Theosophy - Occultism, Semi-Occultism and Pseudo-Occultism by Annie Besant
Adyar
Pamphlet No. 19
Occultism,
Semi-Occultism, and Pseudo-Occultism ΔΔ
by Annie
Besant
A
lecture delivered to the Blavatsky Lodge, London, on 30th June, 1898
Speaking to the Lodge for the first
time after returning from India, it will not seem to you, I think, either strange
or inappropriate that I should take for my subject one which is largely drawn
from Indian history; not the history of the outside nation, but the history
of that inner line of thought which is of the deepest interest to us as students
and as Theosophists. And inasmuch as history continually repeats itself, such
a study may offer points of instruction to us in our own time. For I am going
to ask you to consider with me what I may perhaps define - although definition
is a little difficult - as, first, occultism, then what may be called semi-occultism,
and, thirdly, the outgrowths which follow and surround these and which are specially
marked and active at any time when true occultism is working in the world.
It is a very common blunder made
by many people, to suppose that spiritual forces have in them something which
they are pleased to call unpractical, and we continually notice an assumption,
which is taken for granted without argument, that if a nation, for instance,
should turn itself towards a spiritual ideal, or if individuals should devote
themselves to the spiritual life, that then such a nation is likely to be undistinguished
along other more evident and visible walks in life, and such an individual is
likely to lose much of what is called his practical value in the world. Such
a view of life is a blunder, and a blunder of the most complete kind. The liberation
of spiritual forces, the setting free of energies on the spiritual plane, has
a far greater effect both on the individual than can be produced by any of the
forces that are started on the lower planes of life. When a spiritual energy
is set free, it works down through the other planes of being, giving rise on
each plane to a liberation of energy, and bringing about results great in proportion
to the nature of the spiritual force. So that it is true in history, as you
may find by study, that where spiritual forces are liberated, the intellectual
life of the nation will also leap forward with tremendous energy, the emotional
life of the nation will show fresh development, and even on the lowest plane
of all - the physical, results will be brought about entirely beyond anything
that could have been achieved by the energies of the physical plane which are
set to work and which apparently cause these results. That is a principle, a
law, which I will ask you to bear in mind through all that I have to say to
you - that every force initiated on the higher planes, as it passes down to
the lower, brings about results proportionate to itself; so that it is the shortest-sighted
view of human life and of human activity which imagines that devotion to the
spiritual life, the evolution of the individual in the spiritual world, is anything
but an immense addition to all the forces of progress that work on the earth,
anything but a lifting up of the world on the great ladder up which it is climbing.
But there is another principle that
we must also bear in mind in our study, and it is this; that as forces are liberated
on any plane, the results brought about by those forces will vary in their character
according to those who utilise the energies after their liberation. As we have
often pointed out to you here, energies on the different planes of nature are
not what we call good or bad in themselves. Force is a force: energy is an energy.
When we bring in the idea of good and evil, of right and wrong, of morality
and immorality, these ideas are connected with the results brought about by
individuals in the utilisation of the forces. A time, then, of great spiritual
energy, of great liberation of forces from the spiritual plane, will be marked
to a great extent by activities of opposed characters on the lower planes of
being, and those energies which are liberated on each plane may be taken up
and used by individuals for what we should call either good or evil. The great
mark of good or evil, looking at it from this standpoint, is the use that the
individual is making of these forces, or such part of them as he is able to
control; whether he is using them for the uplifting of humanity, whether he
is regarding them as the Divine energy which he may use to forward the Divine
purposes, or whether he is simply trying to grasp them for his own separate
ends, striving to apply them to that which he desires to grasp and to hold,
serving his own purposes without regard to the Divine economy. This, then, as
I said, we will bear in mind in following out, first, as a lesson, something
of the past in India, and then in applying the lesson that thus we learn to
the movement which we know amongst ourselves at the present day, that great
spiritual movement which is manifesting itself in the world and of which the
Theosophical Society is one of the potent expressions.
To begin with, what is occultism?
The word is used and misused in the most extraordinary ways. H.P. Blavatsky
once defined it as the study of mind in nature, meaning by the word mind, in
that connection, the study of the Universal Mind, the Divine Mind, the study
of the workings of God in the Universe, the study therefore of all the energies
which, coming forth from the spiritual centre, work themselves out in the worlds
around us. It is the study of the life side of the Universe, the side from which
everything proceeds and from which everything is moulded, the looking through
the illusory form to the reality which animates it; it is the study which underlies
all phenomena; it is the ceasing to be wholly blinded by these appearances in
which we so continually move and by which we are so continually deluded; it
is the piercing through the veil of maya and perceiving the reality, the one
Self, the one Life, the one Force, that which is in everything and all things
in it. So that, really, occultism, in the true sense of the word, may be said
to be identical with that vision which, as you know, is spoken of in the Bhagavad-Gita,
where Shri Krishna declares that "He who sees Me," that is, who sees the One
Self, "in everything and everything in Me, verily he seeth". Such a study, if
you understand at all what is implied in it, must necessarily mean the development
in the one who sees of the highest spiritual faculties, for only by the Spirit
can the Spirit be known. We speak continually of proving this, that, or the
other spiritual thing. There is no real proof possible of Spirit, save through
Spirit; there is no proof of the intellect, no proof of the emotion, no proof
of the senses, which is proof when you come to deal with the reality of the
Spirit. Nothing of the nature of proof along those lines, whether sensuous,
emotional, or intellectual, can be anything more than a suggestion, a reflection
of the truth, an analogy which may lead us on the right path, but proof in the
true sense of the word it never can be. And it has been written truly in one
of the great Indian scriptures, and repeated over and over again in the other
scriptures of the world, that there is in the full sense of the word no proof
of God save the belief in the Spirit, for only the Spirit that is akin to Him,
and that is Himself, is able to know, is able to touch.
Now looking at real occultism as
thus defined, realising that no one can be in the full sense of the word an
occultist save one in whom the spiritual nature is developed and active, we
should, in our next step, be able to separate off from this true occultism very
much that goes by its name both in the past and the present, amongst those who
went before us and amongst ourselves today. But we should need, in separating
off all these forms of so-called occultism, to distinguish between those which
may be said, in a sense, to be stepping stones to the real, which were intended
as steppingstones by those who gave them to the world and which may be used
as steppingstones and utilised for progress, and other forms which are not really
included under the name of occultism in any true sense of the term, those things
which H.P. Blavatsky once spoke of as occult arts and which for many people
seem to include everything they regard as occultism - arts in which certain
forces of nature are utilised and in which faculties are developed on various
planes in nature below the spiritual; for there are worlds above what we call
the physical, but still below the spiritual regions, with which the development
of certain faculties brings man into touch, enabling him to control and utilise
their forces. There are almost a myriad arts and lines of study of this kind
which ought never by any real student, by anyone who is seeking the higher truth,
to be included in his thought when that thought is turned towards occultism.
And some of you might clear up much confused thinking on this subject if you
would refer to the writing of H.P. Blavatsky on Occultism versus the Occult
Arts, where she draws the dividing line extremely clearly and shows the
position that these occult arts hold, and should be recognised as holding, when
we are dealing with human evolution.
True occultism, then, is that to
which at first I would ask you to turn your thoughts, and its pursuit implies,
as I have said, the development of the spiritual nature. Now the moment we speak
of the development of the spiritual nature we must at once recognise that for
the larger number of us that development must necessarily lie in the future,
but that we may begin to work towards it today; that it is of enormous import
to our true progress that we should recognise it and work towards it, and not,
by misunderstanding the nature of that development, waste our time, waste possibly
many lives, by following blind alleys and mistaken roads. The development of
the spiritual nature must succeed - and this is one of the most important points
that we can realise - must succeed the purification of the lower parts of our
nature. We must be pure emotionally and intellectually, we must have reached
a certain stage, at least, of the elimination of the personality before anything
that can rightly be called spiritual progress is within our reach. No amount
of mere intellectual development - and I will come back to that point, for I
do not wish in any way to depreciate that most necessary line of human growth
- but no amount of mere intellectual development will of itself bring about
the growth of the spiritual nature. With the fundamental reason for that I shall
deal more fully in a future lecture, but I must say in passing that the development
of the spiritual nature and of the intellectual nature are on one vital point
in direct opposition. The principle that we call the intellect is the analysing,
the dividing, the separative principle. The very purpose of its evolution is
the building up of the individual, its root lies in the ahankara, or the "I"-making
faculty, it is that which limits, which defines, which separates, which marks
off the man from every other man, which makes what we may call that coating
of selfishness which is absolutely necessary as one stage in evolution, which
is one part of our growth in this world. It is a stage through which all humanity
must pass, but which, regarded by itself, makes all those illusions which the
Spirit transcends, and gives the touch of apparent reality to the separated
self, the antagonistic self, the self that covets and grasps and holds and sets
itself against all others. So that what we might call the very principle of
illusion is represented by this intellectual faculty.
Necessary as its evolution is, none
the less it is on this point in antagonism to spiritual evolution; for spiritual
evolution means the recognition and the growth of the One Self into manifested
activity, first within that sheath which has been formed by the intellect, and
then by transcending it and bringing about that realised unity which is the
object of our human evolution. It is for this that we place the unity of mankind
in the spiritual regions, it is for this that we proclaim the brotherhood of
man as a spiritual reality; for the Spirit is one, and it is only as that unity
is recognised, consciously known - not simply intellectually seen, but consciously
realised - it is only as that is done that the spiritual nature is in course
of evolution. Inasmuch as the intellect is separative and the Spirit unifying,
inasmuch as the one gives rise to illusion while the other transcends it, as
the one is the source both of individuality and of personality, whereas the
other is the source of that Oneship which we seek and shall realise - you will
readily see how in the course of evolution these two parts of the nature cannot
be regarded as causally related in the strict sense of the term, and we cannot
say that by the evolution of the intellectual nature the spiritual nature will
inevitably develop. On the contrary, we have to learn that we are not the intellect,
but are to use the intellect as an instrument; that we are not the separated
self, but the One Self living in all. That is the object of our evolution, that
the goal of our pilgrimage; and therefore occultism, which means the study and
the development of the spiritual nature, must transcend completely the intellectual
evolution. It may even in many of its earlier stages find, and does find, its
bitterest antagonist, its most dangerous enemy, in that very maker of illusions
that you may remember we are warned against in The Voice of the Silence,
that most spiritual book which so many of us have found as opening up the path
to us to the spiritual life. Recognising this, we shall naturally look forward
to the spiritual evolution as a thing to be worked for rather than to be accomplished,
from the stage at which we are at present. We should also be prepared to realise
the immense difficulty of such an achievement, to understand how much will have
to be done with the character and with the nature, how tremendous are the demands
that we shall have to meet, before anything which in the strict sense of the
term can be called occultism will be at all within our reach.
In the history of the past, where
true occultism was the life of the world, where that great fount of spiritual
life flowed from the Beings in whom the spiritual nature was wholly developed,
when the world was drawing its light and its life from such Beings, it was obviously
not possible that their knowledge, their powers, their work could be largely
shared by undeveloped humanity, or even by the comparatively advanced humanity
that surrounded them. Still less was it possible that any great part of their
teaching or any true comprehension of their work and their methods could be
known to the people at large; and yet it was necessary that links should be
made, that steps, as it were, should be created. The result of this necessity
was that men who were advanced - although in them the spiritual nature was not
yet wholly evolved - men of great powers, who stand out in history as giants
of humanity, strove to make possible for the advancing ranks of mankind some
understanding of the upward path that should be trodden, some realisation of
the methods that might be adopted whereby approach might be made to the spiritual
regions.
These men, great as they were, were
not, as I have said, men in whom the spiritual nature was wholly developed,
supreme, complete. Their evolution in many cases - and I speak with all reverence
of those so much greater than ourselves - may even be said to have gone along
one line in excess of other lines of their growth; so that one man might have
enormously developed intellectual power but less perfection perhaps of moral
character; another might have made great advance in devotion and might not have
developed so much of intellectual force; another might be keenly alive to the
religious necessities of man and not so much interested in his philosophical
evolution; another, again, might have turned his attention towards the development
of certain sides of man's nature which would touch the physical regions of existence,
and even to the forcing of faculties in man, which, when built up from below,
would bring him into touch with parts of the astral or the lower mental world,
and might force those faculties and the part of his nature to which they belong
in advance alike of mental and moral evolution. Along these various lines you
will readily see that individuals might have progressed, and that each man would
be characterised in his thinking and in his endeavour to serve mankind, by his
own qualities, the attributes which he had specially evolved. So that, looking
back into the ancient history of India, we find great teachers, Rishis as they
were called, of many different types, each giving to the nation some great gift
from his thought or from his knowledge, intended to help the more advanced souls
of that nation towards progress which should end in spiritual evolution. Hence,
to take one line of growth, the great philosophical system which we find in
Indian thought, such a system, for instance, as the Vedanta. Regarded as an
intellectual system of pure philosophy it puts in a magnificent intellectual
form a view of the Universe, of the One Self, of the One Life, and of its manifestations,
as illusory in the deepest philosophical sense, that serves as an intellectual
training, as a step which men must take in learning something of the mysteries
of the Universe. This system, when studied apart from the Yoga that alone can
make it practical, may be classed under the head of semi-occultism. It is a
system true within its own realm, a system intended to help forward the progress
of mankind, only capable of being grasped, of being followed, of being studied,
by souls already advanced in mentality; but none the less it is not the spiritual
truth; it is only an intellectual presentment of one aspect of it, an intellectual
showing forth of one side of it.
It is a thing that must always be
remembered, that the Spirit can never be expressed in terms of the intellect,
that the One can never be grasped in the terms of the many, and that any intellectual
presentment of spiritual truths must necessarily be partial, must necessarily
be imperfect, must be, as has often been said, a coloured glass through which
the white light is seen; a ray is passed through the prism of the intellect
which breaks up the white light of the Spirit, showing it in varied colours
as these scattered beams, each one of which is imperfect in itself. One, then,
of the great gifts to ancient India coming in this way as the result of true
occultism, as the result of the mighty spiritual life, was the philosophy of
the Vedanta and all those intellectual systems intended for the training of
man, and giving, so far as the intellect could give it, a view of the spiritual
reality. But remember the saving clause, "as far as the intellect could give
it". The intellectual view is only a partial view; and such a view, however
much it may help man to see intellectually something of the possibilities of
the higher life, can never make him realise it in consciousness, or give the
true knowledge which comes alone through the evolution of the spiritual nature
itself.
Along another line of activity would
come the many schools of Yoga. These schools, as you well know, were exceedingly
various in their nature. Some of them were designed to develop the higher intellectual
consciousness in man by means of concentration, by means of meditation, and
thus to bring him into touch with the higher regions of his being; they were
intended to lead him, stage by stage, to get free from the body, to pass consciously
into higher worlds, so that his consciousness might function in those more extended
realms of being. And we find many of the teachings of Yoga - you may read many
of these systems at your leisure, those which come under the great classification
Raja Yoga - carefully adapted to aid the growth of the mind, the evolution of
the loftier mental faculties, the rising on to the higher intellectual planes,
the passing into states of consciousness far beyond the reach of ordinary humanity.
They are again, a steppingstone offered, but still coming under this heading
that I have called semi-occultism. Other schools were founded which dealt with
man in different fashion, which strove to force his faculties from below, to
force the evolution and the training of the astral faculties, to bring him first
into touch with the astral world, to make him familiar with a part of the phenomenal
universe closely allied to the material. These have generally been classed as
the schools of Hatha Yoga, and in them various methods were employed dealing
with the lower vehicles of man. By these methods the body was trained, was to
a great extent purified and rendered an obedient instrument. The power of the
will was also enormously developed, the man was taught to be master of his lower
nature and so to take what in very many cases was a real step upwards, although
we cannot include it in any sense of the term under the heading of true occultism.
It must be remembered when dealing
with all these schools, when looking at them and striving to learn alike their
use and their abuse, that it is a great thing for a man to become master of
his passions, it is a great thing to subject the animal nature, to be able to
stand unshaken, no matter what temptations may assail the lower man. And very,
very many of these schools, which it is often the fashion in the West to scoff
at and despise, have yet in them this element, that they at least recognise
that man's intellectual nature should be master of his sensuous nature and that
he should learn complete control over the body, complete control over the passions.
And even along many of the darker lines of evolution, even in the schools that
tread the path which all those who would reach the highest should most carefully
avoid, it is none the less true that the subjugation of the lower nature is
most rigorously insisted upon. It is only the ignorant who suppose that those
darker schools are all given over to sensuous practices. Many of the followers
of those schools lead lives which, so far as that side of the nature is concerned,
might be taken as examples by an enormous majority of the men of the western
world.
Now the whole of these different
schools rose and flourished in ancient India as the result of the great downpouring
from the spiritual regions on to the lower planes, and naturally they were used
both for selfish and for unselfish purposes. But in dealing with all those schools
of Yoga which train the intellect and develop the high forms of intellectual
consciousness, it is well to remember that they are real stepping stones to
the higher, and that it is a necessary stage of our progress that we should
practice concentration, that we should use meditation, that we should be accustomed
to contemplate intellectually and emotionally the ideals which appeal to us
by their grandeur and their nobility. Those are stages in our upward path, and
stages that very many of us might well be utilising now, with a view to the
higher growth, the deeper wisdom of the future. Men took up these varying lines
of evolution, stirred fundamentally by the prompting of the Divine Life within
them, ever seeking to raise them and to help their upward growth; stirred, so
far as they themselves were conscious, by the natural and rightful desire for
higher evolution, for further progress, for growth in life. For, as we have
often seen when we have been studying progress, we cannot leap at a bound to
the heights of the spiritual life; we have to climb step by step, we have to
utilise the higher thoughts in us for the subjugation of the lower, and then
in turn to outgrow that higher when a greater height comes within our sight
and without our reach. We have learnt, as we know well, in our studies, that
we may constantly eliminate lower ambitions by nourishing a higher ambition,
and that, though that higher ambition be still attached to the personality,
or even transcending the personality, be attached still to the individual, it
is none the less a steppingstone, it is one of the ways by which we climb. It
is well continually to kill out our lower by our higher desires, though even
those higher in their turn seem lower as we are rising above them and greater
perfection comes slowly within our gaze. So that this longing for a higher life,
this desire to develop, this yearning for progress, had, and have, their rightful
place in evolution; and it is out of the ranks of those who feel these, out
of the ranks of those who use the methods which make progress possible, that
are taken those who are capable of further evolution. They learn gradually to
transcend the hope for individual progress, and learn that that also, in the
fullest sense of the term, is illusion and cannot exist as life which is spent
as part of the Divine Life, pouring itself out for others; and no life is true,
no life real, no life spiritual, save when the very idea of the separated life
is entirely transcended, and all the thought of the being, all the energies
of the life, are poured forth as part of the One Self and no distinction is
recognised. Service is then the natural expression of the life, helping is that
in which the true existence is felt. But ere it is possible that this ideal
can be even intellectually realised, some progress, at least, must have been
made in transcending what we recognise as the personality; and it was in order
to make that possible to every man immersed in illusion, as all men have been
and are, that the various methods were suggested by those who would fain help
their fellows forward, as steps on the upward path.
Others, seeing in the religious
instinct in man - in that side of his nature allied to the emotions, in which
devotion finds its root and the possibilities of its growth - seeing in that
his easiest upward path, gave to the world the various forms of religion in
all their variety of adaptation to human needs, thus making the path upwards
suitable for those whose constitution attracted them chiefly in the direction
of love and of service. Seeing, then, that all these methods of growth were
most active at the time when the real life was working at the heart of things,
it will not be difficult to understand how, as that life found fewer channels
for its expression in the world, fewer who were ready to transcend their own
limitations and to give themselves wholly as channels of the Divine Life, all
these methods lost their vitality and a great part of their usefulness. And
so we find, in looking around the India of today, that many of those things
that were living are now dead, that many of the systems that were vital are
now mere shells, forming subjects for intellectual controversy or for individual
pride, but no longer stepping stones to the higher life. Here and there, still
some gleam of the true life survives, some real use is being made of these stepping
stones upward; but so far as the great masses of the people are concerned, mere
shells and forms remain - evidences of what existed in the past, evidences,
may we dare to hope, of what may be in the future.
It is hardly worth while to remind
you that while semi-occultism may serve as a steppingstone to real occultism,
pseudo-occultism is generally a distinct obstacle and hindrance. Under this
heading may be classed as the "occult arts", in the study of which many promising
beginners have lost their way and wasted their lives. Geomancy, palmistry, the
use of the tarot, etc., all these things are well enough for those who want
to tread the byways of nature and to gather knowledge of her obscurer workings.
They may be harmless, interesting, even useful in a small way, but they are
not occultism and their professors are not occultists. A little success in their
pursuit - and success does not demand high qualities of either head or heart
- is apt to breed the most absurd vanity and pretentiousness, as though this
dalliance with the apsaras of the kingdom of occultism converted a commonplace
man into one of its rulers, a mage. A man may be past-master of all these arts,
and yet be further away from occultism than is a pure and selfless woman seeking
only to love and to serve, or a generous, clean-souled man, devoted to helping
his fellows. And if these arts be turned to selfish purposes, or if they nourish
vanity, their professor may find himself approaching perilously near to the
gateway of the left-hand path.
Looking for the application of this
to our present movement, the lesson springs easily enough to our gaze. Again,
in our own days, a great outpouring of real life has occurred, again an effort
has been made by those who are the guardians, the Reservoirs, of that life for
our humanity, to pour out the true spiritual energies for the helping and the
uplifting of man in every region of his being, the manifesting again of the
possibility of the real life. This has been marked by certain definite statements
made from time to time, by hints thrown out here and there by her who was the
special messenger in our own day of this possibility opening up for our own
race. And there is one passage in that paper to which I referred at the beginning,
which gives us in a phrase the reality of life: we are told that when a man
becomes a real occultist he becomes only a force for good in the world. Here
is a sentence that people read without realising at all its meaning, a sentence
that comes in the middle of many other statements, and does not strike with
its full force on the unprepared mind and heart. For many things may be said
which are missed for want of receptivity, and many truths are proclaimed which
remain dark and silent, save to those whose eyes are beginning to be opened
to see, and whose ears are beginning to be opened to hear. And that statement,
which really puts the occult life in a few words, is one that most readers pass
by without realising its significance. There is no true spiritual life, there
is no real occultism, until the man at least recognises that the goal of his
living is to become a force for good, and that only, in the world. He is no
longer to seek his own progress, no longer to seek his own life, no longer to
seek his own development - no longer to ask aught that heaven or earth or any
of the other worlds can give him for himself. There is only one thing left within
him, the longing to be of service: only one thing the motive of his being, to
be a channel for the great life of God, to enable that life to be scattered
more effectively over the world of man, and over all worlds where that life
exists.
When that is recognised, even afar
off, when that ideal first dimly dawns upon the human heart - come it by way
of intellectual apprehension of its sublimity, or by way of devotional recognition
of its truth - then for the first time the spiritual life stirs within the man,
the first germ of the spiritual nature begins to quicken into life. And so we
begin to realise that if true occultism would be reached and understood by any
of us, we should have to begin the preparation for it by working at character
in the way that every religion has taught. How often do we hear it said amongst
ourselves:
"We know all these moral
truths, there is nothing new in Theosophy when it simply reiterates the old
morality. When we are told to be unselfish, to seek to help others forward,
to eliminate the personality, to kill out our faults, it is all an old story
that we have heard to weariness. We want something new, we want some fresh knowledge,
some facts of the astral world, some strange things of the mental region - that
is what we demand from Theosophy, that is what we are seeking, and we do not
desire to have pressed upon us these ethical maxims, these continual repetitions,
these old-world stories which every religion has made familiar, and which we
can hear from any pulpit."
And yet the truth of the matter
is that along that path only the spiritual life has been and is possible for
man; that the Divine Teachers who gave the religions to the world with their
perpetual insistence on morality, gave them knowing the spiritual life, and
knowing that only along that line the real progress of man into unity with God
was possible. And when it was again declared by the lips of the Christ that
only he might gain his life who lost it, that those who would be perfect must
sacrifice all that they had, when he again reiterated the ancient teaching that
narrow was the path and straight was the gateway, he was only repeating what
all true occultists have taught as to the necessity of the training for the
spiritual life.
As progress is made, all those methods
of Yoga which tend to help forward the individual, which are followed in order
to gain progress, practised in order to evolve faculties, and used in order
that the individual may faster forward himself - all these are dropped, and
Yoga is regarded, not as the means of self-evolution, as we are accustomed to
regard it here, but as the using of great forces for the lifting and the helping
of humanity, with utter disregard for the going forward of him who is using
them, with no thought of progress on the part of him who is wielding them for
the helping of man. For in truth all control of higher forces, all utilisation
of these vast energies, ought to come only within the grasp of man when he has
transcended the personality and has learnt to use them only for the helping
of all. We readily admit this in the common things of life, and recognise the
difference between learning the use of an instrument and mere holding an instrument
without knowing how to use it. A pen, for example is one of the most useful
of instruments, but its utility depends upon the brain and the heart behind
it, upon the knowledge and the skill that wield it; and a pen in the hands of
a child is of no more use than any fragment of wood that the same child might
pick up to use as a toy in its play. Very much the same is the grasping of the
forces of the superphysical world by those who have not yet conquered the lower
nature, eliminated personal desires and consecrated themselves wholly to the
divine service. They are, truly, picking up an instrument which may be used
for the highest and noblest ends; they are, truly, placing their hands upon
a tool, which in hands that know how to use it, may serve for the salvation
of the race; but unless the spiritual nature be developed, that tool fails in
its highest purposes, that instrument fails in all its noblest possibilities.
And it has this peculiarity, that whereas the pen that I used as a symbol might
be comparatively harmless in the hands of the child, the grasping of those forces
by one in whom the personality is not eliminated may become a source of danger
alike to himself and others, and may tend to retard the progress of the race
instead of lifting it upwards. That is why some of us who have learnt but the
mere alphabet of these great truths, lay so much stress - stress to weariness,
as I know some of you think when I am speaking to you - on the moral training
which must precede all attempt at occult study. H.P. Blavatsky gave us the same
lesson when she herself said that she had blundered in teaching part of the
alphabet of occult knowledge without insisting upon that old precept that the
moral growth must come before the occult training, and that the character must
be purified, raised and spiritualised before anyone should dare to lay his hand
upon the latch of the occult gateway. Hence it is that those qualifications
that we have so often studied are made qualifications for initiation; hence
it is that there has even been the demand that only the pure should enter, that
only the selfless should come in.
If I have spoken of the past to
you tonight, if I have reminded you that amongst us today the very outburst
of the new spiritual life will cause activity on all the lower planes, it is
because I would bring the experience of the past to reinforce a lesson so often
given from this platform, it is because I would warn you of the dangers that
surround us on every side - dangers that some of us are beginning keenly to
recognise, and to recognise just because they have to some extent struck us,
and have therefore made progress the more difficult. So that it is our duty
as Theosophists, as would be students of the science of the soul, to be careful
that in all things character precedes any attempt at the gaining of power, that
purity, selflessness, devotion, utter self surrender, be found in us ere we
touch the Ark of occultism - for without these any success is a defeat, without
these any attempt is doomed to failure. And surely it is better for us to learn
from the experience of the past than by the bitter suffering that grows out
of the personal experience of today; better to learn by the authority of the
Great Teachers who have proclaimed the lesson over and over again, than to have
to learn it by the suffering that follows from grasping powers ere we are ready
to use them, from plucking the fruit of knowledge ere it is ripe for our consumption,
from striving to rule ere yet we have learnt to obey, and from endeavouring
to snatch at the mighty forces of the spiritual realm until we have learnt that
great lesson of the Spirit - that only by giving is the Spirit shown, that only
by utter abnegation is the true life realised. As the very life of God in manifestation
is a life that gives everything and asks nothing back, so those who would reach
unity with Him and realise what the spiritual life means, must learn to give
and not to take, to help and not to hold, to pour out without seeking or looking
for return. Only as we learn that, do we become fit candidates for the higher
knowledge, only as the heart is thus rendered absolutely pure may we dare to
face the presence of the Master, hoping that when "He looks at that heart He
may find no stain therein."
First
printed: September 1912:
Reprinted: January 1920
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