in the nature of all things. Are we then to understand that the esoteric
doctrine teaches that the cosmos itself was born, lives, and will eventually
die? If so, how did it come into being, and what will become of it at dissolution?
Now without going
into the exceedingly metaphysical question of Time, upon which these and such
like enquiries properly turn- really an illusion, but perhaps difficult for
us to comprehend as such, save by argument- let us at once say that the philosophy
does hold that the universe has its birth-periods, living and dying like any
other entity; but it does not pretend to say why. Every philosophy must have
its fundamental propositions, and this is one of which the secret doctrine says--"
let it be granted". But look around you: Search with your telescope the
stars, or peer through your microscope into the tiniest drop of blood! Examine
nature's workings in all her fields- in the mineral, animal, vegetable kingdoms!
Gather together the facts attained through scientific investigation, in astronomy,
in geology, in physiology, in chemistry, in every department! And everywhere
you will find, without exception- I speak deliberately, without exception- the
indication of one underlying law of cycles, alternation, or periodicity. Day
gives places to night, and night to day- eternal sleeping and waking. Winter
succeeds summer; summer follows winter. Year after year the trees put forth
their leaves; year after year they die, and are born again. Life gives place
to death and decay, death again replaces life. Such is the immutable law of
being; nature reveals herself to us only through the unending sequence of ebb
and flow. The universal tendency of everything is to complete a cycle of manifestation,
returning eventually to the point from which it originally started. This constant
alternation, this law of periodicity, of ebb and flow, we must accept as a fundamental
law of life. Therefore the secret doctrine holds that the self-same laws apply
equally in the greater and lesser manifestations of nature, it teaches that
the universe itself as a whole is also subject to this law of alternation, and
has its periods of sleeping and waking. In other words, that while it exists
eternally, it is only manifested periodically. These periods of manifestation
and non-manifestation were called by the ancient Hindus the "Days and Nights
of Brahma", or Manvantara and Pralaya, Manvantara being the Day, or period
of waking, and Pralaya the Night or period of sleeping. And, if we would unveil
the mysteries of the universe and tell the story of the birth and development
of the myriads of worlds and beings, we shall have to commence with the dawn
of a Manvantara, or with the first moment of the coming into manifestation of
the dual principle of Spirit-Matter heretofore alluded to.
One other difficulty
must be referred to. Neither religion nor science would be asked to give a reason
for the wherefore of the whole drama of life, because one recognizes in both
these great divisions of thought an imperfectibility of development; but Theosophy,
because it is supposed to hold itself competent to explain everything, and give
a reasonable answer to every query concerning life, will certainly be the target
for questions like this, and it may be well to meet them, as far as possible,
at the outset.
Theosophy, no more
than any other philosophy, can give a reason for existence, as such. It does
not pretend to do so; all it can is to offer an explanation for things as they
are. The question has been asked age after age, and of every philosopher and
sage that has ever lived, and it never has been, never will be answered in such
a way as to satisfy the human mind. But Theosophy does give a reason for individual
life during a Manvantara, or period of manifestation. It says: "the universe
comes into existence in order that it may understand itself", and it may
be added that since the root of nature- Spirit-Matter - exists as a unity in
duality from the dawn of the Manvantara to the close, the myriads of individual
lives thrown into being as the result of this dual existence have each to experience
and to understand the whole. We are all but scintillations of one Universal
Mind or "Over-Soul", which has incarnated in order to gain experience
of material life, so as to understand itself; in which sense "God goes
to school". The secret doctrine affirms that each soul, once separated
from its fountain head as a spark may be thrown out of a flame, has to act its
part in the play during the whole tragedy of life. It regards us as "Pilgrims"
wending our way round the cycle of "necessity" or experience, who,
having passed through the mineral, vegetable and animal stages, have issued
into the human, with many before us high up on the road, many others following
behind.
It will be well at
this juncture to sum up the three fundamental propositions formulated by the
philosophy.
(a) The Nature of
existence: In this we find "an omnipresent, eternal, boundless and immutable
PRINCIPLE, on which all speculation is impossible, since it transcends the power
of human conception and could only by dwarfed by any human expression or similitude",
which expresses itself by its two aspects of Spirit- or consciousness- and Matter,
or Divine Thought and Substance- subject and object, the two factors necessary
for the manifestation of life; which two factors, by virtue of necessity, must
be reflected in some condition or another in every entity in the universe, as
in the universe as a whole.
(b) The Method of
existence: In this we see the law of cycles, of alternation, ebb and flow, a
fundamental law in life, and the consequent periodical appearance and disappearance
of the myriads of worlds and universes in the deeps of space.
(c) The Purpose of
existence: This is to enrich the whole, through the individualized experience
of its parts. It must here be remembered that the secret doctrine "admits
of no privileges or special gifts in Man - intellectual or spiritual - save
those won by his own ego through personal effort and merit throughout a long
series of metempsychoses and reincarnations." [The Secret Doctrine, Vol.
-1-, page 17) This is the pivotal point of the esoteric doctrine, which finds
no room for vicarious atonement.
And now, having formulated
our propositions, let us return to the history of cosmological development.
THE
DAWN OF THE MANVANTARA
Intelligences
are without beginning.
From: Oracles of Zoroaster.
The writer
does not propose to bring before his readers the variety of metaphysical states
through which Being is supposed to pass before the first film of individual
life appears on the shoreless ocean of space; for such they must refer to volumes
more complete than this. The awakening of visible worlds commences with a vibratory
thrill which impels itself throughout all space; motion thus becoming the first
and the greatest god of all - he who works untiringly and unceasingly from the
beginning to the end of time. Spirit and Matter are next described as arising
one within the other, springing, as they divide, a "web" (the language
is of course metaphorical), which may be said to be connected with Spirit above,
with Matter below. This web, as will be at once seen, both divides and unites
the two poles of life; it is indeed nothing less than the universe itself, brought
into being by such separation. In its meshes are afterwards woven the innumerable
worlds worlds and systems, the process of construction lasting until the twilight
of the Day of life.
But there is another
agent which comes into being at the same moment. It is that incomprehensible
link between mind and matter which must be held to exist if we would reason
well; and in the occult system is called Fohat. The necessity for such a link
in any philosophical system must above all things be manifest to the thinking
and intelligent individual.
Thought, for example,
a purely immaterial and spiritual thing, could have no effect on matter unless
there were some mediums existing in nature by which it was joined to that matter.
We have command over every sinew of our frame; by the power of thought we are
enabled to raise an arm or move a finger. But we do not thus dominate the whole
of nature; beyond our bodies our will-power normally fails us. This shows a
definite connection existing between the body and the mind or soul which has
incarnated in it, - some principle by which they are joined together. In the
Cosmos as a whole the Spirit or Deity which incarnates in or inspires Matter
is, in like manner, linked to that Matter by a medium operating between the
two. This is Fohat, which is simply the energy which causes the advance and
motion and evolution of nature. Behind this energy stands Deity or Divine Thought.
"Fohat is the steed; the thought is the rider". On the terrestrial
plane Fohat appears as electricity in the widest sense. It is the basis of all
the multifarious forces which are apparent, though unseen, throughout nature.
The electric current which flows between the positive and negative poles, the
heat generated by the flame, gravity, will, the mesmeric fluid, are all aspects
of this principle.
The universe is indeed
but one grand school of opposites, positive and negative, Thoughts and Substance,
linked by the fohatic medium. Coming into life with the manifestation of these
two poles at the awakening of Being, in its more comprehensive sense Fohat is
the host of gods and powers which call the worlds into existence - "the
transcendental binding unity of all cosmic energies, on the unseen as on the
manifested planes, the action of which resembles- on an immense scale - that
of a living force created by will, in those phenomena where the seemingly subjective
acts on the seemingly objective and propels it to action... On the earthly plane
its influence is felt in the magnetic and active force generated by the strong
desire of the magnetizer. On the cosmic, it is present in the constructive power
that carries out, in the formation of things - from the planetary system down
to the glowworm and simple daisy - the plan in the mind of nature, or in the
Divine Thought, with regard to the development and worth of that special thing".
(Plane is a term used by Theosophists to indicate the field in which such and
such a mode of consciousness operates. Thus we may speak of the Mental plane,
or the field of the mind's play; the Physical plane,or field of material action;
the Dream Plane, etc.). From every aspect it is the errand-runner between the
spiritual and the material sides of nature, the "messenger of the gods".
The universe comes
into being on seven planes (Plane is a term used by Theosophists to indicate
the field in which such and such a mode of consciousness operates. Thus we may
speak of the Mental plane, or the field of the mind's play; the Physical plane,
or Field of material action; the Dream plane, etc. ). The esoteric doctrine
has not, so far, presented us with a reason as to why the number seven, which
plays so important a part in the whole system, should be that employed. But
it may be remarked that one proof of the basic identity of all creeds might
be found in the observance of the constant recurrence of this number throughout
all scriptures, and it has been said that it is the basic number of present
period of evolution in this solar system. These seven planes naturally partake
of the two qualities of Spirit and Matter, since in their totality they embrace
every phase of consciousness in the universe. Three of them are spiritual, and
four material - or, in other words, the subjective, inner side of nature is
held to exist on three planes of consciousness, while the objective, visible
part, is constructed on four.
With the dawn of
life, the gods or intelligent forces in nature - the various aspects of Fohat
- are brought into being on all planes of consciousness in seven classes. These
are the greater fashioners of the planets and systems; the lower orders - the
"builders" - moulding the worlds in obedience to the direction of
their superiors, those of the essence of the Thought Divine.
A full and proper
treatment of that portion of the esoteric philosophy dealing with Fohat and
the birth of the gods or builders, is of the greatest importance in demonstrating
the harmony of the whole; nevertheless it can only be briefly touched upon at
the present stage of this work. The whole of space is held to be filled with
countless myriads of these "builders" of all degrees of development
and experience, whose work lies in the "drawing-out" or expanding
of the occult side of nature into the visible or known world. The growth of
external forms may indeed, as the biologist tells us, be the result of the interaction
of natural forces, but Theosophists demur to the statement that such forces
are "blind". The secret doctrine holds that there is no force without
its intelligent guide or director, and that the least as well as the greatest
of the gods are indispensable in the "Creation" or calling into visible
being of the universe.
But it must be remarked
that the universe throughout the whole Manvantara is in the "act of becoming"
in answer to the Thought which impressed itself in Matter at the commencement
of the drama, this Thought afterwards retiring into "silence and darkness",
- because it becomes immersed in that which is produced. This Thought is "Grand
Architect of the Universe" of Freemasonry the architect, understand, he
who plans, not he who creates, for, according to the ancients, creation is the
work of many gods or forces, not the labour of one; man himself, yea, and every
entity in space, down to the least of the animalcules, is a creator in his sphere.
Thus the occult philosophy believes in no such things as unintelligent matter;
each congeries of atoms has its ruler or lord, who guides it more or less intelligently
- according to its degree of consciousness - during its passage through life.
This subject will be more fully treated under another section of this chapter
(The Astral Light) and it only remains to be said meanwhile that, grouped all
together, these primal gods and forces are known under the generic name of the
"Dhyan Chohans" corresponding to the "Heavenly Hosts" of
the Bible.
Although seven planes
are affirmed, yet each of these is again subdivided into seven, and this subdivision
is continued ad infinitum, the septenary being in every instance divided into
two parts - three (relatively) subjective, and four objective, or the everlasting
duad of Spirit and Matter. At present, however, we are dealing only with the
general cast of the universe, and our concern is therefore only with the seven
major divisions, but it must be remembered that the greater and lesser of these
divisions have always an exact correspondence with one another. The author has
however, neither intention nor desire to discourse at any length on "Planes
of Consciousness", and only touches on the subject just in so far as is
absolutely necessary to give a general outline of the secret doctrine, purposely
omitting all names and correspondences. But an observation of correspondences
of this nature is indeed a most important one to the student of the esoteric
philosophy. The "Microcosm is a reflection of the Macrocosm", said
the ancient Kabalists, meaning by this that the least thing in nature contains
in itself the potentiality of all, and is to this extent a copy of the greater
being in which it lives. That which we find to be true concerning ourselves
will prove to be equally true concerning the universe and the planets. Therefore
only the broad outline of that which occurs at the awakening of the Manvantara
is given. For at the birth of the planet at the birth of man himself, as of
all creatures, precisely the same play is enacted as at the birth of the cosmos.
Were we able to remember and place on paper the various changes of state and
condition we pass through before birth and in childhood during our gradual development
and awakening into this life, we should have a complete description of the genesis
of cosmos.
The "builders"
alluded to, set to work to create, and from the lowest elemental kingdom in
nature to the highest and most perfect, carry on the work of construction from
the beginning to end of the Manvantara. Leaving them for the time being to their
labours, let us consider some other aspects of the doctrine necessary for a
correct conception of what is to follow, returning later to view their handiwork
in a description of the planets and spheres, according to eastern philosophy.
THE
ULTIMATE LAW OF THE UNIVERSE
Lower than
hell,
Higher than heaven, outside the utmost stars,
Farther than Brahm doth dwell,
Before beginning and without an end,
As space eternal and as surety sure,
Is fixed a power divine which moves to good,
Only its laws endure
-From The Light
of Asia by Edwin Arnold
It was said
that the pivotal doctrine of the philosophy ordained that no special gifts were
possible in man, or indeed in any entity in the universe, save as the result
of individual effort, and consequently of merit. Yet we have seen that with
the very commencement of the Manvantara, the "builders" or creators-
the Dhyan Chohans- come into existence, and proceed to construct that universe.
Here, then, an apparent contradiction will be noticed, and the point will require
some elucidation.
The solution of the
difficulty is, however, simpler than might at first appear, if it be recollected
that the universe is itself subject to the aforesaid conditional progress. The
dawn of each Manvantara witnesses the revivifying of all those entities who
disappeared at the commencement of the preceding Pralaya; they are resurrected
and are ready to continue their upward march along the line of evolution. Day
after day of life they reawaken merely to continue the journey onward.
We are aware that
a question naturally follows from this concerning previous Manvantaras, as to
the number of these, and how, for instance, life arose in the first. But Theosophy
says that there never was a first: Time in the eastern philosophy, exists solely
as a relative thing, and has no existence outside the period of manifested life;
once this manifestation takes place, however, we descend within its circle.
The ancients symbolized life by a serpent swallowing its tail, intending thus
to illustrate that it never had a beginning and can never end; so that we must
understand an infinite number of Manvantaras to stretch behind and an infinite
number to be awaiting us.
The law which regulates
the progress of each entity in cosmos, and of the universe itself, is the law
of equilibrium, called by the Hindus "Karma", and it is this law which
may be said to be the ultimate Law of Laws - the fountainhead, all others being
traceable to its operations; by itsaction Manvantara after Manvantara come into
being. So that on reawakening after their long period of sleep, all beings that
arise take their positions of importance and necessity in accordance with the
equilibration or balancing of their record, in a previous Manvantara - this
is their Karmic record, the volume of results and causes, the "Judgment
Book".
The operations of
this law are more elaborated in a succeeding chapter, and the question is only
briefly referred to here in order to clear up any possible difficulties arising
in the reader's mind.
SPIRIT
AND MATTER
Mere intellectual
enlightenment cannot recognize the spiritual. As the sun puts out a fire, so
spirit puts out the eyes of mere intellect.
W.Howitt.
As the whole
of the theosophical position rests on a correct conception of the two bases
of life, Spirit and Matter, I find it absolutely necessary to return for a while
to the subject, and to endeavour, by more fully explaining what is meant by
these, to do away with any misconceptions that might otherwise arise.
It will be remembered
that we showed at the opening of this chapter, the necessity for two poles of
Being, which we then named Thought and Substance. Owing however to the fact
that there are really many manifestations of these, although they ever remain
but two in essence, it becomes necessary to speak concerning these manifestations.
Here also we shall be compelled to introduce the reader to many of the eastern
terms employed in the philosophy - employed for the reason that the English
language, having developed chiefly from materialistic thought, is without words
to express very many ideas conceived by eastern nations. This, we may add, is
the excuse offered by the Theosophists for the use of strange words in dealing
with these subjects.
"Spirit"
and "Matter", "Thought" and "Substance", "Purusha"
and "Prakriti", are words used to express the root-nature of those
elements which compose life. The perception of existence on the part of the
human being is readily divisible into two factors - (a) the thinking part of
his being, and (b) those things about which he thinks. Destroy the harmony existing
between these two sides, and there will be no human beings. When the spirit
or thinking part of the man is withdrawn, we say that he is dead; but no less
dead would he be if the whole of that complicated series of images and objective
forms which he daily regards, and those things about which he thinks, were deducted
from his sphere of being; unless a man thinks, in some way or other, he does
not live. Therefore we see that his being is made up of these two principles,
and we must consider their relation, if we would understand Being in the abstract.
Some philosophers
have sought to explain life by hypotheses which made of the external world around
each man is merely the production of his thoughts. But were this so, we should
be always able at will to alter the appearance of things, which manifestly we
are not. The oriental students of the occult sciences explain nature by showing
that the principles of "thinker" and "thing thought of"
which compose human life are not first principles, but have their roots far
back in the life of the cosmos. To find the true sources of life by "trying
back" both in the subjective spheres of their own being, and in those of
the external world, has been the effort of sages and seers for ages.
The relation of "thinker"
and "thing thought of" obtains in some degree and kind throughout
the whole process of life, like principles being found operating in every existing
thing. [The action of thinking being an active agency - a force, and the things
thought of constituting the passive substance in which the thought works, we
see a direct and immediate analogy with the Energy and Matter of the physicist.].
At the very beginning of things this relation on the part of the fundamental
principles of the cosmos must have existed. Hence the necessity of an active
Deity of some kind becomes apparent -"Deity" and "nature",
- the "Spirit of God" and the "waters of space". From the
work of God in nature, the action of Spirit on Matter, arises all the motion,
change and growth we see around us. But Spirit itself can never really identify
itself with Matter; it merely inspires it. Fire cannot associate itself with
water, but water placed near the fire will boil, becoming inspired with the
heat. This heat is not of the same consummating nature as the flame, although
its source is in the latter; it is transformed into an energy of a different
kind, one which acts directly with the water. The water itself is thus endowed
with the dual nature of energy or heat, and matter. So with the true "Spirit"
or "Purusha"; it merely impregnates "Matter" or "Prakriti",
which thereupon itself becomes endowed with a dual nature, much akin to that
of "Spirit" and "Matter". The inspiring process is repeated
again in the latter couplet - the Spirit impregnating the Matter; so on almost
indefinitely. The states thus produced constitute the different planes of Being,
which, while they rest in seven great divisions, yet by virtue of their quality
of subdivision, are indefinite in their extent.
These being the fundamental
principles of the cosmos, they are reflected in every manifested thing in the
universe; that is, nothing can have existence without their cooperation. As
we descend the scale of Being, however, greater differentiation of necessity
takes place: Matter triumphs over Spirit, and the quality of that inspiring
fire is so changed in its reflections from plane to plane, that in the lowest
terrestrial state it is scarcely recognizable as the original essences. Here
the physicist knows it as energy. This energy stands therefore as the agent
of the true Spirit and is at the same time the link between that and Matter;
regarded in a universal sense, it is called Fohat. The reflection of the fundamental
principles of the cosmos in every manifested thing is the cause of the well-observed
fact that nothing in nature is producible without the coming into contact of
two poles - positive and negative, active and passive, male and female, subject
and object; that force which both joins these two poles together and is thrown
off by their action on one another, is Fohat.
At the dawn of the
Manvantara, and just before the breaking of the day of life, Being is said to
slumber in absolute consciousness - virtually for us one and the same thing
as unconsciousness, as we cannot cognize it. Inherent in it is the "first
cause"- that which is as unexplainable as the absolute itself. This has
been called the logos (The "Divine Thought", or "Spirit".)
- the first logos, rather, for three are recognized. It is that which is spoken
of in that exceedingly metaphysical little treatise called the "Gospel
according to St.John", where in the opening chapter the author writes,
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God". As the awakening process continues, the two poles of Spirit and
Matter come into existence - not yet however as two separate principles, but
as one, which we may speak of as Spirit-Matter. This is called the second logos.
From it springs immediately the third, or manifested word which is the coming
into being of the universe. Spirit separates from its shadow, Substance, and
then overshadows or inspires that. This overshadowing process being reflected
from plane to plane, as shown above, causes the segregation of Substance- or
Akasha, as the Hindus call it - into seven natures or principles, in all degrees
of matter from the most refined to the most material. The highest is called
Mahat - Universal Intelligence, or Cosmic Ideation, called also Maha-Buddhi
- the "First product of Pradhana, Akasha; [See the Secret Doctrine, Vol.
1., page 256] it stands as the proxy of the Absolute Spirit. The lowest is the
soul of our terrestrial world - the "Astral Light". "In this
manner", says the Vishnu Purana "were the seven principles of Prakriti
reckoned from Mahat to Earth... At the time of Pralaya (pratyahara) these seven
successively reenter into each other. The Egg of Brahma (Sarva-mandala) is dissolved
with its seven zones, seven oceans, seven regions,....[See Vishnu Purana, Book
VI, chapter IV].
In Occultism, the
above is always spiritual to the below. Unless this is understood it will be
hard for the reader to grasp the idea that the highest conceivable thing- Mahat
- is itself Substance, a differentiation of the Akasha. But as a vehicle or
upadhi of the One Unknown - absolute consciousness - it must be of the nature
of Substance, although infinitely transcending all physical phenomena. It is
(abstract) Substance from the standpoint of the Absolute, though to us true
Spirit. To put it plainly: Spirit cannot express itself without some basis to
focus upon, any more than fire can burn unless it consume some material stuff
"There can be no manifestation of consciousness, semi-consciousness, or
even "unconscious purposiveness ', except through a vehicle of Matter."
The Akasha then is the whole universe, in which the one eternal PRINCIPLE has
incarnated; it is Substance in the abstract, in all possible degrees from Mahat
to the soul of our world. The above being spiritual to the below, the poles
of Spirit and Matter are to be found relative to everything in the universe;
their action and interplay produces the whole cosmos; the universe hangs between
these two poles of Being. The modern metaphysician tells us that the "cooperation
of subject and object results in the sense-object or phenomenon", which
is the same as saying that Mind and Matter, or Spirit and Substance, acting
upon each other, or "cooperating", produce what we know as objects
of perception. "But", some will ask, "why say produce these -
are not these sense-objects themselves gross Matter?"Yes; and no; according
to Theosophy. Yes; if we understand Matter to be merely that which we may call
Substance in a state of vibration or motion. No; if by Matter is meant this
Substance itself. If we wave a lighted stick rapidly to and fro in the air,
we shall see what appears to be a band of red fire; but we are aware that this
band is merely an appearance, the effect on the eye of the motion of single
point of fire. This will help us to understand what Matter as we see it really
is, namely, that which we have called Substance, or the atom, in vibration.
And, therefore, let our chemists search as they may for the atom, it will never
be found through the use of weights or measures, because it exists on another
plane of consciousness. In the words of Madame Blavatsky: "Atoms are called
'vibrations' in Occultism; also 'Sound' collectively" This does not interfere
with Mr. Tyndall's scientific discovery. He traced, on the lower rung of the
ladder of monadic being, the whole course of the atmospheric vibrations - and
this constitutes the objective part of the process in nature. He has traced
and recorded the rapidity of their motion and transmission; the force of their
impact; their setting up vibrations in the tympanum and their transmission of
these to the stolithes, etc., etc., till the vibration of the auditory nerve
commences - and a new phenomenon now takes place; the subjective side of the
process or the sensation of Sound. Does he perceive or see it? No; for his specialty
is to discover the behaviour of matter. But why should not a psychic see it,
a spiritual seer, whose inner eye is opened, and who can see through the veil
of matter? The waves and undulations of science are all produced by atoms propelling
their molecules into activity from within. Atoms fill the immensity of Space,
by their continuous vibration are that motion which keeps the wheels of Life
perpetually going. It is that inner work which produces the natural phenomenon
called the correlation of forces. Only, at the origin of every such 'force',
there stands the conscious guiding noumenon thereof - angel or god, spirit or
demon - ruling powers, yet the same.
"As described
by seers - those who can see the motion of the interstellar shoals, and follow
them in their evolution clairvoyantly - they are dazzling, like specks of virgin
snow in radiant sunlight. Their velocity is swifter than thought, quicker than
any mortal physical eye could follow, and, as well as can be judged from the
tremendous rapidity of their course, the motion is circular... Standing on an
open plane, on a mountain summit especially, and gazing into the vast vault
above and the spacial infinitudes around, the whole atmosphere seems ablaze
with them, the air soaked through with these dazzling coruscations. At times,
the intensity of their motion produces flashes like the northern lights during
the aurora borealis. The sight is so marvellous, that, as the Seer gazes into
this inner world, and feels the scintillating points shoot past him, he is filled
with awe at the thought of other still greater mysteries, that lie beyond, and
within, this radiant ocean...(The Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1., page 633)
The ancients held
that the world as we see it - that is, as perceived by our five senses, is an
illusion; truly as the mere vibration of the ether or lowest principle of the
Akasa it is nothing else. The Christian tells us that no man can see God, which
is only another way of saying that the roots of life can never be viewed - God
in this sense being both Spirit and Matter, neither of which can ever really
see the other, because they are in truth essentially but one thing. But by their
cooperation they raise the great tabernacle of life, and in its forms they meet
and see each other, but never face to face. The plants, the animals, and all
the images in the garden of nature are but symbols of the Spirit which hides
behind them; all our most scientific examination of life's structures will not
reveal her hidden springs, any more than will the minutest dissection and microscopic
scrutiny of the letters of a word tell us what it means.
(a) Atomic life then
is true Substance, the Ether [In physics, a hypothetical medium of extreme tenuity
and elasticity supposed to be diffused throughout all space (as well as among
the molecules of which solid bodies are composed) and to be the medium for the
transmission of light and heat] of modern physics; its underlying root is called
Akasha, the Aether of the ancient Greeks; while Matter as we view it, is simply
Substance in a state of vibration.
(b) Its opposite
pole is Universal Ideation or Mahat, the basis of individual mind. It is that
which underlies the whole of the inner side of our being.
But the mystery of
the relationship between the subjective (inner) and objective sides of Being
can never be wholly told; it is occult, in the truest sense of the word. Until
these two are merged together in each one of us, we cannot be said to truly
know. Even then we stand before the veil of "that yet more awful riddle,
before which even the highest Dhyan Chohan must bow in silence and ignorance
- the unspeakable mystery of that which is called by the Vedantins the Parabrahm",
- the Absolute, the ever Unknown God.
THE
ASTRAL LIGHT
Nature is
a perpetual circulatory worker, generating fluids out of solids, fixed things
out of volatile, and volatile out of fixed, subtle out of gross, and gross out
of subtle. Thus, perhaps, may all things be originated from Ether.-
Newton, Hypoth.
1675
Theosophy holds
that the whole of nature is wrapped about in a highly ethereal substance, a
plastic and sensitive medium, which is diffused universally throughout space.
This has been called the Astral Light, adopting the title from the medieval
Kabalists, who so christened it on account of its luminous appearance when sensed
clairvoyantly. It is the basis of all manifested nature, that which lies within,
underneath and about all things; and therefore, although unseen with the physical
organ of sight, and although the finer forms which exist in it are so ethereal
as to be outside the range of our normal senses, yet it is material and not
spiritual. It is, indeed, that aspect or grade of the Akasha which is nearest
to objective nature, and therefore includes the ether of the scientific schools.
We have pointed out
that objectivized matter, according to the occult hypothesis, and indeed also
according to that of many eminent physicists, is the effect of the vibratory
motion of the true element which exists beneath. We have also spoken of clairvoyance,
the power of seeing through or within the walls of this objectivized matter,
and it is easy now to see that such is little other than the altering of the
rate of vibration in the etheric medium which forms the basis of the physical
body, so as to make it conform to the rate of that of the object seen through.
Some people are so
organized nervously as to be unable to control their own state; they are continually
passing into this negative condition and therefore constantly and involuntarily
are viewing abnormal states of matter - abnormal, at least, so far as the physical
vision is concerned. With others the power is the result of special training;
it can be developed in anyone who sets to work in the right way. But unless
one has previously prepared himself in other directions, nervous and hysterical
conditions like those of many a natural clairvoyant are certain to be induced.
Therefore, in the properly organized occult schools, clairvoyance relating to
the Astral Light and to this physical plane is the very last thing developed.
It is easy to believe
that persons who themselves are not thus gifted, or who have not had cases of
clairvoyance under their direction observation, will not be generally prepared
to admit the existence of a state such as that of which we speak, or that the
surrounding space contains anything more than empty air. But the pythoness of
old was no more a fable than is the medium of the modern seance-room, and the
phenomena of hypnotism present us with so many cases of "clear vision"
, that at this close of the nineteenth century the most unbelieving are rapidly
becoming at any rate semi-credulous. The true scientist of the day draws hourly
nearer and nearer to the occult view of nature, and, having hypothesized his
"ether", has only to add "anima mundi", to fall into full
agreement with the theosophical position.
To discuss fully
the several properties of the Astral Light, even so far as we know of them,
would require a volume of considerable bulk. In its aspect as the ethereal basis
of objective form, it is the storehouse of nature, for from it are produced
all the images we see around us. But it is much more than this. As the "soul
of the world", it is as readily responsive to the influence of thought
as the sensitive plate of the photographic camera is to that of form. According
to theosophical teaching, which is that of the ancient philosophers of every
nation, not a single thought, no matter how subtle, that has ever passed through
the mind of man is lost to the world, but is indelibly and eternally "fixed"
in the aura of the earth; hence it is that thoughts are, in the occult philosophy,
considered to be even more productive of evil, or more potent as agents for
good, than the actions which they may inspire. The thought is the cause, the
action merely the effect. Man, as well as as all the greater of those beings
and gods which control the workings of this planet, is, through the medium of
the Astral Light, in the long run largely responsible for the forms which nature
may produce. His conscious, or even unconscious thought impressing itself in
the soil of this natural bed, becomes the ethereotype of those images which
afterwards blossom into full objectivity on the physical plane; the seed is
sown in this astral or ethereal stuff, and the nurturing processes of the hothouse
of nature force it to put forth its energy and later to sprout into a goodly
plant. Therefore also it is that man is often entirely responsible for his environment.
Many of the thoughts which emanate from the brain during a lifetime, may, according
to Theosophy, in some future life appear in the consciousness as objective entities,
returning to their creator to attack or assist him according as they have been
evil or good.
In this, Theosophy
is not altogether so much at variance with modern scientific through as might
at first be supposed. The author (W.Stanley Jevona, M.A., F.R.S.) Of "Principles
of Science" believes concerning thoughts, that, inasmuch as they displace
the molecules of the brain, setting them in motion and scattering them abroad
in all directions, they must produce effects reaching to the utmost limits of
the universe, and moreover that each "particle of the existing matter must
be a register of all that has happened". (Vol. II, page 455. See also Babbage;
the "Ninth Bridgewater Treatise, page 115") If this be so, then each
thought, once loosed from the human mind, wanders throughout the universe in
its vehicle of molecular life, the "brain particle" in which it resides.
Shall we be laughed at if we beg permission to add that we believe it possible
for one to review the unexpressed thoughts of persons other than himself? Not
three generations ago the discoverer of photography was about to be confined
in a lunatic asylum for maintaining that he could "nail" his shadow
to a plate! Scarce fifty years since and we should have smiled at the enthusiast
who might speak to us of the phonograph and of its powers of unfailingly preserving
sounds! Will anyone then be so presumptuous as to cry out against a possible
future day when our mental actions shall also be recorded? For thoughts are
things, so much so that already we hear whispers of the invention of a machine
which shall record their forms *
* Along the same
lines, the magazine Light, for August, 1893 reports an interview with Mr. Graham
Bell, the inventor of the improved telephone, who, after expounding his method
of "seeing by electricity", as we now hear by it in the telephone,
discussed seriously the possibility of thinking at a distance by electricity.
Prof. Bell premises that the human brain is a kind of electrical reservoir and
that thinking is an electrical disturbance. Therefore the possibilities of setting
up in one brain a disturbance corresponding to what is going on in another,
so that through the persons be a thousand or ten thousand miles apart the one
receives instantly the thoughts of the other, appears to him mainly to depend
on the discovery of suitable medium. This medium has long been "discovered"
by the Occultists. It is the "Astral Light".
In the astral substance
of the world, it is held, are constructed all the forms which are afterwards
handed out into full view here. Were we possessed of the power to glance behind
the scenes - as many have done - we should see innumerable forms awaiting their
turn to pass into physical existence. We should see the thoughts of all beings,
of the gods, of men, of all past ages as well as of the present moment, photographed
on this sensitive-plate of the universal camera, and in process of development
into physical , tangible appearances. Consequently not alone would the past
be within our ken, but we should be also able to read the future, since this
is but the outcome of the past We should see the thoughts of the present humanity,
weak, vague, indefinite, impure, slowly shaping themselves into equally indefinite
and sickly forms, and, in their quickening, transforming the world into an abode
of vice, disease and death. We should see the thoughts of the gods, the divine
humanity, the heroes of old, and trace their present action in the laws which
govern our planet. Lastly we should see the primal Universal Thought out of
whose energy originate the planets, suns, systems, and universes themselves.
As we have builders
to construct the universes, so have we also workers in the astral sphere which
surrounds our earth; but the former are the master-masons, the latter only the
semi-intelligent labourers These are really but centres of action existing in
the astral substance; like every active centre in nature they assume forms corresponding
to the degree and kind of their activity. Persons therefore viewing them in
the psychic or trance condition would regard them as objective entities, as
on the astral plane they certainly are, although invisible so far as the physical
world is concerned.
In this teaching
we have an explanation of the worldwide belief in "nature-spirits",
variously known as fairies, elves, devas. Apart from his philosophy, the rationalistic
view of things which it is the endeavour of the Theosophist to preserve, would
of itself convince him that a belief so universal as that appertaining to those
invisible beings known under the generic name of "spirits", could
not be without some foundation in fact, however slight. But his philosophy demands
their services for its completion. It scorns the belief that anything, of even
the most trivial kind, should be produced without efficient cause, holding the
causes usually assigned to the production of any natural entity - blind forces
- to be not only entirely inadequate, but manifestly absurd, and that more intelligent
labourers than the human brain can conceive of are needed to bring into existence
the simplest form in nature, more individual efforts still to achieve its destruction.
Nature abhors a vacuum;
she has no room for empty space. In the beautiful language of Bulwer (Sir Bulwer
Lytton); " In the small as in the vast, God is equally profuse of life.
The traveler looks upon the tree, and fancies its boughs were formed for his
shelter in the summer sun, or his fuel in the winter frosts. But in each leaf
of these boughs the Creator has made a world; it swarms with innumerable races.
Each Drop of the water in yon moat is an orb more populous than a kingdom is
of men. Everywhere, then, in this immense design, science brings new life to
light. Life is the one pervading principle, and even the thing which seems to
die and putrefy, but engenders new life, and changes to fresh forms of matter.
Reasoning then by evident analogy - if not a leaf, if not a drop of water, but
is, no less than yonder star, a habitable and breathing world- nay, if even
man himself is a world to other lives, and millions and myriads dwell in the
rivers of his blood, and inhabit man's frame as a man inhabits earth, commonsense
(if your schoolmen had it) would suffice to teach the the circumfluent infinite
which you call space - the boundless Impalpable which divides earth from the
moon and stars - filled also with its correspondent and appropriate life. Is
it not a visible absurdity to suppose that Being is crowded upon every leaf
and yet absent from the immensities of space? The law of the Great System forbids
the waste even of an atom; it knows no spot where something of life does not
breathe. In the very charnel house is the nursery of production and animation.
Is that true? Well then, can you conceive that space, which is the Infinite
itself, is alone a waste, is alone lifeless, is less useful to the one design
of universal being than the dead carcass of a dog, than the peopled leaf, than
the swarming globule? The microscope shows you the creature on the leaf; no
mechanical tube is yet invented to discover the nobler and more gifted things
that hover in the illimitable air. Yet between these last and man is a mysterious
and terrible affinity. And hence, by tales and legends not wholly false nor
wholly true, have arisen from time to time beliefs in apparitions and spectres.
If more common to the earlier and simpler tribes than to the men of your duller
age, it is but that with the first the senses are more keen and quick. And as
the savage can see or scent, miles away, the traces of a foe, invisible to the
gross sense of the civilized animal, so the barrier itself between him and the
creatures of the airy world is less thickened and obscured". (Zanoni).
I is well to understand
that Occultism is only at variance with physical science in some of the theories
that the votaries of the latter have propounded, as the outcome of the deductions
drawn from observed facts; certainly not in those facts themselves. And foremost
of all stands the conception of blind forces. This no Theosophist will agree
with. He sees consciousness in every atom in the universe; a vast intelligent
Whole, planned with care, produced with mathematical exactness, its kaleidoscopic
changes themselves but the energies for new life and being, replete with innumerable
beings who think, direct, builds and weave, all having conscious existence and
their set duties to perform. Biologists may speak as they will of forces generated
by matter, or modes of motion - Theosophy sees in all effects in nature the
work of intelligent labourers. Everything, it hold, contains within itself the
duality of mind and matter, the soul or drive on the one side, and on the other
its body or chariot, the vehicle through which it expresses itself. But, "of
course we shall never agree with the American Substantialists, who call every
Force and energy, whether Light, heat, electricity or cohesion- an 'entity';
for this would be equivalent to calling the noise produced by the rolling of
the wheels of a vehicle an entity, thus confusing and identifying that 'noise'
with the diver outside, and the guiding master Intelligence within the vehicle.
But we certainly give that name to the 'driver' and to these guiding Intelligences,
the ruling Dhyan Chohans as shown. The 'elementals', the nature-forces are the
acting, though invisible, or rather imperceptible, secondary causes and in themselves
the effects of primary causes behind the veil of all terrestrial phenomena.
Electricity, light, heat, have been aptly termed the 'ghost or shadow of matter
in motion' i.e.., supersensuous states of matter whose effects only we are able
to cognize. To expand them the simile given above: The sensation of light is
like the sound of the rolling wheels - a purely phenomenal effect, having no
existence outside the observer; the proximate existing cause of the sensation
is comparable to the driver - a supersensuous state of matter in motion, a nature-force
or elemental. But, behind even this, stand - just as the owner of the carriage
directs the carriage from within - the higher and noumenal causes, the Intelligences
from whose essence radiate these states of matter', generating the countless
milliards of elementals or psychic nature-spirits, just as every drop of water
generates its physical infinitesimal infusoria" [The Secret Doctrine, Vol.
I, page 146]
Thus those to us
normally invisible beings called elementals are but the souls or intelligences
of the elements. In this repetition of ancient philosophy we see the reason
why our forefathers recognized so many gods. For invariably spoke of the "spirit"
or god of any given element, not of that spirit's gross body or manifestation,
the element which represented it, or through which it functioned. Directly this
fact is recognized, we do away with the standing reproach of the ancients by
men of science that they "supposed their element simple or indecomposable".
For if this be the case, then why had almost all their gods and goddesses so
many sons and daughters, brothers and sisters? Such represented but the various
aspects or "divisions" of the elements from which they sprang, and
cases could be cites without number, drawn from every philosophy ad mythology,
to prove the truth of this assertion.
Of the seven principal
elements which go to produce the manifested world, four are visible or sensible,
three invisible; such division into quaternary and triad repeating itself in
every septenary in Occultism. These are but the seen aspects of the fohatic
force. The four which are objective or sensible are known under the general
titles of fire, air, earth and water; and, consequently, the "nature-spirits"
or natural elementals which build our world, innumerable as are their tribes,
may be conveniently divided into classes corresponding to these; each class
being again divided into three degrees, corresponding to the three subjective
planes of our being. The Rosicrucians- the hermetic brotherhood from which developed
the latter-day Freemason - found them very necessary factors in their study
of nature, and used to know them under the names of salamanders - spirits of
the flame, sylphs - spirits of the air, gnomes - spirits of the earth and undines
- spirits of the water; and traces of the ancient wisdom from which these philosophers
derived their knowledge may be found among the popular beliefs of all the older
nations, now degraded however among most of them into superstition of the worst
kind.
It
must be remembered that the elementals of which we have spoken are the "nature"
spirits, or those concerned with the building up of the visible universe, everything
in which is supposed to spring out of a combination of the four elements above
named. There are however many other kinds of elementals besides, such as (a)
those formed in the astral substance by every action whether of thought or of
deed. (b) those created by the presence of human beings, reflecting to some
extent the intelligences of their creators, and (c) those thousands of forms,
endowed with more or less consciousness of purpose and existence, thrown into
being upon the death or change of state of any organic entity- called variously
spooks, elementaries, and the like. The latter can never become men, save under
exceptional circumstances, but must fade away in course of time. The nature-spirits
will all become such, only, however , after many ages of evolution, and by passing
up through all the kingdoms, mineral, vegetable, and animal.
CHAPTER
THREE
THE
PLANETARY WORLD
And after
having thus framed the Universe, he allotted to it souls equal in number to
the stars, inserting each in each; and then as it were placing them on a vehicle
(whereon to travel through the heavens) he pointed out the nature of the Universe
and announced to them its laws. -
Plato, Timaeus, xvii
The heavy-moving
stars are many, and each has an Intelligence, a Soul, a Body. And in like manner
every distinct division of the heavens and planets, hath its Intelligences and
Souls. The Desatir, or Sacred Writings of the Ancient Persian Prophets.
The book of the Prophet, the Great Abad; 23, 24
The esoteric
philosophy presents us with a view of nature sufficiently novel to permit of
little comparison with so-called scientific hypotheses, although the recorded
facts of western science bear out the doctrine in every details. The writer,
therefore, cannot be surprised if he finds that the statements which follow
are regarded at first as a result of fanciful speculation, or even as the wildest
romance. Nevertheless, like his brethren and coworkers, he is convinced that
the secret doctrine embodies a mass of entirely trustworthy knowledge and teachings,
by means of which we can piece together all surviving fragments of ancient philosophies,
finding at the same time a solution for all the present social and scientific
difficulties. A bold claim, perhaps; but the latter-day discoveries of the various
schools have altered not a little the position of many of the world's most eminent
scholars toward the Society, and it may be prognosticated safely that the twentieth
century will not break without some substantiation of it.
Carried to its extreme
limit,the "doctrine of correspondences" is the method by which everything,
according to eastern teaching, may be known. In order to understand the nature
of the universe, we must apply to it our knowledge of ourselves. If we compare
ourselves as individuals to the universe as a whole, we shall have to imagine
that whole as intelligent, perfect, conscious in its wholeness, but only one
of many other "universes", themselves again portions of a still greater
Whole - the process being continued indefinitely, because of the infinity of
natural manifestations. If, on the other hand, in our comparative study, we
set ourselves to examine our own frames in order to understand the nature of
the greater lives which exist outside us, we shall find our bodies to be composed
of thousands of little worlds and centres of individual life,of bacteria and
microbes, each of which, in the system wherein it plays its part, may be a veritable
sun to the numbers of attendant planets and satellites that we might perhaps
find existing around it, had we but lenses strong enough to conjure them before
our eyes. Man's body is a composite being built up and preserved by the work
of thousands of lives as far removed in the scale of nature from his real self
- or ego, the soul - as the firefly is from the sun; nevertheless as dependent
on him for the excellence of their work as a company of soldiers is dependent
on its captain. The inner man is the general to the armies of lives that build,
rebuild and compose his body. Practical occultism teaches the laws that govern
their movements and evolution.
We cannot here refrain
from calling the attention of our readers to one of the latest productions of
physical science- Alfred Binet's Psychic life of Microorganisms (Translated
from the French by Thos. McCormack; American Edition, 1889) in which the author
has, to our thinking, conclusively shown that intelligent existence is to be
found among the more primary of the organisms which go to build the bodies of
either animals or plants. Not only are they shown as living and dying, feeding
and reproducing, but also as exercising choice in such matters, a choice indicative
of intelligent life. "The more closely the phenomena of life are scrutinized",
writes M.Binet, "the more carefully they are studied in their various aspects,
the more certain does the conclusion become that the processes attributed to
physico-chemical forces forces in reality obey much more complicated laws"
than mechanical phenomena; pointing out that as physiology advances the tendency
is not, as the modern opponents of vitalism have it, to relegate all phenomena
nominally physiological into the domain of physics and chemistry, but the reverse.
"If the existence of psychological phenomena in the lower organisms is
denied, it will be necessary to assume that these phenomena can be super-added
in course of evolution, in proportion as an organism grows more perfect and
complex. Nothing could be more inconsistent with the teachings of general physiology,
which shows us that all vital phenomena are previously present in non-differentiated
cells (see preface). Then, concluding a work which is from first to last an
unintentional tribute to occult science by a modern biologist, the author quotes
from his own letter to M. Richet. Differing from the latter in his theory of
chemical irritability as being the sole law which conditions the movement of
simple organisms, Binet adds: "Psychic life, like its substratum, living
matter, is, when closely studied, an exceedingly complex subject. This fact
is with me a profound conviction, not upon abstract ideas and methods, but upon
the observations that I have given, observations that are not founded upon my
own personal authority alone, but which are drawn from the highest authorities,
and most of which I have been able to verify with my own eyes. "
Occultists have long
known living matter to be an "exceedingly complex subject", but they
recognize no other sort of matter. And they go much further than M. Binet; they
find "psychic life" and intelligence to exist in every speck in space.
Again, if biology shows us that each individuals is a "universe" to
the multiplicity of infusoria which complete his body, what objection can there
be to what we may term the corollary of this: that each of us constitutes but
an infusorium of the planet in which we have our home, each planet again being
but a "micro-organism" in relation to the universe in which it cycles?
It is but the logical outcome of our premise - Intelligence in all things. In
Theosophy the worlds and planets are all looked upon as individual entities,
having their duties to fulfill, their times of health and disease, their periods
of birth, maturity, decay and death; and- following out our law of the duality
of mind and matter- the actual corporeal abodes of ensouling intelligences,which
we may conveniently call their Archangels or Chohans. This is a very old belief;
Plato considered the earth an animal, and represents it as having all the tendencies
and properties of such; the Egyptians and Hindus always so regarded it- so that
Theosophy in this particular is but reflecting the knowledge of the ancients.
But the teachings of the moderns point to a like notion. Says Mr. N.S.Shaler,
professor of geology in Harvard University: "The conception of the earth
as inert held in the minds of naturalists even down to our own generation. Only
in the divine Kepler do we find a philosopher strong enough to conceive this
sphere as essentially organized. To him this world is so endowed with activities
that it is to be accounted alive. In his reflections on the order of nature,
he holds to the doctrine that the earth is animated in the fashion of an animal;
he finds in the tides an evidence of its slow breathing. Critics have found
in this fancy of Kepler proof of a disordered mind, of an imagination which
outran the limits of scientific inquiry; but.... it seems likely that his divining
imagination brought him nearer the truth than the hardmindedness of other naturalists."
(Nature and man in America - Page 2)
The truth is that
there is a complete ladder of progression and evolution in nature, stretching
from the infinitesimal microorganism of our bodies upwards to God himself- or
whatever name we may give to the fons et origo of all things; and each being
or class of beings progresses along the lines marked out by its intent and experience.
Prof. Huxley has lately said that: "without stepping beyond the analogy
of that which is known it is easy to people the cosmos with entities, in ascending
scale, until we reach something practically indistinguishable from omnipotence,
omnipresence, and omniscience". (See Essays upon some Controverted Questions)
. May we add that the more acceptance of this one hypothesis would forge the
long desired link between? Religion and Science; and lead to the eventual discovery
of those forces and laws of nature known to ancient philosophy, but concealed
from all in this age but the practical occultist?
Now although we are
still dealing with universals rather than particulars, it is yet natural that
all we have to say shall still centre around man; we may best commence, therefore,
with a general description of the earth, his home, and when we come to the chapter
on "Anthropology" it will readily be seen wherein lies the correspondence
between the planets and man in their respective constitutions as sketched by
occult science.
SISTERS
OF THE EARTH
Thus Time
moves on seven wheels; he has seven naves; immortality is his axle. He is at
present all these worlds
-Atharva Veda,
Hymn xix, 53
This light
is above all the Seven Worlds, as a Monad before or above the triad of the Empyreal,
Ethereal and Material Worlds.
Proclus (cited
by Simplicius on the Zoroastrian oracles)
The seven
worlds became in Persia the seven Karshvare of the earth; the earth is divided
into seven Karshvare, only one of which is known and accessible to man, the
one on which we live, namely, Hvaniratha.
James Darmesteter,
Intro. Vendidad, page lx
Reference was
made in the preceding chapter to the constant use of the number seven throughout
the whole of the esoteric system; we shall now see it in its application to
our earth. It was said that the universe with its forces, psychic nature and
the like- the whole of its machinery, exists on the four lower of the seven
great planes of consciousness and being, and we have now to add that, correspondently,
the earth and every planet is conscious on four planes, or better, perhaps,
lives in three other conditions or states besides the physical state- the material
condition in which we view them. The three might be known as the Astral, the
Higher Psychic and the Spiritual. They are those states referred to in the philosophy
of Paul, called the three "heavens" in Biblical terminology. (II Corinthians
12; 2) Everything in nature according to the philosophy is septenary; that is
to say, is divisible into seven elements or principles- and hence the earth
and every planet is one of a family of seven globes, six of them existing on
the three planes above the terrestrial one in which their bodies or gross forms
function. Let me be explicit. Theosophy holds that everything in the universe
embodies a sevenfold entity, not merely a unit. Thus there are seven men in
every men, seven trees in every tree, seven globes in every planet. But is not
meant, however, that there are seven bodies one within the other like a set
of Chinese puzzle-boxes, but that there are seven aspects or sides to the nature
of each thing, through any of which it may be seen and examined; two existing
on each plane of consciousness outside the physical plane. Perhaps we might
say with more precision that there are seven worlds within each planet, seven
states of matter in any of which its consciousness might be awakened. But these
seven, although existing on different planes of consciousness, yet, so far as
each plane is concerned, embody actual forms [ H.P.Blavatsky once illustrate
this by saying that if she were to draw the gross matter out of an article -
a goblet, for instance - it would no longer be visible to those whose perceptions
were limited to the five senses; but the clairvoyant, psychic power developed,
and the vision corresponding to the next - the astral - plane, opened, and the
goblet would again come into view.] Not unlike their terrestrial counterpart.
It is from this arcane teaching that have sprung all the myths and fables regarding
worlds above us, some religious systems openly speaking of "seven heavens".
The diagram underneath will render this clearer.
Here
it will be seen that the lowest of these globes, or the fourth in the alphabetical
order adopted, is what we know as our earth, but is nevertheless its physical
gross envelope or shell only. Directly the evolutionary progress which carries
us along in its wave shall have advanced far enough to develop in us finer senses
than those which we now possess, others of these worlds will become visible.
These seven worlds
or globes being interlinked constitute what is called a "chain", and,
as will be shown, form the centres of life through which the spiritual essence
functions during its incarnation in matter, the three which precede and the
three which follow ours- the fourth- being, in a sense, portals for entrance
and exit, to and from the physical world we live in, - that state of consciousness
in which we at present know life.
Thus the consciousness
of the planet as a whole,first awakened in world or state A, then in B, then
C, finally expanding into physical being on the lowest material sphere D. Its
period of physical existence ended, its consciousness will travel back to the
more ethereal regions through states or worlds, E, F and G. The correspondence
between human life and planetary existence in this respect is too evident to
need much comment. Each of us having passed through the waking stage of daily
life,when we have our being on this, the physical plane, normally rest. In sleep
we loose the bonds which tie us to earth, and our consciousness travels further
and further from it. First we dream, then fall into deeper sleep,then into profoundest
trance, and, rounding the cycle of phases of consciousness, return to waking
in the reverse order. It is the same in life and death. Our physical body is
merely the vehicle of our consciousness on this plane, which consciousness,
however much materialists may disbelieve it, has descended from other spheres
at birth, and hasnever known a break. At death it will reascend as though we
slept, and cycling round its own celestial spheres, will be in due time reborn.
The consciousness of the planet as a whole is merely the sum total of the consciousness
of the individual units of which it is composed. So that to say that it centres
its existence in each of the states or spheres outside the physical one, before
finally issuing into the latter, is to say that all its "parts" do
so likewise. The passage of the consciousness of the whole from one state to
another, also is, as in the case of every normal awakening, gradual. If now
for the sake of convenience we therefore divine the planetary body into the
various kingdoms -mineral, vegetable, animal, human - we can best trace the
awakening or development of the globes by reference to these as in the following
section.
PLANETARY
EVOLUTION
They divided
the interminable periods of human existence on this planet into cycles, during
each of which mankind gradually reached the culminating point of highest civilization
and gradually relapsed into abject barbarism... These cycles do not embrace
all mankind at one and the same time.
H.P.Blavatsky
We do not propose
at present to carry the reader back to what may have occurred before life on
this planet became manifested as we know it, but to deal wholly with an account
of its expression from from the moment of the world's awakening. It may be briefly
stated, however, that the nature of the earth's existence is an effect of causes
generated in life in another planet, just as each person's present life is by
Theosophy held to be the outcome or continuance of his life in a past age and
in another body. We must now suppose the life-essence or planetary consciousness,
to arrive from some other world, and to be first of all centered in globe A.
Here it gradually
awakes in all the kingdoms- mineral, [at the immature stage of planetary evolution
of which we write,the word "mineral", as applied to what we ordinarily
know as that kingdom, is inadequate; but the term is held to as it is that which
will afterwards become the physical mineral state. The same applies to vegetable,
animal, and human.] Vegetable, animal and human - in turn. Only when it has
completed its development so far as globe A is concerned, does it pass into
globes B, C, and the rest, repeating the process around the whole chain. Each
globe, as this life-consciousness leaves it, falls again into sleep.
Before this teaching
can be further developed, and in order to remove any possible misconceptions
concerning planetary consciousness, we must briefly refer to what is termed
the monad or ego. We have said that the individual consciousness of any body
is, in a sense, the representative of the sum-total of that of its parts- the
lesser bodies of which it is composed; so that any one of the lesser bodies
may be said only to reach the height of it cognizing powers upon expansion into
those full lives becoming "one with the oversoul" of that planet to
which it belongs. This is the explanation of the saying in Occultism that all
things are basically one - in their last analysis a unit. But at a certain stage
of differentiation so far removed is this idea of oneness, that we must conceive
of many egos or monads- in progression; and, without altogether ridding ourselves
of the conception of One, as regards the ultimate soul of our planet, yet continue
to trace its evolution through that of its individual parts. Then, in reference
to these individual monads, "the reader is asked to bear in mind that eastern
philosophy rejects the western theological dogma of a newly-created soul for
every baby born, as being as unphilosophical as it is impossible in the economy
of nature. There must be a limited number of monads evolving and growing more
and more perfect through their assimilation of many successive personalities,
in every new Manvantara. This is absolutely necessary in view of the doctrines
of Rebirth, Karma, and the gradual return of the human monad to its source-
absolute Deity. Thus, although the hosts of more or less progressed monads are
almost incalculable, they are still finite,as is everything in this universe
of differentiation and finiteness". [The Secret Doctrine, Vol.1, page 171)
We may now carry
on our sketch of planetary evolution through that of the monads or souls which
incarnate on earth, the evolution of these and of that latter being so closely
interblended as to be practically one.
The life-wave of
souls passing through the different kingdoms, does not cycle around the chain
of globes once only, but seven times, before completing its period on this earth.
The reader must not however for a moment imagine that each of these "Rounds"
contains identical experiences for the monads who travel them. Nothing could
be further from the fact. Nature never allows us the same experiences twice;
even though she may often repeat her punishments or her kindnesses she never
does so under precisely identical circumstances. Her line of work is ever that
of a circle, or cycle, and she invariably returns along her original paths,
working into herself again and again. Yet each time she traverses the road she
evolves a greater perfection. Her labour is therefore a sort of spiral process,
retravelling constantly over the same ground, but on an ever higher and higher
scale. And this is exactly the teaching of Theosophy concerning the globe rounds;
the life-wave more than once passing over the same ground each time on a loftier
stage of the spiral - while the complete experience of every phase of life on
any given planet is said to be obtained after seven cyclings.
The monads which
compose the lifewave do not however arrive from the preceding globe in equal
stages of development. In the vast scheme of evolution presented by the esoteric
philosophy, a chain of globes constitutes but a very minute portion of the whole
road to be traveled by the "Pilgrims" before perfection is attained.
Nor in the process of development is it to be supposed that all will remain
in line. Every degree is recognized, the occult doctrine never for a moment
supposing such a possibility as strict equality, except in essence. In the myriads
of forms produced by nature, no two are alike. "Throughout all creation,
from the archangel to the worm, - from Olympus to to the pebble, - from the
radiant and completed planet to the nebula that hardens through ages of mist
and slime into the habitable world, the first law of nature is inequality".
Each individual's place in the universe can be held by him alone; no two persons
can stand exactly abreast on the same rung of the ladder.
Therefore it is that
the life-wave of souls or monads arriving with the earth at the hour of its
birth, or commencement of its Manvantara - for the terms Manvantara and Pralaya
are applicable equally to planets as to the Cosmos - are to be considered as
divisible into seven classes, according to their degree of evolution and consciousness;
in other words, Occultism recognizes seven kingdoms of nature rather than only
those four which we have named, human, animal, vegetable and mineral. The additional
three are those less developed even than the mineral, and are really the elemental
or nascent kingdoms of which we have spoken in the section the "Astral
Light".
Now the lowest or
least developed of these elemental kingdoms incarnates on globe A of this chain
at the time of the earth's birth, the "builders" of which it (the
kingdom) is composed, proceeding at once to their evolutionary work. After enormous
periods of time they have evolved the globe sufficiently to place it in readiness
for the next class, who forthwith make their appearance, taking up their work
in the substance prepared for them by the lower order. Then, in course of time,
the third or highest class of elementals arrive, and prepare the now highly
evolved "world-stuff" for the monads of the mineral kingdom, the arrival
of these latter being again followed in evolutionary order by those of the vegetable,
animal, and finally human kingdom. Then, just as the hierarchy of human monads
arrives on the globe, the time has come for the first elemental kingdom to pass
forward into the next and denser globe, B. Here it is followed by all the kingdoms
in succession. And so on step by step around the entire chain. [ This is but
the general outline of the evolutionary process as carried on through the "Rounds";
it differs in different Rounds and cycles. The full teaching concerning the
development of life in the planetary Rounds has not been given out by the Adepts,
but is kept from the world "until the time comes". The author has
not thought it necessary in a small volume like this to piece together the few
imperfect, fragments of instruction that have been given. He has confined himself
to the mere outline of the process of planetary evolution; and would refer the
reader, who desires more information, to the Secret Doctrine, Part I]
Thus it will be seen
that as soon as the first class arrives on globe C the live-wave has completely
left the planetary sphere called globe A, which forthwith "sleeps",
or becomes nonexistent for a period, to reawaken when the wave again reaches
it, which it does only after it has passed through the intervening series of
globes. So that when the wave reaches the fourth globe - the one we are at present
on - it has descended through three other spheres of increasing density, and
when it leaves this fourth, it will pass upward through others of gradually
increasing ethereality. Therefore, if we consider our globe especially - it
being that with which we have most concern, - since the life-wave passes seven
times round the whole chain, it passes seven times through this particular sphere,
leaving breaks of immense periods of time between each passage, during which
the monads are working their way round the cycle composed of the other globes,
and slowly carrying on their evolutionary progress on each.
Now as life on any
planet constitutes but a very small link in the great evolutionary plan laid
out by the arcane philosophy, it is easy to see that the Occultism can never
be at one with the biologist in his theories concerning the descent of man.
While our scientists, following along the lines of investigation suggested by
Charles Darwin, have undoubtedly made important discoveries, they have understood
but a very small portion of a great truth, of which the occultists have enjoyed
possession for ages. Although the esoteric philosophy denies entirely a possible
descent from the anthropoid - a creed indeed, as the saying goes, "more
Darwinian than Darwin", for the great scientist never suggested such a
probability - yet it by no means throws aside the evolutionary process of natural
law. It holds, indeed, that growth or development is at once the first and the
last object of life, but, in so doing, it maintains that evolution as it is
now known is but half of the real truth; the other half being metempsychosis
or reincarnation. "The Stone becomes a plant, the plant an animal, the
animal a man, and the man a god", is an old occult aphorism, but does not
mean that the stone will evolve into the plant, or the animal into the man,
but that entity ensouling the lower phases of nature will eventually pass into
the higher, thus gaining experience of all. For the form taken on by matter
is almost wholly the impress stamped upon it by the intelligence or mind which
stands behind, and is not, and cannot be, something inherent in the molecules
themselves. Otherwise, why is there diversity of form? Or why, indeed, form
at all? There is nothing more manifest, more self-evident in nature than the
existence of mind as the basis of material form; we cannot divorce the twin.
And whether we call this basis God or Nature, or attribute the variety of images
to our own super-conscious Thought, is of little actual consequence.
Yet, it may be argued,
even supposing that the intelligence standing behind matter itself causes the
change and variety of imagery existing, still, if the theosophical system be
a true one, we must suppose that mind would impress matter in so orderly and
progressive a manner as to effect a gradual change of form and state from one
kingdom of nature, to another. We can hardly imagine the intelligence, which
had just ensouled the stone, springing forward along the path of experience
and knowledge so rapidly as to be able immediately after to inform a plant;
nor can we fancy egress from the vegetable as implying immediate incarnation
in the animal - yet no links can be found. The border-line on either side may
here and there be closely approached, but the division still remains clearly
marked; and it is this division which has always been the puzzle and stumbling-block
to the evolutionists- the everlasting "missing link".
The theosophical
theory, however, completely effaces all difficulties of this nature.
Seven classes of monads cycle round the globes, representing seven
distinct degrees of experience in the hierarchy of souls inhabiting
the chain of worlds called "earth". These seven by reason
of a certain law, remain always distinct from one another, although
they follow each other through almost identical experiences. Briefly
then, the reason why no absolute link can be traced between the kingdoms,
is because this link is formed on the other globes. It"It is
the spiral character of the progress accomplished by the life impulses
that develop the various kingdoms of Nature, which accounts for the
gaps now observed in the animated forms which people the earth. The
thread of a screw, which is a uniformly inclined plane in reality,
looks like a succession of steps when examined along one line parallel
to its axis. The spiritual monads, which are coming round the system
on the animal level, pass on to other worlds when they have performed
their turn of animal incarnation here. By the time they come again
they are ready for human incarnation, and there is no necessity now
for the upward development of animal forms into human forms - these
are already waiting for their spiritual tenants". [ See Esoteric
Buddhism, page 83, Sixth American Edition]. So that although there
is a continual development and evolution of each of the seven classes
spoken of, and a consequent approach of any given one towards the
position occupied by the one next above it in the scale, yet as this
latter is itself progressing at an equal rate, the distance between
the classes remains ever he same. Only in individual cases does an
ego strike out a path for itself in advance of its class, and instead,
as it were, of going round the road of the spiral, takes a short cut
upward on to the path above it. These are the pioneers of their class;
the majority of monads keeping slowly in the winding march of evolutionary
progression. This will be better understood, however, after we have
dealt directly with the evolution of man; meanwhile, we have to say
a few words concerning the last chain of globes around which the life-wave
cycled before issuing on to this planet.
THE
MYSTERY OF THE MOON
I have consumed
forty years of my pilgrimage.... seeking the philosopher's stone called truth.
I have consulted all the adepts of antiquity - Epicurus and Augustine, Plato,
and Malebranche, and I still remain in ignorance... All that I have been able
to obtain by comparing and combining the system of Plato, of the tutor of Alexander,
Pythagoras, and the Oriental, is this: Chance is a word devoid of sense. The
world is arranged according to mathematical laws.
Voltaire. Dictionnaire
Philosophique: Art Philosophie
Many theories
have been formulated concerning the genesis of the moon, and its position in
the solar system, the one receiving most favour in scientific circles being
that which supposes it to have been thrown off from our our earth when the latter
was rotating at a rate of extreme rapidity. Now, without going into all the
difficulties suggested by such a hypothesis, it may at once be said that the
occultists have always held an exactly opposite theory, our world according
to them being the child and not the parent of the moon, the latter having given
to the earth all but her corpse. Apart from the statement that this is the position
held concerning it by the greatest sages of the world for ages, we may say that
it is quite as reasonable as any put forward by modern science; for the "astronomical
conclusions are theories based on data so uncertain that while in some cases
they give results incredibly short, like that of fifteen million of years for
the whole past process of formation of the solar system, in others they give
results almost incredibly long, as in that which supposes the moon to have been
thrown off when the earth was rotating in three hours, while the utmost actual
retardation obtained from observation would require 600 millions of years to
make it rotate in twenty-three hours instead of twenty-four ". [ Samuel
Laing; Modern Science and Modern Thought, page 48]. If men of science disagree
among themselves to so great an extent in their theories concerning the lunar
orb, there can be no harm in advancing a new theory - new, at any rate, to them
- the reverse of the old one.
In support of the
statement that there is an occult connection between the earth and the moon,
it is almost needless to remark on the great influence that the latter exercises
over the former. The tides, perhaps the most important of the natural phenomena
of the earth, are almost entirely the result of her influence. That she affects
vegetation is well known [ See the Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information, issued
from the Botanic Garden, Grenada, February 1893, for proof of this.] -even to
the extent of the sap in some of the plants rising and falling with her motions.
The crises of certain diseases are well observed to coincide with the lunar
phases; their influence on human gestation and conception being also marked.
So that we can scarcely be called to task even if we make the broad assertion
that the moon exercises more influence over the earth and its inhabitants than
the latter does over her satellite, which influence, so far as science knows,
does not extent beyond the physical attraction that causes her to circle round
the earth. Now that the phenomena of animal magnetism and hypnotism have become
accepted facts, and the existence of occult forces in nature demonstrated, perhaps
the day will come when we shall hear of the moon being once again, as in the
day of old, regarded as an important factor in the evolution of our earth, and
even astrology may eventually rebecome a science; [Not, however, as it is now
known.] For, "if certain aspects of the moon effect tangible results so
familiar in the experience of men throughout all time, what violence are we
doing to logic in assuming the possibility that a certain combination of siderial
influences may also be more or less potent?"
But let us see what
Occultism has to say concerning the moon and its effect upon the evolution of
the monads at present cycling around our chain. It has been said that each planet
in universe is credited with six companions spheres, around which seven spheres
the life-waves washes seven times. As soon as it has passed from globe A to
globe B the former gradually fades and goes into obscuration, to reawaken only
on the return of the monads after their journeying around the other spheres;
thus for seven Rounds. But at the last of these, as soon as the life-wave has
left any given globe, that globe, instead of falling again into obscuration,
or sleeping- dies, and in so doing transfuses its life-essence or "principles"
into a neutral centre in space, which thus commences the formation of a new
chain; so that when the life -wave again reaches what should be globe A it has
to pass on to a new chain of worlds.
Now the moon was
the fourth globe in the chain of worlds last inhabited by us. At her death,
which occurred incalculable ages ago, her life-essence was transferred to a
centre in space, around which our earth was formed; the souls (ourselves) inhabiting
her separated gradually from their world, and after a period of obscuration
or Pralaya, reawakened in their new home, our earth. This period of obscuration
is the "Nirvana" which awaits all at the close of their journeyings
around a chain, and before their incarnation on a new planet. The "Pralaya"
of a globe however, should not be confounded with the great Pralaya of the universe,
or even with that of the solar system.
"Imagine
the six fellow-globes of the Moon - aeons before the first globe of our seven
was evolved - just in the same position in relation to each other, as the fellow-globes
of our chain occupy in regard to our Earth now. And now it will be easy to imagine
further globe A of the lunar chain informing globe A of the terrestrial chain,
and - dying; globe B of the former sending after that its energy into globe
B of the new chain; then globe C of the lunar creating its progeny sphere C
of the terrene chain; then the moon (our satellite) pouring forth into the lowest
globe of our planetary ring - globe D, our Earth - all its life, energy and
powers; and having transferred them to a new centre becoming virtually a dead
planet, in which rotation has almost ceased since the birth of our globe. The
Moon is now the cold residual quantity, the shadow dragged after the new body,
into which her living powers and "principles" are transfused. She
is doomed for long ages to be ever pursuing the Earth, to be attracted by and
to her progeny. Constantly vampirised by her child, she revenges herself on
it by soaking it through and through with the nefarious, invisible and poisoned
influence which emanates from the occult side of her nature. For she is a dead
yet a living body. The particles of her decaying corpse are full of active and
destructive life, although the body which they had formed be soulless and lifeless.
Therefore its emanations are at the same time beneficent and maleficent - this
circumstance finding its parallel on earth in the fact that the grass and plants
are nowhere more juicy and thriving than on the graves; while at the same time
it is the graveyard or corpse emanations which kill. And like all ghouls or
vampires, the moon is the friend of the sorcerers and the foe of the unwary.
From the archaic aeons and the later times of the witches of Thessaly, down
to some of the present tantrikas of Bengal, her nature and properties were known
to every Occultist, but have remained a closed book for physicists". [The
Secret Doctrine, Vol. 1, pages 155-156]
Thus it will be seen
that the occult doctrine teaches that all beings now on earth,have come from
the moon, that,in fact, the lunar chain is nothing but the seven rungs below
our earth, of the vast spiral around which the monads or souls are slowly ascending
and that the earth is literally and actually the reincarnation of the moon.
For although the body or gross physical shell of the latter still remains, yet
she is dead physically and spiritually, and her inner "principles"
or forces have been gradually transferred to our earth. This affords an explanation
of the constant reference in Indian literature to the lunar pitris (Fathers)
or "lunar ancestors". They are our ancestors truly, inasmuch as from
them we have sprung; but having incarnated on this globe, they are also - ourselves.
It also removes from the Hindus the odium of worshipping these "spirits".
They do not worship them, but rather reverence their wisdom, since those of
the pitris that are not yet incarnated here are in a sense those real inner
principles of man which have to be transferred to him in some future Round,
the life-wave having so far only reached the middle of the fourth Round. Hence
it has been said that the wisdom of all ages is locked up in the moon, and until
she has delivered herself of it she cannot entirely disappear from the sky.
THE
SEVEN RACES
The
mythical traditions of almost all nations place at the beginning of human history
a time of happiness and perfection, a "golden age" which has no features
of savagery or barbarism, but many of civilization and refinement-
Rawlison, The
Origin of Nations
Of the song,
the order of the sixth race close.
-Orphic Line.
Some idea of
the history of the earth, as written in the arcane scriptures and occult works,
must now be sketched, the time having come when the reader can appreciate some
of the figures indicative of its age and of the degree of evolution reached
by man. If we consider that class of monads the bulk of which have, in their
cycle of evolution on earth, reached the human stage, we shall find them passing
through all the kingdoms of nature in the Rounds that preceded ours, finally
issuing a man on this fourth globe in the middle of the fourth Round. The order
of class evolution is not the same in every Round, however. Arrive on earth
in the fourth Round, "Man is the first form that appears thereon, being
preceded only by the mineral and vegetable kingdoms- even the latter having
to develop and continue its further evolution through man. During the three
Rounds to come, Humanity, like the globe on which it lives, will be ever tending
to reassume its primeval form, that of a Dhyan Chohanic Host. Man tends to become
a God and then- GOD, like every other atom in the universe".
In the passage through
the globes seven distinct degrees or experiences are recognized which we may
call "races" and the human units have to live through all of these
and pass through each many times. Thus if we directly consider our own physical
globe, the fourth of the series, and that with which we have most concern at
present, we shall find that several races have already appeared thereon, before
ours, the present one , was born. The most highly developed of the earth's peoples
are at present going through the fifth race, the evolution of this fifth having
commenced nearly a million years ago. So that the reader will now begin to form
some idea of the age of the world according to the esoteric philosophy , which
finds itself under no obligation to limit its calculations concerning our planet
to a few thousands of years, a period of time, indeed, utterly insufficient
to meet the demands of either geologist or archaeologist.
Each of these races
is again subdivided into seven, and even then the limits of sectional possibility
can hardly be said to be reached. But as their periods considerably overlap
one another, the close of one not being finally effected until many thousand
years after the birth of its successor, it suffices to recognize the main races,
and that sevenfold division of them called their "sub-races". The
present pioneers of the globe, or those monads furthest developed - and as we
understand the term- compose the fifth root-race, and it may be added, the fifth
sub-race of that root-race. There are, however, a few exceptions, which will
be referred to later.
If the reader has
born in mind the second of the fundamental propositions of the Secret Doctrine,
which postulated the universal necessity for cycles or circles, the law which
occasions the gradual change of day to night, and vice versa , throughout the
whole cosmos he will,have seen, long ago, an exemplification of it in the cycling
of the monads around the chain of globes. Beginning with the most spiritual,
the life-wave flows through spheres of gradually increasing materiality into
the densest and most physical, the fourth, and then as gradually returns to
its more ethereal homes. And presently we shall see a similar drama played in
the history of the seven races, the earlier and later of which are ethereal
and spiritual, the intervening ones being more or less material. The fourth,
the race which immediately preceded our own, will therefore be seen to have
been that one most deeply sunk into and bound by physical life, while we are
now launched upon the upward arc of the cycle.
Although
seven successive races are mentioned, the reader must not fancy that
each of these has sole possession of the earth during its period of
development; they lap over one another to a considerable extent. Thus,
for instance, although the fifth sub-race of the fifth root-race is
the furthest advanced, and is that holding dominion over the world
at present, yet "the majority of mankind belongs to the seventh
sub-race of the fourth root-race.. Chinese and their offshoots and
branchlets (Malayans, Mongolians, Tibetans, Javanese) - with remnants
of other sub-races of the fourth and seventh sub-race of the third
race". [Extra from a letter from one of the "Brothers"
quoted in Esoteric Buddhism.]
The gradual development
of a race is from its first sub-race to its seventh, and it reaches its zenith
of perfection only at the close of this last; the period of its glory being
followed, like every thing else in the universe, by obscuration. In other words,
having developed its highest civilization or possibility, and being unable to
go any higher in its own particular cycle, the great law compels it to return
back again along its path, - the monads composing it being able to gain the
higher knowledge they crave only on the upward arc of the succeeding cycle.
No race as a whole indeed can ever be allowed to "encroach on the knowledge
and powers in store for its successor", and any attempt to do so is regarded
as an unpardonable sin against the law, nature then taking the matter into her
own hands and destroying the race. "The approach of every new obscuration
is always signaled by cataclysms of either fire or water. But apart from this,
every root-race has to be cut in two, so as to say, by either one or the other.
Thus, having reached the apex of its development and glory, the fourth race-
the Atlanteans- were destroyed by water; and you find now but their degenerate
fallen remnants, whose sub-races nevertheless, each of them, had its palmy day
of glory and relative greatness. What they are now, you will be some day, the
law of cycles being one and immutable".
The cataclysms which
periodically overthrow each race at its close are alternately of fire and water.
The last one, which destroyed the great bulk of the fourth race, was of water
- the land of that race, Atlantis, sinking under the ocean; hence the almost
universal tradition of a flood. The one which will destroy the present race
when it has reached the summit of its progress, in about another million years,
will be of fire; hence, again the many prophecies of the destruction of the
earth by fire.
Here the description
of the general laws governing planetary and human evolution must end; later
we shall outline the history of racial development on this globe. In summing
up the section we may add the following from a letter of an Adept, quoted in
the Secret Doctrine (Vol.1., Page 188)
"Man, in the
first Round and first race on globe D, our Earth, was an ethereal being....
non-intelligent, but super -spiritual; and correspondingly, on the law of analogy,
in the first race of the fourth Round. In each of the subsequent races and sub-races...
he grows more and more into an encased or incarnate being, still preponderatingly
ethereal. ...He is sexless, and, like the animal and vegetable, he develops
monstrous bodies correspondential with his coarser surroundings.
"II Round. He
(man) is still gigantic and ethereal, but growing firmer and more condensed
in body, a more physical man. Yet still less intelligent than spiritual, for
mind is a slower and more difficult evolution than is the physical frame...
"III Round.
He has now a perfectly concrete or compacted body, at first the form of a giant
ape, and now more intelligent, or rather cunning, than spiritual. For, on the
downward arc, he has now reached a point where his primordial spirituality is
eclipsed and overshadowed by nascent mentality. In the last half of third Round
his gigantic stature decreases, and his body improves in texture, and he becomes
a more rational being, though still more an ape than a Deva....
(All this is almost
exactly repeated in the third root-race of the fourth Round.)
"IV Round. Intellect
has an enormous development in this Round. The (hitherto) dumb races acquire
our (present) human speech on this globe, on which, from the fourth race, language
is perfected and knowledge increases. At this half way point of the fourth Round
(as of the fourth root, or Atlantean race), humanity passes the axial point
of the minor Manvantaric cycle.... the world teeming with the results of intellectual
activity and spiritual decrease...."
CHAPTER
FOUR
ANTHROPOLOGICAL
In the earliest
ages, Philosophy descended not to the business and homes of men. It dwelt amid
the wonders of the loftier creation; it sought to analyze the formation of matter-
the essentials of the prevailing soul; to read the mysteries of the starry orbs;
to dive into those depths of Nature in which Zoroaster is said by the schoolmen
first to have discovered the arts which your ignorance classes under the name
of magic-
Sir Bulwer Lytton
in Zanoni
By a natural
descent from universals to particulars we have at length arrived at the consideration
of that part of the esoteric philosophy which deals especially with man, and
which of necessity must prove to be of the widest interest to students of esoteric
lore; for, however deeply Occultism may have searched the mysteries of nature,
the schools have ever held that, "the greatest study of mankind is man",
and that through the understanding of Self alone,can anything true be known.
Here perhaps it will
be of advantage to state briefly what Occultism considers to be the real work
of the human individual, and his position as regards the planet on which he
lives. It should be remarked that whereas in previous Rounds man, or that class
of monads which are destined afterwards to become human, issues on the first
and succeeding globes of the earth-chain only after the evolution of the lower
kingdoms, yet on this fourth Round, or at least on this lowest globe of the
fourth Round, man is the first to appear; and, it may be added, the evolution
of the other kingdoms from this point is carried on under his direct guidance.
He is, or should be, absolute lord of his planet.
Eastern science teaches
that man, and indeed every visible entity, is a centre or repository for the
innumerable life-atoms which whirl through space- a veritable vortex of life.
Resting for a moment in each body, they are thrown off and disappear or are
attracted to other forms- but they carry with them the reflection or impress
of everything they have passed through. Hence it is held that by reason of this
constant change of atoms, each person is in a measure responsible for the character
and tendencies of the persons he may live amongst, in many other ways than those
of example or training. His very thoughts reflected as they are in the characteristics
of his organism, are caught up by the fleeting atoms and sown in other bodies,
and, through these, affect other minds. Murderous intent, even though unfulfilled,
may bring about its committal by persons weaker than the would-be offender;
vicious thoughts may have their expression in others outside the man of desire;
while philanthropic and beneficent purposes will have an infinitely greater
effect for good than even the actions they may inspire in the individual who
evoked them. Motive, then, is of far more account than action.
But the atoms that
pass of from man go also to build up all visible nature, and hence, since he
is the only being on earth capable of conscious progression, he alone can help
on its evolution. His duty from the first was to raise all beings, to train
and educate them, and to lift them to higher levels. Instead he ha adopted in
the majority of his kind, a course of selfishness, ending in vice, and has become
by his gross pursuits absolutely unconscious of the tremendous effect that he
exercises on all around him. Yet, however much nature may have turned against
him for this- however much she may have inspired each to raise his hand against
his brother- she is still kind to the innocent in heart , and in those countries
where the poorest peoples dwell is often sweetest and most luxuriant, while
the inhabitants are happier and, if we but recognized it, more highly developed.
One can understand in the light of this doctrine how little it matters what
form of religion one professes, so long as he is true to his highest calling;
how it may be that those nations which seem to be less civilized, may yet, in
the purity of the lives they lead, do greater services for their race and for
the world at large than even their more enlightened brethren; and though their
only guidance be but a simple, perhaps a foolish faith.
So that in Occultism
finds for man more work to do than simply "preparing himself to die".
Human existence and destiny is, in its view, something more than "eating,
propagating and rotting". There was a time when man had such power over
the elements that he could actually create, or call into physical being, animals,
birds or plants, by hurrying forward the evolution of the germ. But in the dark
cycle through which he is just now passing, these powers are lost to him, he
is degraded almost to the level of the brutes, and it will not be until he has
worked his way once more upward into the light that they can be regained.
Before we can really
say much concerning man, we shall have to see what his constitution or make-up
is according to Theosophy, and to trace the origin of all the various elements
which enter into his being.
THE
CONSTITUTION OF MAN
Oh man,
the machine of boldest nature!
Oracles of Zoroaster.
The problem
of life is man. MAGIC, or rather Wisdom, is the evolved knowledge of the potencies
of man's interior being; which forces are Divine emanations, as intuition is
the perception of their origin, and initiation our induction into that knowledge...
We begin with instinct; the end is OMNISCIENCE. -
A.Wilder
In the last
chapter it was said that Occultism recognized every entity in the universe,
not as one, but as seven; that these however were not to be considered as bodies
one within another, but as seven aspects through which the entity might be regarded,
or better, as seven phases of consciousness through which it functions. Man
is no more exempt from this septenary division than is anything else. Seven
distinct elements, or "principles", as they are called, enter into
the composition of the being we call human; he may be said to live and breathe
in seven different ways.
Every age has known
its philosophers; individuals who have sought to fathom the human soul and understand
the workings of the mind, with greater or less success, and all have agreed
that in order to achieve any result whatever in this department of knowledge,
a metaphorical division- simple or complex as the case may be - of the individual
into certain constituents is necessary; a resolution, as it were, into more
simple factors. The Occultist would be the last to break this time-honoured
rule. Even the metaphysician of our own day is forced to adopt this method,
and separately to consider memory, will, imagination, although no one would
for a moment accuse him of not being perfectly aware that these were in reality
but aspects of one thing - not separate pieces of the structure, which could
be microscopically examined apart from the whole. So, too, must we regard the
theosophical sevenfold division of man.
Although seven main
principles are put forward in Theosophy as entering into the composition of
man, yet the dividing process is by no means to be considered as having its
limits in these, the possibility being really an infinite one. Simplification,
however, is as desirable in occult study as in any other, and for such purpose
the easiest division has been adopted; but, as will be seen, once the main elements
are grasped it is advisable to subdivide some of these again, so as to render
their function and nature more clearly.
The chief religion
of the West - Christianity - has always regarded man as a trinity of body, soul
and spirit; but save in the Roman Catholic fraternity the duad of body and spirit,
or body and soul, seems only to be recognized - soul and spirit being apparently
synonymous with most of the other sects. Protestantism, indeed, no matter what
we may otherwise think of it, has now degenerated into little more than a pseudo
philosophy, although among "High Church" adherents attempts is made
to retain some of the old rites and religious observances, all of which had
originally an actual occult effects and meaning; but year by year these become
more and more a meaningless mass of ritualism. Like a branch that would live
apart from the three which produced it, the "reformed" church has
separated from the mother church, and death and decay can be its only award.
But if this be said of Protestantism, in what light shall we regard its parent,
the Church of Rome? The Gnosticism which inspired its doctrines is not now to
be found there, pure and intact, for the ghost of Eusebius hovers among the
books and manuscripts of the Vatican. Retaining the original truths in its keeping,it
has managed, in order to suit the several objects of various Popes and Jesuits,
so to deface them as to allow of little comparison with the first teachings,
and nothing now remains but the husk or shell of a once great school of mysticism.
Theosophy seeks to
restore the lost harmony, to bring order and sequence out of discord, confusion
and chaos. Hence it shows us that these three, body, soul and spirit, constitute
but a crude division of the human principles,which are to be found far more
fully tabulated in the Hindu, Chinese, Egyptian, Hebraic and Hellenic systems,
each of which specifies either a six-fold or a sevenfold division.
Like all other septenaries,
that of which we are now about to speak may be separated into three higher and
four lower constituents; three-spiritual, eternal, and indissoluble; four-terrestrial,
transient and perishable. Thus we see an immediate correspondence with the "planes"
and "globes". As in nature we observe the crocus growing year after
year from the same bulb, itself hidden, so also the four terrestrial principles-
representing man as we ordinarily view him - constitute the periodical expression
or blossoming of his permanent and spiritual elements, themselves the hidden
"root". Hence each individual is said to appear and reappear on earth,
growing age after age more and more perfect, until the hour of the Pralaya strikes.
In order to familiarize
the student with the sevenfold classification, it will be well to preface with
a tabulated statement:
Leaving aside any
consideration of the nature of the root principles in man for the present, let
us first examine the four which compose his terrestrial personality, dealing
afterwards with the more permanent elements.
ELEMENTS |
|
PRINCIPLE |
SANSKRIT
TERMS |
OTHER
TERMS |
ENGLISH
EQUIVALENTS
|
Transitory |
|
1 |
STHULA
SHARIRA |
|
Physical
Body |
|
2 |
LINGA
SHARIRA |
|
Astral
Body |
|
3 |
PRANA |
Etheric |
Vital
Essence |
|
4 |
KAMA
|
Emotional
, Desire |
Animal
Soul |
Permanent |
Lower
Mental |
5 |
MANAS
-is the link between Matter and Spirit
(the ego per se
the "I Am I") |
|
Human
Soul |
Antaskarana
(being the bridge
between the lower and higher mental ) |
|
Higher
Mental |
Causal
body |
The Monad
the true Ego also
called the Pilgrim
|
6 |
BUDDHI |
Intuition |
Spiritual
Soul |
7 |
ATMA
(pure spiti) |
|
Spirit
|
These four
are: (1) physical body; (2) its ethereal double, or wraith, the astral body;
(3) the vital essence; (4) the principle of desire, or the animal soul.
(1) Physical Body.
-
This is simply the gross material frame, composed of bones, flesh and blood;
the individual man as he appears on the lowest plane. It is called in Sanskrit,
Shthula Sharira, literally, a "sheath" of differentiated and conditioned
matter, which sheath according to occult philosophy is constructed by nature
solely for use as the instrument of the incarnating intelligence, dissolving
directly the latter is withdrawn. For this reason, and because of its exceedingly
transitory nature, it never was regarded by the ancient philosophers as worthy
of much investigation - its double or wraith being, according to them, the real
vital body, and the one for study. As will be seen later, this "double"
is the true basis or mould of the physical body, the latter being simply an
appearance produced by the molecules or particles of matter massed around the
said mould; hence the constant change which physiologists observe in the "life-atoms"
of the body, some schools affirming that- apart from the bone structure - every
man has a completely new frame, through which to function, every three months,
while only seven years are considered for a renewal of the bones. However this
may be, we are well aware of the constant loss of substance undergone by our
bodies, and of the need of replenishment; the whole process of physical life
being little more than a matter of rebuilding.
(2) The Astral Body,
double,
doppelganger, or wraith, is , counting from below, the first principle of importance
in occult philosophy. In Sanskrit terminology it is called Linga Sharira. As
the lingam is little else than a symbol of creation, the Linga Sharira (or creative
sheath) may be regarded as the creator of the physical form, being the mould,
as said, upon which are thrown the innumerable "life-atoms" which
build up and constitute the body. It is therefore the true "vital body",
the eidolon of the Greeks, and is an exact counterpart of the physical body,
growing and developing with the latter. It is formed out of the astral stuff
which is the basis of all manifested nature. It is born before the terrestrial
frame is formed about it, and only entirely fades away into the ethereal elements
of the earth, upon the complete dissolution of that frame. Owing again to the
fact that it has the property of enormous extension - being, according to the
Hindus, capable of assuming any size or shape - it has been called the "protean"
or "plastic" body; it exists in the womb while the foetus is being
created or built around it, as well as in the full grown man. It is also capable,
to some extent, of separation from the physical body during life - an occurrence
usually the result of weakness- but even then it can only stray a few yards
away. It is well known that persons in the last stages of consumption often
see themselves, as it were, from the other side of the room in which they are
lying, and numerous cases of like nature are on record as occurring in moments
of great fatigue. Theosophists hold this to be merely the partial separation
of the Linga Sharira from the body, persons in such instances maintaining their
consciousness in the "double" instead of in the physical frame. The
astral form may nevertheless leave the body without the consciousness of the
individual. But in any such cases, it is liable to injury of one sort or another
through accidents to it, which, of course, at once impress themselves upon the
body, and thus we have an explanation for those accidents to the body which
sometimes occur to weak persons when they are asleep, the astral in these instances
having probably separated from the physical frame , and received a cut or puncture.
The astral body again is the basis of the materialized forms which appear at
spiritualist seances. However much the phenomena of these seances may be coloured
by fraud and deception, no one can doubt the genuineness of many of many of
them; the others being but imitations of the real article. It is concerning
these very materializations that Theosophists differ from Spiritualists; the
latter maintaining them to be the actual "spirits" of persons passed
away, the former teaching that they are but the shades or doubles of the deceased,
galvanized into life
by
the astral body of any one present who may be in a sufficiently weak and passive
condition to allow of its separation from his body; such a person being technically
termed a "medium".
The
double has thus two principal aspects; one, that which constitutes the mould
or form of the physical, and the other that which can be separated from it.
It is not, however, to be understood that these are two different bodies, but
merely two aspects of the one. To make this clear, it may be said that, owing
to its plastic nature, the Linga Sharira has been called the "fluidic body",
being capable of almost infinite extension. A portion of its substance "drawn
off", so to speak, from the main body, will assume the form of the whole,
unless it goes to strengthen the eidolon of another individual, dead or alive,
in which case it takes on the form it inspires. Thus it oozes out from the physical
frame, the organs through which this is accomplished being the spleen, where
the Linga Sharira is said to be "curled up". The Linga Sharira proper,
however must not be confounded with the body in which a person may, consciously
or unconsciously, travel invisibly to places far distance, and observe what
is going on there, without, apparently, having himself moved. This is called
the Mayavi Rupa, or thought-body, and is not a "principle"
at all, but is a combination of two principles.
At death the
astral body separates entirely from the physical form finally dissolving with
the disappearance of the last vestige of the decaying body. In certain atmospheric
conditions it may be seen hanging over the graves of the dead; from this have
arisen all the stories concerning ghosts and ghouls. The luminosity of its appearance
under such circumstances being probably one reason for its name, the astral-
or starry - body.
(3) The Vital Essence
- This
is the third element necessary for the composition of the human body. Having
endowed it with substance and form, if we would have it a living thing we must
add vitality. But life is inherent in all things, and Theosophy recognizes no
such thing as dead substance, therefore the reader must understand by this third
principle, individual
as
opposed to universal life, or that which distinguishes organic from inorganic
matter. Prana is the name given to it by the Hindus, Jiva being the name for
the universal essence, the great ocean of life in which all things are plunged.
Madame Blavatsky used to draw the distinction between Jiva and Prana by the
analogy of a sponge in water; the sponge being held to represent an individual,
the water - Jiva, or the universal ocean of life, while that portion of the
water which flowed through the sponge indicated Prana or individual vitality.
Thus it will be seen that, as the sponge can contain a greater or less supply
of water, so we can be filled to a greater or less extent with the vital essence,
and here it is that Occultism advances a theory, not known to Science. It holds
that death is the result of too much life. The atoms carried by the life-waves
into the mould of the physical body constitute its material structure, but owing
to the fact that these wave rush with constantly increasing intensity a time
comes when we are not any longer able to endure their power, and nature then
comes to our aid and we do what is usually called "falling asleep".
During sleep the excess of vitality is allowed to escape, and the waking stage
is arrived at when the life-waves have readjusted themselves to the molecules
of the body. But when the life-waves become too powerful for us to stave them
off, death results; and with the dissolving body Prana once more becomes Jiva.
For this reason it is that the Occultist say that the body would be kept alive
much longer, if we could avoid the necessity for sleep; in other words, if we
were better able to battle with the life-waves, we could live longer. And, accordingly,
the greater our degree of strength, the less sleep we require.
(4) Kama. The
three foregoing principles are those which are common to all living forms on
the terrestrial globe, whether of the vegetable or the animal kingdoms. But
the animal has something which renders it quite distinct from the plant; this
is the element of desire, instinct or the animal soul, called in Theosophy-
Kama. It is this principle which man has in common with the brute, and to which
must be traced all such instincts as eating, sleeping, procreation and the like.
Owing to the fact, however, that man has some thing in him which no animal possesses,
namely, mind, or the mental fire- the fifth principle - he is able by thought
or "suggestion" to govern or control the animal soul, and becomes
in consequence responsible for its deeds. If left entirely to itself, the physical
body of man will act as any other animal; but directly the mind functions in
it, it at once makes obeisance to the higher power. Hence man is the only animal
that has the power at any time to call into play his animal passions, first
on the mental plane, and afterwards for physical gratification. In such case
they are not the outcome of natural instincts, but constitute indulgence and
lust; it is the prostitution of this power that has caused all the suffering
of the age, arising as it does out of greed, drunkenness and sexuality.
It will now be seen
that a perfect animal has been formed, of substance, form and vitality; and
the soul having been added, we must imagine the whole composition evolved to
the highest point possible in this age, and having the most perfect of nature's
forms. It then becomes a fitting tabernacle for the dwelling of a god, whom
we shall now see in the three higher principles of man.
The four transitory,
mortal elements having been considered, it next becomes our duty to speak of
the root nature of man; the latter being permanent and immortal.
In this case
we shall for good reasons begin with the most transcendental of the divine trinity
which constitutes man's higher parts, ending with the third of these, the fifth
principle. These three are (7) Atma, pure spirit; (6) Buddhi, spirit soul; and
(5) Manas, human soul.
(7) Atma , or
pure spirit: of this little can be said without once again returning to the
metaphysics of the second chapter. Neither spirit nor matter per se can be held
really to enter into the constitution of man, and can therefore hardly be called
"principles" at all, but as they are the basis of his make-up they
are tabulated. Atma is the name given by Theosophists for the pure spiritual
essence, the light, as it were, from which the higher rays of his being spring:
it is his HIGHER SELF- the god above rather than within him.
(6) Buddhi, or
spiritual soul, is the first emanation from this light and is its vehicle or
body. In spiritual clairvoyance it is impossible to ascend higher than this,
or rather than Buddhi in conjunction with Manas- the causal body- or divine
consciousness. It is the spiritual soul as distinguished from pure spirit.
Atma and Buddhi together
constitute what has been called the Monad, or the spiritual part of man which
experiences; the "Pilgrim"
(5) Manas, the
human soul, the fifth principle, is by far the most important of the seven.
It is the ego per se, the "I am "I" consciousness within us,
and it is the link between spirit and matter in the human individual, the point
where heaven and earth may be said to kiss one another. Man is greater than
any being on earth because he is able to understand both spiritual and material
life, although in this age the latter alone is comprehended.
Soul is a generic
name: we have spoken of the of the spiritual and animal souls, and likewise
soul has been applied to the Monad or Atma-Buddhi, the Pilgrim which has to
experience individual existence. Now we shall have to mention another- the human
Soul, Manas. As neither Atma (pure spirit) nor Buddhi, its vehicle or soul,
can comprehend matter, and as on the other hand matter has no power to understand
spirit, a link is wanted before true experience is possible. This link is Manas,
possessed on this earth by man alone. He, of all creatures, is the only one
who can dwell either among the gods or with the brutes, who in the self-consciousness
of his mentality can grasp, draw together, study and understand all sides of
nature. Verily an incarnate god, in this age he has permitted himself to degenerate
almost to the level of the brute.
Manas is a Sanskrit
word derived from man, the root of the verb "to think", and therefore
conveys essentially the idea of a thinker. [Our word "man" has its
root in this.] It is the perception of egoity within, and according to Occultism
it is alone the heirloom of man, the animals being conscious, but not self-conscious.
So that Manas is not simply the mind, but it is rather the perception of "I
am-ness", that from which the faculty of comparison, analysis or thought
proceeds. It is the direct emanation from Mahat.
Now if we suppose
the root of man's nature - the spiritual trinity out of which he springs, to
be prepared to experience earthly life for a period, we shall see the manasic
portion of it about to incarnate in the animal child born of terrestrial parentage.
But is has not the power of fully entering into the life on earth; only the
lowest phase of its being can be said to really do so, and this enters the man-child
and forthwith assumes the lordship over it. And from the moment of his birth,
every human being has two selves, his "ego and alter ego", one of
which reigns on earth, the other dwelling in the heavenly abodes; these being
apparently divorced from one another, but really forming one individual. At
night, when his body is sleeping, if undistracted by the dreams of the Deva-world,
his terrestrial self may once again become "one with the Father in Heaven";
it is said, however, that he can recall but little memory of such conjunction
unless he has passed through an Initiation [been initiated into some of the
mysteries of his own nature. The word is here used in the mystic sense familiar
to all Kabalists, Neo-Platonists and other students of the soul-sciences. Derived
from the Latin initio, meaning literally to go into, or to enter upon, a new
condition, it hence signifies here, and in theosophical literature, a change
of being, through a clearer perception of the soul and of the essentials of
nature. In the ancient Temple-Mysteries of Egypt, India and Greece, various
ceremonies were attended by the Candidate for Initiation , symbolic of the changes
of state experienced by his soul] .
Manas is, for
these reasons, to be considered as divided into two, or as having two aspects,
called respectively Higher and Lower Manas. The link between them, the mode
of consciousness by which the self changes from one to the other is called Antaskarana,
which can only be said to exist for the lower self when it is conscious of higher
aspirations than those which are drawn from its contact with earthly objects.
So that the Theosophist holds that nothing of a spiritual nature, no matter
of what kind, can reach man save as an influence sent by his Higher Manas to
him. However badly such messages may be translated because of the veil of earthly
nature through which they must filter, yet we owe to them anything of an order
higher than animality which enters the heart of man.
Thus we see that
the Lower Manas, our own conscious self, suffers through being bound in the
animal frame, unless it succeed in fully dominating the brute to which it is
tied. It is the old story of the two thieves: Jesus, the soul - Lower Manas-
is crucified between the two thieves, the brute and the god, each of which would
fain steal him for himself, but only to one can he say "thou shalt be with
me in Paradise".
This must complete
our description of the seven principles for the present; as the work proceeds
it will be seen how important a part they play in explanation of the phenomena
of the birth, life, and death of the creature we call human. One point, however,
needs elucidation. It is not to be imagined that the perfect seven-principled
man could be produced at nature's first effort. Man is the flower of his planet,
and it has taken ages to evolve him even to the height of imperfect development
he has reached. All the different forces that play in this system- all the "gods"-
had to combine together to produce man; he had, as will be seen, not one, but
many "creators" being literally built up by the power of the different
energizing essences. These, however, have been educated or instilled into him
gradually - one additional principle alone becoming active during each of the
seven races- first as natural effect, but afterwards as the result of his own
self-devised efforts. Now at present man is - on this planet (the earth) and
in this Round (the fourth) - in the fifth of these races, and therefore, without
recognizing his development as a whole, we shall find him to be generally in
possession of fivefold attributes. We see him a creature of five extremities,
a veritable "five pointed star", as the Rosicrucians
symbolized him- with five fingers, five toes, five senses, five organs of sense.
His development is not therefore above the fifth stage- that of the human soul
or the mind- having as yet as little perception of the sixth, or spiritual soul,
as he has of a sixth sense. To put it in other words; the Monad or true ego,
has succeeded, after many ages of effort, in evolving, or perceiving in itself,those
qualities pertaining to the first five "principles", and it has yet,
before it can claim permanent rest after its toils, to evolve the other two.
But man is only in the fourth Round on this planet, and although a partial development
of the whole seven principles is made in each Round, yet the keynote for the
period will be the principle corresponding to that Round. Therefore, as this
is the fourth, so also the fourth principle that of Desire - for good or for
bad- is the real keynote of man's being at present. Great indeed is he who can
surmount it, and , passing ahead of his time, become a Buddha!
From all this
it will be evident that with a full comprehension of each of the "seven
men" which are bound together in the human being, an understanding of their
nature, and a knowledge of their heredity, man becomes a god, having dominion
over the seven elements of nature- each of which is powerfully related to a
"principle"- and reflecting in himself the whole cosmos. For "as
man is a sevenfold being, so is the universe; the septenary microcosm being
to the septenary macrocosm but as the drop of rainwater to the cloud from which
it has dropped, and to which in the course of time it will return. In the One
are embraced or included so many tendencies for the evolution of air, fire,
water, etc. (from the purely abstract down to their concrete conditions), and
when those latter are called elements, it is to indicate their productive potentialities
for numberless form-changes or evolutions of being.
"Let us
represent the unknown quantity as X : that quantity is the one eternal, immutable
principle; and
a,
b, c, d, e, five of the six minor principles
or components of the same- viz., the principles of earth, water, air, fire and
ether (Akasha)
, following
the order of their spirituality, and beginning with the lowest. There is a sixth
principle answering to the sixth principle (called in the east Buddhi) in man
(to avoid confusion, remember that in viewing the question from the side of
the descending scale, the abstract All, or eternal principle, would be numerically
designated as the first, and the phenomenal universe as the seventh, whether
belonging to man or the universe- viewed from the other side, the numerical
order will be reversed); but we are not permitted to name it except among the
Initiates. I may, however, hint that it is connected with the process of the
highest intellection. Let us call it N;
and
besides there is, under all the activities of the phenomenal universe, an energizing
impulse from X-
call this
Y.
Algebraically
stated, our equation will therefore read: a+b+c+d+e+N=Y=X. Each of the first
six letters represents, so to speak, the spirit or abstraction of what you call
elements (your meagre English gives me no other word). Thus spirit controls
the entire live of evolution around the entire cycle of cosmic activity, in
its own department, the informing, vivifying, evolving cause, behind the countless
manifestations in that department of nature.
"Let us work
out the idea with a single example. Take fire: D, the primal igneous principle
resident in X , is the ultimate cause of every phenomenal manifestation of fire
on all the globes of the chain. The proximate causes are the evolved secondary
igneous agencies which severally control the seven descents of fire on each
planet, every element having its seven principles, and every principle its seven
sub-principles, and so these secondary agencies have in their turn to become
primary causes.
"D"
is a septenary compound, of which the highest
fraction is pure spirit. As we see it on our globe, it is in its coarsest, most
material condition, as gross in its way as is man in his physical encasement.
In the next preceding globe to ours,fire was less gross than here; on the one
before that, less still. So the body of flame was more and more pure, and less
and less material, on each antecedent planet. On the first of all in the cyclic
chain, it appeared as an almost pure objective shining
- the
Maha Buddhi, the sixth principle of the
eternal
light....
On
each globe of the chain there are seven manifestations of fire, of which the
first in order will compare, as to its spiritual quality, with the last manifested
on the next preceding planet; the process being reversed, as you will infer
with the opposite arc. The myriad specific manifestations of these six universal
elements are in their turn but the offshoots, branches, or branchlets of the
one single primordial tree of life" [Letter from an adept, quoted in "Man;
Fragments of Forgotten History".]
It is upon
a correct understanding of the "seven principles of man" that rests
a knowledge of Occultism. The principles are each drawn from one of the seven
planes of the cosmos. Man is therefore a veritable copy of the whole universe
and through a complete understanding and rendering active of his seven natures
he becomes acquainted with all the laws of Being. No other entity on this globe
is perfect; - the fire of Manas is wanting in the animal, Kama is absent from
the plant, Prana does not exist in the mineral. Atma-Buddhi, the Monad, is of
course present in all things, but is not individualized save in the higher organisms.
Even in the animal there is wanting that which can form a self-conscious link
between its lower nature and its spirit. Only in man does this exist, and it
is Manas. This principle in man is an incarnate god, and, as will later be explained,
has come from other spheres to help on the evolution of this globe. Each of
us therefore in his inmost self, is a foreigner on this planet, with definite
labour to perform; we have to educate all things below us. Few of us have realized
this. But even ordinary man, little as he follows the high calling of his life
or heeds his higher nature, is yet helping forward nature's work. He touches
a plant, and it is cultivated; an animal, and it is tamed! Wherever he goes
he dominates and changes the face of the globe. But he will only have quite
fulfilled his mission on that day when he has endowed everything with the power
of his own soul.
LIFE
AND DEATH
There is
a principle of the soul, superior to all nature, through which we are capable
of surpassing the order and systems of the world. When the soul is elevated
to natures better than itself, then it is entirely separated from subordinate
natures, exchanges this for another life, and, deserting the order of things
with which it was connected, links and mingles itself with another.
Iamblichus
The house
of life hath many chambers.
Rossetti
It is seldom
indeed in this age of precipitancy, impetuosity and confused activity, that
one comes to question himself without bias as to the wherefore of his curious
life. Religionists are prone to rely entirely on the creed they have come to
by inheritance, and therefore constantly tend to throw back their powers of
thought into the beliefs formed in their infancy. Little inquiry is made; less
advance possible. So-called scientific investigators, on the hand, fall into
an equally obvious error. The training of youth is ever to regard externals
as finalities; to take heed of appearances, rather than of whatever reality
may lie behind them. This analysis of surroundings, carried to its furthest
limits, and into the vigorous thought of mature age, is what is usually, though
improperly, denominated "scientific investigation". How if both sides
be wrong? What if the beliefs of the religionist be based upon error; the "discoveries"
of the biologist upon a wrong conception of life? What if each person's life
be nothing but a nightmare dream? Of little avail then would be doctrinal knowledge,
or scientific examination of the surrounding shadows. Yet no one can positively
affirm that such is not the case.
The philosopher,
however, is not content with shadows, whether for belief or investigation, but
tries to find a key to the situation by a study of himself in relation to life
at large, analysing his own mind to find from whence its inspirations spring,
and reaching down into the depths of his conscious being to discover a rock
whereon to base some absolute knowledge.
In such search
it is but natural that he should advance along the lines followed by his predecessors
in the same field. However varied human natures may be, all follow approximately
along the same road of experience, and it is decidedly to the advantage of those
who are thinking in certain directions to have access to the record of experiences
of others who have gone before. Theosophy is little more than the recorded experiences
of thousands who have dived into and studied the workings of the human mind,
of seer after seer who have for ages sought truth in this domain; if such be
the claim of the science, it deserves consideration at least at the hands of
earnest thinkers.
We ordinarily fancy
that the life we spend here, the waking state, or physical being, is the only
one of which we are properly conscious any other state we may pass through being
regarded as abnormal or of no account. Strange that we should hold to this when
we have almost daily testimony to the fact that we know next to nothing about
this consciousness at all. Case after case has been recorded where persons have
lived through seemingly long periods in a second of time. De Quincey mentions
one where sixty years were passed through in less than a minute! Abernethy affirms
that on a certain occasion, when sitting with one of his pupils in his study,
a hand-bell fell from off the table on to the floor, and during the short space
of time that it took to pass through the air, the student dreamed that he had
committed a crime, had been sentenced to twenty years of penal servitude, and
had served his time. He saw the years go by with their sorrow and pain. On the
last day he heard the gong sounding to call him in from work. It was the bell
striking the floor! If we have such problems as these to deal with in life,
who shall say what our normal state is, since the sum-total of our present life
may, from another aspect of thought, or plane of consciousness, be passed through
in a second
of time.
The whole problem
of consciousness may be well expressed in the anecdote of the Persian philosopher,
who, seated one day writing in his garden, observed a butterfly moving to and
fro among the flowers; and watching it intently, he fell into a trace and fancied
himself a butterfly also. He flitted about among the plants, around the garden,
and finally flew away into the woods. Half an hour later he suddenly awoke to
find himself seated before his writing. Then reasoned the sage thus: "Was
I then a philosopher fancying myself a butterfly; or am I now a butterfly who
imagines himself a philosopher?"
Let us see what Theosophy
has to say for human consciousness. Every person dreams, although not every
one remembers having done so. This is because the various organs through which
the thinking part of man functions, are not always coordinated. Each individual
is conscious physically, psychically and spiritually, and every one of his experiences
in each of these states is of equal importance in his evolution as a whole.
But the memory of one state is not ordinarily carried into the next.
Occult training
teaches how to coordinate theses states. Modern discoveries in hypnotism have
conclusively proved that freedom of mental action, or clearness of vision, is
often much greater during sleep than at other times, giving to the somnambulist
knowledge of events and even of languages not possessed by him when awake. The
dullest intellects are sharpened to a degree far exceeding the average; clairvoyant
powers are established; and even cases of prophetic vision recorded. But hypnotism
is only a dishing-up of the arcane theurgic practices, of sorcery and the magic
of old. And but a very small portion indeed has been revived. The "discovery"
the schools have made in this instance constitutes only one of the many ways
of coordinating two states of consciousness, and not by any means the best way
either, for the subjects rarely, if ever, remember the experiences they have
passed through, upon being awakened out of the trance. Still hypnotists have
made some discoveries, and if what they say be true, can anyone yet deny the
possibility of wakefulness on other planes of being, during sleep, or the periods
of unconsciousness here?
Through experiments
and training, based upon a greater knowledge of natural laws than we of the
west have, the eastern occultists have discovered how to coordinate the various
states of consciousness, to reflect into the brain any knowledge gained during
trance or sleep, and thus to carry it into the subsequent waking stage. They
teach us as follows: during an incarnation- the period of time that we are associated
with any one physical body - the states of consciousness which are proper to
the Lower Manas, or "I am" principle in us, divide themselves roughly
into:
Sanskrit
Terms
|
English
Equivalents
|
Yagrata |
Waking |
Svapna |
Dreaming |
Sushupti |
Trance |
These without
taking cognizance of the fourth or highest spiritual state.
The only one of these
three which is not generally known to us is the dreamless or trance state. All
those confused memories which we bring back from our nightly slumbers, all the
various states pertaining to catalepsy, lethargy, somnambulism, must be grouped
under the class called svapna or dreaming, which constitutes the link between
the Sushupti and the Yagrata. But each condition is walled off from its fellow
by a barrier which is with difficulty broken down, and only under circumstances
bringing about an abnormal arrangement of the principles. The three states may
roughly be compared to three chambers leading into one another through spring
doors. Directly anyone passes from one room to another, the door diving them
shuts, cutting off the communication and allowing no view of the room just left.
Room No. 2 lying midway between the other two, must be passed through in getting
from No. 1 to No. 3, or vice versa, and we can see by this analogy that the
intermediary state of svapna or dreaming has to be passed through before one
can enter the Sushupti, or trance state, from the waking , or Yagrata. Again,
directly we pass from one to another,the doors close, and we have no memory
of what we have left behind. But by certain processes the doors may be held
partially open, and then it is possible to retain the memory of the other states,
at lest to some limited extent. Glimpses can be caught through the half-open
door of what the next chamber is like, and what it holds.
So that although
when we sleep we pass into states transcending the Yagrata or waking consciousness,
yet when we again return here, it is a rare occurrence for us to carry back
any recollection of what we may have been doing or experiencing. That we have
dreamed, however, without immediately recollecting it, is often proved by the
fact that after the lapses of many hours or even days, some trivial instance
may serve to stir the chords of memory, establishing a momentary link between
our waking and sleeping consciousness and enabling us to recall some incident
of the dream. The avenues leading from the waking to the dreaming, or from the
dreaming to the trance states may be held open by the use of certain drugs,
by such processes as hypnotism or mesmerism, or by an idiosyncrasy of the individual,
but normally none have consciousness on the physical plane or in the ordinary
waking state, of what has occurred in other conditions.
Few persons
have the power in ordinary everyday life of relating their ego sum to anything
else than chairs and tables, rooms and people. Consequently they are not assured
of the fact of their immortality; living only a life of relativity's, they know
nothing outside their impermanent and transitory existence. They have no fixed
point, no stronghold within themselves where they can retire at will "far
from the madding crowd", no real "home". Nevertheless, belief
in his immortality, in what has been loosely called an "after-state",
is strong in the breast of man, and this alone would prove a powerful factor
in any argument in favour of it. But what need for argument; if it be true that
we retain our consciousness, our egoity, from sleeping to waking - and there
is no conceivable reason why we should regain it upon again rising from our
slumbers it we do not - then who can object to the statement that it is eternal,
that it has existed and will exist everlastingly, and that the only reason why
we are at present bound within the walls of time, knowing a beginning, a future
and a past, is because of the materiality of our conceptions?
That fact is, that
while our consciousness, or that pertaining to the real self within - the higher
aspect of Manas - is eternal, yet as a manifestation only of the One Supreme,
it- during a Manvantara - is subject to the same great law of cycles, which
underlies the workings of all things in the universe. So that it has its greater
periods of waking and sleeping, as well as its lesser, each knowing an almost
infinite subdivision into smaller and smaller cycles. For a period it manifests
here, and we call that Life; for a period it sleeps, and we call that Death.
They are but transitory phases of the everlasting consciousness. Life, however,
again divides itself into the alternation of day and night, during the latter
of which, in sleep, the ego once more frees itself from the cares of this world
and ascends to purer regions; and it is said that once in seven nights at least,
man has reunion with his god.
Thus life is
a journey, a march around the great cycle of experience; this cycle being but
one step of a spiral composed itself of thousands of lesser and ever lessening
spirals. Each "Pilgrim" has to pass through cycles of waking and sleeping,
of life and death, of races, of globes, of Rounds, of planets, of systems, of
universes, in an ever upward climb, ever enlarging its knowledge of existence,
ever placing at greater distances the boundary mark of its finite perceptions;
so to an en eventual merging in the pure essence of life, the fount at which
it had drawn its being.
DEATH
AND AFTER
The soul
leaving the body, becomes that power which it has most developed.
Plotinus
When we
die we shall find that we have not lost our dreams; but that we have only lost
our sleep.
Richter
But the various
phases or states of consciousness of which we have been writing, refer only
to the period of incarnation, or life as associated with the physical plane.
And as our consciousness of any state runs, as said, in cycles, sooner or later
our perceptions of this present existence end, and we pass away, as from waking
to sleeping, to a condition, more or less prolonged, of rest.
Ordinarily speaking,
death is the destruction of the physical body. Occultism says it is far more.
It is the dividing-up of all the principles of which the human being is composed,
and the return of each to its respective source. Death is the portal to rest;
but it would be absurd to fancy that such rest is only for the self-conscious
lord of the numberless beings that harmonized together in the building called
man. Each of these rests also, and from this point of view we may define death
as the return of all the constituents elements composing any being, to their
respective homes. The physical body gradually dissolves after the separation
from it of the astral body or Linga Sharira, the latter itself slowly fading
out. Prana rebecomes Jiva, and the Kamic element is dissipated in its own sphere.
The Lower Manas, or human soul, thus freed from the four chains which bind it
down to earth, escapes into the spiritual world and claims reunion with its
alter ego - its "Father in Heave".
But before describing
the actual processes undergone,during death, according to the occult philosophy,
some description of the different lokas, abodes, and states through which the
soul passes in its upward flight, and those to which its destiny will eventually
lead it, are necessary.
Modern Christianity,
or at least the Protestant fraternity, recognizes but two after-death states
- "Heaven" and "Hell". Roman Catholicism has in addition
that of "Purgatory". But those of the esoteric philosophy, like those
of the Egyptians and the Greeks, and of all the great religious systems are
almost innumerable. While this is so, however, it names only "three principal
lokas,
so
called - namely, 1, Kama loka;
2, Rupa
loka; 3,
Arupa
loka ;
or,
in their literal translation and meaning -1, world of desires or passions, of
unsatisfied earthly cravings- the abode of "Shells" and Victims, of
Elementaries, and Suicides; 2, the world of Forms - i.e.,
of shadows
more spiritual, having form and objectivity, but no substance; and, 3, the
formless
world,
or rather the world of no form, the incorporeal, since its denizens can have
neither body, shape nor colour for us mortals, and in the sense that we give
to these terms. There are the three spheres of ascending spirituality in which
the several groups of subjective and semi-subjective entities find their attractions.
All but the suicides and the victims of premature violent deaths go, according
to their attractions and powers, either into the Devachanic or the Avitchi state,
which two states form the numberless subdivisions of Rupa and Arupa lokas- that
is to say, that such states not only vary in degree, or in their presentation
to the subject entity as regards form, colour, etc., but that there is an infinite
scale, of such states, in their progressive spirituality and intensity of feeling;
from the lowest in the Rupa, up to the highest and the most exalted in the Arupa-loka
The student must bear in mind that
personality
is
the synonym for limitation; and that the more selfish, the more contracted the
person's ideas, the closer will he cling to the lower spheres of being, the
longer loiter on the plane of selfish social intercourse". [Extract from
an Adept's letter, quoted in Esoteric Buddhism, page 141].
We are thus immediately
brought to a consideration of the two principal states into which the souls
of the dead enter, to rest during the period intervening between incarnation
and incarnation.
Devachan claims
our first attention. Although literally the "abode of the gods", it
is a state rather than a locality, and is that pure, spiritual condition of
rest which is the lot of the average man after he has "shuffled off this
mortal coil". It will be recollected that the manasic principle, during
the period of incarnation,is divided into two parts, or better expressed, perhaps,
has two aspects- a higher and a lower; and that the latter constitutes the real
human soul or personal being. The transitory period of life ended, the two Manases
or selves rebecome one, and are virtually the same as before life,but with this
addition- the recollection or association of the experiences passed through
by the lower. Spirit must have a material basis through which to express itself;
the noumenon is unseen save through the phenomenon, and in this way we can understand
the impossibility of any spiritual enjoyment by the personality without an association
of its consciousness with the memory of the things it had left behind. Consequently
the aroma of the life, the most divine thoughts, everything that approached,
however remotely, to aspiration, is one with the Devachanee, together with the
same environment and friends as in the earth-life."We say that the Bliss
of the Devachanee consists in the complete conviction that it has never left
the earth, that there is no such thing as death at all".
[See H.P.Blavatsky's Key to Theosophy page 146]
The illusion
is perfect. It can only be compared to a prolonged refreshing dream, in which
the sleeper has every wish gratified, every hope fulfilled, every aspiration
realized, where, surrounded by all he loved, he lives and breathes in an atmosphere
of purity and bliss, forgetting absolutely that anything ordinarily termed
sorrow exists or ever did exist, or that he had ever suffered.
The great cause
of pain and sorrow to the human being on earth arises out of his severance,
during lifetime, from the spiritual half of his nature- the Higher Manas. The
half-remembrance of that blissful state of completeness and purity is ever
before him, and while this is so there is little rest. Filled eternally with
an indefinable longing, an indescribable yearning for a something unknown, he
seeks here and there, laying hold of this or that thing, in the everlasting
search after happiness; but not until his higher consciousness is fully known
to him can there be any bliss for mortal man.
Union of the Higher
and Lower Egos may take place either during earth-life, at the time of an Initiation,
or afterwards in the Devachanic state - and sometimes during sleep, as before
spoken of. Evolution or progress, as we understand the term, is only possible
during earth-life, and it will therefore be seen that in the instance of this
union being effected before the separation of the four lower principles, or
at death, the experiencing possibilities and consequent progression of the individual
are not thereby hindered, but enormously increased; whereas after death nothing
new can be added, and in Devachan he simple lives over and over again his past
life, only with a blissful unconsciousness of sorrow or sadness, and a conscious
realization of all his spiritual hopes and longings.
To the ordinary
mortal his bliss in Devachan is complete. "The
Devachanee
lives
its intermediate cycle between two incarnations surrounded by everything it
had aspired to in vain, and in the companionship of everyone it loved on earth.
It has reached the fulfillment of all its soul-yearnings. And thus it lives
throughout long centuries an existence of unalloyed
happiness,
which is the reward for its suffering in earth-life. In short, it bathes in
a sea of uninterrupted felicity spanned only by events of still grater felicity
in degree". [ Key to Theosophy, page 148]
Readers, however,
unacquainted with the harmony of the esoteric doctrine, will doubtless offer
ready objections to a heaven such as that depicted above. It may be urged that
such a "fool's paradise" can be of no real benefit as a rest, since
the shock of waking to the terrible realities of life must be increased proportionately
to the intensity of the blissful illusion.
But waking
means nothing other than rebirth. Once we have passed the threshold leading
into earth-life, the draught of Lethe has been taken, and no shock whatever
is encountered, since the soul has no more recollection of its Devachanic experiences
than we have of what our consciousness has been during a night spent in deep
sleep. One we rise with a sense of refreshment and revivification.
Again, "It
is such a waste of time". Yet nature does not consider it waste of time
to sleep. Nothing more lawful or necessary can be conceived of, and this period
of rest between two earth-lives, in the theosophical systems, is really but
one more tribute to the harmony of the whole Devachan , though a rest, is not
altogether the waste of time one might at first suppose. It is a period of spiritual
gestation, when all the ideal qualities of the mind, of which the hurried and
busy everyday life of civilized man permits but little or no expansion, find
opportunity to grow and develop. "For that dream-life is but the fruitage,
the harvest time, of those spiritual seed-germs dropped from the tree of physical
existence in our moments of dream and hope- fancy-glimpses of bliss and happiness,
stifled in an ungrateful social soil, blooming in the rosy dawn of Devachan
and ripening under its ever-fructifying sky. If man had but one single moment
of ideal experience, not even then could it be, as erroneously supposed, the
indefinite prolongation of that 'Single moment'. That one note, struck from
the lyre of life, would form the keynote of the being's subjective state, and
work out into numberless harmonic tones and semitones of the spiritual phantasmagoria
There, all unrealized hopes, aspirations, dreams, become fully realized, and
the dreams of the objective become the realities of the subjective existence..."
But enough
has been said to explain the nature of the devachanic state, which is one of
rest and spiritual enjoyment. We must pass on to consider its antithesis- that
of Avitchi.
Like Devachan, Avitchi
is a state, not a locality, and is one of the most "idea Spiritual wickedness,
something akin to the state of Lucifer, so superbly described by Milton".
But true Avitchi is not possible to the humanity of this globe; only the black
magician, and perhaps to some extent the most absolutely depraved among soulless
men, can reach anything approaching this condition. All others receive whatever
punishment may be their due, on earth. As will be seen in the section "Karma
and Reincarnation", the good and evil deeds of one earth-life entitle the
doer to a just reward or punishment in the next, or in succeeding incarnations,
and all our suffering here is, according to the esoteric philosophy, the direct
outcome of our previous misdeeds. So that the only hell known is on earth. "There
are no hells but the man-bearing worlds". Few indeed are those who are
so absolutely without a single high thought during an incarnation as to render
a devachanic rest impossible after death, and far, far fewer are those who are
so spiritually depraved as to merit a condition of Avitchi. "Not many are
there who can reach it.. And if it be urged that since there is Devachan for
nearly all, for the good, the bad, and the indifferent, the ends of harmony
and equilibrium are frustrated and the law of retribution and of impartial,
implacable justice, hardly met and satisfied by such a comparative scarcity
if not absence of its antithesis, then the answer will show that it is not so.
'Evil is the dark son of Earth (matter), and Good- the fair daughter of Heaven'
(or Spirit), says the Chinese philosopher; hence the place of punishment for
most of our sins is the earth- their birthplace and playground. There is more
apparent and relative than actual evil even on earth, and it is not given to
the hoi
polloi to reach the fatal grandeur and eminence
of a 'Satan' every day". [letter from an Adept, quoted in Esoteric Buddhism,
page 143].
Definition of the
state of the normal individual between the two earth-lives - the devachanic-
having been accomplished, further elucidation of the after-death conditions
will be best carried on along illustrative lines. Let us fancy a man to be dying;
then, as the soul wings its flight to other spheres, let us see what becomes
of it, and of the body and the remaining principles thus freed and separated
from each other and their lord.
No idle speculation
is it that the dying recalls every detail of his life. As at the moment of birth
the child is said to prospect its future, so at death the ego looks back over
the road it has come and notes all the incidents that have befallen along the
way. Anyone of mature age, reviewing his past, will find that he has lived out
his whole span of years to learn but one great lesson. Throughout all the vicissitudes,
changes and experiences; embedded in the tangled maze of thoughts and ideals,
of unfulfilled soul-yearnings, unrealized desires; and finding its way out from
under
the rare glossing of felicity which shows out here and there, there runs a long
dark vein, as unsolved problem, which seems to carry in it also the key to the
whole life. Just above it, appearing and reappearing simultaneously with it,
is line of thought which may be said to embody the sum-total of the highest
aspirations,the individual's idea of the grand purpose of life. At the moment
of death, as each deed and even rush through the brain, these lines stand out
brighter than the rest; all other thoughts, the aroma of every past deed, fall
in harmony with them, and the vibration organ sounds as it were but one prolonged
note. And upon the final emission of the soul it carries with it this thought-summation
which shall determine the nature of its future birth.
"At the last
moment the whole life is reflected in our memory and emerges from all the forgotten
nooks and corners, picture after picture, one event after another. The dying
brain dislodges memory with a strong, supreme impulse; and memory restores faithfully
every impression that has been entrusted to it during the period of the brains'
activity. That impression and thought which was the strongest,naturally becomes
the most vivid, and survives, so to say, all the rest, which now vanish and
disappear forever, to reappear but in Devachan. No man dies insane or unconscious,
as some physiologists assert. Even a madman, or one in a fit of delirium tremens,
will have his instant of perfect lucidity at the moment of death, though unable
to say so to those present. The man may often appear dead, yet from the last
pulsation, and between the last throbbing of the heart and the moment when the
last spark of animal heat leaves the body, the
brain thinks, and
the ego lives in those few brief seconds his whole life over again. Speak in
whispers, ye who assist at a deathbed, and find yourselves in the solemn presence
of Death! Especially have ye to keep quiet just after Death has laid her clammy
hand upon the body. Speak in whispers, I say, lest you disturb the quiet ripple
of thought, and hinder the busy work of the Past casting its reflection upon
the veil of the Future!...
The Hindus hold that
if a man pronounces the name of Rama at the moment of death he will go to the
Supreme. And the writer has been assured by travelers in India, that the more
ignorant of the people may be often seen lying on their backs at certain hours
of the day, crying constantly "Rama, Rama, Rama,... " hoping that
death might come upon them while they pronounced the sacred name. But what is
really meant by this mystic teaching is that he who at the moment of death has
in his brain only the one dominant thought of aspiration to unity with the Supreme,
will have such aspirations realized. In other words, such bliss is only for
him who has held no other thought during his whole life.
The link which
binds the ego to the physical body having snapped at the moment of death, the
Linga Sharira separates from it, and its parts straightway commence to fall
asunder, only a few months being required for it to decompose and return to
its mother element, the earth. This decomposition sets free, the Prana or life-essence
which it has held, and this is one reason perhaps why dead substances often
impart to living organisms such life-giving properties; why, for instance, the
grass is always greenest on the grave.
Immediately after
the dying individual has separated from the body he finds himself in the state
called Kama Loka, where he is compelled to remain until he has freed himself
from all the gross desires which chain him down to earth. This period, in the
case of the majority of men, is one of semi-consciousness, or like a drowsy,
drunken sleep; it may last a few days, or it may last hundred of years, according
to the life the individual has led, and according to the effort he has made
to rid himself of his lower tendencies while alive. Having cast off the gross
elements, the soul or Lower Manas is freed, and presently rejoins its spiritual
half, being born into the devachanic state, and here it remains until the time
comes for it to again take up the thread of destiny on earth, to suffer reincarnation.
But, some may
ask, what if the gross elements which bind its desire to earth are too strong
to enable the personality to obtain the mastery over them? Then, and in such
case, it becomes an "earthbound soul" and remains in Kama Loka until
the time arrives for reincarnation, instead of passing into Devachan. In the
Egyptian "Book of the Dead" the good or purified soul, after death
"in conjunction with its higher or uncreated spirit, is more or less the
victim of the dark influence of the dragon Apophis (the bundle of terrestrial
desires). If it has attained the final knowledge of the heavenly and the infernal
mysteries- the gnosis, i.e., complete reunion with the Spirit, it will triumph
over its enemies; if not, the soul cannot escape its second death", such
second death being a spiritual one by reason of the severing of the link which
bound it to its Higher Ego.
To say much more
concerning the awful mystery of such soul-death is here impossible, but it should
be added that the actions performed by the individual after death, such as freeing
himself from earth-desire in Kama Loka, the warring with the dragon Apophis,
are only the effects of his actions and thoughts during the previous incarnation,
or life just ended. And therefore one may suffer spiritual death as well during
life as after. But the man who leads a naturally pure and virtuous life, albeit
no adept, need have no fear of such a catastrophe, although, not having knowledge
of the "heavenly and infernal mysteries" he will, after death, have
to suffer " a delay in the world of spirits, until he finds himself sufficiently
purified to receive it from his Spiritual 'Lord', one of the mighty Host. But
if otherwise, the 'soul', as a half animal principle, becomes paralyzed, and
grows unconscious of its subjective half... the Lord,.... and in proportion
to the sensuous development of the brain and nerves, sooner or later, it finally
loses sight of its divine mission on earth. Like the Vourdalak, or Vampire,
of the Servian tale, the brain feeds and lives and grows in strength and power
at the expense of its spiritual parent. Then the already half-unconscious soul,
now fully intoxicated by the fumes of earthly life, becomes senseless, beyond
hope of redemption. It is powerless to discern the splendour of its higher spirit,
to hear the warning voice of its "Guardian Angel" and its 'God' It
aims but at the development and fuller comprehension of natural, earthly life;
and thus can discover but the mysteries of physical nature. Its grief and fear,
hope and joy, are all closely blended with its terrestrial existence. It ignores
all that cannot be demonstrated either by its organs of action or sensation.
It begins by becoming virtually dead; it dies at last completely. It is annihilated.
Such a catastrophe may often happen long years before the final separation of
the life-principle from the body. When death arrives, its iron and clammy grasp
finds work with life as usual; but there is no more a soul to liberate. The
whole essence of the latter has been already absorbed by the vital system of
the physical man. Grim death frees but a spiritual corpse; at best an idiot.
Unable either to soar higher or to awaken from lethargy, it is soon dissolved
in the elements of the terrestrial atmosphere... Our present cycle is preeminently
one of such soul-deaths. [Isis Unveiled, Vol.II., page 368, 369]
Yet is is said
that even one who has become dead to his spiritual self can yet be "born
again", through genuine aspiration, or by a knowledge of his mission on
earth arrived at through occult study, the first step in which is an intellectual
grasp of the tenets of the Wisdom-Religion.
From the foregoing,
the reader will have gathered that the death of the individual sets free the
various principles, each of which has then to be accounted for in the scheme
of nature. First of all, the physical body or gross particles of matter held
together during life by the vital astral form, return to the earth, departing
to their "home", the Linga Sharira disappearing with them and fading
into the Astral Light. The Linga Sharira, however, remains intact, thought separate
from the body, until the last vestige of the physical shell has gone, [ This
without taking account of the bone structure.] And during such dissolution may
be frequently seen hanging over the grave or place of rest of the grosser body,
as a shade of the deceased. The Prana, thus freed, rebecomes one with the pulsating
life-waves of the earth.
There yet remains
the Kamic element, the principle of desire, or terrestrial clingings of the
Lower Manas ("I am I" consciousness) to be disposed of before devachanic
bliss can be enjoyed. The "war" between the soul and its earthly proclivities
takes place, as shown, in Kama Loka, and continues until the personality is
purified sufficiently to become one with its spiritual self. Then the dross
thrown off- the Kama Rupa or body of desire - is dissipated in the aura of the
earth, its energy being transformed into elementals, which sleep, awaiting the
return of their Lord from the devachanic
rest. These constitute what are called the Skandhas of the personality: "they
remain as Karmic effects,
as
germs, hanging in the atmosphere of the terrestrial plane, ready to come to
life, like so many avenging fiends, to attach themselves to the new personality
of the Ego when it reincarnates". [Key to Theosophy] . Therefore it is
that each person, on being born, awakes to find himself carrying on a battle
with his lower nature, being compelled to conquer those tendencies left un-mastered
in the last life. In the case, however, of one whose lower desires were very
strong, the Kama Rupa may not dissipate, but may continue as a complete entity
between incarnation and incarnation. In any case it will remain so for a long
time, and until the entry of the ego into Devachan.
Kama Rupa is thus
seen to be the real element which binds the soul to earth. It may be called
the intellectualized animal part of man. H.P.Blavatsky used to say that if any
one lived for a long time in association with an animal, a dog, for instance,
making a pet of it, such a one actually endowed the animal with some degree
of intellect- lit partially the manasic fire- the brute in return animalizing
him to some extent. In each one of us resides both an animal and a god. If the
desire to pamper, feed and live with the brute nature, then we intellectualize
it, and in time our whole soul becomes absorbed in its behests. But if, on the
other hand, our communion be with the divine Higher Self, we starve the lower,
and in time it fades away.. But the Kama Rupa formed by and forming our connection
with the
lower world may be of any degree of energy, according to the strength of our
earthward proclivities. Any one who lives on this earth must possess some such
entity, even the highest adept, if he would remain in touch with the planet;
the spiritualized form produced in the the latter case is however very different
from that of the man of desire.
After death, the
Kama-rupic phantom, separated from the manasic principle, "no longer receiving
light from the higher mind, and no longer having a physical brain to work through,
collapses.... It falls into the state of the frog when certain portions of its
brain are taken out by the vivisector. It can think no more, even on the lowest
animal plane. Henceforth it is no longer even the Lower Manas, since this "lower"
is nothing without the "higher".. It is this nonentity we find materializing
in seance-rooms with mediums.... A true nonentity, however, only as to reasoning
or cogitating powers, still an Entity, however astral and fluidic, as shown
in certain cases when, having been magnetically and unconsciously drawn toward
a medium, it is revived for a time and lives in him by proxy, so to speak. This
"spook" or the Kama Rupa may be compared with the jellyfish, which
has an ethereal gelatinous appearance so long as it is in its own element, or
water (the medium's specific AURA )
but
which, no sooner is it thrown out of it, than it dissolves in the hand or on
the sand, especially in sunlight. In the medium's Aura it lives a kind of vicarious
life, and reasons and speaks either through the medium's brain or those of other
persons present [Key to Theosophy-Pages 144-145]. But if it finds no medium
or sensitive person upon whom to draw for vitality,it sleeps, or, splitting
up into elements, dies a natural death, and is resurrected only the day when
the Manas or Individual, its period of devachanic rest ended, seeks a fresh
incarnation in accordance with karmic law, to progress along its path of evolution.
Then the phantom awakes, is resurrected, and, drawn to its other self by the
unseen force which must link the creation to its creator, both are guided together
to the family in which is to be born the child which shall fulfill the karmic
destiny and answer the necessities of evolution. Rebirth follows; but with the
passing into the light of common day the draught of Lethe is taken, the past
forgotten. Yet the man awakes to meet his old enemy, his lower self, and to
carry on the war with it which lasts from the cradle to the grave.
So much for the normal
after-death states. There are, however, many other sides of the question to
be examined, such as those concerning accidental deaths, suicides, and the like.
All deaths occurring before the natural period, before the expenditure of the
force which was brought into play at the time of birth, necessitate - save in
exceptional cases- immediate reincarnation to complete the life. For such deaths,
whether of the soul, of the astral or of the physical body, constitute but the
forcible separation of one principle from the seven, not the natural loosening
of all.
Thus in the
case of suicides, or accidental deaths, all that has happened has been the severing
of the physical shell, the instrument through which the ego functions on this
plane. The man is complete minus his body, and must remain so until the time
for natural death arrives. But there is this difference between the victim of
circumstances and the suicide; that whereas the former is immediately united
to his Higher Manas and rests until the period for rebirth, the latter is compelled
to remain in Kama Loka during the same time- the vital distinction between death
in the two cases being identical to that between an energy affecting an entity
from outside, and a force generated within itself; one is a working off of old
Karma, the other a generating of new. The suicide's experience is therefore
one of the most awful that can be imagined. Remaining alive as before the severance
of the body, with full power to think, to live, he is without any means of functioning
on this plane. The desire to eat or drink, sleep, communicate with friends,
in short anything pertaining to the life he has just left, may be strong within
him, but he has no means of gratifying such save by establishing connection
through another body- that of some weak medium or sensitive. Thus he lives until
his hour for death and liberation arrives. Of course, however, the weaker his
lower desires, the fewer his tortures.
KARMA
AND REINCARNATION
Since the
soul perpetually runs and passes through all things in a certain space of time,
which being performed, it is presently compelled to run back again through all
things, and unfold the same web of generation in the world... for as often as
the same causes return,the same effects will in like manner be returned
- Ficin. De Im.
An. 129, Chaldean Oracles
Metempsychosis
is the only system of immortality that philosophy can hearken to.
Hume
From all that
has preceded it will be seen readily that reincarnation or rebirth is the fundamental
tenet of the esoteric philosophy. The doctrine is an exceedingly simple one,
and in so far as it relates to man can be stated in a few words. (1) That the
self or soul does not enter life here and now for the first time at birth, but
takes its position as a member of the human family only after a long course
of previous incarnations in other kingdoms of nature, on this earth and elsewhere,
its passage through the man-stage being likewise but the necessary prelude or
probation to after-experiences in higher and more perfect organisms. (2) That
life as a human being is not ordained for one incarnation only, but exists through
many, the position each person takes in anyone earth-life being the outcome
of his experience and merit in previous ones.
In the eminently
rational basis of such a doctrine we see at once so natural a solution for most
of the world-problems that it is not surprising to find it dominating the minds
of the greatest thinkers of every century and moulding the philosophies of all
countries, for incalculable ages.
To be sure, the reader
may not have before heard of it, but this is not any good reason for its untruthfulness.
It is not yet common in the West, because the intellectual development of the
American and European nations has not reached a point when they can formulate
a philosophy of their own; but among all matured races, the Egyptians, Hindus,
ancient Greeks, Chinese, the Mexicans, the Peruvians, the Jews, it was a common
doctrine, and, in fact, in the
present day as in the past, it may be stated fairly to be absolutely universal
outside of Christianity. This is not by any means because the founder of that
religion did not uphold it, but because his teachings have never been understood
correctly. If it could be shown to be a part of the Christian doctrine, its
universal character as a natural belief of man would be established. The writer
claims that it can be so shown, and holds that any difficulty that may arise
in so doing must be charged to the account of the early Christians, who, as
is now generally admitted, chose so to alter the original teachings to suit
their own views, as to render them hardly reconcilable with the real philosophy.
The history of the soul's trials, temptations, and final victory and illumination,
has been confounded with that of the Sage who expounded the Doctrine, the only
evidences for whose existence are now the four canonical gospels. [Concerning
which we read in Smith's "Dictionary of the Bible" (Art. New Testament),
that "the original copies seem to have perished. It is certainly remarkable
that in the controversies at the close of the second century, which often turned
upon disputed passages of Scripture, no appeal was made to apostolic originals...
Express statements of readings which are found in some of the most ancient Christian
writers are indeed the first direct evidence which we have, and are consequently
of the highest importance. But till the last quarter of the second century this
source of information fails us. Not only are the remains of Christian literature
up to that time exceedingly scanty, but the practice of verbal quotation from
the New Testament was not yet prevalent. As soon as definite controversies arose
among Christians, the text of the New Testament assumed its true importance.
The earliest monuments of these remain in the works of Irenaeus Hippolytus and
Tertullian, who quote many of the arguments of the leading adversaries of the
Church. Charges of corrupting the sacred text are urged on both sides with great
acrimony".]
Thus in
St. John, ix, Jesus is cited as healing a man - blind from his birth. "And
his disciples asked him saying, Master, who did sin, this man or his parents,
that he was
born
blind? Jesus
answered, neither hath this man sinned nor his parents: etc., etc.". Observe
the italicized word. Had the question been, "Master, who did sin, this
man or his parents, that he became blind? We should have no remark to make,
but the use of the word "born" distinctly implies a belief by the
disciples of a possible sin before birth. And if we remember that the apostles
were taught mysteries not revealed to the vulgar herd, and Jesus himself- an
Essene - must also have been a reincarnationist, then the claim that this was
a reference to such teachings has more than merely a supposed foundation.
Again, let the reader
turn to St. Matt. XI, 14, where Jesus, in speaking of John the Baptist, says:
"If ye will receive it, this is Elias, which was for to come". And
again in St.Matt. XVII., 12, 13L Elias is come already, and they knew him not,
but have done unto him whatsoever they listed... Then the disciples understood
that he spake unto them of John the Baptist". These remarks are so clear
as to call for no further comment.
Apart
from these two references to the belief, however, there are many others more
or less marked, to be found throughout the whole Bible and the Apocrypha.
The intelligent
reader will have perceived that two independent particulars enter into the doctrine
of reincarnation as formulated above; one, the fact of rebirth itself, apart
from anything which may affect or guide it - the simple statement of the immortality,
preexistence, and change of dwelling of the soul or self; the other a regulating
function in such process. That the latter is necessary is self-evident. It could
neither be rational, just, nor in keeping with the law of evolution, that the
soul, after inhabiting a relatively high organism, such as that of a human being,
should next take up its abode in a lower one, as a plant or an animal. Matter,
as has been affirmed several times already, is a purely passive element, and
has to be acted upon by the active principle of mind before forms can be produced,
so that our idea of scale or order in nature arises out of the effect produced
in matter by the influence of the different degrees of intelligences which ensoul
it, the existence of such degrees being again an effect of the varied experiences
of said intelligences.
Hence the position
in nature that a soul takes upon incarnation is held to be the direct result
of its past experiences; its formed deeds, good or bad, regulating the degree
of pleasure or suffering that will be its lot.
But "a theoretical
principle deduced from practice or observation"[Ogilvie] is known as law;
and seer after seer for untold ages having confirmed one another in their observation
of the reincarnationary process as taking place in the manner above stated,
we must speak of law as regulating it, such being known in Theosophy as Karma.
It is that which was referred to on page 37 as the "Ultimate Law of the
Universe".
The Buddhistic
doctrine of Karma is one which has held always an important place in the philosophy
of the exoteric as well as of the esoteric schools. The word has been introduced
into theosophical terminology for the simple reason that there is none in the
English language to express the idea intended. It does not simply signify "action
and reaction" nor yet, "cause and effect", but both of these.
In one sense it conveys the idea of ethical causation- "with what measure
ye mete, it shall be measured to you again"; in another, the balance of
individual merit and demerit considered as affecting one's actions and environment.
It is the law of Adjustment, the outcome of the unvarying tendency of nature
to bring about harmony and equilibrium, having its expression equally in the
Spiritual, Manasic, Astral, and Physical planes of existence.
Law cannot be said
to be seen, although its actions may be perceived, the term literally signifying
the determination of any body or bodies to certain changes or motions which
invariably take place under similar circumstances. Consequently Law is an abstraction,
is merely the name for the observed "like tendency of things in like condition".
This definition is necessary in view of the fact that many persons, after a
not very complete examination of this principle of theosophical teaching, have
come to the conclusion that Karma is to be understood in the light of a personal
god, combining the properties of an indulgent father or friend, and an avenging
fiend. But there is nothing personal about Law; it exists, and naught we may
do can avail one jot or tittle against its workings. No one would consider
that a fire had some personal spite against him, if upon plunging his hand into
the flame he were to draw it back scorched; or that the rain which drenched
its umbrellaless victim had acted with malicious intent. And why should we ascribe
any of the evils which may come upon us to anything other than the direct result
of a disregard of natural law? Such is surely far more logical than the Theologian's
assumption of an anthropomorphic deity, or the "chance" doctrine of
the atheistic and materialistic schools.
Until the advent
of the Theosophical Society, no full understanding of the doctrine of Karma
seems to have been arrived at by any in the West, even including Orientalists.
Yet the following definition of Mr. Rhys Davids deserves quoting: "Buddhism
is convinced that if a man reaps sorrow, disappointment, pain, he himself and
no other, must at some time have sown folly, error, sin! and if not in this
life, the in some former birth.. We are familiar with the doctrine 'Whatever
a man soweth that shall he also reap', and can therefore enter into the Buddhist
feeling that whatever a man reaps that he must also have sown; we are familiar
with the doctrine of the indestructibility of force, and can therefore understand
the Buddhist dogma (however it may contravene our Christian notions) that no
exterior power can destroy the fruit of a man's deeds, that they must work out
their full effect to the pleasant or the bitter end. But the peculiarity of
Buddhism lies in this: that the result of what a man is or does is held not
to be dissipated, as it were, into many separate streams, but to be concentrated
together in the formation of one new sentient being". Reincarnation it
will thus bee seen, is the necessary accompaniment to the doctrine of Karma.
Christianity usually imposes the after states of Hell or Heaven for the evil-doer
or the righteous man, but the representatives of this doctrine
do not generally seem to have held the notion that such after-states might as
easily find their expression on earth as anywhere else. There are places of
suffering here that we cannot fancy as excelled in any hell; and the heaven
of most men is not above the highest enjoyment of the material things that this
world can afford. And it is far more logical and in accordance with common sense
to believe that a cause generated on the physical plane should have a physical
effect, than that the "Spirit" should suffer for the misdeeds of the
flesh- misdeeds invariably directly antithetical to that Spirit's behests. That
the "Spirit is willing but the flesh weak" is well said, but if justice
is to be accorded, the body or lower man should suffer, not the higher; under
which circumstances most men would have to return to earth-life many times before
their full award was meted out.
Reincarnation refers
to the real man or thinker- the Manas, and not to the several other principles
with which that is associated. The division of the manasic element into two
aspects, a higher and a lower, has already been stated, but it should now be
made clear that this division can only be said to exist during the period of
incarnation. It it that part which comes into contact with the animal man which
is known as Lower Manas, the other half maintaining its station in the spiritual
spheres. After death the two become one, and for a period rest from the pain
of separation; but this period ended, it (now one Manas) again projects part
of itself into earth-life and another incarnation and simultaneous
division
of the Self results. So that no one can therefore say that it is the same Mr.
Brown or Mr. Smith who appears from life to life, but rather that the individualizing
self which inspired every succeeding birth, was identical. The "I am "
consciousness of each one of us may have looked out through the eyes of an Egyptian,
Chaldean or Arabian, but we are now no more Egyptian, Chaldean, or Arabian than
we were American or European in times past. Yet there are anomalies in reincarnation
as in everything else, and we find in rare cases the actual incarnation of the
personal being, comprising everything but his physical body. Thus "the
appearance of the same individual, or rather of his "astral monad, twice...
is not a rule in nature; it is an exception, like the teratological phenomenon
of a two-headed infant. It is preceded by a violation of the laws of harmony
of nature; and happens only when the latter, seeking to restore its disturbed
equilibrium, violently throws back into earth-life the astral monad which has
been tossed out of the circle of necessity by crime or accident. Thus, in cases
of abortion, of infants dying before a certain age, and of congenital and incurable
idiocy, nature's original design to produce a perfect human being has been interrupted.
Therefore, while the gross matter of each of these several entities is suffered
to disperse itself at death, through the vast realm of being, the immortal spirit
and astral monad of the individual - the latter having been set apart to animate
a frame and the former to shed its divine light on the corporeal organization-
must try a second time to carry out the purpose of the creative intelligence."
(Isis Unveiled, Vol. 1, page 351). We may add to the above, "suicides"
and "accidental deaths", in both of which cases the natural period
of incarnation not having been ended, the law generally forces a return without
any Devachanic period to complete this. This generally takes place within thirty-five
years after the natural period of death has arrived. The "certain age"
quoted above, before which infants dying are incarnated immediately, is seven
years, and this for the reason that before that age the Manas or ego and mind
has not fully associated itself with the child, but merely overshadows and protects
it.
Some have endeavoured
to show that reincarnation means the going back from the human form to the inhabitancy
of the brute or inanimate kingdoms. This is called "transmigration of souls",
but is not held by Theosophists as true of the human soul. The foundation for
the ignorant superstition that one's horse or dog may be his grandfather or
dead brother, lies in a very old teaching arising out of the recognition of
the fact in nature, referred to at the commencement of this chapter, that every
one of the fleeting atoms of which the body is composed, gains from it a certain
impress, the colouring of the individual's temperament, and when it soon after
leaves, it is absorbed into some other being or form for which it has an attraction
or sympathy. So, in this sense, if one lives a low, vicious life, it is very
likely true that his atoms, affected every moment with brutishness and animal
thoughts, go, upon leaving his corporeal limits, to the kingdom of atoms to
which they by right belong. This can have, however, no application to the real
man or thinking part of us, since that has no atomic structure, as we understand
the term.
It is not easy
for Westerners to credit the idea that they have lived upon the earth before,
for the reason chiefly that they have not thought along lines tending to this
idea; yet lurking low down in the mind of almost every individual will be found
the belief. Outside, this it will be found to solve so many of the problems
of existence, otherwise explainable only attributing them to chance or divine
caprice, that this fact alone entitles it to the most serious consideration.
For instance, while it would be absurd to hold, as some have done, that each
individual is born into the world with equal chances, when we are well aware
of the great differences perceptible even among the very young, yet outside
of reincarnation we are in possession of no straightforward explanation of such
differences. Heredity does not afford one, by any means. Examples can be furnished
without number where men of genius are born into families almost entirely destitute
of it. Instance Immanuel Kant, Benjamin Franklin, Robert Burns, William Shakespeare,
Abraham Lincoln, and a host of others. The late discoveries of Weissman also
seem to be producing a revolution in the scientific position concerning heredity,
at least in Germany, while its very groundwork, the doctrine of the transmission
of acquired faculties, has already found some serious opponents among physiologists.
Soon scientists will have to find some more adequate explanation for the intellectual
advancement of mankind, to give better reasons why all are not born with equal
possibilities and identical tendencies.
The most general
argument against the doctrine of rebirth is that of "memory". "If
I have lived here before, why do I not remember it?" is a first and most
natural query. We answer: because memory, such as is here spoken of, is that
of the brain, the physical organism, and as one has a fresh body, how can one
be expected to remember those things which were associated with the old one,
an entirely distinct entity? But this only refers to the details - the chain
of recollection. The aroma or experience is certainly remembered from life to
life. No one recollects learning to walk. He has no memory of the time he drew
one leg after the other in his effort to move in childhood's days. Yet he has
learned to walk. The details are forgotten, but the knowledge remains. And it
is precisely thus with rebirth; no recollections of the details or individual
experiences of previous incarnations are carried into this one, but the experience
gained from all is every present. So that we are all born with certain memories
- a certain knowledge of men and things, greater or less according to the variety
of our past experiences.
There is, however,
a state which can be reached by the purified soul, in which the details of past
lives are seen, although this is scarcely for the ordinary mortal of this humanity.
And again, in the case of the immediate rebirth the past life is often so vividly
photographed in the surrounding aura of the person that he may have memory of
it. In either of these cases reincarnation becomes something more than a theory,
it becomes an actual, verifiable fact; and the writer knows of several instances
in which it has so become.
PREHISTORIC
RACES
And he charged
the lesser gods with the duty of constructing mortal bodies as well as everything
additional that was required for the human soul, giving them dominion also over
these and all things consequent thereon, and bidding them rule over the mortal
creature as nobly and honourably as they could, that it might not become a cause
of evil to itself.
Plato in Timaeus
An orderly
presentation of the esoteric philosophy would here necessitate a description
of past races of humanity, out of which have grown or evolved the individual
as he stands before us in the present age. But it would perhaps be advisable
before so doing to recapitulate something of what has already been said, and,
in the light of this, to add one or more additional tenets, thereby to render
clearer what is now to follow;
(a) At the dawn of
the Manvantara, or at the first dividing of the two poles of life, Spirit and
Matter, the "Pilgrim" or monad-
Atma-Buddhi
-
separating
itself from the Over-Soul, commences its long cycle of experience which will
end only with the Pralaya, or night of the Cosmos. It passes through
world after world, issuing on each in different garbs, and learning the lessons
each has to teach.
(2)
The cycle of experience or "necessity" thus passed through, is, obediently
to the fundamental law of periodicity, itself also composed of many minor cycles,
these again including numerous lesser ones- en very truth, "wheels within
wheels"; so that a process corresponding to that act of evolution which
we have named "the descent of Spirit into Matter", is repeated again
and again throughout the whole range of life.
(3) The human monad
arrives on our planet after experiencing life in innumerable other worlds, and
from this point alone the secret doctrine considers its evolution, past worlds
having but little interest for us now.
(4) The last chain
of globes occupied by the monads of this world was the moon-chain, the parent
of the earth.
(5) Life and experience
on this world is ordered through multitudinous cycles, of Round and of race,
on each of the seven globes of which the earth-chain is composed. The present
Round is the fourth of the series in this chain- the total number being seven-
the globe now occupied in this Round being also the fourth, or physical one.
The esoteric philosophy as at present advanced, deals therefore mainly with
this Round as it sweeps through the physical globe, - our earth- the monads
having visited
this globe three times previously.
Although the
monad is compelled to incarnate in, or rather contact, every race, it must not
be imagined that it does this for once only. Each main race has, as already
shown, seven sub-races; each of these has in turn seven branch or family "races",
even the latter being still yet further subdivided, and into all these the law
compels its descent. The latter subdivisions may be likened to the nations or
tribes of human beings which in this, the fifth root-race, "vary with each
succeeding 'season' of three or four thousands years", reaching in that
period their apex of glory and their downfall. By the figures thus before us
we shall be able to calculate approximately the age of the world according to
esoteric chronology. I say approximately, advisedly, for the whole "information
concerning the occult calculations and figures pertains only to the highest
Initiations". If the period of a "nation" be estimated at 3,000
years, then a family-race will last for 3,000 times 7 or 21,000 years, and a
sub-race for 147,000, and the root rate for 1,029,000 years. This for the fifth
race, our present one, which has been already in existence for "nearly
a million years". As, however, races vary in the length of their duration
from the first to the fourth, each of them also overlapping the preceding and
succeeding one, besides commencing and closing with "taillights" or
periods of birth and death, the above will not help us very far. But the guard
over the esoteric calculations has been so far relaxed as to give us the information
that the "sedimentary deposits of the earth began in this Round over 320,000,000
years ago", and therefore,if the reader bears in mind that we have passed
through three Rounds previously to this, probably much longer ones, that we
have yet to experience as many more before life on this planet is ended, and
that this world is but a unit in the infinity of spheres which the "Pilgrim"
has to thread on its way "home", he will truly begin to have some
idea of the immensity of the scheme of evolution advanced by the theosophical
philosophy.
Indeed, it
may be well here to mention some of the total figures as given, and in this
we cannot do better than quote the following passage from the Secret
Doctrine. The author of that work, in speaking of the "seven eternities"
referred to in the sacred books, says : (Vol. 1, page 35) -
" By the
Seven 'Eternities' , aeons or periods are meant. The word 'Eternity', as understood
in Christian theology, has no meaning to the Asiatic ear, except in its application
to the ONE existence; nor is the term sempiternity, the eternal only in futurity,
anything better than a misnomer. Such words do not and cannot exist in philosophical
metaphysics, and were unknown until the advance of ecclesiastical Christianity.
The Seven Eternities meant are the seven periods, or a period answering in its
duration to the seven periods of a Manvantara, and extending throughout a Maha-Kalpa,
or 'Great Age'- 100 yeas of Brahma- making a total of 311,040,000,000,000 of
years, each year of Brahma being composed of 360 'days'; and of the same number
of 'nights' of Brahma (reckoning by the Chandrayana or lunar year); and a 'Day
of Brahma' consisting of 4,320,000,000 of mortal years. [The number 4,320 is
the basic number of the great ages, and so appears in all the occult systems.
The Jews, borrowing their knowledge from the Chaldeans, transformed the 432,000
of the Dynasties of the latter into the supposed lunar years of the Nativity,
4,3200 years. Dr. Sepp, of Munich- who plagiarized the idea from an unlucky
speculation, and a mistake of Colonel Wilford the orientalist- fancied he saw
in these figures a confirmation of the date of the coming of Jesus Christ, holding,
a priori, that the Hindus had copied them from the Jews. Subsequent discoveries
seem to have reverse the tables. In the Bible the 4,320 lunar years have been
transformed into solar years, and appear in Genesis as 4,004!] These 'Eternities'
belong to the most secret calculations, in which, in order to arrive at the
true total, every figure must be 7 to the power of x) -x varying according to
the nature of the cycle in the subjective or real world; and every figure or
number relating to, or representing all the different cycles from the greatest
to the smallest- in the objective or unreal world- must necessarily be multiples
of seven. The key to this cannot be given, for herein lies the mystery of esoteric
calculations,and for the purposes of ordinary calculation it has no sense".
During the
320,000,000 years that have elapsed since our physical globe was evolved in
this,the fourth, Round of the earth-chain, four races have lived and passed
away, and a fifth now enjoys rulership over its kingdoms. And here we meet with
another illustration of the law of cycles. The first of these races was ethereal,
so much so as to present forms quite unappreciable by our senses as now developed,
but nevertheless objective, and consequently- material, no matter of how delicate
a texture. The fourth race, on the other hand- midway of the seven which develop
in this Round- was even more grossly sunk in matter than our present fifth one
is. For we are now on the ascending arc of the cycle, and the seventh race which
is to be, will be as spiritual or ethereal as the first- but plus the wisdom
of its experience gained from the "fall into matter".
But to our
history. The mystical sketch which tells the story of the birth of man on this
planet, opens in representing the latter as calling on the gods to come and
people her "wheel" as she is unable of herself to create reasoning
beings. The gods refuse to do so until she has produced forms sufficiently evolved
to become fit dwellings for them- and recommend her to call upon the moon for
these. Then the earth, after "whirling for thirty crores (ages) more,",
herself tries to give birth to human beings, and, as a result, creates "watermen,
terrible and bad". These fail entirely in their mission as rulers of the
planet, and commit much evil. The "Sons of Wisdom" come and look on
them, and, finding them unfit to incarnate in, destroy them. Then the waters
are died from off the earth,the lords of the moon come, and with their help
the earth produces her first race, out of which are evolved the second and third,
in which latter the "Sons of Wisdom" find a fit abode.
All of this is, of
course, purely allegorical. The earth, like everything in nature, is at first
but a germ- a "laya point", or neutral centre. The transfusion of
the principles of the moon, its last incarnation, into this centre, gradually
produces the new planet, at first ethereal, but consolidating and hardening
after many ages; or, in other words, as the transfusion of the moon's principles
become more and more complete. The "creation" of man, as we now know
him, could not come to pass until this the fourth Round; consequently the "Sons
of Wisdom"- our own inner egos- are represented as refusing to incarnate
or dwell on earth,when she first calls on them to do so. But in the fourth Round,
on the fourth globe, the time has come when men-animals may be formed, sufficiently
developed to serve as dwellings for the gods, and the earth tries then to evolve
them herself, but without success; thus showing that "nature unaided fails".
The lunar Pitris-
or fathers- then "create" men by projecting their astral bodies, around
which the physical stuff of the earth gathers, and thus the first race is produced.
These pitris are
the lunar spirits who represented man on the lunar chain of globes; when the
first globe of our chain was formed they passed through the various kingdoms
elemental, mineral, vegetable, animal and so during the Rounds until Round IV.
Then they "oozed out" their astral doubles from the ape-like forms
they had evolved in Round III., Thus giving the form around which Nature built
physical man. After this they are said to retire to Mahar Loka. [ The Great
Place; "a region where dwell the Munis or "Saints" during Pralaya".
If the writer understands the philosophy correctly, this ascent of the pitris
to Mahar Loka is equivalent to their passing out of the manifested world entirely;
the "oozing out" of their astral doubles being practically the same
as their incarnating on earth. The Pitri is the "root" or seed of
the periodically manifesting Astral Body.]
Now it will
be remembered that seven classes of pitris were spoken of- and these may really
be said to be the principles of the "human" entity as they remained
at the period of the moon's Pralaya, which principles must necessarily be transfused
into the earth along with the rest of the lunar world. For man is in the esoteric
philosophy regarded as composition of seven gods, forces, elements or "fires"
which play through the column we call humans , each of which itself evolves;
and as the earth-chain is but the next ring of the spiral above the moon-chain,
so we must conceive these seen forces or gods "incarnating" here from
the moon-chain, and thus creating men "who are themselves". But so
far we have only spoken of the Lunar Pitris.
Like every
other septenary, the classes of pitris are divided into two main divisions,
three higher and four lower,- the former being of the essence of the spiritual,
metaphysical side of nature, the latter partaking of the material. In the Hindu
account these are called respectively the Agnishwatta or solar pitris and the
Barhishad or lunar pitris. And now it will become clear to us why the allegory
shows "The Sons of Wisdom" as refusing to incarnate on the earth or
"create" man when called upon by her to do so. The "Sons of Wisdom"
are the Agnishwatta pitris, and they refused because they could not, being of
the spiritual essence, having to wait until the Barhishad, the more material
pitris, had evolved the lower principles, or the animal man, before they could
find dwelling on earth. The incarnating gods, the Agnishwatta, pitris, are really
nothing less than the manasic fire, or mental and self-conscious intelligence
within us,that which joins Atma-Buddhi, or the monad, to the animal creation.
For wherein indeed do men and animals differ from one another? Surely not in
the monadic or spiritual sides of their natures, which are identical. Rather
is it that man has in him a principle which is possessed by no other being in
creation,that which cements the most spiritual and the most material- Manas.
And he must ever remain separated from lower creations by this- "the impassable
abyss of mentality and self-consciousness".
It was only
in the third race that man was sufficiently evolved to allow of the manasic
essence being imparted to him. The first two races produced by the Barhishad
pitris - were ethereal, astral forms-"spiritual" in a sense, yet belonging
so much to the elemental worlds as to be almost useless. They were certainly
forms, and, as the allegory has it, "could stand, walk, run, recline and
fly"- yet were but shadows with no sense.
From the first race
was formed the second; not, however, in the way we now understand the human
species to propagate its kind. Humanity in the prehistoric times of which we
write was "shadowy, ethereal and negative", and it made its progeny,
according to the Secret Doctrine by doubling itself- producing an astral shadow,
and incarnating in the latter. Hence this first race is said to have never died,
for death was unknown in its golden age.
The second race was
a more material one than its progenitor. The ethereal,shadowy frame was more
solid- more covered with flesh- and a physical body began to make its appearance,
as yet, however, of a far less gross texture than our present forms.
The distinction
between these two races lies chiefly in the fact that whereas the first was
sexless,the last was asexual or double sexed- androgynous. The former evolved
the second unconsciously, like the plants,or better, perhaps, "like the
Amoeba,- only on a more ethereal, impressive and larger scale".
The third was produced from the second by an oviparous method. It seems strange
to us now that in past ages men should have been born from eggs, like the birds,
yet such is the teaching of the esoteric philosophy: "the species was procreated
by a kind of exudation of moisture or vital fluid, the drops of which coalescing,
formed an oviform ball, which served as an extraneous vehicle for the generation
therein of a foetus and child". [The Secret Doctrine, Vol. II, page 132].
Hence, as the "eggs" were produced from the moisture of the human
body, the third race is graphically called the "sweat-born". It was
only at the end of this race that asexual humanity became divided into distinct
men and women.
However weird
all this may appear, yet distinct traces of like traditions can be found in
almost all the world-religions. No system which contains a history of the birth
of man is without traditions of a nature confirming the esoteric doctrine on
every side, but space absolutely forbids reference to them here. They generally
deal, as is natural,with the origin of man as he now is known- with the birth
of the fifth, our present race- but the more important contain a fuller recital,
and many volumes could readily be filled in recounting the different traditions
of the nations, showing the manner in which they bear out the teachings of the
Secret Doctrine.
The man-bearing eggs
of the third race, toward the close of the latter, began gradually to produce
beings in which one sex preponderated, and in time distinct men and women were
evolved. The asexual became the sexual, and just at the very close of this race
human beings began to produce their species in the way they now do. Almost exactly
at this period also, mankind was far enough evolved to receive the incarnating
gods, "The Sons of Wisdom" (our inner selves) who forthwith took up
their above on earth; divine love- Eros, and the terrestrial passion- Cupid,
the two poles of creation, thus becoming active in the world at the same time.
And this brings
us to a period of the greatest interest to the mythological students, for it
is from what happened in that age that have sprung all the ills and evils of
present-day humanity.
All
the "Sons of Wisdom" did not incarnate at once.
When
the time came that they should leave their divine abode and enter earthly existence
so as to help on the work of nature, only a few fully obeyed the law; of the
others, some half did so- "emitting a spark", while the rest refused,
saying, "we have wisdom, we can choose", and deferred their incarnation
until the fourth race was evolved, the law then forcing them to descend.
This descent is symbolized in Christian and Gnostic mythology by the war in
Heaven, Michael casting down the angels-or the Dragons of Wisdom.
But what happened
between these periods? The men sufficiently evolved as to be ready to receive
the fire of mind, not receiving this endowment, committed much evil. The power
of creation, formerly the property of all, was changed to that of procreation;
even the latter was prostituted, for, in the words of the sacred writings we
read that, "those which had no spark (of mind) took huge she-animals unto
them. They begat upon them dumb races... Monsters they bred. A race of crooked
red-hair-covered monsters, going on all fours. A dumb race, to keep the shame
untold". And it is from this race that has sprung our "ancestor"
- the ape - who was no ancestor at all, but an offshoot from, and a result of
the sin of, the mindless race of humanity. Here it will be seen that Occultists,
while granting the facts of the evolutionists and biologists, reject their theories,holding
that, in this Round, the animals were produced from man, not man from the animals;
as is maintained in all "Geneses" - including that of the Bible. If
the question be asked: "How then did the huge she-animals come into being"?
the answer could not be better made than by quoting the following passage from
the pen of H.P.Blavatsky. "As regards that other question, of the priority
of man to the animals in the order of evolution, the answer is as promptly given.
If man is really the Microcosm of the Macrocosm, then the teaching has nothing
so very impossible in it, and is but logical. For man becomes that Macrocosm
for the three lower kingdoms under him. Arguing from a physical standpoint,
all the lower kingdoms, save the mineral- which is light itself, crystallized
and immetallized- from plants to the creatures which preceded the first mammalians,
all have been consolidated in their physical structures by means of the "cast-off
dust" of those minerals, the refuse of the human matter, whether from
living or dead bodies, on which they fed and which gave them their outer bodies.
In his turn, man grew more physical, by reabsorbing into his system that
which he had given out, and which became transformed in the living animal crucibles
through which it had passed, owing to nature's alchemical transmutations. There
were animals in those days of which our modern naturalists have never dreamed;
and the stronger became physical material man, the giants of those times, the
more powerful were his emanations. Once that Androgyne "humanity"
separated into sexes, transformed by Nature into childbearing engines,it ceased
to procreate its like through drops of vital energy oozing out of the body.
But while man was still ignorant of his procreative power son the human plane,
(before his Fall, as a believer in Adam would say), all this vital energy, scattered
far and wide from him, was used by Nature for the production of the first mammal-animal
forms. Evolution is an eternal cycle of becoming, we are taught; and Nature
never leaves an atom unused. Moreover, from the beginning of the Round, all
in Nature tends to become Man. All the impulses of the dual, centripetal and
centrifugal force are are directed towards one point- MAN (The Secret Doctrine,
Vol II, page 169) The existence of such gigantic animals, monsters, dragons
or reptiles in these old days, or at any time in the earth's history, will no
doubt be scoffed at by the superficial reader; but happily I have before me
a copy of "Mythical Monsters",
by Charles Gould, one of the deepest students and
thinkers of our day. I quote from the Introduction: "For me the major part
of these creatures are not chimeras, but objects of rational study. The dragon,
in place of being a creature evolved out of the imagination of Aryan mam made
by the contemplation of lightning flashing through the caverns which he tenanted,
as is held by some mythologists, is an animal which once lived and dragged its
ponderous coils, and perhaps flew... To me the specific existence of the unicorn
seems not incredible, and in fact more probable than that theory which assigns
its origin to a lunar myth". And much more of the like, thus adding the
corroboration of more scientist to the esoteric philosophy.
However,be
this as it may, such is the teaching. The men of the fourth race were born in
many stage of development. Roughly three classes, the first being those who
retained their godlike powers- and whose descendants do to this day- the second
and third representing different degrees of degradation. Humanity then being
fully endowed with mind, and having reached its apex of materiality- being even
more gross than the men of our present day- gradually lost its spiritual perceptions.
Whereas in the gold, silver and bronze ages- the ages of the first three races,-
man had been spiritually gifted, could see the future and the past at will,
having a "third eye", and possessed of creative and "phenomenal"
powers, now after his fall, these were gradually lost to him as a race; white
magic gave room to sorcery, man forgot his place as the ruler of the planet,
committing evils undreamed of in our day, and in the midst of evil and darkness,the
fifth, our present race, was born.
I must now say a
few words concerning the various habitations of the races, touching on the location
of prehistoric continents and adding the names of these as adopted by the modern
Theosophist.
(a) The first- the
"Imperishable Sacred Land" - was and is at the North Pole. It never
shared the fate of the succeeding continent; like the race whose home it was,
it "never died". Little is told concerning it, and we shall only remind
the reader of the belt of snow and ice that makes a natural impassable barrier
to the northern limits of the earth; albeit now and then men have come forward-
instance Franklin- stating their discovery of such a continent.
(2)
The "Hyperborean Land" is the name given to the continent of the second
race, which comprised the northern belt of the world, most of which is now embedded
in snow and ice, but at one was truly a "Greenland". It comprised
also the whole of Northern Asia, and "was the name given by the oldest
Greeks to the far-off and mysterious region, whither their tradition made Apollo
the "Hyperborean" travel every year".
(3) "Lemuria"
(This name is an invention of Phillip Lutley Sclater, who asserted between 1850
and 1860, on zoological grounds, the actual existence in prehistoric times of
a continent which he showed to have extended from Madagascar to Ceylon and Sumatra.)
Was the next continent, the abode of the third race- the Lemurians. It extended
across the Pacific ocean from India to Australia, and was connected with Atlantis,
stretching westward as far as Madagascar and Africa, the latter not being then
in existence. It was destroyed by volcanic eruptions, fires and earthquakes
about 700,000 years before the commencement of what we know as the early Miocene
age, afterwards sinking under the ocean. "Lemuria was not submerged as
Atlantis was, but was sunk under the waves, owing to earthquakes and subterranean
fires, as Great Britain and Europe will be some day".
Its people
are said to have been of enormous stature- from twenty-seven to even thirty
feet in height, and to have possessed such powers over nature as we cannot now
conceive of. Therefore their civilization, though great, must have been of a
different kind to our own, having probably more to do with science and philosophy
than with food and clothing. They are the true ancestors of present-day humanity,
for it was during the period of their existence that man first received the
gift of mind; the "Sons of Wisdom" entered their tabernacles and claimed
rulership over the earth. "No sooner had the mental eye of man been opened
to understanding, that the Third Race felt itself one with the ever-present
as the ever to be unknown and invisible ALL, the One Universal Deity. Endowed
with divine powers, and feeling in himself his inner God, each felt that he
was a Man-God in his nature, through animal in his physical Self. The struggle
between the two began from the very day they tasted of the fruit of the Tree
of Wisdom; a struggle for live between the spiritual and the psychic, the psychic
and the physical. Those who conquered the lower principles by obtaining mastery
over the body, joined the "Sons of Light". Those who fell victims
to their lower natures, became the slaves of Matter. From 'Sons of Light and
Wisdom', they ended by becoming the 'Sons of Darkness'. They had fallen in the
battle of mortal life with Life immortal, and all those so fallen became the
seed of the future generations of Atlanteans"
The
Secret Doctrine, Vol. II, page 272-
[The
name is used here in the sense of, and as a synonym of 'sorcerers'. The Atlantean
races were many, and lasted in their evolution for millions of years; all were
not bad. They became so toward their end, as we (the fifth) are fast becoming
now." ]
(4) Atlantis was
the home of the race which preceded our own, and was probably situated south
of that portion of the globe which we known as Asia, extending far out into
the Atlantic ocean. The Atlantean being the middle, or fourth in order, of the
seven races on this globe, was consequently the most sunk in physical existence,
and is credited with a far greater (material) civilization than our own. We
find its descendants in the ancient Egyptians, the older Greeks, Romans, and
the Chinese, all of whom were offshoots or branches of the mother race: we have
only to examine such relics as now remain to us of these peoples to understand
something of the former greatness of the root stock. But the great continent
itself was submerged many thousand years ago, and with its sinking nearly the
whole race perished.
The people are said
to have been possessed of wondrous knowledge; they could live with equal ease
in water, air or fire, and had unlimited control over the elements. But they
fell into sorcery, and with their fall, their fair home was lost forever.
The island
referred to by Plato in his Critias
was
the last fragment of the great continent which had perished long before. In
the words of an Adept: "The great event, the triumph of our sons of the
firemist (the adepts), the inhabitants of Shambullah when yet an island in the
Central Asia sea, over the selfish, if not entirely wicked magians of Poseidonis
(the last of the Atlantean continents), occurred just 11,446 years ago".
(1881) [see the book "Man: Fragments of Forgotten
History, page 85]
(5) Last of all we
come to the true home of the present race- the fifth continent, America. It
should be remembered that although these five lands have been posited in various
portions of the globe, they were not the only ones existing at the periods of
their greatness, but as the race which dominated the world at any given period
had its rise in some particular land, that has been called the continent of
the time. America was the fifth great continent which appeared, but the evolution
of the races having taken place in Europe, the latter is often called the fifth.
Nevertheless, as said, America is the true home of the fifth race.
It is scarcely
to be expected that the casual reader, meeting with statements such as the preceding
for the first time, will be likely to accept them unconditionally- less so when
the further statement is made that he had himself lived with all these races,
had likewise contributed to their rise and fall. But very little trouble is
required for any one to verify many of the assertions by an intelligent examination
of the various facts which the different sciences have collected together. Deeply
submerged as the continents may have been, yet distinct traces of their existence
are yet to be found- in every race, every country, every language. The most
arcane Sanskrit and Tamil works teem with references to them; ancient traditions
of widely separated peoples- of India, Greece, Sumatra, Java, Madagascar, and
the legends of both Americas are full of them. Modern Science finds the existence
of one of them, at any rate- of a former continent now sunk beneath the India
Ocean (Lemuria) necessary to afford an explanation of many difficulties in the
distribution of organic life; while of the other, Atlantis, fresh traces are
constantly being brought to life. [ In "Atlantis, the Antediluvian World".
Ignatius Donnelly has gathered together a mass of unanswerable evidence to demonstrate
the existence of such a continent, and it would appear that only a few more
years must elapse ere it become an established fact.
"Why
should not your geologists bear in mind that under the continents explored and
fathomed by them, in the bowels of which they have found the Eocene age, and
forced it to deliver them its secrets, there may be hidden deep in the fathomless,
or rather unfathomed ocean beds, other and far older continents whose strata
have never been geologically explored; and that they may some day upset entirely
their present theories? Why not admit that our present continents have, like
Lemuria and Atlantis, been several times already submerged, and had the time
to reappear again, and bear their new groups of mankind and civilization; and
that at the first great geological upheaval at the next cataclysm, in the series
of periodical cataclysms that occur from the beginning to the end of every round,
our already autopsized continents will go down, and the Lemurias and Atlantises
come up again ? [Letter from an Adept,quoted in Esoteric Buddhism.]
But this brief sketch
of the races, which preceded the present-day humanity, must end. Incredible
as it at first may seem, there never was a time when no forms peopled the earth.
From the moment of her birth, before the first sedimentary deposits, the earth
had produced beings, and hence the races whose history has been so rapidly sketched,
have extended over many millions of years. As they have been divided and subdivided,
as each has had its allotted cycle, so each, to the minutest division, had its
Golden, Silver, Bronze and Iron ages- allegorically, of course, meaning its
period of purity, and subsequent descent into vice and materiality. The Iron
or Black age (Kali Yuga) of the fifth race ends its first five thousand years
in A.D. 1897-8, so says the tradition. "We have not long to wait, and many
of us will witness the Dawn of the New Cycle, at the end of which not a few
accounts will be settled and squared between the races".
THE
MONAD
The soul contains
in itself the event that shall presently befall it, for the event is only the
actualizing of its thoughts
Emerson
Heaven is not
reached at a single bound,
But we build the ladder by which we rise
From the lowly earth to the vaulted skies,
And we mount to its summit round by round.
J.G.
Holland
If the reader
has understood the general tenets of the esoteric philosophy, as put forward
in the foregoing pages, it will be possible to add a few words on the mystery
of the ego, a task that could not have been attempted in the earlier chapters.
Confusion may have
been suspected in the fact that while the monad or "Pilgrim" the spiritual
part of man which experiences, has been cited as Atma-Buddhi (see previous graphic
on page 119) , yet the ego-sum is given as Manas. Moreover, the manasic essence
did not vivify man until the end of the third race (see page 184). It would
be natural also for one to inquire if before that mankind, according to occult
teaching, had no egoity.
There is really,
however, no confusion whatever in the matter, only a difficulty in comprehending
the oriental philosophy arising out of our undeveloped notions concerning consciousness-
a term whose definition, it has been said, no two of our metaphysicians have
agreed upon. Atma-Buddhi- pure Spirit, with its vehicle, or first veil- is the
true monad, that which. While inseparable from the UNIVERSAL CONSCIOUSNESS,
yet erroneously fancies itself separate therefrom, during a Manvantara or Day
of life. All monads are essentially one and the same.
But if this is so,
that these monads or "Spirits" of all things are essentially One,
the same cannot be said of the forms and individuals that One evolves; these,
illusionary and evanescent, judged from the stand of Spirit, are yet to themselves,
from the groundstand of illusion, actual realities.
The work of
life is to individualize, to produce single, separate, distinct existences,
and to adorn each as far as possible with the characteristics of divinity. But
however high in the scale any one may climb; however great a god he may become
after ages and ages spent in accumulating wisdom,; with whatever profusion nature
may yield to him her gifts- yet her last secret must always be withheld, for
to no finite being can the knowledge of the Infinite be. Until that day which
is so graphically called in the eastern Schools the "great day BE-WITH-US",
arrives, none can cross the "circle of the Pass Not"- the boundary
line of limitation. It is only then, in the great night of the Maha-Pralaya,
that the wall of individual consciousness shall be broken down, each unit merged
in the translucent waters of the Universal Essence.
The Universal Monas,a
s soon as the Day of Life, the Manvantara, has fully dawned, commences its work
of producing individual existences, building them up or "drawing them out"
by contact with the opposite pole of life- Substance- first as simple forms,
afterwards as more perfect and complex. Consequently it is said to incarnate
first in the lowest mineral kingdom. But to say that it "incarnates"
gives perhaps a wrong impression. It contacts rather. Figuratively speaking,
spirit and matter upon becoming a duality, upon separation, "throw"
toward one another, to produce a bridge across which they can travel to each
other, and it is this joint endeavour which causes that action which from the
one side is the "descent of spirit into matter", from the other "evolution",
or the ascent and perfection of matter. Individualized monads cannot be said
really to exist until the "bridge" is fully formed; and its point
of completion is to be found in that faculty or principle called Manas , or
self-consciousness, which on this planet exists only in man. "It would
be very misleading to imagine a monad as a separate entity trailing its slow
way into a distinct path through the lower Kingdoms, and after an incalculable
series of transmigrations flowering into a human being; in short, that the Monad
of a Humboldt dates back to the Monad of an atom of hornblende... The atom,
as represented in the ordinary scientific hypothesis, is not a particle of something,
animated by a psychic something, destined after aeons to blossom as a man. But
it is a concrete manifestation of the Universal Energy which itself has not
yet become individualized; a sequential manifestation of the one Universal Monas.
The ocean (of matter) does not divide into its potential and constituent drops
until the sweep of the life-impulse reaches the evolutionary stage of man-birth.
The tendency toward segregation into individual Monads is gradual, and in the
higher animals comes almost to the point. [See The Secret Doctrine, Vol. I.,
page 178)
Hence, while in one
sense the more undeveloped beings, the animals and plants, are more spiritual
than we are, since they draw their life more directly from the ethereal regions,
yet they are by no means so advanced in the scale of perfection, are not of
any direct use to nature in the great object that she has in in view, that of
developing Individuals. They have consciousness, truly, but not self-consciousness.
Some day they will have reached a point in their evolution when the manasic
essence can vivify them, but before that they are conscious of little more than
of being alive. With the few exceptions of those higher animals who "come
almost to the point", - those who dwell with civilized man, - they simply
exist, and generate very little individual
Karma. The same may be said of the first two
races on our globe. They were certainly more spiritual than we are, but not
having Manas, not having the spirit of rebellion against nature, the desire
to dominate and control her, not having "activity", they were useless
as powers and scarce awake on this plane.
There really exists
in nature a triple evolutionary scheme: (a) that of the
body,
or animal part of man; (b) that of the soul, or self-conscious
ego; and (c) that of the spirit or monad- the "Pilgrim"- which sacrifices
itself, by severance from the Universal Over-Soul, for the purpose of producing
individual intelligences. "Each of these three systems has its own laws,
and is ruled and guided by different sets of the highest Dhyanis... Each is
represented in the constitution of man, the Microcosm of the great Macrocosm;
and it is the union of these three streams in him which makes him the complex
being he now is".
Self-consciousness
having arisen in man, or Manas having been evolved, the Monad, since it assimilates
the experiences of self-conscious being, must from this point be considered
as Atma-Buddhi-Manas, instead of merely Atma-Buddhi, as heretofore. In the great
march of the soul along the cycle of incarnation or experience and necessity,it
may be said to start on its journey as Atma-Buddhi, or pure spirit, and to return
as Atma-Buddhi-Manas, or spirit joined to self-consciousness: the TWO-IN-ONE
expresses itself as the THREE-IN-ONE,a result of its cycle of independent existence.
The unfolding of such self-conscious principle within Itself is the one object
of manifestation, or coming into being, of the Universal Self or "world
soul".
NIRVANA
The spiritual
Ego of man moves in eternity like a pendulum between the hours of life and death.
But if these hours marking the periods of terrestrial and spiritual life are
limited in their duration, and if the very number of such stages in eternity
between sleep and awakening, illusion and reality, had its beginning and its
end, on the other hand the spiritual "Pilgrim" is eternal
M.
The essential
feature of the esoteric philosophy is the conception of a principle of unity
as underlying the infinite productions of nature. This has been sufficiently
demonstrated already, and if appreciated, if then becomes comparatively an easy
task to have some idea of the destiny of Being, as that also of every individual
item in the scheme of nature.
All things have sprung
from One - out of homogeneity into heterogeneity- to one they all tend; the
final endeavour of each unit is to recognize its oneness with all. This state
has been called Nirvana. There are many degrees of it, however; indeed in the
evolution of the lowest to the highest many "Nirvanas" may be said
to be realized. From a lower aspect it is simply the bringing of any entity
into a state of harmony with its surroundings. Thus the Chinese say that the
animals enter Nirvana when they become civilized. But from a higher point of
view, it is the total merging of the consciousness of individuality of any unit
into that more complete nature of which it forms a part. For example, a drop
of water might be said to have attained to its highest power, its Nirvana, when
it had identified itself with the larger body of fluid to which it belonged;
likewise a leaf, if it merged its individual life in that of the branch of which
it was born; or the branch, if it felt itself the tree; or the tree, if it cast
into the earth for its essential life. Each would have extended its sphere of
being, and by the consciousness of unity thus established, attained peace, arising
out of freedom from its former sense of separateness. And as a lesser unit,
joining its individuality with that whole of which it forms a part, finds itself
a member of a greater world, so also the latter, identifying itself with a yet
more complete nature, recognizes a still more perfect harmony. This constant
assertion of greater harmonies in the universe constitutes the real progress
of the "Pilgrim" in its journey "home".
Each stage
of perfection thus reached, each more complete individuality evoked by the monad,
gives it at first the idea of finality. It is only after much association with
its new condition that it discovers that such is not yet an entirely complete
one; that there are still yet loftier peaks to scale, wider fields of Being
to investigate. "Nothing is permanent except the one hidden absolute existence,
which contains in itself the noumena of all realities.... Whatever plane our
consciousness may be acting in, both we and the things belonging to that plane
are, for the time being, our only realities. As we rise in the scale of development
we perceive that during the stages through which we have passed we mistook shadows
for realities, and the upward progress of the ego is a series of progressive
awakenings, each advance bringing with it the idea that now, at last, we have
reached "reality"; but only when we shall have reached the absolute
Consciousness, and blended our own with it, shall we be free from the delusions
produced by Maya .[The Secret Doctrine. Vol. -1-, Pages 39-40]
This identification
of individual life with the sum-total of consciousness- universal life- has
been the goal of every religious system. The Zoroastrian is called upon to "hasten
to the Light"; the Buddhist aspires to his "Nirvana"; the Hindu
asks for rest in the "Bosom of Brahm"; the Hebrew, for rest in the
"Bosom of A-Brahm"; the Christian would become "one with God".
It will be
seen at once that a vast distinction must exist in the degree and kind of their
development between those beings that are without the element of self-consciousness
and those that have it. With the first Nirvana is merely the sliding into a
state of passive harmony; the second carries the power of individuality. The
retaining of self-consciousness, yet evolving perfect consciousness and existing
in absolute harmony with all things and on all planes, is said to be the greatest
bliss known, the sum-total of strength. In part it fulfills the purpose of the
Universe in manifesting itself as individual lives- to evolve self-consciousness
within itself. It is possible on earth to man alone. He alone, of all beings,
can reach the highest state in this solar Manvantara, for no other composite
being has the manasic element in it.
What the state of
Nirvana is for the monad that has attained self-consciousness- the human monad,
Atma-Buddhi-Manas has been the subject of more controversy among eastern Buddhist
pandits than almost any other. And it has reflected itself among western Orientalists.
Some have maintained that the Nirvana of Gautama's doctrine, signifying as it
does the fulness of Being, is equivalent to annihilation. This arises out of
the limitations of the mental faculty to comprehend such state. "All that
words can convey", writes A.P.Sinnett [in his Esoteric Buddhism, page 236]
is that Nirvana is a sublime state of conscious rest in omniscience. It would
be ludicrous, after all that has gone before, to turn to the various discussions
which have been carried on by students of exoteric Buddhism as to whether Nirvana
does or does not mean annihilation. Worldly similes fall short of indicating
the feeling with which the graduates of esoteric science regard such a question.
Does the last penalty of the law mean the highest honour of the peerage? Is
a
wooden spoon the emblem of the most illustrious preeminence in learning? Such
questions as these but faintly symbolize the extravagance of the question whether
Nirvana is held by Buddhism to be equivalent to annihilation. And in some, to
us inconceivable, way the state of para-Nirvana is spoken of as immeasurably
higher than that of Nirvana".
Above all things
it is important to recollect that Nirvana is a condition, or state of the soul,
or spiritual ego, not a locality. It is not a place where the destiny of man
lies, but is the transfusing of his individual mind into the universal soul-essence.
And the state can be reached while the physical body is alive as after its dissolution.
During life it is called Samadhi. At such periods, when the ego has separated
itself entirely from physical life, has entered the ineffable condition of Nirvana,
the body remains in a sort of cataleptic condition, one of suspended animation,
and to all intents and purposes dead. Its inner principles have fled, and resolved
themselves into the more ethereal natures of the world.
This high ecstatic
condition of bliss reached,the only question is if the soul will ever return
from it. To pass into Nirvana means a cessation of any further possibility of
individual development or of aiding other selves to that end. The ego has run
its course, it has attained the object of its setting forth, has reared individual
life. And proportionately as success has crowned its efforts, it is entitled
to blissful rest. But to accept its well-earned peace is to divorce itself from
the power of rendering further aid to nature in her great labour, that of evolving
individual existences. Therefore those
wise ones who have attained liberty- 'freedom from rebirth'- and Nirvana, are,
among the trans-Himalayan Brothers, regarded as selfish if they accept Nirvana.
They are the Buddhas of Selfishness, the Pratyeka Buddhas, as opposed to the
Buddhas of Compassion, those who renounce nirvanic bliss "to help mankind".
The fact that the
ego should have the power to return to earth-life after having attained the
condition of Nirvana, contains a greater mystery than the writer is prepared
to state his ability to explain. It is a teaching of the esoteric doctrine;
but only those who have made the great journey can have any idea of its mystery.
That the ego-spirit can, and frequently does return, however, is exemplified
in the lives of such as Gautama and all the greater sages of the world. These
are the divines of earth who are said to walk "the fourth path of holiness".
It will be apparent
that death to so exalted a being as one who had attained an renounced Nirvana,
could scarcely be called death at all. At best it would be but a "shuffling
of this mortal coil". The death of the body would simply mean the dissolution
of the lowest and most physical instruments. The adept could then live for ages
in his next form, his astral counterpart, untrammeled with the desires terrestrial-
which must to some extent affect all who dwell in the flesh,- and living thus,
aid nature in her development of man, man in the development of himself. Such
adepts are known to exist. Unseen of man, they labour to shield him from falling
into deeper sin and misery than has already become his lot. They are called
the Nirmanakayas of Compassion. They incarnate from age to age as the greater
avatars, the saviours of the world. Of such were Gautama , Jesus, and many whose
names rest unknown; who worked silently,
perhaps through others, for the regeneration, the upraising of mankind. Yet
even the highest of the earth's more perfected beings cannot entirely avoid
the issue of life. As surely as night follows day, as the state of waking leads
to the condition of rest, is it that the time will come when even the most active
natures must be plunged into the nirvanic sleep, animals, men, nirmanakayas,
gods, planets, universes alike. This is when the whole cosmos passes into its
Pralaya, at the close of a Day of life. The monads of all must then return into
their primary state of oneness, to reemerge only when again the great thrill
of activity awakes the sleeping worlds. This universal sleep is called the state
of Para-Nirvana "In
para-Nirvana
when Pralaya
will have reduced not only material and physical
bodies, but even the spiritual Ego(s) to their original principle- the Past,
Present, and even Future Humanities, like all things, will be one and the same.
Everything will have reentered the Great Breath.
In other words, everything will be "merged in Brahma" or the divine
unity.
"Is this annihilation,
as some think? Or Atheism, as other critics- the worshipers of a personal deity
and believers in an unphilosophical paradise- are inclined to suppose? Neither.
It is worse than useless to return to the question of implied atheism in that
which spiritually of most refined character. To see in Nirvana annihilation
amounts to saying of a man plunged in a sound dreamless
sleep- one that leaves no impression on the physical memory and brain, because
the sleeper's Higher Self is in its original state of absolute consciousness
during those hours- that he, too, is annihilated.
The latter- simile answers only to one side of the question, - the most material;
since re-absorption is by no means such
a "dreamless sleep", but, on the contrary, absolute existence, an
unconditioned unity, or a state, to describe which human language is absolutely
and hopelessly inadequate. The only approach to anything like a comprehensive
conception of it can be attempted solely in the panoramic visions of the soul,
through spiritual ideations of the divine monad. Nor is the individuality- nor
even the essence of the personality, if any be left behind- lost, because reabsorbed.
For, however limitless- from a human standpoint- the para-Nirvanic state, it
has yet a limit in Eternity. Once reached, the same monad, will re-emerge therefrom,
as a still higher being, on a far higher plane, to recommence its cycle of perfected
activity. The human mind cannot, in its present stage of development transcend,
it can scarcely reach this plane of thought. It totters here, on the brink of
incomprehensible Absoluteness and Eternity".[ The Secret Doctrine- Vol.
1- pages 265 and 266]
CHAPTER
FIVE
MASTERS
OF WISDOM
But the Brotherhood
has always existed. Some in ages past had discovered how to the eye of Spirit
all the workings of Nature might be revealed; they caught glimpses of a steadier
lore, and sought to baffled the grave. But freedom from the chilling ties of
earth was found only possible in fulfillment of the Law- the Law of Harmony
and Brotherhood. Hence, etc..
-Letters
on the Rosicrucian Fraternity.
As for what
thou hearest others say, who persuade the many that the soul, when once freed
from the body, neither suffers... evil nor is conscious, I known that thou art
better grounded in the doctrines received by us from our ancestors, and in the
sacred orgies of Dionysus, than to believe them; for the mystics symbols are
well known to us who belong to the "Brotherhood".
Plutarch
So far this
work has dealt only with the outline of the more important theosophical teachings
at present before the world. Some acquaintance with the oriental esoteric doctrine
was necessary before anything could be said at length concerning the Masters
of Wisdom claimed by Theosophists to exist, and before the reader could have
understood correctly the relationship of the Society to its unseen but true
Founders.
It is reasonable
to expect from the ordinary reader, who perhaps may have had not experience
of a nature sufficient to justify a belief in any higher evolution than that
of a man as he now is, incredulity in regard to a possible greater development
of the latter than is to be found among the best and most cultured individuals
of his own particular nation. But the existence of degrees in nature is easily
discernible; and the fact of orders of beings of less degree of intelligence
and power than man, argues for the possibility of the existence of men presently
developed to the highest point. For aught we can say there may be many orders
of beings higher than the human, bearing the same relation to man as the latter
does to the animal or plant, although we may not be able to perceive them with
the aid of our five senses. The animal, if it thinks at all, probably looks
upon the human being as an animal like itself. It has no Mind to enable it to
perceive that faculty in man, and although it obeys him, yet it understands
not why, but only that it is acting in obedience to some law which has the mastery
over it for the moment. Similarly who can say that when we find ourselves forced
to yield to some greater energy than our own, we are not obeying the commands
of some more complete intelligence? Who can say that the cyclones, earthquakes,
floods, avalanches, are not the result of forces directed against us by greater
beings than ourselves- greater, that is to say, in the sense of being more matured,-
while we ascribe it all to natural law? Who can say? The conception is not untenable;
it is not unscientific.
But although the
author himself believes in the existence of very many higher kingdoms of nature
than the human, though perhaps not quite in the way suggested, he does not call
upon the reader just now to give credence to their existence; all he asks, judging
by analogy, in the observation of differing degrees in the human family, is
belief in the possibility of a race of men who have evolved very much higher
in mental and spiritual perception than the scientist, the theologian, or the
ordinary man of our age. Let us suppose the reader to be sufficiently large-minded
to grant such a possibility, then may we proceed to prosecute our inquiries
along lines best calculated to at once interest and convince.
The
task of inquiry would have been a much more difficult one some years ago than
it is now, on account of the absence of evidence then; nearly all that could
be obtained at the time of founding the Theosophical Society being the statements
of the one solitary individual who acted as the messenger from the Brotherhood.
But some seventeen years having passed, and more than one person of high position
in the intellectual world having received communications from the members of
the eastern School, it remains for us now to place before our reader for his
considerations some of these facts. It might, however, be well to see first
the position of affairs in the early days of the Theosophical Society's history.
Madame H.P.Blavatsky
[probably no one of her time has been more traduced and slandered, unfairly
criticized, or suffered more from misrepresentation, than this extraordinary
woman. But this, as she said herself, was all that could be expected of a materialistic
world, for one who strove to implant therein a few seeds of a high philosophy.
The author lived with her during the last three years of her life, and his unhesitating
criticism of her is that few purer in mind, nobler, or more self-sacrificing
have ever existed. Nearly all who knew her have said the same. The evil reports
about- and they are all reports- were originated by selfish and ambitious persons
who strove by ruining her reputation, to place themselves in power. Toward the
end of her life, however the greater number of the charges against her were
withdrawn, yet since the public do not seem generally aware of this the following
retraction of the famous New York Sun article of July 1890, a full sheet of
slander- which appeared in the editorial column of that paper's issue of Monday,
September 26th, 1891, may well be added here:
"We print
on another page an article in which Mr. William Q.Judge deals with the romantic
and extraordinary career of the late Helena P.Blavatsky, the Theosophist. We
take occasion to observe that on July 20th, 1890, we were misled into admitting
to The Sun's columns an article by Dr.E.F.Coues of Washington, in which allegations
were made against Madam Blavatsky's character, and also against her followers,
which appear to have been without solid foundation. Mr. Judge's article dispose
of all questions relating to Madame Blavatsky as represented by Dr. Coues, and
we desire to say that his allegations respecting the Theosophical Society and
Mr. Judge personally are not sustained by evidence, and should not have been
printed", The only regret is that Madame Blavatsky never lived to see this
retraction. And so Madame Blavatsky, a high pupil of the trans-Himalayan School
of Adepts, was sent by that college in 1875 to give out to the world knowledge
in respect to certain important points that had been concealed from it as a
whole for ages. Two or three thousands years ago, when everybody believed in
"Messengers from God", in Sages, in Prophets, such an ambassador would
have only to state his or her position and claims, to secure at once a large
following; but in this age slightly different tactics had to be employed. It
was well seen that whereas, at first, belief in the philosophy depended almost
wholly on the credit given to Madame Blavatsky's declaration of the existence
of the Brotherhood, yet afterwards, when the truth of he doctrine was proven,
both by the evidence of science and by its being shown as existing in all past
ages, then belief in a Humanity higher than our own-in "Masters of Wisdom"-
would be the natural outcome. Hence the necessity at first of proof of the existence
of the Brotherhood.
Now it is clear
that to permit every inquirer to visit the School in order to prove its existence,
would be an impossibility, not only because visitations of this nature would
be contrary to the most time-honoured rule of the institution- which demands
for good reason that none save persons of the greatest purity and of high development
shall enter their precincts, - but also as a matter of policy, identical with
that which makes us legislate against the random invasion of our own public
and private buildings by the curious, Nor, on the other hand,could it be expected
that the whole array of adepts and occultists should turn out to prove themselves
to a few possible converts, who might as easily as not be found quite unfitted
to understand the sacred sciences. Proof for the few in that way would be difficult,
and for the many it would be impossible. Curiosity in the multitude would have
arisen, and were the masses convinced by ocular demonstration a new dogmatism
would result.
Hence other methods
had to be resorted to in order to prove the claim. Occultists claim that their
study, as a secondary effect, gives power over many forces in nature not generally
known to the world; it goes without saying, therefore,that one coming directly
from the eastern School should be endowed marvelously in this respect. Hence
if Madame Blavatsky showed herself to be possessed of ability to control the
elements, to produce or make things visible by the power of her will, and in
other ways to indicate her power over hidden forces of nature, much necessary
evidence would have been given, and the philosophy could then be placed before
the whole world backed up by some semblance, at any rate, of truth. While directly
the attention of thinkers was turned to the philosophies of the past, every
desired object would have been accomplished.
Therefore we
find the early days of the Theosophical Society's history pregnant with stories
about the powers of this wonderful woman, powers which were exhibited even up
to the time of her death, though in a lesser degree once the first point was
gained.
Having proved her
endowments in these particulars to some, she at once set about her work of piecing
together all the older philosophies of the world and showing that an identical
teaching (Theosophy) ran throughout all. That she succeeded in this, probably
beyond the most sanguine expectations of any, must be manifest from an examination
of her work, "Isis Unveiled", comprising two volumes of between six
and seven hundred pages each, every chapter of which is filled with citations
from and references to the ancient and modern philosophies in defense of her
statements.
This was in the earlier
days. People began to believe what was said, and very soon many showed a desire
to go out to the eastern Brotherhood and become pupils of these sages. And now
the wisdom of not localizing the college was shown. A stampede to Tibet [It
was given out that the headquarters of the school were somewhere in Tibet] such
as might then have followed would have completely frustrated the attempts of
the Adepts to give their philosophy to the world, and to establish the nucleus
of a Universal Brotherhood; not a worker would have remained in the ordinary
haunts of men.
But some years
later, in 1880, the veil was partially withdrawn, and several of the Tibetan
Brothers made themselves known to members of the Theosophical Society in Simla
and Allhabad, India. Mr. Sinnett in the "Occult World", recites a
number of very interesting experiences of this period, afterwards publishing
letters he received from the Mahatmas at that time, and these, annotated and
explained, were swollen into a volume of considerable bulk and presented under
the title "Esoteric Buddhism"-
the
first attempt to present Theosophy to the West in an orderly and comprehensive
manner. The value of the testimony in the "Occult
World"
consists
chiefly in that many of the experiences recorded,which, as is natural, might
be readily open to skeptical judgment, were properly witnessed by persons, a
number of whom bore high standing in the social and literary world, and we recommend
the perusal of this work to all who would critically examine the question. Space
forbids our quoting from it here.
Of course most of
the people in India, who are born and brought up in an atmosphere redolent with
occult tradition, believe in the existence of adepts. Dotted all over as the
country is with fakirs of every kind and holy men, it would be hard indeed for
the native not to believe in masters in the occult sciences. This holds in every
ancient eastern land. And from Americans and Europeans many letters could be
quoted giving accounts of interviews with such men, of exhibitions made of their
powers, and of other proofs of their existence, such as that through correspondence,
letters received and the like. But what necessity is there for such? If the
philosophy be a true one, then there must
be some where
on earth the Elder Brothers of the race. And the demonstration of its general
truth proceeds yearly in all departments of thought.
"Looking
at the matter from the most rigidly scientific point of view", says Prof.
Huxley, "The assumption that, amidst the myriads of worlds scattered through
endless space there can be no intelligence as much greater than man's as his
is greater than the black beetle's; no being endowed with powers of influencing
the course of nature as much greater than his, as his is greater than a snail's,
seems to me not merely baseless, but impertinent... If our intelligence can
in some matters surely reproduce the past of thousands of years ago, and anticipate
the future thousands of years hence,it is clearly within the limits of possibility
that some greater intellect, even of the same order, may be able to mirror the
whole past and the whole future " [Essays upon some Controverted Questions.
The italics are ours.]
In the opening chapter,
and several times subsequently, we have briefly referred to the work of the
Adepts, but the time seems now to have come when the matter can be more fully
treated. The Theosophical Society, founded with the object, among others, of
forming the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity, may be considered
as the general outside work of the Adepts at the present time, and must, therefore,
in its endeavour and methods of work, follow along the same lines as the more
select body. It may, indeed, be said to be the outward and visible sign of the
inner esoteric school. Therefore an examination of the work attempted and achieved
by its members would be perhaps the most fitting way of demonstrating the work
of the Brothers; but as this is largely treated of in the next chapter, "The
Theosophical Society", the question must be dealt with just now from a
more general position.
The first question
that one would naturally be expected to ask is, "Why a Brotherhood- if
Theosophy sketches an immense scheme of evolution, and names this latter in
its widest sense as the great object of existence, such can be nothing but a
protracted selfishness- an evolution is now generally understood, it means the
raising and improving of certain individuals who survive at the expense of the
weaker, and Universal Brotherhood is certain not possible in company with the
doctrine of the 'survival of the fittest'? But, with the Occultists, evolution
has not for its keynote the pushing ahead of the individual to the detriment
and destruction of his fellows, but precisely the opposite, the Fraternity holding
that the only way possible of raising one's self is by raising those with whom
one is associated in earth-life- the nation either into which one is born, or
with which it is one's
Karma
to
dwell. This must be the case if the hypotheses of the philosophy are correct.
Unity is, as has by this time been clearly shown, the basis of the whole doctrine-from
this have all things sprung, to it they all tend, and he would therefore best
help forward the race to its final emancipation, its Nirvana, who makes for
unity instead of for discord. Again, as in each planet and race a soul is associated
with other individuals for incalculable ages, its work lies in lifting these,
and by such means raising itself also; all being chained together, in effect
of past acts. The work of the Brothers, then, lies in the improvement of mankind,
the oldest traditions of the schools holding that in this way alone can any
advance be made in the spiritual sciences.
The question that
naturally follows in the reader's mind from this, is how, since one has to descend
into material life, to pass through planetary existence, through Rounds and
races- how it can in any way be said to be possible to advance men? Would not
this be a getting ahead of the "Great Law"? By no means, for such
Law itself includes the factor of individual development. Although all have
to pass through certain cycles of existence, to experience material as well
as psychic, mental and spiritual life, yet there is no actual obligation which
forces anyone to keep merely abreast of the times. The most casual inspection
of humanity will show how varying are the degrees of progress, how it is possible
for any one man by dint of exertion to outdo his fellows, and the same possibility
must hold good in the general as well as in the more limited sense. It is thus,
from one point of view, that have arisen the many classes of monads referred
to, divided roughly into minerals, vegetables, animals and humans. The calculations
deal with the general bulk, not with individual units.
The writer
once addressed a similar question to Mme Blavatsky, asking her why, since it
was the law that we had to pass through material existence, we should have to
suffer so in getting out of it? "Well", she said, "we should
not have had all this pain and suffering if we had not bound ourselves in chains
when on the road. It part of one's journey lies through a boggy swamp, it is
bad policy to stop and sit down in the mud. But this is just what we have done.
We might have walked through on stilts".
This settles the
question concerning the work of these individuals, which is solely with the
object of benefiting the race to which they belong; next concerning themselves.
Upon first being told that persons endowed with great power and learning, living
apart from ordinary humanity, unknown and almost unheard of, and apparently
refusing to disclose their knowledge, our western sense of openness and freedom
receives a shock and we at once feel inclined either to discredit the whole
statement, or, if finding it to be true, to exclaim: "How selfish! these
men ought to be forced to reveal their knowledge!" But until we fully comprehend
the nature of the lore, the conditions of its successful study, we are hardly
justified in ascribing to its possessors the attribute of selfishness if they
do not happen to scatter their wisdom broadcast. Occult science is at one with
modern philosophy at least in this, that, on the one hand, it is not advisable
to cast pearls before swine, nor, on the other, it is wise to allow explosives
to be handled by the uninitiated. For these two reasons its possessors prefer
to keep their science as much as may be to themselves, and, what is necessary
to this, themselves to remain as far as possible in the background.
As to the first
reason: So great is the ignorance of the masses concerning the spiritual side
of nature, that, save at certain epochs, the wisdom is not so jealously guarded,
for the simple reason that the skepticism of the "wise man" of the
age, generally prevents its abuse.- "disbelief being as the Magic Casket
in which it is locked". But at other times the reins are very closely drawn.
This is a period for more or less of secrecy. Although we have not yet more
than touched the border-line, still we are, according to the traditions, approaching
one of those periods when belief in "nature's finer forces", in "magicians",
"fairies", "ghosts", "spells", and indeed all
the so-called superstitions of the past ages, will once more become general,
and what is more, will be scientifically
proven
to be well-founded. "Coming events cast their shadows before". "Coming
events cast their shadows before".Already several of the greatest minds
of the age have publicly stated their belief in an unseen world; the ancient
superstitions of Mesmer and de Puysegur have lately transformed themselves into
the scientific discoveries of hypnotism and catalepsy; spiritualism is not without
its adherents amongst men of letters- although perhaps the "fourth dimension
of space" may one day prove itself an inadequate explanation; and the writer
can state on excellent authority that many of the first physicians in London
do not withhold from practicing astrology!
Yes; many who would
fain pin their faith to a materialistic conception of the universe have been
forced, nolens volens, to a belief in its occult side. But they have no explanation
to offer. Theosophy is the only philosophy, we affirm, which has afforded any
solution of the phenomena which are taking place on all sides and among all
classes of men. The intelligent reader will see in this more than a mere result
of chance. The occult sciences, little as has yet been given out, have not been
even so far advanced without the definite object of benefiting the race by offering
light and truth in explanation of what must, without it, very soon plunge humanity
deeper than ever into darkness and ignorance. The state of matter called astral,
- the anima mundi, elemental forces, Linga Sharira, and the like, - can, we
hold, of themselves give full explanation of all psychic phenomena, including
clairvoyance, clairaudience, even to the extent of explaining the rationale
of the remarkable "Double Ego" of hypnotism, where, by careful experiment
many times repeated, men are proved to be possessed of two (or even more ) selves.
Reincarnation again, new tothe West, but by no means new to the world, and the
law of Karma, will serve as solutions to many, if not all, of the mysteries
of life; and, if not complete ones, yet quite fall enough to be appreciated
by our race as a whole. "The Adepts", it should be remembered, "do
not undertake to give any one the key to the final mysteries until he is prepared
to receive and understand it" - which we Westerns certainly are not. Before
we can hold and use that key we must be properly trained. But few as yet have
fully escaped from the influence of old dogmatic doctrines respecting cosmogenesis;
we are not yet as a whole free enough from prejudice rightly to comprehend or
properly to use such knowledge.
And as in other days
argument against a six-day creation, based perhaps on geological investigations,
or more unaffected "common sense", would have been misunderstood,
probably to the extent of sending the perpetrator of such heresy to the stake,
so now, if more of the philosophy than could be assimilated by mankind in its
present era of evolution were scattered broadcast, no benefit could accrue to
the race.
As to the other reason:
We referred to the undesirability of giving explosives into the hands of persons
uninitiated in the methods of handling them, and have now to say that the study
of certain branches of Occultism is held to invest its disciples with powers
not normally possessed by man. A correct understanding of the conditions of
matter, and of the methods of directing its hidden forces, will easily be seen
to be the steppingstone of great power, and in this connection it may some day
be that the "Vril" of Bulwer Lytton's "Coming
Race" is
not altogether a fable. The same force which stirs the summer zephyr, intensified,
may pick up a locomotive and hurl it many yards distant. The subtle agent that
warms our houses may likewise devastate our towns. Electricity is equally efficacious
in tickling the palate, or in blasting the rock. And we may readily conceive
regarding any of the multitudinous hidden forces which must play through us,
that, were we able to hold and control them, to make out of the human body a
veritable storage-battery, then would we be invested with the power to work
apparent miracles. There is, indeed, said to be one force of terrible effect,
which, raised to its highest power on this plane, comes only under the control
of man. Electricity is its lowest aspect, but it is many million times more
potent than this. Happily, however, it is only as man rids himself of his passions
and terrestrial desires that he gains ability to handle this terrible agent;
the two are not compatible. Therefore will it only be the inheritance of mankind
as a whole in the purified coming seventh race.
Yet, even in our
own time, in a lower degree, it is not entirely without its manipulators. In
the majority of persons these powers lie entirely dormant; but in some, physical
and psychical idiosyncrasies more or less awaken them, and they require only
very slight stimuli to call them into potent action. So that "individuals
born with such a capacity as not very race. That they are not heard of more
frequently is due to the fact that they live and die, in almost every case,
in
utter ignorance of being possessed of abnormal power at all".
But mankind
has now as a whole commenced its ascent along the upward cycle which leads back
to unity; consequently spirituality is on the increase, materiality on the decline,
and year by year our race will become less animal, more human, possessed of
greater and greater powers over matter. Yet, as such gifts may be possessed
by the unrighteous as by the righteous- esoteric science, recognizing
spiritual evil as
well as spiritual good- perhaps it is well that those who have them do not always
discover their power.
For these and like
reasons the practical study of Occultism is denied to any who have not proven
themselves sincerely desirous of benefiting their race. It is therefore the
province of the very few. The theoretic study, on the other hand, is within
certain limits, the province of all, such limitation being expressed by the
boundary line of the spiritual possibilities of humanity in any given epoch.
In other words; the Great Law withholds no one individual from becoming a pioneer
of his family, tribe or race, provided he has the strength to do so; if he has
not the innate daring which alone can achieve this, then he must only wind his
way slowly around the circle of progression with his brethren.
Thus
"The
firm soul hastes; the feeble tarries,
yet-
all -
Will
reach the sunlit snows.
-From the Light of
Asia by Edwin Arnodl
It is well to put
this clearly. Mankind in the present age being, according to the eastern belief,
on the ascending arc of its cycle, it is easy to see that the gradual return
to unity (Nirvana) must be the indication of progress. Advancement therefore
depends entirely on the striving after unity. This is logical; and the study
of Occultism is nothing else from beginning to end than the practical realization
of it. So also the powers with which the students of the lore are endowed, results
as a natural consequence of their recognition of unity in nature as opposed
to the sense of separateness which inheres in the ordinary mortal.
The Brotherhood,
or Lodge, as it is sometimes called- the hierarchy of the Masters of Wisdom,
together with those whose endeavour is toward becoming such- must therefore
be looked upon as embodying the true pioneers, the advance-guard of the race;
and the profound knowledge of the laws of nature with which ages of research
have invested them- a research probably carried on through innumerable incarnations,
- causes them to believe that a working for the benefit of their brethren, and,
indeed, of all nature, is the truest aim of life. Of such were Gautama Buddha,
Sri Sankaracharya, Jesus, Pythagoras, Plato and many others, the beauty of whose
lives must well testify to their inherent divinity, and to the soul-light which
inspired their labours.
It is such as these
who were referred to one page 97 as the exceptions to the rule concerning the
present pioneers of the Globe; for some of them have, as the result of their
great endeavour, gone so far ahead of ordinary humanity as to have arrived at
development equal to that of the fifth Round. These are the true "Sons
of God".
But all nature is
made up of opposites; the existence of "Brothers of the Light" argues
that also of "Brothers of the Shadow". The control over the elements
which comes of an elevated perception, could scarcely be observed by the evil-minded
and selfish without being coveted for personal benefit; it is natural to suppose
that the world holds also those who are leaders of its people to spiritual wickedness.
The supposition is well grounded. Oriental occult philosophy speaks not a little
of Black Magicians, Sorcerers, Pratyeka Buddhas, [ Pratyeka Buddhas are those
Bodhisattvas who... caring nothing for the woes of mankind or to help it, but
only for their own bliss, enter Nirvana and- disappear from the sight and the
hearts of men. In Northern Buddhism a 'Pratyeka Buddha' is a synonym of spiritual
selfishness".- The Voice of the Silence], Dugpas, and others whose labours
in occult study are wholly with the
object of gaining personal benefit. The powers attained are used solely for
the glory and advantage of the possessor, and consequent detriment of his fellowmen.
This statement does not militate against the previous one that these powers
are only to be obtained through unity and harmony. Notwithstanding that the
Black Adept works on an exceedingly low plane of spirituality, to evil and disharmony
in relation to the planet on which he lives, and the race to which he belongs,
yet even he has to labour harmoniously with his coworkers. It is not therefore
surprising to find sorcerers adopting many methods of producing their results,
identical to those followed by the White Brotherhood. This will be rendered
clear if the reader remembers that almost every soul-production can be imitated
by mathematical ingenuity. It requires talent, rather than genius, to transfer
the landscape to our canvas. The most inartistic may, by practice among lines
and curves, in time produce what looks like a human face. By a legitimate course
of figuring we may even construct a piece of music. But the true inspiration,
the divine creative faculty, is absent in every case, they are but base imitations
of the genuine article. And, just as the man of genius lives only for his art,
while his brother perhaps produces only for the sake of whatever advantage may
accrue to him thereby, so also we find some to whom the soul-science comes naturally,
others whose labours in the occult fields are wholly with the object of gaining
whatever personal benefit is possible therefrom. White and black magic differ
from one another, primarily, in the end each seeks to accomplish; secondarily,
in the means employed to reach that end.
He who pours
water into the muddy well, does but disturb the mud.
Iamblicus
de Vit. Pythagoras
It is not to
be imagined because the Adepts do not feel constrained to give out the bright
truths to the world to be dragged in the mud by the masses, that they refrain
also from helping individuals. Such would be entirely against the work of the
Brotherhood. Anyone who aims at the improvement of himself and of his race will,
most certainly, be assisted by those whose only desire is the regeneration of
mankind.
But it is only after
one has advanced some distance along the path of knowledge, by his own unaided
efforts either in this or former lives, and achieved a certain degree of spiritual
perception, that he may become the direct pupil of an adept in occult lore.
Such pupils- chelas or lanoos as they are called, - are almost as little heard
of by the profane as are the Adepts themselves, since they are not, for good
reasons, allowed to reveal themselves as such. Yet it is said that there are
far more of them in existence than might be at first supposed. Mr. Sinnett,
for instance, came across many, after he had joined the Theosophical Society,
before unsuspected as such.
"Till now",
he writes "in accordance with the law of those schools, the neophyte no
sooner forced his way into the region of mystery, than he was bound over to
the most inviolable secrecy as to everything connected with his entrance and
further progress there. In Asia, in the same way, the chela, or pupil of Occultism,
no sooner became a chela than he ceased to be a witness on behalf of the reality
of occult knowledge. I have been astonished to find, since my own connection
with the subject, how numerous such chelas are. But it is impossible to imagine
any act more improbable than the unauthorized revelation by any such chela,
to persons in the outer world, that he is one; and so the great esoteric school
of philosophy successfully guards its seclusion". [See Esoteric Buddhism,
pages 58-59, Sixth American edition]
As in every
properly organized school of instruction there are many degrees of pupilage,
corresponding to the varying degrees of advancement of the scholars, so in the
occult colleges, there are many degrees of discipleship, only those pupils coming
under the individual tuition of a master being chelas proper. All the rest are
but "probationers", of whatever rank.
Although chelas in
the east are many, yet we have it on excellent authority that those in the west
are exceedingly rare, mainly because the conditions and requirements of discipleship
are so entirely opposed to those bred by our civilization. Unity, the sine qua
non of spiritual progression and enlightenment, is too far removed from western
thought. Emulation and strife, ambition, push, the resolve to surpass, outdo,
and conquer our fellowmen, is educated into us from our earliest childhood.
What schoolboy is there who does not hasten to learn, not in order that he may
eventually acquire wisdom, but that he may outstrip his companions and carry
off the prize? And, instinct with such principles of envy and uncharitableness-
however much masked under the cloak of social courtesies and well-bred manners-
how is it possible to find persons willing and able to fulfill such conditions
as the following, which been quoted as directions to the eastern instructor?:
"The disciples
when studying must take care to be united as the fingers on one hand. Thou shalt
impress upon their minds that whatever hurts one should hurt the others, and
if the rejoicing of one finds no echo in the breasts of the others, then the
required conditions are absent, and it is useless to proceed.
"The co-disciples
must be tuned by the guru as the strings of a lute, each different from the
others, yet emitting sounds in harmony with all. Collectively they must form
a keyboard answering in all its parts to thy lightest touch (the touch of the
Master). Thus their minds shall open for the harmonies of Wisdom, to vibrate
as knowledge through each and all, resulting in effects pleasing to the presiding
Gods and useful to the Lanoo. So shall Wisdom be impressed for ever on their
hearts and the harmony of the law shall never be broken".
During the first
years of his development the eastern pupil is forced to study in company with
a select body of other disciples; it is only toward the end of the cycle of
his training that he can receive individual instruction. The chela has to fulfill
the conditions of harmony, before he can proceed consciously and individually
along the lines of spiritual development, and study "face to face"
with his guru or his own Higher Ego.
It will readily
be seen how difficult it would be for any of us in the west to fulfill such
conditions when all our training has been along exactly opposite lines; although
it is not wholly impossible. But we learn from the ancient books that in order
to be born into a family and circumstances suitable to occult study and development,
one must have consciously struggled towards the light in a previous birth; therefore
we must only consider it as the Karma of our race which makes the practical
realization of the God within us so difficult, attempted, as it must be, in
the rush and roar of our civilization.
CHAPTER
SIX
THE
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
Nature's first
and imperishable, and most lovely, and most noble Law- the Inequality Between
Man and Man.
Bulwer
Lytton
In a work devoted
to an account of the Wisdom-Religion as it is at present known, the reader will
expect to find some sketch of organization through which, directly or indirectly,
it has come. A chapter under this head will therefore not be out of place.
The Theosophical
Society is only one many; it is not the first, nor will it be the last of its
kind. There have been many bodies in the past under this name, organized with
the same object in view as had the Founders of the present one- that of forming
an association which should act as an efficient channel for the scattering of
the few seeds of true knowledge among the masses that the degree of their development
entitled them to. But here have been still more bodies of the same nature formed
under other names. Of these, some are not yet fully dead. They remain; but most
of their utility has long ago departed. Like the husk without the seed, the
house without its inhabitant, the shell bereft of the vital organism its only
use is to encase, their glory has departed,; no longer has the world any need
of their services, no longer have they any "good tidings" to impart,
for a new race has been born since they strove to fulfill their mission in the
world; a new race, with fresh vitality and fresh ideas of the fitness of things,
to which Truth must present another facet of her brilliant gem. The Rosicrucian
fraternity, the Freemasons, Foresters, are all remnants of former endeavours
to inculcate and implant the Wisdom-Religion in the hearts of men. But the great
mystics who formerly sat at their heads have long ago departed, the vehicles
are left to run without their drivers, and the weary descendants of the once
great schools will strive in vain to hold together the fast crumbling remains.
Yet their history records the efforts of the past; they are "footprints
on the sands of time", and as such are yet, perhaps, not without their
value.
The word Theosophy
literally means "God-Wisdom" theo-sophia); however much dictionary
editors may inform us to the contrary, this is all we can claim for the word.
But this does not signify revelation.
The
signification or term "divine-widom" does not necessarily contain
any implication as to how that wisdom is acquired. Theosophy is wisdom concerning
God,
or the divinity of things, not wisdom from God.
In this view therefore the writer accepts the definition of Vaughan: "A
Theosophist", he says, "is one who gives you a theory of God, or of
the works of God, which... an
inspiration
of his own for its basis". Therefore
all great philosophers and thinkers who have offered any explanation of life,
the founders of every great religion, have been Theosophists, and, we affirm,
have all taught, consciously or unconsciously to themselves, some aspect or
other of the vast system which has been so roughly outlined in this volume.
Christian writers
ascribe the development of the ancient Eclectic Theosophical System to the third
century of their era; but there were Theosophists before that time. Diogenes
Laertius speaks of the philosophy as antedating the dynasty of the Ptolemies,disclosing
its founder in the Egyptian Hierophant, Pot Amun - a Coptic name, signifying
a priest consecrated to Amun,the god of wisdom. History shows its revival in
the Eclectic System of Ammonius Saccas, in whose time certainly the word Theosophy
originated. The object of this philosopher was almost identical with our own-
to reconcile all sects, peoples and nations under one common faith, and to establish
a belief in one Supreme, Eternal, Unknown and Unnamed Power or Principle, through
which the Universe came into being,and by which it was governed with immutable
and eternal laws.
Again, we find Theosophists
in Germany in the 12th century, holding identical views of life and working
to the same end, and also in the 15th century. There was a society formed in
London in or about the year 1665, which strove after a like purpose. All these,
not to speak of the host of seers who have appeared from time to time, of the
Swedenborg and Bohme type, whose explanation of nature differed but in minor
detail from that offered by the modern Theosophists.
Theosophy is the
Wisdom-Religion, the archaic philosophy which was the fount of knowledge in
every ancient country having claims to civilization, and from which have descended
in less mystic garb the sciences of the present day known to the professors
of our colleges as Chemistry, Astronomy, etcs., However much said professors
may object to the statement.
But whether
known as Theosophy or by any other name, the same Wisdom-Religion has existed
always and will show itself on earth and among men for all eternity: the sequence
of martyrs to the great universal truths has never once been broken; known or
unknown they will appear and suffer again and again, ever adding to their ranks
however, until some day, at the birth of the purified seventh race, mankind
will reawaken to find the chair of materialistic philosophy vacant and decayed.
It was said in another
part of this work that about once every hundred years special efforts to regenerate
mankind are made by those in whose guardianship is the philosophy, and a retrospective
glance would show where many of these have been undertaken and under whose management.
But to trace them all completely would now be a difficult task, for the simple
reason that all have not been made in the shape of public movements. They have
been in a manner suitable to the exigencies of the times. It is only in our
cycle that an open attempt has been made, and this for the reason that the age
demands it. Formerly work was often done through kings and rulers, instead of
through public movements, because people had then less independence and the
king held more the position of dictator than he does in this age. We constantly
hear of wise men, alchemists, soothsayers, appearing at various courts and working
marvels sufficient to attract the attention and wonder of the monarch These,
however, were but their outward signs; in truth they worked to other ends than
miracles. They often influenced the prince's mind, so that he altered his method
of ruling his kingdom, thereby perhaps bringing about results which not only
affected his own subjects, but, by reaction, the peoples of other countries,
and afterwards the world as a whole.
But although
it is for these reasons hard to trace the uprising of all such efforts, yet
with some we have no difficulty. Toward the end of the 14th century we may place
the founding of the later Rosicrucian [ do you imagine that there were no mystic
solemn unions of men, seeking the same end through the same means, before the
Arabians of Damus, in 1378, taught to a wandering Jew the secrets which founded
the institution of the Rosicrucians?" Bulwer Lytton in Zanoni] fraternity,
one of the brightest and most successful of bodies of philosophers, although
a secret one. The labours of Jacob Boehme and of his teacher, John George Gichtel,
had their effect at the close of the 17th century. [In 1672, when Louis XIV,
laid siege, to Amsterdam, Gichtel, by the power of his will, is reported by
his disciples to have exercised influence enough to cause the raising of the
siege, and afterwards the names of the very regiments and squadrons he had seen
in his vision were found in the papers. Princes of Germany and even sovereigns
consulted him".] The one however which comes nearest to our own time is
that which directly preceded the Theosophical Society, at the close of the 18th
century of the Christian era. This was the famous "Société
de l'Harmonie", founded by Mesmer in Paris in 1783.
The success
of these efforts is not, it should be remembered, any more absolutely certain
than is anything else in nature. The Adepts are not infallible. Their extended
insight into the workings of natural law enables them to place the cause farther
back, the effect further forward, than our more limited vision permits us to.
But this is all they claim. The mistakes of one century are corrected in the
efforts of the next, so that in course of time they may lessen enormously with
respect, at least, to that race whose development is being forwarded; but so
long as there is a limitation of vision, finity- and work on the material plane
of necessity implies such, there must be error. The effort of last century was
a failure because of the too socialistic aspect of the mystical doctrine put
forward. There was a definite teaching- albeit a secret one- similar to Theosophy
as now known, given to the members of Mesmer's society. But the true philosophy
did not come to the front. "Fraternité, Liberté, Egalité"
constituted the only philosophy the people of the period would listen to. Hence
the Reign of Terror of 1794. Even such as Count St.Germain and the wonder-working
Cagliostro, the successor of Mesmer, could not stay the torrent of materialism;
they were laughed at, and accounted charlatans and falsifiers. [In her "Theosophical
Glossary" (article Mesmer) Madame Blavatsky says: "Of these three
men (St Germain, Mesmer, Cagliostro) who were at first regarded as quacks, Mesmer
is already vindicated. The justification of the two others will follow in the
next century (1892)]
Although such
attempts are made at every cycle of 100 years, yet all are not equally powerful
in effect; the more efficient efforts themselves also run in cycles. The result
of work done in such epochs lasts much longer. Consequently while it would require
much acquaintance with European and other history, both told and untold, to
trace each endeavour, yet the greater ones can always be observed.
Of course each movement
makes use as far as possible of the work of its predecessors; so that, for instance,
the "revival
of Freemasonry" has become almost a byword,
nobody being able to tell exactly when or where the craft had its origin or
founding. The same thing may be said of Rosicrucianism, and indeed of Theosophy
itself. It is therefore not surprising, in view of the fact that Cagliostro
and others worked to reestablish lodges of Freemasonry, to find H.P.Blavatsky,
the nineteenth century messenger,offering herself at the outset of her career
as the new leader of the Freemasons. This she did before 1875 to some of the
heads of the craft in America, naming herself as the messenger from the eastern
Brotherhood. It was but the Karma of Freemasonry, which was the movement that
had been carried over from the last century to the present one. But even if
the Freemasons had wished to accept her as their head, they could not have done
so, since the traditions of that Fraternity militate against the admission of
women. This was probably a later introduction than the days of Cagliostro, who
is said to have organized more than one "lodge" composed entirely
of women.
Madame Blavatsky's
services being declined, she set to work to form the nucleus of a new body.
Gathering together some of those on earth who had previously worked with her,
she started the Theosophical Society, with Col. H.S. Olcott, William Q.Judge
and others; and from the date of its founding men's interests have been drawn
more and more to spiritual things.
It is advisable,
perhaps, here to make clear to the reader that the reason that the wave of spirituality
which marks the revival of occult knowledge among the masses, is manifested
for twenty-five years only of each century,is not because the Adepts are unable
to work at other times, but because they have found that any attempt carried
forward longer than such period has been productive of evil rather than of good
results. The time chosen,also, it is well to point out, is that period when
the forces for evil are strongest, so that while combating the reawakened tendency
of humanity toward wickedness and sorcery, they can at the same time work to
the establishment of a higher ideal among the masses. Everything has its twilight
or period of awakening. The advent of Theosophy was marked by a number of phenomena
of the spiritualistic character, which served as indications of the existence
of subtler forces in nature. The manifestation of these was in part the direct
work of certain Nirmanakayas, who thus, behind the scenes, forwarded the work
of the T.S. By giving it an actual basis on which to commence work. And for
this reason H.P.Blavatsky, during her lifework, in her first labours worked
among the spiritualists, supporting their assertions even to the extent of at
first declaring herself one, although always maintaining that they attributed
their effects to wrong causes.
The Theosophical
Society, as at present constituted, has three objects, which tree, if properly
carried out and fully understood, must result in the recognition of the mystical
system known as Theosophy. Thus the Society is bound by no beliefs, no dogmas,
throws its doors wide open to all, and has only endeavour, that of uniting all
sects and peoples into one harmonious whole- producing a humanity of philo-sophers,
or true lovers of wisdom. Indeed, so evident is it that without a knowledge
of the laws of Nature and of Being, the first object, "To form the nucleus
of a Universal Brotherhood", would be a mere high-sounding mockery, and
could not be accomplished, that restriction over the other two has been withdrawn,
and the candidate for entrance into the T.S. Need now only subscribe to the
first object.
The three are as
follows:
First-
To form the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity, without distinction
of race, creed, sex, caste or colour;
Second- To
promote the study of Aryan and other Eastern literatures, religions and sciences;
Third- To
investigate unexplained laws of Nature and the psychical powers latent in man.
No person's religious
opinions are asked upon his joining, nor his interference with them permitted,
but every one is expected to show towards his fellow-members the same tolerance
in this respect as he claims for himself.
Some may wonder,
perhaps, with only the above programme, why nearly all of the members of the
Theosophical Society should also be Theosophists. An examination of the three
objects will indicate the reason. The First must be subscribed to, otherwise
admission cannot be gained to the Society. But any one desiring to be a worker
in establishing such a Brotherhood must be a pioneer of his race. It is one
and the same thing as saying that his spiritual perceptions are more awakened
than those of the majority of his kind. Let him cry out against the statement
as much as he will, he is not a materialist at heart. For there is nothing so
opposed to materialistic science, nothing so mystical, nothing so founded on
the internal evidence of the heart, as the Brotherhood of Humanity; and, sooner
or later, men who believe in its existence, who work to help it on, will find
that they draw their inspirations from the spiritual spheres, from their own
Higher Ego, and not from an inspection of material things.
Then, religionists
and mystics at heart, whether subscribing to a creed or not, let them study
under the Second Object, and they will find that humanity has ever placed its
hopes elsewhere than on this globe. They will find that from the dawn of the
Aryan race down to the present time mystics an sages have always walked the
earth and taught the peoples the one truth, Universal Brotherhood- the one doctrine,
Theosophy. No wonder than they are Theosophists. For once the keynote has been
struck, once the Wisdom-Religion is shown to have existed ever, in all creeds,
it takes very little to convince anyone with higher perceptions than those which
look on clay, of its verity.
And if they
wish to go further, and demonstrate its truth in their own lives, there is still
the Third Object, now embraced in a school founded by H.P.Blavatsky, which,
under certain conditions, members of the Society can enter in its first degree.
This they may join, and through it come to a real inner perception and knowledge
of the truth of the ever occult philosophy.
Universal Brotherhood
is the end as well as the beginning of the doctrines of Theosophy. Harmonious
living is the direct heritage of Wisdom; without the latter we might as well
try to "love our neighbour as ourselves" as to endeavour to run without
possessing legs. So the true philosopher will not attempt to point out a possible
Utopia without showing also the manner in which it may be reached. While the
Theosophical Society, therefore, adopts the formation of a Universal Brotherhood
as its main object, the theosophical philosophy is put forward as serving as
a pointer, at least, to the solution of the problem of life, and to indicate
the rationale of such Brotherhood.
Theosophy shows unity
in its most complete sense to be the last expression of the Universe; the recognition
of harmony in all things to be the final perfection of life. To reach the final,
perfected state, therefore, it would be reasonable to conclude that cooperation
with one's fellow men should be the first endeavour, so Theosophists are invariably
found advocating work in the service of Humanity. But work for others is only
a means to an end- that of raising those others-, is not the end itself, and
it would be manifestly foolish to continue such work without learning from it
the best methods of achieving success in this direction. And Theosophists strive
more toward the altering of the minds of the people than their surroundings,
the individual rather than his environment; considering the latter in regard
to each person to be almost wholly the outcome of the vice or virtue which may
have coloured his previous lives, or his past actions in this one. This is striking
at the root of the evil. All the vice and wickedness of the world, no matter
how we may regard it, has selfishness for its foundation-stone; has arisen out
of thought for self, regardless of the necessities or troubles of others. If
a complete change for good is to be made in the condition of the world, the
mind of man must first be altered. Philanthropic associations are doubtless
of value, but the good they have done has lain more in any effect they may have
had in making people less selfish, than in the establishment of soup-kitchens
and workingmen's clubs. And while he untutored philanthropist rushes wildly
about, struggling frantically to remove the effects of the evil, the Theosophist,
versed in the laws of advancement works silently at the cause.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
CONCLUSION
The door by
which the human soul goes out of itself, is the same by which it enters the
understanding.
The door by which the human understanding goes out of itself, is the same by
which it enters the spirit of the universe.
The door by which the spirit of the universe goes out of itself, is that by
which it enters into the elements and matter.
This is the reason why the learned, who do not take these routes, never enter
Nature.-
Louis
Claude de Saint-Martin
The mission
of Theosophy is, in the main, to broaden the thought of the age and to direct
the minds of thinkers toward the contemplation of life from groundstands high
enough to overlook all the different sciences and philosophies.
It seeks to reveal
the true origin of our various religions, and to show that the same mysticism
which inspired the founding of Christianity sowed the seed for the growth of
all the creeds of the world. Religion, it teaches, is a part of man's own character,
not simply a knowledge derived from whatever books he may have studied; and
every creed represents but the external covering of Truth. Essentially, therefore,
are the teachings of all the sages identical. External differences are due merely
to incidental causes- diversity in the methods of giving their wisdom among
individual teachers, natural modifications and changes of the original philosophy
after lapse of time, or the varied interpretations of it by the priests into
whose keeping it was entrusted. Theosophy therefore in this sense is the Religion
of religions.
But Theosophy
is distinctly a science. It is religion with a philosophical basis. There is
really no difference between its conclusions and those reached by the great
thinkers of our civilization save in that it takes a broader view of life, and
shows a more complete harmony throughout the manifestations of nature. Our physical
sciences are concerned with nature in her last effect,- her outward manifestations
or "garment"; the secret science of the Orient studies the whole of
that concatenation of causes and effects which intervenes between this sphere
of life and God or the "First Cause". That is almost the only difference
between the two. Eventually will our western thinkers- perhaps through greater
attention to the psychological fields of investigation- attain to a knowledge
of life similar to that of the great nature-students of the East; the only thing
needful to such being a development of the occult senses.
In Theosophy therefore
science blends with religion. Religion, according to that theosophical view,
being but a clearer perception of,a deeper insight into life, by man, freed
from superstition and emotion and grounded in true philosophy, it must lead
to wisdom. If the insight it gives be added to the practical and intellectual
powers of our modern scientist we can set no limit to his advance in knowledge.
It is indeed this ever deepening insight, by whatever name it be known, that
alone permits scientific progress. The Romanes lectures for 1893 [Evolution
and Ethics by T.R. Huxley , F.R.S.] Has been a surprise to many. In it the lecturer
frankly admits that cosmic evolution does not explain everything, and that in
particular it tells us nothing of the "soul" of man. "Cosmic
evolution", he says, "may teach us how the good and the evil tendencies
of man may have come about; but, in itself, it is incompetent to furnish any
better reason why what we call good is preferable to what we call evil than
we had before", in the religions and philosophies of the past and especially
in those of India. "Fragile reed as he may be, man, as Pascal says, is
a thinking reed: there lies within him a fund of energy, operating intelligently
and so far akin to that which pervades the universe that it is competent to
influence and modify the cosmic process. In virtue of his intelligence the dwarf
bends the Titan to his will". Both the intelligence in man and his knowledge
of good and evil are rooted in the same cause; that no science of mere physical
nature can explain. Outside of occult science or religious philosophy, there
has been no efficient reason given why man, as an animal the most degraded,
and certainly by no means among the most powerful, can yet bring under his subjection
all living things; why for instance the strongest and even the wildest animals
are forced to answer to his will. The reason has been given by the occultists
ages ago. Man is the temple of divinity. In each human being there is incarnated
some of the divine essence, drawn from the plane of Mahat or Maha-Buddhi, by
virtue of which incarnation he is endowed with intelligence and religious instinct.
By permitting it to inspire his actions here he becomes the greatest of all
beings; for Mahat is the finer, occult side of the universe, the realm of Divine
Thought and of the higher law, and man as an actual vessel of its essence has
no equal in power on this plane. Physical nature could produce a perfect animal;
but soul had to be added, it could not be evolved in the ordinary way. Its first
incarnation, by which man obtained the rulership of nature- referred to on page
185? of this volume, is allegorized in all the great religions and mythologies.
The tempting by Wisdom of Man in the Garden of Eden; the story of Prometheus;
the fall of the Gods; are examples.
The truth is that
each of the world's great religions is but the remnant of an ancient science.
As in the present day we receive our general knowledge concerning physics
and biology from the personal experiments of our Stewarts and Huxleys, so
in the past did the masses receive their instruction regarding nature from
the information given them by the sages of that time. But the latter- the
scientists of that day- laboured in fields of investigation different from
those explored by the more advanced men of our civilization. We consider
physical nature in all her aspects and are rarely carried into the psychic
realms; their studies constituted what may be called an advanced psychology
- acquaintance with
the subtle essences of the universe and a practical knowledge of the Soul
of man. This occult study has left perhaps but little that is applicable
to the studies of our day, for as it appears in the garb of popular religion
it is so cloaked in allegory and metaphor that its inner truths are not
easily seen. But the "first principles" of today are identical
with those of old; and the practical science of the soul is already in embryo
in our civilization. The old philosophy was given out in turn to each nation
on its arriving at maturity; and survived in the race as its religion. Greatly
modified and altered as the ages have passed, changed into superstition
in the minds of the majority, it is still to be found in almost all the
exoteric scriptures of the world; the Theosophical Society has been established
to try and resurrect it. When religion is fully comprehended and science
entirely developed there will be found no essential difference between the
two. The links in the chain of thought that brought the great thinkers of
the past to their conclusions are scattered,the occult science is lost to
the world at large; but it is the hope of the Trans-Himalayan Brotherhood
that by the light of Theosophy the old wisdom may be restored.
"Well then",
it will be said, "is the Theosophical a school of occultism; does it teach
how to develop the hidden powers of man and enable him to practically investigate
these questions?" The Theosophical Society itself is not a school of occultism;
but it certainly seeks to educate man into knowledge of a possible growth in
the occult sphere. The practical investigation of the occult and psychic side
of nature is one of the most difficult things imaginable. It requires the development
of senses and faculties not generally active in man. But before even these senses
are developed, a certain philosophical balance- a complete self-reliance, must
be attained. Until the soul is able to learn entirely on itself, on the god
within- to draw its food,not from the opinions of friends or the fulfillment
of the desires of
the flesh, but from the spirit with which it is linked, it would be hazardous
indeed to have intercourse with the denizens of the hidden spheres, many of
whom are inimical to man. Everyone is surrounded, in the wise provision of nature,
with an akasic wall that preserves the soul from conscious association with
the astral world until it is sufficiently grown in power to be able to dominate
and overcome the inhabitants of that world. To rush willfully into the occult
spheres before that power is developed, to gain ability to associate with the
elementals without first having entirely purified the nature, is to become what
is technically termed a medium, one who has permitted himself to become the
agent of the transmission of occult forces,but who is entirely powerless to
control them. In its final consequences such a condition is one of the most
terrible imaginable. The power to control these forces is drawn only from the
Higher Ego. Reliance on that, a total renunciation of self, and utter fearlessness
of life, are the only talismans that can guard the soul from danger when it
attempts to fathom the mysteries of other worlds.
Absolute purity of
mind, selfishness, and freedom from superstition, are therefore the preliminary
necessaries to occult development, and it is with a desire to attain these that
the Theosophical Society seeks first to inspire man; then later a school of
practical occultism in the west may be developed. All the greater sages have
instructed their pupils in these virtues before permitting them to practically
study occultism; nearly every oriental philosophical treatise is based on them.
For this reason
also very little information has been given regarding the subjective spheres.
Beyond the fact of their existences, and the general laws governing them, scarcely
anything definite has been told us by the Brotherhood. It would be of no value
to us in the present state of development, for nothing could be really understood
until occult powers were attained. The most meager information has been given
us concerning the fellow globes of our earth, their relations to the "seven
mystery planets", the globe-rounds, elementals and the like. Humanity is
not prepared for the knowledge; even what has been told us has given rise to
no little misunderstanding. All the information regarding them that could be
given us would not enable us any better to truly comprehend them unless gifted
with psychic powers- and such would at once place us beyond the necessity for
mere information.
Psychic powers will
assuredly be an endowment of our race at no very distance time. Already many
breathe who possess them in some slight degree. But the Theosophical Society
was not established to hasten their development. It was formed to give men a
conception of right philosophy, to awaken in them a knowledge of their possibilities,
to point out the methods of advance, and to train each to conquer and dominate
his own nature and thus diminish the evil of the day.
The Coils of Eliphas
Lévi's "Great
Serpent",
the
Astral Light, reflected in which are the desires and passions of all past humanities-
enfold our civilization; but the desire to be liberated from its oppression,
to escape the influence of its corrupt magnetism and to break the enchantment
of its eyes is growing among us and in age when success may be achieved. Shall
not each of us lend his aid to the deliverance of his kind! Slight is the exertion-
a mere control of self- in comparison with the reward, the emancipation of a
race. And the occult laws of advance and power set no out of the way task before
us; they require only that each one shall do his best in that sphere into which
it is his Karma to have been born or to have come. "Each man who conquers
a single passion or fault raises the Karma of the whole world to that extent".
Following the examples set us by the Great Ones of the past and the blessed
Mahatmas of today- the example of self-sacrifice- we may be certain of success;
drawing our inspiration from the knowledge that every drop of blood wrung from
the heart through sacrifice out of genuine compassion for our brothers pays
the ransom of ten thousand souls.
There is an old,
old tradition that for the sin of one soul the whole world is dipped in suffering;
and until that soul repents and atones, so will the world remain.
That soul incarnates
among men in every age. Who is so acquainted with the mystic signs as to point
out the forehead that bears the mark? It may be a brother, but, reader, - it
may be YOU!
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