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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55618 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55618)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Key to Theosophy, by H. P. Blavatsky
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Key to Theosophy
- Being A Clear Exposition, In The Form Of Question And
- Answer Of The Ethics, Science And Philosophy
-
-Author: H. P. Blavatsky
-
-Release Date: September 24, 2017 [EBook #55618]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KEY TO THEOSOPHY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Paul Marshall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-book was produced from scanned images of public domain
-material from the Google Books project.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes:
-
- Underscores "_" before and after a word or phrase indicate _italics_
- in the original text.
- Equal signs "=" before and after a word or phrase indicate =bold=
- in the original text.
- Small capitals have been converted to SOLID capitals.
- Typographical errors have been silently corrected but other variations
- in spelling and punctuation remain unaltered.
- The heading on page 188 was changed from “ON SELF-RELIANCE” to
- “ON SELF-SACRIFICE”, to agree with the Table of Contents, and
- the subject of the section.
-
-
-
-
-The Key to Theosophy
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
- THE KEY TO THEOSOPHY
-
- BEING
- _A CLEAR EXPOSITION, IN THE FORM OF QUESTION AND ANSWER_
-
- OF THE
- ETHICS, SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY
-
- FOR THE STUDY OF WHICH THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY HAS
- BEEN FOUNDED
-
- BY
- H. P. BLAVATSKY
-
- [Reprinted Verbatim from the Original Edition
- first published in 1889.]
-
- THE UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
- 1920
-
- _Dedicated_
-
- by
- “_H. P. B._”
-
- _To all her Pupils_
-
- _that_
-
- _They may Learn and Teach
- in their turn_
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- SECTION I.
- Page
- THEOSOPHY AND THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY:
- The Meaning of the Name 1
- The Policy of the Theosophical Society 3
- The Wisdom-Religion Esoteric in all Ages 5
- Theosophy is not Buddhism 10
-
- SECTION II.
- EXOTERIC AND ESOTERIC THEOSOPHY:
- What the Modern Theosophical Society is not 12
- Theosophists and Members of the “T.S.” 15
- The Difference between Theosophy and Occultism 19
- The Difference between Theosophy and Spiritualism 21
- Why is Theosophy accepted? 27
-
- SECTION III.
- THE WORKING SYSTEM OF THE T.S.:
- The Objects of the Society 30
- The Common Origin of Man 31
- Our other Objects 36
- On the Sacredness of the Pledge 37
-
- SECTION IV.
- THE RELATIONS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY TO THEOSOPHY:
- On Self-Improvement 40
- The Abstract and the Concrete 43
-
- SECTION V.
- THE FUNDAMENTAL TEACHINGS OF THEOSOPHY:
- On God and Prayer 47
- Is it Necessary to Pray? 50
- Prayer Kills Self-Reliance 55
- On the Source of the Human Soul 57
- The Buddhist Teachings on the above 59
-
- SECTION VI.
- THEOSOPHICAL TEACHINGS AS TO NATURE AND MAN:
- The Unity of All in All 64
- Evolution and Illusion 65
- The Septenary Constitution of our Planet 67
- The Septenary Nature of Man 69
- The Distinction between Soul and Spirit 72
- The Greek Teachings 75
-
- SECTION VII.
- ON THE VARIOUS POST-MORTEM STATES:
- The Physical and the Spiritual Man 79
- Our Eternal Reward and Punishment; and on Nirvana 85
- On the Various “Principles” in Man 91
-
- SECTION VIII.
- ON RE-INCARNATION OR REBIRTH:
- What is Memory according to Theosophical Teaching? 96
- Why do we not Remember our Past Lives? 99
- On Individuality and Personality 104
- On the Reward and Punishment of the Ego 107
-
- SECTION IX.
- ON THE KAMA-LOKA AND DEVACHAN:
- On the Fate of the Lower “Principles” 112
- Why Theosophists do not believe in the Return of Pure “Spirits” 114
- A few Words about the Skandhas 120
- On Post-mortem and Post-natal Consciousness 123
- What is really meant by Annihilation 127
- Definite Words for Definite Things 134
-
- SECTION X.
- ON THE NATURE OF OUR THINKING PRINCIPLE:
- The Mystery of the Ego 139
- The Complex Nature of Manas 143
- The Doctrine is Taught in St. John’s Gospel 146
-
- SECTION XI.
- ON THE MYSTERIES OF RE-INCARNATION:
- Periodical Rebirths 155
- What is Karma? 158
- Who are Those who Know? 170
- The Difference between Faith and Knowledge; or,
- Blind and Reasoned Faith 172
- Has God the Right to Forgive? 176
-
- SECTION XII.
- WHAT IS PRACTICAL THEOSOPHY?
- Duty 180
- The Relations of the T.S. to Political Reforms 183
- On Self-Sacrifice 188
- On Charity 192
- Theosophy for the Masses 194
- How Members can Help the Society 196
- What a Theosophist ought not to do 197
-
- SECTION XIII.
- ON THE MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY:
- Theosophy and Asceticism 204
- Theosophy and Marriage 207
- Theosophy and Education 208
- Why, then, is there so much Prejudice against the T.S? 214
- Is the Theosophical Society a Money-making Concern? 221
- The Working Staff of the T.S. 225
-
- SECTION XIV.
- THE “THEOSOPHICAL MAHATMAS”:
- Are They “Spirits of Light” or “Goblins Damn’d”? 228
- The Abuse of Sacred Names and Terms 237
-
- CONCLUSION.
- The Future of the Theosophical Society 241
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The purpose of this book is exactly expressed in its title, “THE
-KEY TO THEOSOPHY,” and needs but few words of explanation. It
-is not a complete or exhaustive text-book of Theosophy, but only a
-key to unlock the door that leads to the deeper study. It traces the
-broad outlines of the Wisdom Religion, and explains its fundamental
-principles; meeting, at the same time, the various objections raised by
-the average Western enquirer, and endeavouring to present unfamiliar
-concepts in a form as simple and in language as clear as possible.
-That it should succeed in making Theosophy intelligible without mental
-effort on the part of the reader, would be too much to expect; but it
-is hoped that the obscurity still left is of the thought not of the
-language, is due to depth not to confusion. To the mentally lazy or
-obtuse, Theosophy must remain a riddle; for in the world mental as in
-the world spiritual each man must progress by his own efforts. The
-writer cannot do the reader’s thinking for him, nor would the latter
-be any the better off if such vicarious thought were possible. The
-need for such an exposition as the present has long been felt among
-those interested in the Theosophical Society and its work, and it
-is hoped that it will supply information, as free as possible from
-technicalities, to many whose attention has been awakened, but who, as
-yet, are merely puzzled and not convinced.
-
-Some care has been taken in disentangling some part of what is true
-from what is false in Spiritualistic teachings as to the post-mortem
-life, and to showing the true nature of Spiritualistic phænomena.
-Previous explanations of a similar kind have drawn much wrath upon
-the writer’s devoted head; the Spiritualists, like too many others,
-preferring to believe what is pleasant rather than what is true, and
-becoming very angry with anyone who destroys an agreeable delusion. For
-the past year Theosophy has been the target for every poisoned arrow
-of Spiritualism, as though the possessors of a half truth felt more
-antagonism to the possessors of the whole truth than those who had no
-share to boast of.
-
-Very hearty thanks are due from the author to many Theosophists who
-have sent suggestions and questions, or have otherwise contributed help
-during the writing of this book. The work will be the more useful for
-their aid, and that will be their best reward.
-
- H. P. B.
-
-
-
-
-THE KEY TO THEOSOPHY.
-
-
-I. THEOSOPHY AND THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
-
-
-THE MEANING OF THE NAME.
-
- ENQUIRER. Theosophy and its doctrines are often referred to as a
- new-fangled religion. Is it a religion?
-
- THEOSOPHIST. It is not. Theosophy is Divine Knowledge or Science.
-
- ENQ. What is the real meaning of the term?
-
- THEO. “Divine Wisdom,” Θεοσοφία (Theosophia) or Wisdom of the gods, as
- Θεογονία (theogonia), genealogy of the gods. The word Θεὸς means
- a god in Greek, one of the divine beings, certainly not “God” in
- the sense attached in our day to the term. Therefore, it is not
- “Wisdom of God,” as translated by some, but _Divine Wisdom_ such
- as that possessed by the gods. The term is many thousand years old.
-
- ENQ. What is the origin of the name?
-
- THEO. It comes to us from the Alexandrian philosophers, called lovers
- of truth, Philatheians, from φιλ (phil) “loving,” and ἀλήθεια
- (aletheia) “truth.” The name Theosophy dates from the third
- century of our era, and began with Ammonius Saccas and his
- disciples,[1] who started the Eclectic Theosophical system.
-
- ENQ. What was the object of this system?
-
- THEO. First of all to inculcate certain great moral truths upon its
- disciples, and all those who were “lovers of the truth.” Hence the
- motto adopted by the Theosophical Society: “There is no religion
- higher than truth.”[2] The chief aim of the Founders of the
- Eclectic Theosophical School was one of the three objects of its
- modern successor, the Theosophical Society, namely, to reconcile
- all religions, sects and nations under a common system of ethics,
- based on eternal verities.
-
- ENQ. What have you to show that this is not an impossible dream; and
- that all the world’s religions _are_ based on the one and the same
- truth?
-
- THEO. Their comparative study and analysis. The “Wisdom-Religion” was
- one in antiquity; and the sameness of primitive religious
- philosophy is proven to us by the identical doctrines taught
- to the Initiates during the MYSTERIES, an institution once
- universally diffused. “All the old worships indicate the existence
- of a single Theosophy anterior to them. The key that is to open
- one must open all; otherwise it cannot be the right key.” (Eclect.
- Philo.)
-
-
-THE POLICY OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
-
- ENQ. In the days of Ammonius there were several ancient great
- religions, and numerous were the sects in Egypt and Palestine
- alone. How could he reconcile them?
-
- THEO. By doing that which we again try to do now. The Neo-Platonists
- were a large body, and belonged to various religious
- philosophies[3]; so do our Theosophists. In those days, the Jew
- Aristobulus affirmed that the ethics of Aristotle represented the
- _esoteric_ teachings of the Law of Moses; Philo Judæus endeavoured
- to reconcile the _Pentateuch_ with the Pythagorean and Platonic
- philosophy; and Josephus proved that the Essenes of Carmel were
- simply the copyists and followers of the Egyptian Therapeutæ (the
- healers). So it is in our day. We can show the line of descent of
- every Christian religion, as of every, even the smallest, sect.
- The latter are the minor twigs or shoots grown on the larger
- branches; but shoots and branches spring from the same trunk—the
- WISDOM-RELIGION. To prove this was the aim of Ammonius, who
- endeavoured to induce Gentiles and Christians, Jews and Idolators,
- to lay aside their contentions and strifes, remembering only
- that they were all in possession of the same truth under various
- vestments, and were all the children of a common mother.[4] This
- is the aim of Theosophy likewise.
-
- ENQ. What are your authorities for saying this of the ancient
- Theosophists of Alexandria?
-
- THEO. An almost countless number of well-known writers. Mosheim, one of
- them, says that:—
-
- “Ammonius taught that the religion of the multitude went
- hand-in-hand with philosophy, and with her had shared the fate
- of being by degrees corrupted and obscured with mere human
- conceits, superstitions, and lies; that it ought, therefore,
- to be brought back to its original purity by purging it of
- this dross and expounding it upon philosophical principles;
- and the whole Christ had in view was to reinstate and restore
- to its primitive integrity the wisdom of the ancients; to
- reduce within bounds the universally-prevailing dominion
- of superstition; and in part to correct, and in part to
- exterminate the various errors that had found their way into
- the different popular religions.”
-
- This, again, is precisely what the modern Theosophists say. Only
- while the great Philaletheian was supported and helped in the
- policy he pursued by two Church Fathers, Clement and Athenagoras,
- by all the learned Rabbis of the Synagogue, the Academy and the
- Groves, and while he taught a common doctrine for all, we, his
- followers on the same line, receive no recognition, but, on the
- contrary, are abused and persecuted. People 1,500 years ago are
- thus shown to have been more tolerant than they are in this
- _enlightened_ century.
-
- ENQ. Was he encouraged and supported by the Church because,
- notwithstanding his heresies, Ammonius taught Christianity and was
- a Christian?
-
- THEO. Not at all. He was born a Christian, but never accepted Church
- Christianity. As said of him by the same writer:
-
- “He had but to propound his instructions according to the
- ancient pillars of Hermes, which Plato and Pythagoras knew
- before, and from them constituted their philosophy. Finding the
- same in the prologue of the Gospel according to St. John, he
- very properly supposed that the purpose of Jesus was to restore
- the great doctrine of wisdom in its primitive integrity.
- The narratives of the Bible and the stories of the gods he
- considered to be allegories illustrative of the truth, or
- else fables to be rejected.” Moreover, as says the _Edinburgh
- Encyclopedia_, “he acknowledged that Jesus Christ was an
- excellent _man_ and the ‘friend of God,’ but alleged that it
- was not his design entirely to abolish the worship of demons
- (gods), and that his only intention was to purify the ancient
- religion.”
-
-
-THE WISDOM-RELIGION ESOTERIC IN ALL AGES.
-
- ENQ. Since Ammonius never committed anything to writing, how can one
- feel sure that such were his teachings?
-
- THEO. Neither did Buddha, Pythagoras, Confucius, Orpheus, Socrates, or
- even Jesus, leave behind them any writings. Yet most of these
- are historical personages, and their teachings have all survived.
- The disciples of Ammonius (among whom Origen and Herennius)
- wrote treatises and explained his ethics. Certainly the latter
- are as historical, if not more so, than the Apostolic writings.
- Moreover, his pupils—Origen, Plotinus, and Longinus (counsellor
- of the famous Queen Zenobia)—have all left voluminous records of
- the Philaletheian System—so far, at all events, as their public
- profession of faith was known, for the school was divided into
- exoteric and _esoteric_ teachings.
-
- ENQ. How have the latter tenets reached our day, since you hold that
- what is properly called the WISDOM-RELIGION was esoteric?
-
- THEO. The WISDOM-RELIGION was ever one, and being the last word of
- possible human knowledge, was, therefore, carefully preserved. It
- preceded by long ages the Alexandrian Theosophists, reached the
- modern, and will survive every other religion and philosophy.
-
- ENQ. Where and by whom was it so preserved?
-
- THEO. Among Initiates of every country; among profound seekers after
- truth—their disciples; and in those parts of the world where such
- topics have always been most valued and pursued: in India, Central
- Asia, and Persia.
-
- ENQ. Can you give me some proofs of its esotericism?
-
- THEO. The best proof you can have of the fact is that every ancient
- religious, or rather philosophical, cult consisted of an
- esoteric or secret teaching, and an exoteric (outward public)
- worship. Furthermore, it is a well-known fact that the MYSTERIES
- of the ancients comprised with every nation the “greater” (secret)
- and “Lesser” (public) MYSTERIES—_e.g._, in the celebrated
- solemnities called the _Eleusinia_, in Greece. From the
- Hierophants of Samothrace, Egypt, and the initiated Brahmins of
- the India of old, down to the later Hebrew Rabbis, all preserved,
- for fear of profanation, their real _bona fide_ beliefs secret.
- The Jewish Rabbis called their secular religious series the
- _Mercavah_ (the exterior body), “the vehicle,” or, _the covering
- which contains the hidden soul_—_i.e._, their highest secret
- knowledge. Not one of the ancient nations ever imparted through
- its priests its real philosophical secrets to the masses, but
- allotted to the latter only the husks. Northern Buddhism has its
- “greater” and its “lesser” vehicle, known as the _Mahayana_, the
- esoteric, and the _Hinayana_, the exoteric, Schools. Nor can you
- blame them for such secrecy; for surely you would not think of
- feeding your flock of sheep on learned dissertations on botany
- instead of on grass? Pythagoras called his _Gnosis_ “the knowledge
- of things that are,” or ἡ γνῶσις τῶν ὄντων, and preserved that
- knowledge for his pledged disciples only: for those who could
- digest such mental food and feel satisfied; and he pledged them
- to silence and secrecy. Occult alphabets and secret ciphers are
- the development of the old Egyptian _hieratic_ writings, the
- secret of which was, in the days of old, in the possession only
- of the Hierogrammatists, or initiated Egyptian priests. Ammonius
- Saccas, as his biographers tell us, bound his pupils by oath not
- to divulge _his higher doctrines_ except to those who had already
- been instructed in preliminary knowledge, and who were also bound
- by a pledge. Finally, do we not find the same even in early
- Christianity, among the Gnostics, and even in the teachings of
- Christ? Did he not speak to the multitudes in parables which had a
- two-fold meaning, and explain his reasons only to his disciples?
- “To you,” he says, “it is given to know the mysteries of the
- kingdom of heaven; but unto them that are without, all these
- things are done in parables” (Mark iv. 11). “The Essenes of Judea
- and Carmel made similar distinctions, dividing their adherents
- into neophytes, brethren, and the _perfect_, or those initiated”
- (Eclec. Phil.). Examples might be brought from every country to
- this effect.
-
- ENQ. Can you attain the “Secret Wisdom” simply by study? Encyclopædias
- define _Theosophy_ pretty much as Webster’s Dictionary does,
- _i.e._, as “_supposed intercourse with God and superior spirits,
- and consequent attainment of superhuman knowledge by physical
- means and chemical processes_.” Is this so?
-
- THEO. I think not. Nor is there any lexicographer capable of
- explaining, whether to himself or others, how _superhuman_
- knowledge can be attained by _physical_ or chemical processes.
- Had Webster said “by _metaphysical_ and alchemical processes,”
- the definition would be approximately correct: as it is, it is
- absurd. Ancient Theosophists claimed, and so do the modern, that
- the infinite cannot be known by the finite—_i.e._, sensed by the
- finite Self—but that the divine essence could be communicated to
- the higher Spiritual Self in a state of ecstacy. This condition
- can hardly be attained, like _hypnotism_, by “physical and
- chemical means.”
-
- ENQ. What is your explanation of it?
-
- THEO. Real ecstacy was defined by Plotinus as “the liberation of the
- mind from its finite consciousness, becoming one and identified
- with the infinite.” This is the highest condition, says Prof.
- Wilder, but not one of permanent duration, and it is reached only
- by the very _very_ few. It is, indeed, identical with that state
- which is known in India as _Samadhi_. The latter is practised by
- the Yogis, who facilitate it physically by the greatest abstinence
- in food and drink, and mentally by an incessant endeavour to
- purify and elevate the mind. Meditation is silent and _unuttered_
- prayer, or, as Plato expressed it, “the ardent turning of the
- soul toward the divine; not to ask any particular good (as in the
- common meaning of prayer), but for good itself—for the universal
- Supreme Good” of which we are a part on earth, and out of the
- essence of which we have all emerged. Therefore, adds Plato,
- “remain silent in the presence of the _divine ones_, till they
- remove the clouds from thy eyes and enable thee to see by the
- light which issues from themselves, not what appears as good to
- thee, but what is intrinsically good.”[5]
-
- ENQ. Theosophy, then, is not, as held by some, a newly devised scheme?
-
- THEO. Only ignorant people can thus refer to it. It is as old as the
- world, in its teachings and ethics, if not in name, as it is also
- the broadest and most catholic system among all.
-
- ENQ. How comes it, then, that Theosophy has remained so unknown to the
- nations of the Western Hemisphere? Why should it have been a
- sealed book to races confessedly the most cultured and advanced?
-
- THEO. We believe there were nations as cultured in days of old and
- certainly more spiritually “advanced” than we are. But there are
- several reasons for this willing ignorance. One of them was given
- by St. Paul to the cultured Athenians—a loss, for long centuries,
- of real spiritual insight, and even interest, owing to their too
- great devotion to things of sense and their long slavery to the
- dead letter of dogma and ritualism. But the strongest reason for
- its lies in the fact that real Theosophy has ever been kept secret.
-
- ENQ. You have brought forward proofs that such secrecy has existed; but
- what was the real cause for it?
-
- THEO. The causes for it were: _Firstly_, the perversity of average
- human nature and its selfishness, always tending to the
- gratification of _personal_ desires to the detriment of neighbours
- and next of kin. Such people could never be entrusted with
- _divine_ secrets. _Secondly_, their unreliability to keep the
- sacred and divine knowledge from desecration. It is the latter
- that led to the perversion of the most sublime truths and symbols,
- and to the gradual transformation of things spiritual into
- anthropomorphic, concrete, and gross imagery—in other words, to
- the dwarfing of the god-idea and to idolatry.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY IS NOT BUDDHISM.
-
- ENQ. You are often spoken of as “Esoteric Buddhists.” Are you then all
- followers of Gautama Buddha?
-
- THEO. No more than musicians are all followers of Wagner. Some of us
- are Buddhists by religion; yet there are far more Hindus and
- Brahmins than Buddhists among us, and more Christian-born
- Europeans and Americans than _converted_ Buddhists. The mistake
- has arisen from a misunderstanding of the real meaning of the
- title of Mr. Sinnett’s excellent work, “Esoteric Buddhism,” which
- last word ought to have been spelt _with one, instead of two,
- d’s_, as then _Budhism_ would have meant what it was intended for,
- merely “Wisdom_ism_” (Bodha, bodhi, “intelligence,” “wisdom”)
- instead of _Buddhism_, Gautama’s religious philosophy. Theosophy,
- as already said, is the WISDOM-RELIGION.
-
- ENQ. What is the difference between Buddhism, the religion founded by
- the Prince of Kapilavastu, and _Budhism_, the “Wisdomism” which
- you say is synonymous with Theosophy?
-
- THEO. Just the same difference as there is between the secret teachings
- of Christ, which are called “the mysteries of the Kingdom of
- Heaven,” and the later ritualism and dogmatic theology of the
- Churches and Sects. _Buddha_ means the “Enlightened” by _Bodha_,
- or understanding, Wisdom. This has passed root and branch into the
- _esoteric_ teachings that Gautama imparted to his chosen _Arhats_
- only.
-
- ENQ. But some Orientalists deny that Buddha ever taught any esoteric
- doctrine at all?
-
- THEO. They may as well deny that Nature has any hidden secrets for the
- men of science. Further on I will prove it by Buddha’s
- conversation with his disciple Ananda. His esoteric teachings
- were simply the _Gupta Vidya_ (secret knowledge) of the ancient
- Brahmins, the key to which their modern successors have, with few
- exceptions, completely lost. And this _Vidya_ has passed into
- what is now known as the _inner_ teachings of the _Mahayana_
- school of Northern Buddhism. Those who deny it are simply
- ignorant pretenders to Orientalism. I advise you to read the Rev.
- Mr. Edkins’ _Chinese Buddhism_—especially the chapters on the
- Exoteric and _Esoteric_ schools and teachings—and then compare the
- testimony of the whole ancient world upon the subject.
-
- ENQ. But are not the ethics of Theosophy identical with those taught
- by Buddha?
-
- THEO. Certainly, because these ethics are the soul of the
- Wisdom-Religion, and were once the common property of the
- initiates of all nations. But Buddha was the first to embody
- these lofty ethics in his public teachings, and to make them
- the foundation and the very essence of his public system. It is
- herein that lies the immense difference between exoteric Buddhism
- and every other religion. For while in other religions ritualism
- and dogma hold the first and most important place, in Buddhism
- it is the ethics which have always been the most insisted upon.
- This accounts for the resemblance, amounting almost to identity,
- between the ethics of Theosophy and those of the religion of
- Buddha.
-
- ENQ. Are there any great points of difference?
-
- THEO. One great distinction between Theosophy and _exoteric_ Buddhism
- is that the latter, represented by the Southern Church, entirely
- denies (a) the existence of any Deity, and (b) any conscious
- _post-mortem_ life, or even any self-conscious surviving
- individuality in man. Such at least is the teaching of the Siamese
- sect, now considered as the _purest_ form of exoteric Buddhism.
- And it is so, if we refer only to Buddha’s public teachings; the
- reason for such reticence on his part I will give further on. But
- the schools of the Northern Buddhist Church, established in those
- countries to which his initiated Arhats retired after the Master’s
- death, teach all that is now called Theosophical doctrines,
- because they form part of the knowledge of the initiates—thus
- proving how the truth has been sacrificed to the dead-letter by
- the too-zealous orthodoxy of Southern Buddhism. But how much
- grander and more noble, philosophical and scientific, even in its
- dead-letter, is this teaching than that of any other Church or
- religion. Yet Theosophy is not Buddhism.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Also called Analogeticists. As explained by Prof. Alex. Wilder,
-F.T.S., in his “Eclectic Philosophy,” they were called so because of
-their practice of interpreting all sacred legends and narratives, myths
-and mysteries, by a rule or principle of analogy and correspondence: so
-that events which were related as having occurred in the external world
-were regarded as expressing operations and experiences of the human
-soul. They were also denominated Neo-Platonists. Though Theosophy,
-or the Eclectic Theosophical system, is generally attributed to the
-third century, yet, if Diogenes Laertius is to be credited, its origin
-is much earlier, as he attributed the system to an Egyptian priest,
-Pot-Amun, who lived in the early days of the Ptolemaic dynasty. The
-same author tells us that the name is Coptic, and signifies one
-consecrated to Amun, the God of Wisdom. Theosophy is the equivalent of
-Brahma-Vidya, divine knowledge.
-
-[2] Eclectic Theosophy was divided under three heads: (1) Belief
-in one absolute, incomprehensible and supreme Deity, or infinite
-essence, which is the root of all nature, and of all that is, visible
-and invisible. (2) Belief in man’s eternal immortal nature, because,
-being a radiation of the Universal Soul, it is of an identical essence
-with it. (3) _Theurgy_, or “divine work,” or _producing a work of
-gods_; from _theoi_, “gods,” and _ergein_, “to work.” The term is
-very old, but, as it belongs to the vocabulary of the MYSTERIES,
-was not in popular use. It was a mystic belief—practically proven
-by initiated adepts and priests—that, by making oneself as pure
-as the incorporeal beings—_i.e._, by returning to one’s pristine
-purity of nature—man could move the gods to impart to him Divine
-mysteries, and even cause them to become occasionally visible, either
-subjectively or objectively. It was the transcendental aspect of what
-is now called Spiritualism; but having been abused and misconceived
-by the populace, it had come to be regarded by some as necromancy,
-and was generally forbidden. A travestied practice of the theurgy
-of Iamblichus lingers still in the ceremonial magic of some modern
-Kabalists. Modern Theosophy avoids and rejects both these kinds of
-magic and “necromancy” as being very dangerous. Real _divine_ theurgy
-requires an almost superhuman purity and holiness of life; otherwise
-it degenerates into mediumship or black magic. The immediate disciples
-of Ammonius Saccas, who was called _Theodidaktos_, “god-taught”—such
-as Plotinus and his follower Porphyry—rejected theurgy at first, but
-were finally reconciled to it through Iamblichus, who wrote a work
-to that effect entitled “De Mysteriis,” under the name of his own
-master, a famous Egyptian priest called Abammon. Ammonius Saccas was
-the son of Christian parents, and, having been repelled by dogmatic
-spiritualistic Christianity from his childhood, became a Neo-Platonist,
-and like J. Boehme and other great seers and mystics, is said to
-have had divine wisdom revealed to him in dreams and visions. Hence
-his name of _Theodidaktos_. He resolved to reconcile every system of
-religion, and by demonstrating their identical origin to establish
-one universal creed based on ethics. His life was so blameless
-and pure, his learning so profound and vast, that several Church
-Fathers were his secret disciples. Clemens Alexandrinus speaks very
-highly of him. Plotinus, the “St. John” of Ammonius, was also a man
-universally respected and esteemed, and of the most profound learning
-and integrity. When thirty-nine years of age he accompanied the Roman
-Emperor Gordian and his army to the East, to be instructed by the
-sages of Bactria and India. He had a School of Philosophy in Rome.
-Porphyry, his disciple, whose real name was Malek (a Hellenized Jew),
-collected all the writings of his master. Porphyry was himself a great
-author, and gave an allegorical interpretation to some parts of Homer’s
-writings. The system of meditation the Philaletheians resorted to was
-ecstacy, a system akin to Indian Yoga practice. What is known of the
-Eclectic School is due to Origen, Longinus, and Plotinus, the immediate
-disciples of Ammonius.—(_Vide Eclectic Philos._, by A. Wilder).
-
-[3] It was under Philadelphus that Judaism established itself in
-Alexandria, and forthwith the Hellenic teachers became the dangerous
-rivals of the College of Rabbis of Babylon. As the author of “Eclectic
-Philosophy” very pertinently remarks: “The Buddhistic, Vedantic, and
-Magian systems were expounded along with the philosophies of Greece at
-that period. It was not wonderful that thoughtful men supposed that
-the strife of words ought to cease, and considered it possible to
-extract one harmonious system from these various teachings.... Panænus,
-Athenagoras, and Clement were thoroughly instructed in Platonic
-philosophy, and comprehended its essential unity with the Oriental
-systems.”
-
-[4] Says Mosheim of Ammonius: “Conceiving that not only the
-philosophers of Greece, but also all those of the different barbarian
-nations, were perfectly in unison with each other with regard to every
-essential point, he made it his business so to expound the thousand
-tenets of all these various sects as to show they had all originated
-from one and the same source, and tended all to one and the same end.”
-If the writer on Ammonius in the _Edinburgh Encyclopædia_ knows what
-he is talking about, then he describes the modern Theosophists, their
-beliefs, and their work, for he says, speaking of the _Theodidaktos_:
-“He adopted the doctrines which were received in Egypt (the esoteric
-were those of India) concerning the Universe and the Deity, considered
-as constituting one great whole; concerning the eternity of the world
-... and established a system of moral discipline which allowed the
-people in general to live according to the laws of their country and
-the dictates of nature, but required the wise to exalt their mind by
-contemplation.”
-
-[5] This is what the scholarly author of “The Eclectic Philosophy,”
-Prof. A. Wilder, F.T.S., describes as “_spiritual photography_”:
-“The soul is the camera in which facts and events, future, past, and
-present, are alike fixed; and the mind becomes conscious of them.
-Beyond our every-day world of limits all is one day or state—the past
-and future comprised in the present.” ... “Death is the last _ecstasis_
-on earth. Then the soul is freed from the constraint of the body, and
-its nobler part is united to higher nature and becomes partaker in the
-wisdom and foreknowledge of the higher beings.” Real Theosophy is, for
-the mystics, that state which Apollonius of Tyana was made to describe
-thus: “I can see the present and the future as in a clear mirror. The
-sage need not wait for the vapours of the earth and the corruption of
-the air to foresee events.... The _theoi_, or gods, see the future;
-common men the present; sages that which is about to take place.”
-“The Theosophy of the Sages” he speaks of is well expressed in the
-assertion, “The Kingdom of God is within us.”
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-EXOTERIC AND ESOTERIC THEOSOPHY.
-
-
-WHAT THE MODERN THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IS NOT.
-
- ENQ. Your doctrines, then, are not a revival of Buddhism, nor are they
- entirely copied from the Neo-Platonic Theosophy?
-
- THEO. They are not. But to these questions I cannot give you a better
- answer than by quoting from a paper read on “Theosophy” by Dr.
- J. D. Buck, F.T.S., before the last Theosophical Convention, at
- Chicago, America (April, 1889). No living theosophist has better
- expressed and understood the real essence of Theosophy than our
- honoured friend Dr. Buck:—
-
- “The Theosophical Society was organized for the purpose
- of promulgating the Theosophical doctrines, and for the
- promotion of the Theosophic life. The present Theosophical
- Society is not the first of its kind. I have a volume
- entitled: ‘Theosophical Transactions of the Philadelphian
- Society,’ published in London in 1697; and another with the
- following title: ‘Introduction to Theosophy, or the Science
- of the Mystery of Christ; that is, of Deity, Nature, and
- Creature, embracing the philosophy of all the working powers
- of life, magical and spiritual, and forming a practical
- guide to the sublimest purity, sanctity, and evangelical
- perfection; also to the attainment of divine vision, and the
- holy angelic arts, potencies, and other prerogatives of the
- regeneration,’ published in London in 1855. The following is
- the dedication of this volume:
-
- ‘To the students of Universities, Colleges, and schools of
- Christendom: To Professors of Metaphysical, Mechanical,
- and Natural Science in all its forms: To men and women
- of Education generally, of fundamental orthodox faith:
- To Deists, Arians, Unitarians, Swedenborgians, and other
- defective and ungrounded creeds, rationalists, and sceptics
- of every kind: To just-minded and enlightened Mohammedans,
- Jews, and oriental Patriarch-religionists: but especially
- to the gospel minister and missionary, whether to the
- barbaric or intellectual peoples, this introduction to
- Theosophy, or the science of the ground and mystery of all
- things, is most humbly and affectionately dedicated.’
-
- In the following year (1856) another volume was issued,
- royal octavo, of 600 pages, diamond type, of ‘Theosophical
- Miscellanies.’ Of the last-named work 500 copies only
- were issued, for gratuitous distribution to Libraries and
- Universities. These earlier movements, of which there were
- many, originated within the Church, with persons of great
- piety and earnestness, and of unblemished character; and all
- of these writings were in orthodox form, using the Christian
- expressions, and, like the writings of the eminent Churchman
- William Law, would only be distinguished by the ordinary
- reader for their great earnestness and piety. These were
- one and all but attempts to derive and explain the deeper
- meanings and original import of the Christian Scriptures, and
- to illustrate and unfold the Theosophic life. These works
- were soon forgotten, and are now generally unknown. They
- sought to reform the clergy and revive genuine piety, and
- were never welcomed. That one word, “Heresy,” was sufficient
- to bury them in the limbo of all such Utopias. At the time
- of the Reformation John Reuchlin made a similar attempt with
- the same result, though he was the intimate and trusted
- friend of Luther. Orthodoxy never desired to be informed
- and enlightened. These reformers were informed, as was Paul
- by Festus, that too much learning had made them mad, and
- that it would be dangerous to go farther. Passing by the
- verbiage, which was partly a matter of habit and education
- with these writers, and partly due to religious restraint
- through secular power, and coming to the core of the matter,
- these writings were Theosophical in the strictest sense,
- and pertain solely to man’s knowledge of his own nature
- and the higher life of the soul. The present Theosophical
- movement has sometimes been declared to be an attempt to
- convert Christendom to Buddhism, which means simply that
- the word ‘Heresy’ has lost its terrors and relinquished its
- power. Individuals in every age have more or less clearly
- apprehended the Theosophical doctrines and wrought them into
- the fabric of their lives. These doctrines belong exclusively
- to no religion, and are confined to no society or time. They
- are the birthright of every human soul. Such a thing as
- orthodoxy must be wrought out by each individual according
- to his nature and his needs, and according to his varying
- experience. This may explain why those who have imagined
- Theosophy to be a new religion have hunted in vain for its
- creed and its ritual. Its creed is Loyalty to Truth, and its
- ritual ‘To honour every truth by use.’
-
- How little this principle of Universal Brotherhood is
- understood by the masses of mankind, how seldom its
- transcendent importance is recognised, may be seen in the
- diversity of opinion and fictitious interpretations regarding
- the Theosophical Society. This Society was organized on this
- one principle, the essential Brotherhood of Man, as herein
- briefly outlined and imperfectly set forth. It has been
- assailed as Buddhistic and anti-Christian, as though it could
- be both these together, when both Buddhism and Christianity,
- as set forth by their inspired founders, make brotherhood the
- one essential of doctrine and of life. Theosophy has been
- also regarded as something new under the sun, or at best as
- old mysticism masquerading under a new name. While it is true
- that many Societies founded upon, and united to support,
- the principles of altruism, or essential brotherhood, have
- borne various names, it is also true that many have also
- been called Theosophic, and with principles and aims as the
- present society bearing that name. With these societies, one
- and all, the essential doctrine has been the same, and all
- else has been incidental, though this does not obviate the
- fact that many persons are attracted to the incidentals who
- overlook or ignore the essentials.”
-
- No better or more explicit answer—by a man who is one of our most
- esteemed and earnest Theosophists—could be given to your questions.
-
- ENQ. Which system do you prefer or follow, in that case, besides
- Buddhistic ethics?
-
- THEO. None, and all. We hold to no religion, as to no philosophy in
- particular: we cull the good we find in each. But here, again, it
- must be stated that, like all other ancient systems, Theosophy is
- divided into Exoteric and _Esoteric_ Sections.
-
- ENQ. What is the difference?
-
- THEO. The members of the Theosophical Society at large are free to
- profess whatever religion or philosophy they like, or none if
- they so prefer, provided they are in sympathy with, and ready to
- carry out one or more of the three objects of the Association.
- The Society is a philanthropic and scientific body for the
- propagation of the idea of brotherhood on _practical_ instead of
- _theoretical_ lines. The Fellows may be Christians or Mussulmen,
- Jews or Parsees, Buddhists or Brahmins, Spiritualists or
- Materialists, it does not matter; but every member must be either
- a philanthropist, or a scholar, a searcher into Aryan and other
- old literature, or a psychic student. In short, he has to help,
- if he can, in the carrying out of at least one of the objects
- of the programme. Otherwise he has no reason for becoming a
- “Fellow.” Such are the majority of the exoteric Society, composed
- of “attached” and “unattached” members.[6] These may, or may not,
- become Theosophists _de facto_. Members they are, by virtue of
- their having joined the Society; but the latter cannot make a
- Theosophist of one who has no sense for the _divine_ fitness of
- things, or of him who understands Theosophy in his own—if the
- expression may be used—_sectarian_ and egotistic way. “Handsome
- is, as handsome does” could be paraphrased in this case and be
- made to run: “Theosophist is, who Theosophy does.”
-
-
-THEOSOPHISTS AND MEMBERS OF THE “T.S.”
-
- ENQ. This applies to lay members, as I understand. And what of those
- who pursue the esoteric study of Theosophy; are they the real
- Theosophists?
-
- THEO. Not necessarily, until they have proven themselves to be such.
- They have entered the inner group and pledged themselves to
- carry out, as strictly as they can, the rules of the occult
- body. This is a difficult undertaking, as the foremost rule of
- all is the entire renunciation of one’s personality—_i.e._, a
- _pledged_ member has to become a thorough altruist, never to
- think of himself, and to forget his own vanity and pride in the
- thought of the good of his fellow-creatures, besides that of his
- fellow-brothers in the esoteric circle. He has to live, if the
- esoteric instructions shall profit him, a life of abstinence in
- everything, of self-denial and strict morality, doing his duty by
- all men. The few real Theosophists in the T.S. are among these
- members. This does not imply that outside of the T.S. and the
- inner circle, there are no Theosophists; for there are, and more
- than people know of; certainly far more than are found among the
- lay members of the T.S.
-
- ENQ. Then what is the good of joining the so-called Theosophical
- Society in that case? Where is the incentive?
-
- THEO. None, except the advantage of getting esoteric instructions, the
- genuine doctrines of the “Wisdom-Religion,” and if the real
- programme is carried out, deriving much help from mutual aid
- and sympathy. Union is strength and harmony, and well-regulated
- simultaneous efforts produce wonders. This has been the secret of
- all associations and communities since mankind existed.
-
- ENQ. But why could not a man of well-balanced mind and singleness of
- purpose, one, say, of indomitable energy and perseverance, become
- an Occultist and even an Adept if he works alone?
-
- THEO. He may; but there are ten thousand chances against one that he
- will fail. For one reason out of many others, no books on
- Occultism or Theurgy exist in our day which give out the secrets
- of alchemy or mediæval Theosophy in plain language. All are
- symbolical or in parables; and as the key to these has been lost
- for ages in the West, how can a man learn the correct meaning
- of what he is reading and studying? Therein lies the greatest
- danger, one that leads to unconscious _black_ magic or the most
- helpless mediumship. He who has not an Initiate for a master
- had better leave the dangerous study alone. Look around you and
- observe. While two-thirds of _civilized_ society ridicule the
- mere notion that there is anything in Theosophy, Occultism,
- Spiritualism, or in the Kabala, the other third is composed of
- the most heterogeneous and opposite elements. Some believe in the
- mystical, and even in the _supernatural_ (!), but each believes
- in his own way. Others will rush single-handed into the study of
- the Kabala, Psychism, Mesmerism, Spiritualism, or some form or
- another of Mysticism. Result: no two men think alike, no two are
- agreed upon any fundamental occult principles, though many are
- those who claim for themselves the _ultima thule_ of knowledge,
- and would make outsiders believe that they are full-blown
- adepts. Not only is there no scientific and accurate knowledge
- of Occultism accessible in the West—not even of true astrology,
- the only branch of Occultism which, in its _exoteric_ teachings,
- has definite laws and a definite system—but no one has any idea
- of what real Occultism means. Some limit ancient wisdom to the
- _Kabala_ and the Jewish _Zohar_, which each interprets in his
- own way according to the dead-letter of the Rabbinical methods.
- Others regard Swedenborg or Boehme as the ultimate expressions of
- the highest wisdom; while others again see in mesmerism the great
- secret of ancient magic. One and all of those who put their theory
- into practice are rapidly drifting, through ignorance, into black
- magic. Happy are those who escape from it, as they have neither
- test nor criterion by which they can distinguish between the true
- and the false.
-
- ENQ. Are we to understand that the inner group of the T.S. claims to
- learn what it does from real initiates or masters of esoteric
- wisdom?
-
- THEO. Not directly. The personal presence of such masters is not
- required. Suffice it if they give instructions to some of those
- who have studied under their guidance for years, and devoted their
- whole lives to their service. Then, in turn, these can give out
- the knowledge so imparted to others, who had no such opportunity.
- A portion of the true sciences is better than a mass of undigested
- and misunderstood learning. An ounce of gold is worth a ton of
- dust.
-
- ENQ. But how is one to know whether the ounce is real gold or only a
- counterfeit?
-
- THEO. A tree is known by its fruit, a system by its results. When our
- opponents are able to prove to us that any solitary student
- of Occultism throughout the ages has become a saintly adept
- like Ammonius Saccas, or even a Plotinus, or a Theurgist like
- Iamblichus, or achieved feats such as are claimed to have been
- done by St. Germain, without any master to guide him, and all
- this without being a medium, a self-deluded psychic, or a
- charlatan—then shall we confess ourselves mistaken. But till
- then, Theosophists prefer to follow the proven natural law of
- the tradition of the Sacred Science. There are mystics who have
- made great discoveries in chemistry and physical sciences, almost
- bordering on alchemy and Occultism; others who, by the sole aid of
- their genius, have rediscovered portions, if not the whole, of the
- lost alphabets of the “Mystery language,” and are, therefore, able
- to read correctly Hebrew scrolls; others still, who, being seers,
- have caught wonderful _glimpses_ of the hidden secrets of Nature.
- But all these are _specialists_. One is a theoretical inventor,
- another a Hebrew, _i.e._, a Sectarian Kabalist, a third a
- Swedenborg of modern times, denying all and everything outside of
- his own particular science or religion. Not one of them can boast
- of having produced a universal or even a national benefit thereby,
- not even to himself. With the exception of a few healers—of that
- class which the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons would
- call quacks—none have helped with their science Humanity, nor even
- a number of men of the same community. Where are the Chaldees of
- old, those who wrought marvellous cures, “not by charms but by
- simples”? Where is an Apollonius of Tyana, who healed the sick
- and raised the dead under any climate and circumstances? We know
- some _specialists_ of the former class in Europe, but none of the
- latter—except in Asia, where the secret of the Yogi, “to live in
- death,” is still preserved.
-
- ENQ. Is the production of such healing adepts the aim of Theosophy?
-
- THEO. Its aims are several; but the most important of all are those
- which are likely to lead to the relief of human suffering under
- any or every form, moral as well as physical. And we believe the
- former to be far more important than the latter. Theosophy has to
- inculcate ethics; it has to purify the soul, if it would relieve
- the physical body, whose ailments, save cases of accidents, are
- all hereditary. It is not by studying Occultism for selfish ends,
- for the gratification of one’s personal ambition, pride, or
- vanity, that one can ever reach the true goal: that of helping
- suffering mankind. Nor is it by studying one single branch of
- the esoteric philosophy that a man becomes an Occultist, but by
- studying, if not mastering, them all.
-
- ENQ. Is help, then, to reach this most important aim, given only to
- those who study the esoteric sciences?
-
- THEO. Not at all. Every _lay_ member is entitled to general instruction
- if he only wants it; but few are willing to become what is
- called “working members,” and most prefer to remain the _drones_
- of Theosophy. Let it be understood that private research is
- encouraged in the T.S., provided it does not infringe the limit
- which separates the exoteric from the esoteric, the _blind_ from
- the _conscious_ magic.
-
-
-THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALISM.
-
- ENQ. You speak of Theosophy and Occultism; are they identical?
-
- THEO. By no means. A man may be a very good Theosophist indeed, whether
- _in_ or _outside_ of the Society, without being in any way an
- Occultist. But no one can be a true Occultist without being a real
- Theosophist; otherwise he is simply a black magician, whether
- conscious or unconscious.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean?
-
- THEO. I have said already that a true Theosophist must put in practice
- the loftiest moral ideal, must strive to realize his unity with
- the whole of humanity, and work ceaselessly for others. Now, if
- an Occultist does not do all this, he must act selfishly for his
- own personal benefit; and if he has acquired more practical power
- than other ordinary men, he becomes forthwith a far more dangerous
- enemy to the world and those around him than the average mortal.
- This is clear.
-
- ENQ. Then is an Occultist simply a man who possesses more power than
- other people?
-
- THEO. Far more—if he is a _practical_ and really learned Occultist, and
- not one only in name. Occult sciences are _not_, as described,
- in Encyclopædias, “those _imaginary_ sciences of the Middle
- Ages which related to the _supposed_ action or influence of
- Occult qualities or supernatural powers, as alchemy, magic,
- necromancy, and astrology,” for they are real, actual, and very
- dangerous sciences. They teach the secret potency of things in
- Nature, developing and cultivating the hidden powers “latent in
- man,” thus giving him tremendous advantages over more ignorant
- mortals. Hypnotism, now become so common and a subject of serious
- scientific inquiry, is a good instance in point. _Hypnotic_ power
- has been discovered almost by accident, the way to it having been
- prepared by mesmerism; and now an able hypnotizer can do almost
- anything with it, from forcing a man, unconsciously to himself,
- to play the fool, to making him commit a crime—often by proxy for
- the hypnotizer, and _for the benefit of the latter_. Is not this a
- terrible power if left in the hands of unscrupulous persons? And
- please to remember that this is only one of the minor branches of
- Occultism.
-
- ENQ. But are not all these Occult sciences, magic, and sorcery,
- considered by the most cultured and learned people as relics of
- ancient ignorance and superstition?
-
- THEO. Let me remind you that this remark of yours cuts both ways. The
- “most cultured and learned” among you regard also Christianity and
- every other religion as a relic of ignorance and superstition.
- People begin to believe now, at any rate, in _hypnotism_, and
- some—even of the _most cultured_—in Theosophy and phenomena. But
- who among them, except preachers and blind fanatics, will confess
- to a belief in _Biblical miracles_? And this is where the point
- of difference comes in. There are very good and pure Theosophists
- who may believe in the supernatural, divine _miracles_ included,
- but no Occultist will do so. For an Occultist practices
- _scientific_ Theosophy, based on accurate knowledge of Nature’s
- secret workings; but a Theosophist, practising the powers called
- abnormal, _minus_ the light of Occultism, will simply tend toward
- a dangerous form of mediumship, because, although holding to
- Theosophy and its highest conceivable code of ethics, he practises
- it in the dark, on sincere but _blind_ faith. Anyone, Theosophist
- or Spiritualist, who attempts to cultivate one of the branches of
- Occult science—_e.g._, Hypnotism, Mesmerism, or even the secrets
- of producing physical phenomena, etc.—without the knowledge of the
- philosophic _rationale_ of those powers, is like a rudderless boat
- launched on a stormy ocean.
-
-
-THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALISM.
-
- ENQ. But do you not believe in Spiritualism?
-
- THEO. If by “Spiritualism” you mean the explanation which Spiritualists
- give of some abnormal phenomena, then decidedly _we do not_.
- They maintain that these manifestations are all produced by the
- “spirits” of departed mortals, generally their relatives, who
- return to earth, they say, to communicate with those they have
- loved or to whom they are attached. We deny this point blank. We
- assert that the spirits of the dead cannot return to earth—save
- in rare and exceptional cases, of which I may speak later; nor do
- they communicate with men except by _entirely subjective means_.
- That which does appear objectively, is only the phantom of the
- ex-physical man. But in _psychic_, and so to say, “Spiritual”
- Spiritualism, we do believe, most decidedly.
-
- ENQ. Do you reject the phenomena also?
-
- THEO. Assuredly not—save cases of conscious fraud.
-
- ENQ. How do you account for them, then?
-
- THEO. In many ways. The causes of such manifestations are by no means
- so simple as the Spiritualists would like to believe. Foremost of
- all, the _deus ex machinâ_ of the so-called “materializations”
- is usually the astral body or “double” of the medium or of some
- one present. This _astral_ body is also the producer or operating
- force in the manifestations of slate-writing, “Davenport”-like
- manifestations, and so on.
-
- ENQ. You say “usually”; then _what_ is it that produces the rest?
-
- THEO. That depends on the nature of the manifestations. Sometimes the
- astral remains, the Kamalokic “shells” of the vanished
- _personalities_ that were; at other times, Elementals. “Spirit”
- is a word of manifold and wide significance. I really do not
- know what Spiritualists mean by the term; but what we understand
- them to claim is that the physical phenomena are produced by the
- reincarnating _Ego_, the _Spiritual_ and immortal “individuality.”
- And this hypothesis we entirely reject. The Conscious
- _Individuality_ of the disembodied _cannot materialize_, nor can
- it return from its own mental Devachanic sphere to the plane of
- terrestrial objectivity.
-
- ENQ. But many of the communications received from the “spirits” show
- not only intelligence, but a knowledge of facts not known to the
- medium, and sometimes even not consciously present to the mind of
- the investigator, or any of those who compose the audience.
-
- THEO. This does not necessarily prove that the intelligence and
- knowledge you speak of belong to _spirits_, or emanate from
- _disembodied_ souls. Somnambulists have been known to compose
- music and poetry and to solve mathematical problems while in their
- trance state, without having ever learnt music or mathematics.
- Others answered intelligently to questions put to them, and even,
- in several cases, spoke languages, such as Hebrew and Latin, of
- which they were entirely ignorant when awake—all this in a state
- of profound sleep. Will you, then, maintain that this was caused
- by “spirits”?
-
- ENQ. But how would you explain it?
-
- THEO. We assert that the divine spark in man being one and identical in
- its essence with the Universal Spirit, our “spiritual Self” is
- practically omniscient, but that it cannot manifest its knowledge
- owing to the impediments of matter. Now the more these impediments
- are removed, in other words, the more the physical body is
- paralyzed, as to its own independent activity and consciousness,
- as in deep sleep or deep trance, or, again, in illness, the more
- fully can the _inner_ Self manifest on this plane. This is our
- explanation of those truly wonderful phenomena of a higher order,
- in which undeniable intelligence and knowledge are exhibited. As
- to the lower order of manifestations, such as physical phenomena
- and the platitudes and common talk of the general “spirit,” to
- explain even the most important of the teachings we hold upon the
- subject would take up more space and time than can be allotted
- to it at present. We have no desire to interfere with the belief
- of the Spiritualists any more than with any other belief. The
- _onus probandi_ must fall on the believers in “spirits.” And at
- the present moment, while still convinced that the higher sort of
- manifestations occur through the disembodied souls, their leaders
- and the most learned and intelligent among the Spiritualists are
- the first to confess that not _all_ the phenomena are produced by
- spirits. Gradually they will come to recognize the whole truth;
- but meanwhile we have no right nor desire to proselytize them to
- our views. The less so, as in the cases of purely _psychic and
- spiritual manifestations_ we believe in the intercommunication
- of the spirit of the living man with that of disembodied
- personalities.[7]
-
- ENQ. This means that you reject the philosophy of Spiritualism _in
- toto_?
-
- THEO. If by “philosophy” you mean their crude theories, we do. But they
- have no philosophy, in truth. Their best, their most intellectual
- and earnest defenders say so. Their fundamental and only
- unimpeachable truth, namely, that phenomena occur through mediums
- controlled by invisible forces and intelligences—no one, except a
- blind materialist of the “Huxley big toe” school, will or _can_
- deny. With regard to their philosophy, however, let me read to
- you what the able editor of _Light_, than whom the Spiritualists
- will find no wiser nor more devoted champion, says of them and
- their philosophy. This is what “M.A. Oxon,” one of the very few
- _philosophical_ Spiritualists, writes, with respect to their lack
- of organization and blind bigotry:—
-
- It is worth while to look steadily at this point, for it is of
- vital moment. We have an experience and a knowledge beside which
- all other knowledge is comparatively insignificant. The ordinary
- Spiritualist waxes wroth if anyone ventures to impugn his assured
- knowledge of the future and his absolute certainty of the life to
- come. Where other men have stretched forth feeble hands groping
- into the dark future, he walks boldly as one who has a chart and
- knows his way. Where other men have stopped short at a pious
- aspiration or have been content with a hereditary faith, it is his
- boast that he knows what they only believe, and that out of his
- rich stores he can supplement the fading faiths built only upon
- hope. He is magnificent in his dealings with man’s most cherished
- expectations. “You hope,” he seems to say, “for that which I can
- demonstrate. You have accepted a traditional belief in what I can
- experimentally prove according to the strictest scientific method.
- The old beliefs are fading; come out from them and be separate.
- They contain as much falsehood as truth. Only by building on a
- sure foundation of demonstrated fact can your superstructure be
- stable. All round you old faiths are toppling. Avoid the crash and
- get you out.”
-
- When one comes to deal with this magnificent person in a practical
- way, what is the result? Very curious and very disappointing. He
- is so sure of his ground that he takes no trouble to ascertain
- the interpretation which others put upon his facts. The wisdom
- of the ages has concerned itself with the explanation of what he
- rightly regards as proven; but he does not turn a passing glance
- on its researches. He does not even agree altogether with his
- brother Spiritualist. It is the story over again of the old Scotch
- body who, together with her husband, formed a “kirk.” They had
- exclusive keys to Heaven, or, rather, she had, for she was “na
- certain aboot Jamie.” So the infinitely divided and subdivided
- and resubdivided sects of Spiritualists shake their heads,
- and are “na certain aboot” one another. Again, the collective
- experience of mankind is solid and unvarying on this point that
- union is strength, and disunion a source of weakness and failure.
- Shoulder to shoulder, drilled and disciplined, a rabble becomes
- an army, each man a match for a hundred of the untrained men that
- may be brought against it. Organization in every department of
- man’s work means success, saving of time and labour, profit and
- development. Want of method, want of plan, haphazard work, fitful
- energy, undisciplined effort—these mean bungling failure. The
- voice of humanity attests the truth. Does the Spiritualist accept
- the verdict and act on the conclusion? Verily, no. He refuses to
- organize. He is a law unto himself, and a thorn in the side of his
- neighbours.—_Light_, June 22, 1889.
-
- ENQ. I was told that the Theosophical Society was originally founded to
- crush Spiritualism and belief in the survival of the individuality
- in man?
-
- THEO. You are misinformed. Our beliefs are all founded on that immortal
- individuality. But then, like so many others, you confuse
- _personality_ with individuality. Your Western psychologists do
- not seem to have established any clear distinction between the
- two. Yet it is precisely that difference which gives the key-note
- to the understanding of Eastern philosophy, and which lies at the
- root of the divergence between the Theosophical and Spiritualistic
- teachings. And though it may draw upon us still more the hostility
- of some Spiritualists, yet I must state here that it is Theosophy
- which is the _true_ and unalloyed Spiritualism, while the modern
- scheme of that name is, as now practised by the masses, simply
- transcendental materialism.
-
- ENQ. Please explain your idea more clearly.
-
- THEO. What I mean is that though our teachings insist upon the identity
- of spirit and matter, and though we say that spirit is _potential_
- matter, and matter simply crystallized spirit (_e.g._, as ice is
- solidified steam), yet since the original and eternal condition
- of _all_ is not spirit but _meta_-spirit, so to speak, (visible
- and solid matter being simply its periodical manifestation,) we
- maintain that the term spirit can only be applied to the _true_
- individuality.
-
- ENQ. But what is the distinction between this “true individuality” and
- the “I” or “Ego” of which we are all conscious?
-
- THEO. Before I can answer you, we must argue upon what you mean by “I”
- or “Ego.” We distinguish between the simple fact of
- self-consciousness, the simple feeling that “I am I,” and
- the complex thought that “I am Mr. Smith” or “Mrs. Brown.”
- Believing as we do in a series of births for the same Ego, or
- re-incarnation, this distinction is the fundamental pivot of
- the whole idea. You see “Mr. Smith” really means a long series
- of daily experiences strung together by the thread of memory,
- and forming what Mr. Smith calls “himself.” But none of these
- “experiences” are really the “I” or the Ego, nor do they give “Mr.
- Smith” the feeling that he is himself, for he forgets the greater
- part of his daily experiences, and they produce the feeling of
- _Egoity_ in him only while they last. We Theosophists, therefore,
- distinguish between this bundle of “experiences,” which we call
- the _false_ (because so finite and evanescent) _personality_, and
- that element in man to which the feeling of “I am I” is due. It
- is this “I am I” which we call the _true_ individuality; and we
- say that this “Ego” or individuality plays, like an actor, many
- parts on the stage of life.[8] Let us call every new life on earth
- of the same _Ego_ a _night_ on the stage of a theatre. One night
- the actor, or “Ego,” appears as “Macbeth,” the next as “Shylock,”
- the third as “Romeo,” the fourth as “Hamlet” or “King Lear,” and
- so on, until he has run through the whole cycle of incarnations.
- The Ego begins his life-pilgrimage as a sprite, an “Ariel,” or a
- “Puck”; he plays the part of a _super_, is a soldier, a servant,
- one of the chorus; rises then to “speaking parts,” plays leading
- _rôles_, interspersed with insignificant parts, till he finally
- retires from the stage as “Prospero,” the _magician_.
-
- ENQ. I understand. You say, then, that this true _Ego_ cannot return to
- earth after death. But surely the actor is at liberty, if he has
- preserved the sense of his individuality, to return if he likes to
- the scene of his former actions?
-
- THEO. We say not, simply because such a return to earth would be
- incompatible with any state of _unalloyed_ bliss after death, as
- I am prepared to prove. We say that man suffers so much unmerited
- misery during his life, through the fault of others with whom he
- is associated, or because of his environment, that he is surely
- entitled to perfect rest and quiet, if not bliss, before taking up
- again the burden of life. However, we can discuss this in detail
- later.
-
-
-WHY IS THEOSOPHY ACCEPTED?
-
- ENQ. I understand to a certain extent; but I see that your teachings
- are far more complicated and metaphysical than either Spiritualism
- or current religious thought. Can you tell me, then, what has
- caused this system of Theosophy which you support to arouse so
- much interest and so much animosity at the same time?
-
- THEO. There are several reasons for it, I believe; among other causes
- that may be mentioned is, _firstly_, the great reaction from the
- crassly materialistic theories now prevalent among scientific
- teachers. _Secondly_, general dissatisfaction with the artificial
- theology of the various Christian Churches, and the number of
- daily increasing and conflicting sects. _Thirdly_, an ever-growing
- perception of the fact that the creeds which are so obviously
- self—and mutually—contradictory _cannot be true_, and that claims
- which are unverified _cannot be real_. This natural distrust of
- conventional religions is only strengthened by their complete
- failure to preserve morals and to purify society and the masses.
- _Fourthly_, a conviction on the part of many, and _knowledge_ by
- a few, that there must be somewhere a philosophical and religious
- system which shall be scientific and not merely speculative.
- _Finally_, a belief, perhaps, that such a system must be sought
- for in teachings far antedating any modern faith.
-
- ENQ. But how did this system come to be put forward just now?
-
- THEO. Just because the time was found to be ripe, which fact is shown
- by the determined effort of so many earnest students to reach
- _the truth_, at whatever cost and wherever it may be concealed.
- Seeing this, its custodians permitted that some portions at
- least of that truth should be proclaimed. Had the formation of
- the Theosophical Society been postponed a few years longer, one
- half of the civilized nations would have become by this time
- rank materialists, and the other half anthropomorphists and
- phenomenalists.
-
- ENQ. Are we to regard Theosophy in any way as a revelation?
-
- THEO. In no way whatever—not even in the sense of a new and direct
- disclosure from some higher, supernatural, or, at least,
- _superhuman beings_; but only in the sense of an “unveiling” of
- old, very old, truths to minds hitherto ignorant of them, ignorant
- even of the existence and preservation of any such archaic
- knowledge.[9]
-
- ENQ. You spoke of “Persecution.” If truth is as represented by
- Theosophy, why has it met with such opposition, and with no
- general acceptance?
-
- THEO. For many and various reasons again, one of which is the hatred
- felt by men for “innovations,” as they call them. Selfishness is
- essentially conservative, and hates being disturbed. It prefers
- an easy-going, unexacting _lie_ to the greatest truth, if the
- latter requires the sacrifice of one’s smallest comfort. The power
- of mental inertia is great in anything that does not promise
- immediate benefit and reward. Our age is pre-eminently unspiritual
- and matter of fact. Moreover, there is the unfamiliar character of
- Theosophic teachings; the highly abstruse nature of the doctrines,
- some of which contradict flatly many of the human vagaries
- cherished by sectarians, which have eaten into the very core of
- popular beliefs. If we add to this the personal efforts and great
- purity of life exacted of those who would become the disciples
- of the _inner_ circle, and the very limited class to which an
- entirely unselfish code appeals, it will be easy to perceive the
- reason why Theosophy is doomed to such slow, uphill work. It is
- essentially the philosophy of those who suffer, and have lost all
- hope of being helped out of the mire of life by any other means.
- Moreover, the history of any system of belief or morals, newly
- introduced into a foreign soil, shows that its beginnings were
- impeded by every obstacle that obscurantism and selfishness could
- suggest. “The crown of the innovator is a crown of thorns” indeed!
- No pulling down of old, worm-eaten buildings can be accomplished
- without some danger.
-
- ENQ. All this refers rather to the ethics and philosophy of the T.S.
- Can you give me a general idea of the Society itself, its object
- and statutes?
-
- THEO. This was never made secret. Ask, and you shall receive accurate
- answers.
-
- ENQ. But I heard that you were bound by pledges?
-
- THEO. Only in the _Arcane_ or “Esoteric” Section.
-
- ENQ. And also, that some members after leaving did not regard
- themselves bound by them. Are they right?
-
- THEO. This shows that their idea of honour is an imperfect one. How can
- they be right? As well said in the _Path_, our theosophical organ
- at New York, treating of such a case: “Suppose that a soldier is
- tried for infringement of oath and discipline, and is dismissed
- from the service. In his rage at the justice he has called down,
- and of whose penalties he was distinctly forewarned, the soldier
- turns to the enemy with false information,—a spy and traitor—as
- a revenge upon his former Chief, and claims that his punishment
- has released him from his oath of loyalty to a cause.” Is he
- justified, think you? Don’t you think he deserves being called a
- dishonourable man, a coward?
-
- ENQ. I believe so; but some think otherwise.
-
- THEO. So much the worse for them. But we will talk on this subject
- later, if you please.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[6] An “attached member” means one who has joined some particular
-branch of the T.S. An “unattached,” one who belongs to the Society at
-large, has his diploma, from the Headquarters (Adyar, Madras), but is
-connected with no branch or lodge.
-
-[7] We say that in such cases it is not the _spirits_ of the dead
-who _descend_ on earth, but the spirits of the living that _ascend_
-to the pure Spiritual Souls. In truth there is neither _ascending_
-nor _descending_, but a change of _state_ or _condition_ for the
-medium. The body of the latter becoming paralyzed, or “entranced,” the
-spiritual Ego is free from its trammels, and finds itself on the same
-plane of consciousness with the disembodied spirits. Hence, if there
-is any spiritual attraction between the two _they can communicate_,
-as often occurs in dreams. The difference between a mediumistic and
-a non-sensitive nature is this: the liberated spirit of a medium has
-the opportunity and facility of influencing the passive organs of its
-entranced physical body, to make them act, speak, and write at its
-will. The Ego can make it repeat, echo-like, and in the human language,
-the thoughts and ideas of the disembodied entity, as well as its own.
-But the _non-receptive_ or non-sensitive organism of one who is very
-positive cannot be so influenced. Hence, although there is hardly a
-human being whose Ego does not hold free intercourse, during the sleep
-of his body, with those whom it loved and lost, yet, on account of the
-positiveness and non-receptivity of its physical envelope and brain,
-no recollection, or a very dim, dream-like remembrance, lingers in the
-memory of the person once awake.
-
-[8] _Vide infra_, “On Individuality and Personality.”
-
-[9] It has become “fashionable,” especially of late, to deride the
-notion that there ever was, in the _mysteries_ of great and civilized
-peoples, such as the Egyptians, Greeks, or Romans, anything but
-priestly imposture. Even the Rosicrucians were no better than half
-lunatics, half knaves. Numerous books have been written on them; and
-tyros, who had hardly heard the name a few years before, sallied
-out as profound critics and Gnostics on the subject of alchemy, the
-fire-philosophers, and mysticism in general. Yet a long series of the
-Hierophants of Egypt, India, Chaldea, and Arabia are known, along
-with the greatest philosophers and sages of Greece and the West, to
-have included under the designation of wisdom and divine science all
-knowledge, for they considered the base and origin of every art and
-science as _essentially_ divine. Plato regarded the _mysteries_ as
-most sacred, and Clemens Alexandrinus, who had been himself initiated
-into the Eleusinian mysteries, has declared “that the doctrines taught
-therein contained in them the end of all human knowledge.” Were Plato
-and Clemens two knaves or two fools, we wonder, or—both?
-
-
-
-
-III. THE WORKING SYSTEM OF THE T.S.[10]
-
-
-THE OBJECTS OF THE SOCIETY.
-
- ENQ. What are the objects of the “Theosophical Society”?
-
- THEO. They are three, and have been so from the beginning. (1). To form
- the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity without
- distinction of race, colour, or creed. (2). To promote the
- study of Aryan and other Scriptures, of the World’s religion
- and sciences, and to vindicate the importance of old Asiatic
- literature, namely, of the Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Zoroastrian
- philosophies. (3). To investigate the hidden mysteries of Nature
- under every aspect possible, and the psychic and spiritual powers
- latent in man especially. These are, broadly stated, the three
- chief objects of the Theosophical Society.
-
- ENQ. Can you give me some more detailed information upon these?
-
- THEO. We may divide each of the three objects into as many explanatory
- clauses as may be found necessary.
-
- ENQ. Then let us begin with the first. What means would you resort to,
- in order to promote such a feeling of brotherhood among races
- that are known to be of the most diversified religions, customs,
- beliefs, and modes of thought?
-
- THEO. Allow me to add that which you seem unwilling to express. Of
- course we know that with the exception of two remnants of
- races—the Parsees and the Jews—every nation is divided, not merely
- against all other nations, but even against itself. This is found
- most prominently among the so-called civilized Christian nations.
- Hence your wonder, and the reason why our first object appears to
- you a Utopia. Is it not so?
-
- ENQ. Well, yes; but what have you to say against it?
-
- THEO. Nothing against the fact; but much about the necessity of
- removing the causes which make Universal Brotherhood a Utopia at
- present.
-
- ENQ. What are, in your view, these causes?
-
- THEO. First and foremost, the natural selfishness of human nature. This
- selfishness, instead of being eradicated, is daily strengthened
- and stimulated into a ferocious and irresistible feeling by the
- present religious education, which tends not only to encourage,
- but positively to justify it. People’s ideas about right and wrong
- have been entirely perverted by the literal acceptance of the
- Jewish Bible. All the unselfishness of the altruistic teachings
- of Jesus has become merely a theoretical subject for pulpit
- oratory; while the precepts of practical selfishness taught in
- the Mosaic Bible, against which Christ so vainly preached, have
- become ingrained into the innermost life of the Western nations.
- “An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth” has come to be the
- first maxim of your law. Now, I state openly and fearlessly, that
- the perversity of this doctrine and of so many others _Theosophy
- alone_ can eradicate.
-
-
-THE COMMON ORIGIN OF MAN.
-
- ENQ. How?
-
- THEO. Simply by demonstrating on logical, philosophical, metaphysical,
- and even scientific grounds that:—(a) All men have spiritually
- and physically the same origin, which is the fundamental teaching
- of Theosophy. (b) As mankind is essentially of one and the same
- essence, and that essence is one—infinite, uncreate, and eternal,
- whether we call it God or Nature—nothing, therefore, can affect
- one nation or one man without affecting all other nations and
- all other men. This is as certain and as obvious as that a stone
- thrown into a pond will, sooner or later, set in motion every
- single drop of water therein.
-
- ENQ. But this is not the teaching of Christ, but rather a pantheistic
- notion.
-
- THEO. That is where your mistake lies. It is purely _Christian_,
- although _not_ Judaic, and therefore, perhaps, your Biblical
- nations prefer to ignore it.
-
- ENQ. This is a wholesale and unjust accusation. Where are your proofs
- for such a statement?
-
- THEO. They are ready at hand. Christ is alleged to have said: “Love
- each other” and “Love your enemies”; for “if ye love them (only)
- which love you, what reward (or merit) have ye? Do not even the
- _publicans_[11] the same? And if you salute your brethren only,
- what do ye more than others? Do not even publicans so?” These
- are Christ’s words. But Genesis ix. 25, says “Cursed be Canaan,
- a servant of servants shall he be unto his brethren.” And,
- therefore, Christian but Biblical people prefer the law of Moses
- to Christ’s law of love. They base upon the Old Testament, which
- panders to all their passions, their laws of conquest, annexation,
- and tyranny over races which they call _inferior_. What crimes
- have been committed on the strength of this infernal (if taken in
- its dead letter) passage in Genesis, history alone gives us an
- idea, however inadequate.[12]
-
- ENQ. I have heard you say that the identity of our physical origin is
- proved by science, that of our spiritual origin by the
- Wisdom-Religion. Yet we do not find Darwinists exhibiting great
- fraternal affection.
-
- THEO. Just so. This is what shows the deficiency of the materialistic
- systems, and proves that we Theosophists are in the right. The
- identity of our physical origin makes no appeal to our higher and
- deeper feelings. Matter, deprived of its soul and spirit, or its
- divine essence, cannot speak to the human heart. But the identity
- of the soul and spirit, of real, immortal man, as Theosophy
- teaches us, once proven and deep-rooted in our hearts, would lead
- us far on the road of real charity and brotherly goodwill.
-
- ENQ. But how does Theosophy explain the common origin of man?
-
- THEO. By teaching that the _root_ of all nature, objective and
- subjective, and everything else in the universe, visible and
- invisible, _is_, _was_, and _ever will be_ one absolute essence,
- from which all starts, and into which everything returns. This is
- Aryan philosophy, fully represented only by the Vedantins, and
- the Buddhist system. With this object in view, it is the duty of
- all Theosophists to promote in every practical way, and in all
- countries, the spread of _non-sectarian_ education.
-
- ENQ. What do the written statutes of your Society advise its members to
- do besides this? On the physical plane, I mean?
-
- THEO. In order to awaken brotherly feeling among nations we have to
- assist in the international exchange of useful arts and products,
- by advice, information, and co-operation with all worthy
- individuals and associations (provided, however, add the statutes,
- “that no benefit or percentage shall be taken by the Society or
- the ‘Fellows’ for its or their corporate services”). For instance,
- to take a practical illustration. The organization of Society,
- depicted by Edward Bellamy, in his magnificent work “Looking
- Backwards,” admirably represents the Theosophical idea of what
- should be the first great step towards the full realization of
- universal brotherhood. The state of things he depicts falls short
- of perfection, because selfishness still exists and operates in
- the hearts of men. But in the main, selfishness and individualism
- have been overcome by the feeling of solidarity and mutual
- brotherhood; and the scheme of life there described reduces the
- causes tending to create and foster selfishness to a minimum.
-
- ENQ. Then as a Theosophist you will take part in an effort to realize
- such an ideal?
-
- THEO. Certainly; and we have proved it by action. Have not you heard of
- the Nationalist clubs and party which have sprung up in America
- since the publication of Bellamy’s book? They are now coming
- prominently to the front, and will do so more and more as time
- goes on. Well, these clubs and this party were started in the
- first instance by Theosophists. One of the first, the Nationalist
- Club of Boston, Mass., has Theosophists for President and
- Secretary, and the majority of its executive belong to the T.S.
- In the constitution of all their clubs, and of the party they are
- forming, the influence of Theosophy and of the Society is plain,
- for they all take as their basis, their first and fundamental
- principle, the Brotherhood of Humanity as taught by Theosophy. In
- their declaration of Principles they state:—“The principle of the
- Brotherhood of Humanity is one of the eternal truths that govern
- the world’s progress on lines which distinguish human nature from
- brute nature.” What can be more Theosophical than this? But it is
- not enough. What is also needed is to impress men with the idea
- that, if the root of mankind is _one_, then there must also be one
- truth which finds expression in all the various religions—except
- in the Jewish, as you do not find it _expressed_ even in the
- Kabala.
-
- ENQ. This refers to the common origin of religions, and you may be
- right there. But how does it apply to practical brotherhood on the
- physical plane?
-
- THEO. First, because that which is true on the metaphysical plane must
- be also true on the physical. Secondly, because there is no more
- fertile source of hatred and strife than religious differences.
- When one party or another thinks himself the sole possessor of
- absolute truth, it becomes only natural that he should think his
- neighbour absolutely in the clutches of Error or the Devil. But
- once get a man to see that none of them has the _whole_ truth, but
- that they are mutually complementary, that the complete truth can
- be found only in the combined views of all, after that which is
- false in each of them has been sifted out—then true brotherhood
- in religion will be established. The same applies in the physical
- world.
-
- ENQ. Please explain further.
-
- THEO. Take an instance. A plant consists of a root, a stem, and many
- shoots and leaves. As humanity, as a whole, is the stem which
- grows from the spiritual root, so is the stem the unity of the
- plant. Hurt the stem and it is obvious that every shoot and leaf
- will suffer. So it is with mankind.
-
- ENQ. Yes, but if you injure a leaf or a shoot, you do not injure the
- whole plant.
-
- THEO. And therefore you think that by injuring _one_ man you do not
- injure humanity? But how do _you_ know? Are you aware that even
- materialistic science teaches that any injury, however slight,
- to a plant will affect the whole course of its future growth and
- development? Therefore, you are mistaken, and the analogy is
- perfect. If, however, you overlook the fact that a cut in the
- finger may often make the whole body suffer, and react on the
- whole nervous system, I must all the more remind you that there
- may well be other spiritual laws, operating on plants and animals
- as well as on mankind, although, as you do not recognize their
- action on plants and animals, you may deny their existence.
-
- ENQ. What laws do you mean?
-
- THEO. We call them Karmic laws; but you will not understand the full
- meaning of the term unless you study Occultism. However, my
- argument did not rest on the assumption of these laws, but really
- on the analogy of the plant. Expand the idea, carry it out to
- a universal application, and you will soon find that in true
- philosophy every physical action has its moral and everlasting
- effect. Hurt a man by doing him bodily harm; you may think
- that his pain and suffering cannot spread by any means to his
- neighbours, least of all to men of other nations. We affirm _that
- it will, in good time_. Therefore, we say, that unless every man
- is brought to understand and accept _as an axiomatic truth_ that
- by wronging one man we wrong not only ourselves but the whole of
- humanity in the long run, no brotherly feelings such as preached
- by all the great Reformers, pre-eminently by Buddha and Jesus, are
- possible on earth.
-
-
-OUR OTHER OBJECTS.
-
- ENQ. Will you now explain the methods by which you propose to carry out
- the second object?
-
- THEO. To collect for the library at our headquarters of Adyar, Madras,
- (and by the Fellows of their Branches for their local libraries,)
- all the good works upon the world’s religions that we can. To put
- into written form correct information upon the various ancient
- philosophies, traditions, and legends, and disseminate the same
- in such practicable ways as the translation and publication of
- original works of value, and extracts from and commentaries upon
- the same, or the oral instructions of persons learned in their
- respective departments.
-
- ENQ. And what about the third object, to develop in man his latent
- spiritual or psychic powers?
-
- THEO. This has to be achieved also by means of publications, in those
- places where no lectures and personal teachings are possible.
- Our duty is to keep alive in man his spiritual intuitions. To
- oppose and counteract—after due investigation and proof of its
- irrational nature—bigotry in every form, religious, scientific, or
- social, and _cant_ above all, whether as religious sectarianism
- or as belief in miracles or anything supernatural. What we have
- to do is to seek to obtain _knowledge_ of all the laws of nature,
- and to diffuse it. To encourage the study of those laws least
- understood by modern people, the so-called Occult Sciences, _based
- on the true knowledge of nature_, instead of, as at present,
- on _superstitious beliefs based on blind faith and authority_.
- Popular folk-lore and traditions, however fanciful at times, when
- sifted may lead to the discovery of long-lost, but important,
- secrets of nature. The Society, therefore, aims at pursuing this
- line of inquiry, in the hope of widening the field of scientific
- and philosophical observation.
-
-
-ON THE SACREDNESS OF THE PLEDGE.
-
- ENQ. Have you any ethical system that you carry out in the Society?
-
- THEO. The ethics are there, ready and clear enough for whomsoever
- follow them. They are the essence and cream of the world’s ethics,
- gathered from the teachings of all the world’s great reformers.
- Therefore, you will find represented therein Confucius and
- Zoroaster, Lao-Tze and the Bhagavat-Gita, the precepts of Gautama
- Buddha and Jesus of Nazareth, of Hillel and his school, as of
- Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and their schools.
-
- ENQ. Do the members of your Society carry out these precepts? I have
- heard of great dissensions and quarrels among them.
-
- THEO. Very naturally, since although the reform (in its present shape)
- may be called new, the men and women to be reformed are the
- same human, sinning natures as of old. As already said, the
- earnest _working_ members are few; but many are the sincere and
- well-disposed persons, who try their best to live up to the
- Society’s and their own ideals. Our duty is to encourage and
- assist individual fellows in self-improvement, intellectual,
- moral, and spiritual; not to blame or condemn those who fail.
- We have, strictly speaking, no right to refuse admission to
- anyone—especially in the _Esoteric Section_ of the Society,
- wherein “he who enters is as one newly born.” But if any member,
- his sacred pledges on his word of honour and immortal _Self_,
- notwithstanding, chooses to continue, after that “new birth,”
- with the new man, the vices or defects of his old life, and to
- indulge in them still in the Society, then, of course, he is more
- than likely to be asked to resign and withdraw; or, in case of
- his refusal, to be expelled. We have the strictest rules for such
- emergencies.
-
- ENQ. Can some of them be mentioned?
-
- THEO. They can. To begin with, no Fellow in the Society, whether
- exoteric or esoteric, has a right to force his personal opinions
- upon another Fellow. “It is not lawful for _any officer of
- the Parent Society_ to express in public, by word or act, any
- hostility to, or preference for, any one section,[13] religious
- or philosophical, more than another. All have an equal right
- to have the essential features of their religious belief laid
- before the tribunal of an impartial world. And no officer of the
- Society, in his capacity as an officer, has the right to preach
- his own sectarian views and beliefs to members assembled, except
- when the meeting consists of his co-religionists. After due
- warning, violation of this rule shall be punished by suspension
- or expulsion.” This is one of the offenses in the Society at
- large. As regards the inner section, now called the _Esoteric_,
- the following rules have been laid down and adopted, so far back
- as 1880. “No Fellow shall put to his selfish use any knowledge
- communicated to him by any member of the first section (now
- a higher ‘degree’); violation of the rule being punished by
- expulsion.” Now, however, before any such knowledge can be
- imparted, the applicant has to bind himself by a solemn oath not
- to use it for selfish purposes, nor to reveal anything said except
- by permission.
-
- ENQ. But is a man expelled, or resigning, from the section free to
- reveal anything he may have learned, or to break any clause of the
- pledge he has taken?
-
- THEO. Certainly not. His expulsion or resignation only relieves him
- from the obligation of obedience to the teacher, and from that of
- taking an active part in the work of the Society, but surely not
- from the sacred pledge of secrecy.
-
- ENQ. But is this reasonable and just?
-
- THEO. Most assuredly. To any man or woman with the slightest honourable
- feeling a pledge of secrecy taken even on one’s _word of honour_,
- much more to one’s Higher Self—the God within—is binding till
- death. And though he may leave the Section and the Society, no man
- or woman of honour will think of attacking or injuring a body to
- which he or she has been so pledged.
-
- ENQ. But is not this going rather far?
-
- THEO. Perhaps so, according to the low standard of the present time and
- morality. But if it does not bind as far as this, what use is
- a _pledge_ at all? How can anyone expect to be taught secret
- knowledge, if he is to be at liberty to free himself from all the
- obligations he had taken, whenever he pleases? What security,
- confidence, or trust would ever exist among them, if pledges such
- as this were to have no really binding force at all? Believe
- me, the law of retribution (Karma) would very soon overtake one
- who so broke his pledge, and perhaps as soon as the contempt of
- every honourable man would, even on this physical plane. As well
- expressed in the N. Y. “Path” just cited on this subject, “_A
- pledge once taken, is for ever binding in both the moral and the
- occult worlds._ If we break it once and are punished, that does
- not justify us in breaking it again, and so long as we do, so long
- will the mighty lever of the Law (of Karma) react upon us.” (The
- _Path_, July, 1889.)
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[10] _Vide_ (at the end) the official rules of the T.S., Appendix A.
-_Nota bene_, “T.S.” is an abbreviation for “Theosophical Society.”
-
-[11] Publicans—regarded as so many thieves and pickpockets in those
-days. Among the Jews the name and profession of a publican was the
-most odious thing in the world. They were not allowed to enter the
-Temple, and Matthew (xviii. 17) speaks of a heathen and a publican
-as identical. Yet they were only Roman tax-gatherers occupying the
-same position as the British officials in India and other conquered
-countries.
-
-[12] “At the close of the Middle Ages slavery, under the power of
-moral forces, had mainly disappeared from Europe; but two momentous
-events occurred which overbore the moral power working in European
-society and let loose a swarm of curses upon the earth such as mankind
-had scarcely ever known. One of these events was the first voyaging
-to a populated and barbarous coast where human beings were a familiar
-article of traffic; and the other the discovery of a new world, where
-mines of glittering wealth were open, provided labour could be imported
-to work them. For four hundred years men and women and children were
-torn from all whom they knew and loved, and were sold on the coast of
-Africa to foreign traders; they were chained below decks—the dead often
-with the living—during the horrible ‘middle passage,’ and, according to
-Bancroft, an impartial historian, two hundred and fifty thousand out
-of three and a quarter millions were thrown into the sea on that fatal
-passage, while the remainder were consigned to nameless misery in the
-mines, or under the lash in the cane and rice fields. The guilt of this
-great crime rests on the Christian Church. ‘In the name of the most
-Holy Trinity’ the Spanish Government (Roman Catholic) concluded more
-than ten treaties authorising the sale of five hundred thousand human
-beings; in 1562 Sir John Hawkins sailed on his diabolical errand of
-buying slaves in Africa and selling them in the West Indies in a ship
-which bore the sacred name of Jesus; while Elizabeth, the Protestant
-Queen, rewarded him for his success in this first adventure of
-Englishmen in that inhuman traffic by allowing him to wear as his crest
-‘a demi-Moor in his proper colour, bound with a cord, or, in other
-words, a manacled negro slave.’”—_Conquests of the Cross_ (quoted from
-the _Agnostic Journal_).
-
-[13] A “branch,” or lodge, composed solely of co-religionists, or a
-branch _in partibus_, as they are now somewhat bombastically called.
-
-
-
-
-IV. THE RELATIONS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY TO THEOSOPHY.
-
-
-ON SELF-IMPROVEMENT.
-
- ENQ. Is moral elevation, then, the principal thing insisted upon in
- your Society?
-
- THEO. Undoubtedly! He who would be a true Theosophist must bring
- himself to live as one.
-
- ENQ. If so, then, as I remarked before, the behaviour of some members
- strangely belies this fundamental rule.
-
- THEO. Indeed it does. But this cannot be helped among us, any more than
- amongst those who call themselves Christians and act like fiends.
- This is no fault of our statutes and rules, but that of human
- nature. Even in some exoteric public branches, the members pledge
- themselves on their “Higher Self” to live _the_ life prescribed by
- Theosophy. They have to bring their _Divine Self_ to guide their
- every thought and action, every day and at every moment of their
- lives. A true Theosophist ought “to deal justly and walk humbly.”
-
- ENQ. What do you mean by this?
-
- THEO. Simply this: the one self has to forget itself for the many
- selves. Let me answer you in the words of a true Philaletheian,
- an F.T.S., who has beautifully expressed it in the _Theosophist_:
- “What every man needs first is to find himself, and then take
- an honest inventory of his subjective possessions, and, bad or
- bankrupt as it may be, it is not beyond redemption if we set about
- it in earnest.” But how many do? All are willing to work for their
- own development and progress; very few for those of others. To
- quote the same writer again: “Men have been deceived and deluded
- long enough; they must break their idols, put away their shams,
- and go to work for themselves—nay, there is one little word too
- much or too many, for he who works for himself had better not work
- at all; rather let him work himself for others, for all. For every
- flower of love and charity he plants in his neighbour’s garden,
- a loathsome weed will disappear from his own, and so this garden
- of the gods—Humanity—shall blossom as a rose. In all Bibles,
- all religions, this is plainly set forth—but designing men have
- at first misinterpreted and finally emasculated, materialized,
- besotted them. It does not require a new revelation. Let every man
- be a revelation unto himself. Let once man’s immortal spirit take
- possession of the temple of his body, drive out the money-changers
- and every unclean thing, and his own divine humanity will redeem
- him, for when he is thus at one with himself if he will know the
- ‘builder of the Temple.’”
-
- ENQ. This is pure Altruism, I confess.
-
- THEO. It is. And if only one Fellow of the T.S. out of ten would
- practise it ours would be a body of elect indeed. But there are
- those among the outsiders who will always refuse to see the
- essential difference between Theosophy and the Theosophical
- Society, the idea and its imperfect embodiment. Such would visit
- every sin and shortcoming of the vehicle, the human body, on the
- pure spirit which sheds thereon its divine light. Is this just to
- either? They throw stones at an association that tries to work up
- to, and for the propagation of, its ideal with most tremendous
- odds against it. Some vilify the Theosophical Society only because
- it presumes to attempt to do that in which other systems—Church
- and State Christianity pre-eminently—have failed most egregiously;
- others because they would fain preserve the existing state
- of things: Pharisees and Sadducees in the seat of Moses, and
- publicans and sinners revelling in high places, as under the
- Roman Empire during its decadence. Fair-minded people, at any
- rate, ought to remember that the man who does all he can, does as
- much as he who has achieved the most, in this world of relative
- possibilities. This is a simple truism, an axiom supported for
- believers in the Gospels by the parable of the talents given by
- their Master; the servant who doubled his two talents was rewarded
- as much as that other fellow-servant who had received _five_. To
- every man it is given “according to his several ability.”
-
- ENQ. Yet it is rather difficult to draw the line of demarcation between
- the abstract and the concrete in this case, as we have only the
- latter to our judgment by.
-
- THEO. Then why make an exception for the T.S.? Justice, like charity,
- ought to begin at home. Will you revile and scoff at the “Sermon
- on the Mount” because your social, political and even religious
- laws have, so far, not only failed to carry out its precepts in
- their spirit, but even in their dead letter? Abolish the oath in
- Courts, Parliament, Army and everywhere, and do as the Quakers
- do, if you _will_ call yourselves Christians. Abolish the Courts
- themselves, for if you would follow the Commandments of Christ,
- you have to give away your coat to him who deprives you of your
- cloak, and turn your left cheek to the bully who smites you on
- the right. “Resist not evil, love your enemies, bless them that
- curse you, do good to them that hate you,” for “whosoever shall
- break one of the least of these Commandments and shall teach men
- so, he shall be called the least in the Kingdom of Heaven,” and
- “whosoever shall say ‘Thou fool’ shall be in danger of hell fire.”
- And why should you judge, if you would not be judged in your turn?
- Insist that between Theosophy and the Theosophical Society there
- is no difference, and forthwith you lay the system of Christianity
- and its very essence open to the same charges, only in a more
- serious form.
-
- ENQ. Why _more_ serious?
-
- THEO. Because, while the leaders of the Theosophical movement,
- recognising fully their shortcomings, try all they can do to amend
- their ways and uproot the evil existing in the Society; and while
- their rules and by-laws are framed in the spirit of Theosophy, the
- Legislators and the Churches of nations and countries which call
- themselves Christian do the reverse. Our members, even the worst
- among them, are no worse than the average Christian. Moreover,
- if the Western Theosophists experience so much difficulty in
- leading the true Theosophical life, it is because they are all the
- children of their generation. Every one of them was a Christian,
- bred and brought up in the sophistry of his Church, his social
- customs, and even his paradoxical laws. He was this before he
- became a Theosophist, or rather, a member of the Society of that
- name, as it cannot be too often repeated that between the abstract
- ideal and its vehicle there is a most important difference.
-
-
-THE ABSTRACT AND THE CONCRETE.
-
- ENQ. Please elucidate this difference a little more.
-
- THEO. The Society is a great body of men and women, composed of the
- most heterogeneous elements. Theosophy, in its abstract meaning,
- is Divine Wisdom, or the aggregate of the knowledge and wisdom
- that underlie the Universe—the homogeneity of eternal GOOD; and in
- its concrete sense it is the sum total of the same as allotted to
- man by nature, on this earth, and no more. Some members earnestly
- endeavour to realize and, so to speak, to objectivize Theosophy in
- their lives; while others desire only to know of, not to practise
- it; and others still may have joined the Society merely out of
- curiosity, or a passing interest, or perhaps, again, because some
- of their friends belong to it. How, then, can the system be judged
- by the standard of those who would assume the name without any
- right to it? Is poetry or its muse to be measured only by those
- would-be poets who afflict our ears? The Society can be regarded
- as the embodiment of Theosophy only in its abstract motives; it
- can never presume to call itself its concrete vehicle so long as
- human imperfections and weaknesses are all represented in its
- body; otherwise the Society would be only repeating the great
- error and the outflowing sacrileges of the so-called Churches of
- Christ. If Eastern comparisons may be permitted, Theosophy is the
- shoreless ocean of universal truth, love, and wisdom, reflecting
- its radiance on the earth, while the Theosophical Society is
- only a visible bubble on that reflection. Theosophy is divine
- nature, visible and invisible, and its Society human nature
- trying to ascend to its divine parent. Theosophy, finally, is the
- fixed eternal sun, and its Society the evanescent comet trying
- to settle in an orbit to become a planet, ever revolving within
- the attraction of the sun of truth. It was formed to assist in
- showing to men that such a thing as Theosophy exists, and to help
- them to ascend towards it by studying and assimilating its eternal
- verities.
-
- ENQ. I thought you said you had no tenets or doctrines of your own?
-
- THEO. No more we have. The Society has no wisdom of its own to support
- or teach. It is simply the storehouse of all the truths uttered
- by the great seers, initiates, and prophets of historic and even
- pre-historic ages; at least, as many as it can get. Therefore, it
- is merely the channel through which more or less of truth, found
- in the accumulated utterances of humanity’s great teachers, is
- poured out into the world.
-
- ENQ. But is such truth unreachable outside of the Society? Does not
- every Church claim the same?
-
- THEO. Not at all. The undeniable existence of great initiates—true
- “Sons of God”—shows that such wisdom was often reached by isolated
- individuals, never, however, without the guidance of a master
- at first. But most of the followers of such, when they became
- masters in their turn, have dwarfed the catholicism of these
- teachings into the narrow groove of their own sectarian dogmas.
- The commandments of _a_ chosen master alone were then adopted and
- followed, to the exclusion of all others—if followed at all, note
- well, as in the case of the Sermon on the Mount. Each religion is
- thus a bit of the divine truth, made to focus a vast panorama of
- human fancy which claimed to represent and replace that truth.
-
- ENQ. But Theosophy, you say, is not a religion?
-
- THEO. Most assuredly it is not, since it is the essence of all religion
- and of absolute truth, a drop of which only underlies every creed.
- To resort once more to metaphor. Theosophy, on earth, is like
- the white ray of the spectrum, and every religion only one of the
- seven prismatic colours. Ignoring all the others, and cursing them
- as false, every special coloured ray claims not only priority,
- but to be _that white ray_ itself, and anathematizes even its
- own tints from light to dark, as heresies. Yet, as the sun of
- truth rises higher and higher on the horizon of man’s perception,
- and each coloured ray gradually fades out until it is finally
- reabsorbed in its turn, humanity will at last be cursed no longer
- with artificial polarizations, but will find itself bathing in
- the pure colourless sunlight of eternal truth. And this will be
- _Theosophia_.
-
- ENQ. Your claim is, then, that all the great religions are derived from
- Theosophy, and that it is by assimilating it that the world will
- be finally saved from the curse of its great illusions and errors?
-
- THEO. Precisely so. And we add that our Theosophical Society is the
- humble seed which, if watered and left to live, will finally
- produce the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil which is grafted on
- the Tree of Life Eternal. For it is only by studying the various
- great religions and philosophies of humanity, by comparing them
- dispassionately and with an unbiased mind, that men can hope to
- arrive at the truth. It is especially by finding out and noting
- their various points of agreement that we may achieve this result.
- For no sooner do we arrive—either by study, or by being taught by
- someone who knows—at their inner meaning, than we find, almost in
- every case, that it expresses some great truth in Nature.
-
- ENQ. We have heard of a Golden Age that was, and what you describe
- would be a Golden Age to be realised at some future day. When
- shall it be?
-
- THEO. Not before humanity, as a whole, feels the need of it. A maxim in
- the Persian “Javidan Khirad” says: “Truth is of two kinds—one
- manifest and self-evident; the other demanding incessantly new
- demonstrations and proofs.” It is only when this latter kind
- of truth becomes as universally obvious as it is now dim, and
- therefore liable to be distorted by sophistry and casuistry; it is
- only when the two kinds will have become once more one, that all
- people will be brought to see alike.
-
- ENQ. But surely those few who have felt the need of such truths must
- have made up their minds to believe in something definite? You
- tell me that, the Society having no doctrines of its own, every
- member may believe as he chooses and accept what he pleases. This
- looks as if the Theosophical Society was bent upon reviving the
- confusion of languages and beliefs of the Tower of Babel of old.
- Have you no beliefs in common?
-
- THEO. What is meant by the Society having no tenets or doctrines of its
- own is, that no special doctrines or beliefs are _obligatory_ on
- its members; but, of course, this applies only to the body as a
- whole. The Society, as you were told, is divided into an outer and
- an inner body. Those who belong to the latter have, of course, a
- philosophy, or—if you so prefer it— a religious system of their
- own.
-
- ENQ. May we be told what it is?
-
- THEO. We make no secret of it. It was outlined a few years ago in the
- _Theosophist_ and “Esoteric Buddhism,” and may be found still
- more elaborated in the “Secret Doctrine.” It is based on the
- oldest philosophy in the world, called the Wisdom-Religion or the
- Archaic Doctrine. If you like, you may ask questions and have them
- explained.
-
-
-
-
-V. THE FUNDAMENTAL TEACHINGS OF THEOSOPHY.
-
-
-ON GOD AND PRAYER.
-
- ENQ. Do you believe in God?
-
- THEO. That depends what you mean by the term.
-
- ENQ. I mean the God of the Christians, the Father of Jesus, and the
- Creator: the Biblical God of Moses, in short.
-
- THEO. In such a God we do not believe. We reject the idea of a
- personal, or an extra-cosmic and anthropomorphic God, who is
- but the gigantic shadow of _man_, and not of man at his best,
- either. The God of theology, we say—and prove it—is a bundle of
- contradictions and a logical impossibility. Therefore, we will
- have nothing to do with him.
-
- ENQ. State your reasons, if you please.
-
- THEO. They are many, and cannot all receive attention. But here are a
- few. This God is called by his devotees infinite and absolute, is
- he not?
-
- ENQ. I believe he is.
-
- THEO. Then, if infinite—_i.e._, limitless—and especially if absolute,
- how can he have a form, and be a creator of anything? Form implies
- limitation, and a beginning as well as an end; and, in order
- to create, a Being must think and plan. How can the ABSOLUTE
- be supposed to think—_i.e._, to have any relation whatever
- to that which is limited, finite, and conditioned? This is a
- philosophical and a logical absurdity. Even the Hebrew Kabala
- rejects such an idea, and therefore makes of the one and the
- Absolute Deific Principle an infinite Unity called Ain-Soph.[14]
- In order to create, the Creator has to become active; and as
- this is impossible for ABSOLUTENESS, the infinite principle had
- to be shown becoming the cause of evolution (not creation) in an
- indirect way—_i.e._, through the emanation from itself (another
- absurdity, due this time to the translators of the Kabala)[15] of
- the Sephiroth.
-
- ENQ. How about those Kabalists, who, while being such, still believe in
- Jehovah, or the _Tetragrammaton_?
-
- THEO. They are at liberty to believe in what they please, as their
- belief or disbelief can hardly affect a self-evident fact.
- The Jesuits tell us that two and two are not always four to a
- certainty, since it depends on the will of God to make 2 x 2 = 5.
- Shall we accept their sophistry for all that?
-
- ENQ. Then you are Atheists?
-
- THEO. Not that we know of, and not unless the epithet of “Atheist” is
- to be applied to those who disbelieve in an anthropomorphic God.
- We believe in a Universal Divine Principle, the root of ALL, from
- which all proceeds, and within which all shall be absorbed at the
- end of the great cycle of Being.
-
- ENQ. This is the old, old claim of Pantheism. If you are Pantheists,
- you cannot be Deists; and if you are not Deists, then you have to
- answer to the name of Atheists.
-
- THEO. Not necessarily so. The term “Pantheism” is again one of the many
- abused terms, whose real and primitive meaning has been distorted
- by blind prejudice and a one-sided view of it. If you accept the
- Christian etymology of this compound word, and form it of παν,
- “all,” and θεος, “god,” and then imagine and teach that this means
- that every stone and every tree in Nature is a God or the ONE
- God, then, of course, you will be right, and make of Pantheists
- fetish-worshippers, in addition to their legitimate name. But you
- will hardly be as successful if you etymologise the word Pantheism
- esoterically, and as we do.
-
- ENQ. What is, then your definition of it?
-
- THEO. Let me ask you a question in my turn. What do you understand by
- Pan or Nature?
-
- ENQ. Nature is, I suppose, the sum total of things existing around us;
- the aggregate of causes and effects in the world of matter, the
- creation or universe.
-
- THEO. Hence the personified sum and order of known causes and effects;
- the total of all finite agencies and forces, as utterly
- disconnected from an intelligent Creator or Creators, and
- perhaps “conceived of as a single and separate force”—as in your
- cyclopædias?
-
- ENQ. Yes, I believe so.
-
- THEO. Well, we neither take into consideration this objective and
- material nature, which we call an evanescent illusion, nor do
- we mean by παν Nature, in the sense of its accepted derivation
- from the Latin _Natura_ (becoming, from _nasci_, to be born).
- When we speak of the Deity and make it identical, hence coeval,
- with Nature, the eternal and uncreate nature is meant, and not
- your aggregate of flitting shadows and finite unrealities. We
- leave it to the hymn-makers to call the visible sky or heaven,
- God’s Throne, and our earth of mud His footstool. Our DEITY is
- neither in a paradise, nor in a particular tree, building, or
- mountain; it is everywhere, in every atom of the visible as of the
- invisible Cosmos, in, over, and around every invisible atom and
- divisible molecule; for IT is the mysterious power of evolution
- and involution, the omnipresent, omnipotent, and even omniscient
- creative potentiality.
-
- ENQ. Stop! Omniscience is the prerogative of something that thinks, and
- you deny to your Absoluteness the power of thought.
-
- THEO. We deny it to the ABSOLUTE, since thought is something limited
- and conditioned. But you evidently forget that in philosophy
- absolute unconsciousness is also absolute consciousness, as
- otherwise it would not be _absolute_.
-
- ENQ. Then your Absolute thinks?
-
- THEO. No, IT does not; for the simple reason that it is _Absolute
- Thought_ itself. Nor does it exist, for the same reason, as it
- is absolute existence, and _Be-ness_, not a Being. Read the
- superb Kabalistic poem by Solomon Ben Jehudah Gabirol, in the
- Kether-Malchut, and you will understand:—“Thou art one, the root
- of all numbers, but not as an element of numeration; for unity
- admits not of multiplication, change, or form. Thou art one, and
- in the secret of Thy unity the wisest of men are lost, because
- they know it not. Thou art one, and Thy unity is never diminished,
- never extended, and cannot be changed. Thou art one, and no
- thought of mine can fix for Thee a limit, or define Thee. Thou
- ART, but not as one existent, for the understanding and vision of
- mortals cannot attain to Thy existence, nor determine for Thee the
- where, the how and the why,” etc., etc. In short, our Deity is the
- eternal, incessantly _evolving_, not _creating_, builder of the
- universe; that _universe itself unfolding_ out of its own essence,
- not being _made_. It is a sphere, without circumference, in its
- symbolism, which has but one ever-acting attribute embracing all
- other existing or thinkable attributes—ITSELF. It is the one law,
- giving the impulse to manifested, eternal, and immutable laws,
- within that never-manifesting, _because_ absolute LAW, which in
- its manifesting periods is _The ever-Becoming_.
-
- ENQ. I once heard one of your members remarking that Universal Deity,
- being everywhere, was in vessels of dishonour, as in those of
- honour, and, therefore, was present in every atom of my cigar ash!
- Is this not rank blasphemy?
-
- THEO. I do not think so, as simple logic can hardly be regarded as
- blasphemy. Were we to exclude the Omnipresent Principle from one
- single mathematical point of the universe, or from a particle of
- matter occupying any conceivable space, could we still regard it
- as infinite?
-
-
-IS IT NECESSARY TO PRAY?
-
- ENQ. Do you believe in prayer, and do you ever pray?
-
- THEO. We do not. We _act_, instead of _talking_.
-
- ENQ. You do not offer prayers even to the Absolute Principle?
-
- THEO. Why should we? Being well-occupied people, we can hardly afford
- to lose time in addressing verbal prayers to a pure abstraction.
- The Unknowable is capable of relations only in its parts to each
- other, but is non-existent as regards any finite relations. The
- visible universe depends for its existence and phenomena on its
- mutually acting forms and their laws, not on prayer or prayers.
-
- ENQ. Do you not believe at all in the efficacy of prayer?
-
- THEO. Not in prayer taught in so many words and repeated externally, if
- by prayer you mean the outward petition to an unknown God as the
- addressee, which was inaugurated by the Jews and popularised by
- the Pharisees.
-
- ENQ. Is there any other kind of prayer?
-
- THEO. Most decidedly; we call it WILL-PRAYER, and it is rather an
- internal command than a petition.
-
- ENQ. To whom, then, do you pray when you do so?
-
- THEO. To “our Father in heaven”—in its esoteric meaning.
-
- ENQ. Is that different from the one given to it in theology?
-
- THEO. Entirely so. An Occultist or a Theosophist addresses his prayer
- to _his Father which is in secret_ (read, and try to understand,
- ch. vi. v. 6, Matthew), not to an extra-cosmic and therefore
- finite God; and that “Father” is in man himself.
-
- ENQ. Then you make of man a God?
-
- THEO. Please say “God” and not _a_ God. In our sense, the inner man is
- the only God we can have cognizance of. And how can this be
- otherwise? Grant us our postulate that God is a universally
- diffused, infinite principle, and how can man alone escape from
- being soaked through _by_, and _in_, the Deity? We call our
- “Father in heaven” that deific essence of which we are cognizant
- within us, in our heart and spiritual consciousness, and which
- has nothing to do with the anthropomorphic conception we may form
- of it in our physical brain or its fancy: “Know ye not that ye
- are the temple of God, and that the great spirit of that the
- spirit of (the absolute) God dwelleth in you?”[16] Yet, let no
- man anthropomorphise that essence in us. Let no Theosophist, if
- he would hold to divine, not human truth, say that this “God in
- secret” listens to, or is distinct from, either finite man or the
- infinite essence—for all are one. Nor, as just remarked, that a
- prayer is a petition. It is a mystery rather; an occult process
- by which finite and conditioned thoughts and desires, unable to
- be assimilated by the absolute spirit which is unconditioned, are
- translated into spiritual wills and the will; such process being
- called “spiritual transmutation.” The intensity of our ardent
- aspirations changes prayer into the “philosopher’s stone,” or
- that which transmutes lead into pure gold. The only homogeneous
- essence, our “will-power” becomes the active or creative force,
- producing effects according to our desire.
-
- ENQ. Do you mean to say that prayer is an occult process bringing about
- physical results?
-
- THEO. I do. _Will-Power_ becomes a living power. But woe unto those
- Occultists and Theosophists, who, instead of crushing out the
- desires of the lower personal _ego_ or physical man, and saying,
- addressing their _Higher_ Spiritual Ego immersed in Atma-Buddhic
- light, “Thy will be done, not mine,” etc., send up waves of
- will-power for selfish or unholy purposes! For this is black
- magic, abomination, and spiritual sorcery. Unfortunately, all
- this is the favorite occupation of our Christian statesmen and
- generals, especially when the latter are sending two armies to
- murder each other. Both indulge before action in a bit of such
- sorcery, by offering respectively prayers to the same God of
- Hosts, each entreating his help to cut its enemies’ throats.
-
- ENQ. David prayed to the Lord of Hosts to help him smite the
- Philistines and slay the Syrians and the Moabites, and “the Lord
- preserved David whithersoever he went.” In that we only follow
- what we find in the Bible.
-
- THEO. Of course you do. But since you delight in calling yourselves
- Christians, not Israelites or Jews, as far as we know, why do
- you not rather follow that which Christ says? And he distinctly
- commands you not to follow “them of old times,” or the Mosaic law,
- but bids you do as he tells you, and warns those who would kill
- by the sword, that they, too, will perish by the sword. Christ
- has given you one prayer of which you have made a lip prayer and
- a boast, and which none but the _true_ Occultist understands. In
- it you say, in your dead-sense meaning: “Forgive us our debts, as
- we forgive our debtors,” which you never do. Again, he told you
- to _love your enemies_ and do _good to them that hate you_. It is
- surely not the “meek prophet of Nazareth” who taught you to pray
- to your “Father” to slay, and give you victory over your enemies!
- This is why we reject what you call “prayers.”
-
- ENQ. But how do you explain the universal fact that all nations and
- peoples have prayed to, and worshipped a God or Gods? Some have
- adored and propitiated _devils_ and harmful spirits, but this only
- proves the universality of the belief in the efficacy of prayer.
-
- THEO. It is explained by that other fact that prayer has several other
- meanings besides that given it by the Christians. It means not
- only a pleading or _petition_, but meant, in days of old, far more
- an invocation and incantation. The _mantra_, or the rhythmically
- chanted prayer of the Hindus, has precisely such a meaning, as the
- Brahmins hold themselves higher than the common _devas_ or “Gods.”
- A prayer may be an appeal or an incantation for malediction, and
- a curse (as in the case of two armies praying simultaneously for
- mutual destruction) as much as for blessing. And as the great
- majority of people are intensely selfish, and pray only for
- themselves, asking to be _given_ their “daily bread” instead of
- working for it, and begging God not to lead them “into temptation”
- but to deliver them (the memoralists only) from evil, the result
- is, that prayer, as now understood, is doubly pernicious: (_a_)
- It kills in man self-reliance; (_b_) It develops in him a still
- more ferocious selfishness and egotism than he is already endowed
- with by nature. I repeat, that we believe in “communion” and
- simultaneous action in unison with our “Father in secret”; and
- in rare moments of ecstatic bliss, in the mingling of our higher
- soul with the universal essence, attracted as it is towards its
- origin and centre, a state, called during life _Samadhi_, and
- after death, _Nirvana_. We refuse to pray to _created_ finite
- beings—_i.e._, gods, saints, angels, etc., because we regard it
- as idolatry. We cannot pray to the ABSOLUTE for reasons explained
- before; therefore, we try to replace fruitless and useless prayer
- by meritorious and good-producing actions.
-
- ENQ. Christians would call it pride and blasphemy. Are they wrong?
-
- THEO. Entirely so. It is they, on the contrary, who show Satanic pride
- in their belief that the Absolute or the Infinite, even if there
- was such a thing as the possibility of any relation between the
- unconditioned and the conditioned—will stoop to listen to every
- foolish or egotistical prayer. And it is they again, who virtually
- blaspheme, in teaching that an Omniscient and Omnipotent God
- needs uttered prayers to know what he has to do! This—understood
- esoterically—is corroborated by both Buddha and Jesus. The one
- says “seek nought from the helpless Gods—pray not! _but rather
- act_; for darkness will not brighten. Ask nought from silence, for
- it can neither speak nor hear.” And the other—Jesus—recommends:
- “Whatsoever ye shall ask in my name (that of Christos) that will I
- do.” Of course, this quotation, if taken in its _literal_ sense,
- goes against our argument. But if we accept it esoterically, with
- the full knowledge of the meaning of the term, “Christos,” which
- to us represents _Atma-Buddhi-Manas_, the “SELF,” it comes to
- this: the only God we must recognise and pray to, or rather act
- in unison with, is that spirit of God of which our body is the
- temple, and in which it dwelleth.
-
-
-PRAYER KILLS SELF RELIANCE.
-
- ENQ. But did not Christ himself pray and recommend prayer?
-
- THEO. It is so recorded, but those “prayers” are precisely of that kind
- of communion just mentioned with one’s “Father in secret.”
- Otherwise, and if we identify Jesus with the universal deity,
- there would be something too absurdly illogical in the inevitable
- conclusion that he, the “very God himself” _prayed to himself_,
- and separated the will of that God from his own!
-
- ENQ. One argument more; an argument, moreover, much used by some
- Christians. They say, “I feel that I am not able to conquer any
- passions and weaknesses in my own strength. But when I pray to
- Jesus Christ I feel that he gives me strength and that in his
- power I am able to conquer.”
-
- THEO. No wonder. If “Christ Jesus” is God, and one independent and
- separate from him who prays, of course everything is, and
- _must_ be possible to “a mighty God.” But, then, where’s the
- merit, or justice either, of such a conquest? Why should the
- pseudo-conqueror be rewarded for something done which has cost
- him only prayers? Would you, even a simple mortal man, pay your
- labourer a full day’s wage if you did most of his work for him, he
- sitting under an apple tree, and praying to you to do so, all the
- while? This idea of passing one’s whole life in moral idleness,
- and having one’s hardest work and duty done by another—whether God
- or man—is most revolting to us, as it is most degrading to human
- dignity.
-
- ENQ. Perhaps so, yet it is the idea of trusting in a personal Saviour
- to help and strengthen in the battle of life, which is the
- fundamental idea of modern Christianity. And there is no doubt
- that, subjectively, such belief is efficacious, _i.e._, that those
- who believe _do_ feel themselves helped and strengthened.
-
- THEO. Nor is there any more doubt, that some patients of “Christian”
- and “Mental Scientists”—the great “_Deniers_”[17]—are also
- sometimes cured; nor that hypnotism, and suggestion, psychology,
- and even mediumship, will produce such results, as often, if not
- oftener. You take into consideration, and string on the thread of
- your argument, successes alone. And how about ten times the number
- of failures? Surely you will not presume to say that failure is
- unknown even with a sufficiency of blind faith, among fanatical
- Christians?
-
- ENQ. But how can you explain those cases which are followed by full
- success? Where does a Theosophist look to for power to subdue his
- passions and selfishness?
-
- THEO. To his Higher Self, the divine spirit, or the God in him, and to
- his _Karma_. How long shall we have to repeat over and over again
- that the tree is known by its fruit, the nature of the cause by
- its effects? You speak of subduing passions, and becoming good
- through and with the help of God or Christ. We ask, where do
- you find more virtuous, guiltless people, abstaining from sin
- and crime, in Christendom or Buddhism—in Christian countries or
- in heathen lands? Statistics are there to give the answer and
- corroborate our claims. According to the last census in Ceylon and
- India, in the comparative table of crimes committed by Christians,
- Mussulmen, Hindoos, Eurasians, Buddhists, etc., etc., on two
- millions of population taken at random from each, and covering the
- misdemeanours of several years, the proportion of crimes committed
- by the Christian stands as 15 to 4 as against those committed
- by the Buddhist population. (Vide LUCIFER for April, 1888, p.
- 147, Art. Christian Lectures on Buddhism.) No Orientalist, no
- historian of any note, or traveller in Buddhist land, from Bishop
- Bigandet and Abbé Huc, to Sir William Hunter and every fair-minded
- official, will fail to give the palm of virtue to Buddhists before
- Christians. Yet the former (not the true Buddhist Siamese sect,
- at all events) do not believe in either God or a future reward,
- outside of this earth. They do not pray, neither priests nor
- laymen. “Pray!” they would exclaim in wonder, “to whom, or what?”
-
- ENQ. Then they are truly Atheists.
-
- THEO. Most undeniably, but they are also the most virtue-loving and
- virtue-keeping men in the whole world. Buddhism says: Respect the
- religions of other men and remain true to your own; but Church
- Christianity, denouncing all the gods of other nations as devils,
- would doom every _non_-Christian to eternal perdition.
-
- ENQ. Does not the Buddhist priesthood do the same?
-
- THEO. Never. They hold too much to the wise precept found in the
- DHAMMAPADA to do so, for they know that, “If any man, whether he
- be learned or not, consider himself so great as to despise other
- men, he is like a blind man holding a candle—blind himself, he
- illumines others.”
-
-
-ON THE SOURCE OF THE HUMAN SOUL.
-
- ENQ. How, then, do you account for man being endowed with a Spirit and
- Soul? Whence these?
-
- THEO. From the Universal Soul. Certainly not bestowed by a _personal_
- God. Whence the moist element in the jelly-fish? From the Ocean
- which surrounds it, in which it lives and breathes and has its
- being, and whither it returns when dissolved.
-
- ENQ. So you reject the teaching that Soul is given, or breathed into
- man, by God?
-
- THEO. We are obliged to. The “Soul” spoken of in ch. ii. of Genesis
- (v. 7) is, as therein stated, the “living Soul” or _Nephesh_
- (the _vital_, animal soul) with which God (we say “nature” and
- _immutable law_) endows man like every animal, is not at all the
- thinking Soul or mind; least of all is it the _immortal Spirit_.
-
- ENQ. Well, let us put it otherwise: is it God who endows man with a
- human _rational_ Soul and immortal Spirit?
-
- THEO. Again, in the way you put the question, we must object to it.
- Since we believe in no _personal_ God, how can we believe that he
- endows man with anything? But granting, for the sake of argument,
- a God who takes upon himself the risk of creating a new Soul for
- every new-born baby, all that can be said is that such a God
- can hardly be regarded as himself endowed with any wisdom or
- prevision. Certain other difficulties and the impossibility of
- reconciling this with the claims made for the mercy, justice,
- equity and omniscience of that God, are so many deadly reefs on
- which this theological dogma is daily and hourly broken.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean? What difficulties?
-
- THEO. I am thinking of an unanswerable argument offered once in my
- presence by a Cingalese Buddhist priest, a famous preacher, to
- a Christian missionary—one in no way ignorant or unprepared for
- the public discussion during which it was advanced. It was near
- Colombo, and the Missionary had challenged the priest Megattivati
- to give his reasons why the Christian God should not be accepted
- by the “heathen.” Well, the Missionary came out of that for ever
- memorable discussion second best, as usual.
-
- ENQ. I should be glad to learn in what way.
-
- THEO. Simply this: the Buddhist priest premised by asking the _padri_
- whether his God had given commandments to Moses only for men to
- keep, but to be broken by God himself. The missionary denied
- the supposition indignantly. Well, said his opponent, “you tell
- us that God makes no exceptions to this rule, and that no Soul
- can be born without his will. Now God forbids adultery, among
- other things, and yet you say in the same breath that it is he
- who creates every baby born, and he who endows it with a Soul.
- Are we then to understand that the millions of children born in
- crime and adultery are your God’s work? That your God forbids and
- punishes the breaking of his laws; and that, nevertheless, _he
- creates daily and hourly souls for just such children_? According
- to the simplest logic, your God is an accomplice in the crime;
- since, but for his help and interference, no such children of lust
- could be born. Where is the justice of punishing not only the
- guilty parents but even the innocent babe for that which is done
- by that very God, whom yet you exonerate from any guilt himself?”
- The missionary looked at his watch and suddenly found it was
- getting too late for further discussion.
-
- ENQ. You forget that all such inexplicable cases are mysteries, and
- that we are forbidden by our religion to pry into the mysteries of
- God.
-
- THEO. No, we do not forget, but simply reject such impossibilities. Nor
- do we want you to believe as we do. We only answer the questions
- you ask. We have, however, another name for your “mysteries.”
-
-
-THE BUDDHIST TEACHINGS ON THE ABOVE.
-
- ENQ. What does Buddhism teach with regard to the Soul?
-
- THEO. It depends whether you mean exoteric, popular Buddhism, or its
- esoteric teachings. The former explains itself in the _Buddhist
- Catechism_ in this wise: “Soul it considers a word used by the
- ignorant to express a false idea. If everything is subject to
- change, then man is included, and every material part of him
- must change. That which is subject to change is not permanent,
- so there can be no immortal survival of a changeful thing.” This
- seems plain and definite. But when we come to the question that
- the new personality in each succeeding re-birth is the aggregate
- of “_Skandhas_,” or the attributes, of the _old_ personality,
- and ask whether this new aggregation of _Skandhas_ is a _new_
- being likewise, in which nothing has remained of the last, we
- read that: “In one sense it is a new being, in another it is
- not. During this life the Skandhas are continually changing,
- while the man A. B. of forty is identical as regards personality
- with the youth A. B. of eighteen, yet by the continual waste and
- reparation of his body and change of mind and character, he is
- a different being. Nevertheless, the man in his old age justly
- reaps the reward or suffering consequent upon his thoughts and
- actions at every previous stage of his life. So the new being of
- the re-birth, being the _same individuality as before_ (but not
- the same personality), with but a changed form, or new aggregation
- of _Skandhas_, justly reaps the consequences of his actions and
- thoughts in the previous existence.” This is abstruse metaphysics,
- and plainly does not express _disbelief_ in Soul by any means.
-
- ENQ. Is not something like this spoken of in _Esoteric Buddhism_?
-
- THEO. It is, for this teaching belongs both to Esoteric _Budhism_ or
- Secret Wisdom, and to the exoteric Buddhism, or the religious
- philosophy of Gautama Buddha.
-
- ENQ. But we are distinctly told that most of the Buddhists do not
- believe in the Soul’s immortality?
-
- THEO. No more do we, if you mean by Soul the _personal Ego_, or
- life-Soul—_Nephesh_. But every learned Buddhist believes in
- the individual or _divine Ego_. Those who do not, err in their
- judgment. They are as mistaken on this point, as those Christians
- who mistake the theological interpolations of the later editors
- of the Gospels about damnation and hell-fire, for _verbatim_
- utterances of Jesus. Neither Buddha nor “Christ” ever wrote
- anything themselves, but both spoke in allegories and used “dark
- sayings,” as all true Initiates did, and will do for a long time
- yet to come. Both Scriptures treat of all such metaphysical
- questions very cautiously, and both, Buddhist and Christian
- records, sin by that excess of exotericism; the dead letter
- meaning far overshooting the mark in both cases.
-
- ENQ. Do you mean to suggest that neither the teachings of Buddha nor
- those of Christ have been heretofore rightly understood?
-
- THEO. What I mean is just as you say. Both Gospels, the Buddhist and
- the Christian, were preached with the same object in view.
- Both reformers were ardent philanthropists and practical
- _altruists—preaching most unmistakably Socialism_ of the noblest
- and highest type, self-sacrifice to the bitter end. “Let the sins
- of the whole world fall upon me that I may relieve man’s misery
- and suffering!” cries Buddha; ... “I would not let one cry whom I
- could save!” exclaims the Prince-beggar, clad in the refuse rags
- of the burial-grounds. “Come unto me all ye that labour and are
- heavy laden and I will give you rest,” is the appeal to the poor
- and the disinherited made by the “Man of Sorrows,” who hath not
- where to lay his head. The teachings of both are boundless love
- for humanity, charity, forgiveness of injury, forgetfulness of
- self, and pity for the deluded masses; both show the same contempt
- for riches, and make no difference between _meum_ and _tuum_.
- Their desire was, without revealing to _all_ the sacred mysteries
- of initiation, to give the ignorant and the misled, whose burden
- in life was too heavy for them, hope enough and an inkling into
- the truth sufficient to support them in their heaviest hours. But
- the object of both Reformers was frustrated, owing to excess of
- zeal of their later followers. The words of the Masters having
- been misunderstood and misinterpreted, behold the consequences!
-
- ENQ. But surely Buddha must have repudiated the soul’s immortality, if
- all the Orientalists and his own Priests say so!
-
- THEO. The Arhats began by following the policy of their Master and the
- majority of the subsequent priests were not initiated, just as in
- Christianity; and so, little by little, the great esoteric truths
- became almost lost. A proof in point is, that, out of the two
- existing sects in Ceylon, the Siamese believes death to be the
- absolute annihilation of individuality and personality, and the
- other explains Nirvana, as we theosophists do.
-
- ENQ. But why, in that case, do Buddhism and Christianity represent the
- two opposite poles of such belief?
-
- THEO. Because the conditions under which they were preached were not
- the same. In India the Brahmins, jealous of their superior
- knowledge, and excluding from it every caste save their own, had
- driven millions of men into idolatry and almost fetishism. Buddha
- had to give the death-blow to an exuberance of unhealthy fancy
- and fanatical superstition resulting from ignorance, such as has
- rarely been known before or after. Better a philosophical atheism
- than such ignorant worship for those—
-
- “Who cry upon their gods and are not heard,
- Or are not heeded—”
-
- and who live and die in mental despair. He had to arrest first of
- all this muddy torrent of superstition, to uproot _errors_ before
- he gave out the truth. And as he could not give out _all_, for
- the same good reason as Jesus, who reminds _his_ disciples that
- the Mysteries of Heaven are not for the unintelligent masses, but
- for the elect alone, and therefore “spake he to them in parables”
- (Matt. xiii. 11)—so his caution led Buddha _to conceal too much_.
- He even refused to say to the monk Vacchagotta whether there was,
- or was not an Ego in man. When pressed to answer, “the Exalted one
- maintained silence.”[18]
-
- ENQ. This refers to Gautama, but in what way does it touch the Gospels?
-
- THEO. Read history and think over it. At the time the events narrated
- in the Gospels are alleged to have happened, there was a similar
- intellectual fermentation taking place in the whole civilized
- world, only with opposite results in the East and the West. The
- old gods were dying out. While the civilized classes drifted
- in the train of the unbelieving Sadducees into materialistic
- negations and mere dead-letter Mosaic form in Palestine, and
- into moral dissolution in Rome, the lowest and poorer classes
- ran after sorcery and strange gods, or became hypocrites and
- pharisees. Once more the time for a spiritual reform had arrived.
- The cruel, anthropomorphic and jealous God of the Jews, with his
- sanguinary laws of “an eye for eye and tooth for tooth,” of the
- shedding of blood and animal sacrifice, had to be relegated to a
- secondary place and replaced by the merciful “Father in Secret.”
- The latter had to be shown, not as an extra-Cosmic God, but as a
- divine Saviour of the man of flesh, enshrined in his own heart
- and soul, in the poor as in the rich. No more here than in India,
- could the secrets of initiation be divulged, lest by giving that
- which is holy to the dogs, and casting pearls before swine, both
- the _Revealer_ and the things revealed should be trodden under
- foot. Thus, the reticence of both Buddha and Jesus—whether the
- latter lived out the historic period allotted to him or not, and
- who equally abstained from revealing plainly the Mysteries of Life
- and Death—led in the one case to the blank negations of Southern
- Buddhism, and in the other, to the three clashing forms of the
- Christian Church and the 300 sects in Protestant England alone.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[14] Ain-Soph, אין סיף = τὸ πάγ = ἔπειρος Nature, the non-existent
-which IS, but is not _a_ Being.
-
-[15] How can the non-active eternal principle emanate or emit? The
-Parabrahm of the Vedantins does nothing of the kind; nor does the
-Ain-Soph of the Chaldean Kabala. It is an eternal and periodical law
-which causes an active and creative force (the logos) to emanate from
-the ever-concealed and incomprehensible one principle at the beginning
-of every maha-manvantara, or new cycle of life.
-
-[16] One often finds in Theosophical writings conflicting statements
-about the Christos principle in man. Some call it the sixth principle
-(_Buddhi_), others the seventh (_Atman_). If Christian Theosophists
-wish to make use of such expressions, let them be made philosophically
-correct by following the analogy of the old Wisdom-Religion symbols.
-We say that Christos is not only one of the three higher principles,
-but all the three regarded as a Trinity. This Trinity represents
-the Holy Ghost, the Father, and the Son, as it answers to abstract
-spirit, differentiated spirit, and embodied spirit. Krishna and Christ
-are philosophically the same principle under its triple aspect of
-manifestation. In the _Bhagavatgita_ we find Krishna calling himself
-indifferently Atman, the abstract Spirit, Kshetragna, the Higher or
-reincarnating Ego, and the Universal SELF, all names which, when
-transferred from the Universe to man, answer to _Atma_, _Buddhi_ and
-_Manas_. The _Anugita_ is full of the same doctrine.
-
-[17] The new sect of healers, who, by disavowing the existence of
-anything but spirit, which spirit can neither suffer nor be ill, claim
-to cure all and every disease, provided the patient has faith that what
-he denies can have no existence. A new form of self-hypnotism.
-
-[18] Buddha gives to Ananda, his _initiated_ disciple, who enquires
-for the reason of this silence, a plain and unequivocal answer in the
-dialogue translated by Oldenburg from the _Samyuttaka Nikaya_:—“If
-I, Ananda, when the wandering monk Vacchagotta asked me: ‘Is there
-the Ego?’ had answered ‘The Ego is,’ then that, Ananda, would have
-confirmed the doctrine of the Samanas and Brahmanas, who believed in
-permanence. If I, Ananda, when the wandering monk Vacchagotta asked
-me, ‘Is there not the Ego?’ had answered, ‘The Ego is not,’ then
-that, Ananda, would have confirmed the doctrine of those who believed
-in annihilation. If I, Ananda, when the wandering monk Vacchagotta
-asked me, ‘Is there the Ego?’ had answered, ‘The Ego is,’ would that
-have served my end, Ananda, by producing in him the knowledge: all
-existences (dhamma) are non-ego? But if I, Ananda, had answered, ‘The
-Ego is not,’ then that, Ananda, would only have caused the wandering
-monk Vacchagotta to be thrown from one bewilderment to another:
-‘My Ego, did it not exist before? But now it exists no longer!’”
-This shows, better than anything, that Gautama Buddha withheld such
-difficult metaphysical doctrines from the masses in order not to
-perplex them more. What he meant was the difference between the
-personal temporary Ego and the Higher Self, which sheds its light on
-the imperishable Ego, the spiritual “I” of man.
-
-
-
-
-VI. THEOSOPHICAL TEACHINGS AS TO NATURE AND MAN.
-
-
-THE UNITY OF ALL IN ALL.
-
- ENQ. Having told me what God, the Soul and Man are _not_, in your
- views, can you inform me what they _are_, according to your
- teachings?
-
- THEO. In their origin and in eternity the three, like the universe and
- all therein, are one with the absolute Unity, the unknowable
- deific essence I spoke about sometime back. We believe in no
- _creation_, but in the periodical and consecutive appearances of
- the universe from the subjective on to the objective plane of
- being, at regular intervals of time, covering periods of immense
- duration.
-
- ENQ. Can you elaborate the subject?
-
- THEO. Take as a first comparison and a help towards a more correct
- conception, the solar year, and as a second, the two halves
- of that year, producing each a day and a night of six months’
- duration at the North Pole. Now imagine, if you can, instead of
- a Solar year of 365 days, ETERNITY. Let the sun represent the
- universe, and the polar days and nights of 6 months each—_days
- and nights lasting each 182 trillions and quadrillions of years_,
- instead of 182 days each. As the sun arises every morning on our
- _objective_ horizon out of its (to us) _subjective_ and antipodal
- space, so does the Universe emerge periodically on the plane of
- objectivity, issuing from that of subjectivity—the antipodes of
- the former. This is the “Cycle of Life.” And as the sun disappears
- from our horizon, so does the Universe disappear at regular
- periods, when the “Universal night” sets in. The Hindoos call
- such alternations the “Days and Nights of Brahma,” or the time of
- _Manvantara_ and that of _Pralaya_ (dissolution). The Westerns may
- call them Universal Days and Nights if they prefer. During the
- latter (the nights) _All is in All_; every atom is resolved into
- one Homogeneity.
-
-
-EVOLUTION AND ILLUSION.
-
- ENQ. But who is it that creates each time the Universe?
-
- THEO. No one creates it. Science would call the process evolution; the
- pre-Christian philosophers and the Orientalists called it
- emanation: we, Occultists and Theosophists, see in it the only
- universal and eternal _reality_ casting a periodical reflection of
- _itself_ on the infinite Spatial depths. This reflection, which
- you regard as the objective _material_ universe, we consider as a
- temporary _illusion_ and nothing else. That alone which is eternal
- is _real_.
-
- ENQ. At that rate, you and I are also illusions.
-
- THEO. As flitting personalities, to-day one person, to-morrow
- another—we are. Would you call the sudden flashes of the _Aurora
- borealis_, the Northern lights, a “reality,” though it is as real
- as can be while you look at it? Certainly not; it is the cause
- that produces it, if permanent and eternal, which is the only
- reality, while the other is but a passing illusion.
-
- ENQ. All this does not explain to me how this illusion called the
- universe originates; how the conscious _to be_, proceeds to
- manifest itself from the unconsciousness that _is_.
-
- THEO. It is _unconsciousness_ only to our finite consciousness. Verily
- may we paraphrase verse v, in the 1st chapter of St. John,
- and say “and (Absolute) light (which is darkness) shineth in
- darkness (which is illusionary material light); and the darkness
- comprehendeth it not.” This absolute light is also absolute and
- immutable law. Whether by radiation or emanation—we need not
- quarrel over terms—the universe passes out of its homogeneous
- subjectivity on to the first plane of manifestation, of which
- planes there are seven, we are taught. With each plane it becomes
- more dense and material until it reaches this, our plane, on which
- the only world approximately known and understood in its physical
- composition by Science, is the planetary or Solar system—one _sui
- generis_, we are told.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean by _sui generis_?
-
- THEO. I mean that, though the fundamental law and the universal working
- of laws of Nature are uniform, still our Solar system (like every
- other such system in the millions of others in Cosmos) and even
- our Earth, has its own programme of manifestations differing
- from the respective programmes of all others. We speak of the
- inhabitants of other planets and imagine that if they are _men_,
- _i.e._, thinking entities, they must be as we are. The fancy of
- poets and painters and sculptors never fails to represent even
- the angels as a beautiful copy of man—_plus_ wings. We say that
- all this is an error and a delusion; because, if on this little
- earth alone one finds such a diversity in its flora, fauna and
- mankind—from the seaweed to the cedar of Lebanon, from the
- jelly-fish to the elephant, from the Bushman and negro to the
- Apollo Belvedere—alter the conditions cosmic and planetary, and
- there must be as a result quite a different flora, fauna and
- mankind. The same laws will fashion quite a different set of
- things and beings even on this our plane, including in it all
- our planets. How much more different then must be _external_
- nature in other Solar systems, and how foolish is it to judge of
- other _stars_ and worlds and human beings by our own, as physical
- science does!
-
- ENQ. But what are your data for this assertion?
-
- THEO. What science in general will never accept as proof—the cumulative
- testimony of an endless series of Seers who have testified to this
- fact. Their spiritual visions, real explorations by, and through,
- physical and spiritual senses untrammeled by blind flesh, were
- systematically checked and compared one with the other, and their
- nature sifted. All that was not corroborated by unanimous and
- collective experience was rejected, while that only was recorded
- as established truth which, in various ages, under different
- climes, and throughout an untold series of incessant observations,
- was found to agree and receive constantly further corroboration.
- The methods used by our scholars and students of the
- psycho-spiritual sciences do not differ from those of students of
- the natural and physical sciences, as you may see. Only our fields
- of research are on two different planes, and our instruments are
- made by no human hands, for which reason perchance they are only
- the more reliable. The retorts, accumulators, and microscopes of
- the chemist and naturalist may get out of order; the telescope
- and the astronomer’s horological instruments may get spoiled; our
- recording instruments are beyond the influence of weather or the
- elements.
-
- ENQ. And therefore you have implicit faith in them?
-
- THEO. Faith is a word not to be found in theosophical dictionaries: we
- say _knowledge based on observation and experience_. There is this
- difference, however, that while the observation and experience of
- physical science lead the Scientists to about as many “working”
- hypotheses as there are minds to evolve them, our _knowledge_
- consents to add to its lore only those facts which have become
- undeniable, and which are fully and absolutely demonstrated. We
- have no two beliefs or hypotheses on the same subject.
-
- ENQ. Is it on such data that you came to accept the strange theories we
- find in _Esoteric Buddhism_?
-
- THEO. Just so. These theories may be slightly incorrect in their minor
- details, and even faulty in their exposition by lay students; they
- are _facts_ in nature, nevertheless, and come nearer the truth
- than any scientific hypothesis.
-
-
-ON THE SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF OUR PLANET.
-
- ENQ. I understand that you describe our earth as forming part of a
- chain of earths?
-
- THEO. We do. But the other six “earths” or globes, are not on the same
- plane of objectivity as our earth is; therefore we cannot see them.
-
- ENQ. Is that on account of the great distance?
-
- THEO. Not at all, for we see with our naked eye planets and even stars
- at immeasurably greater distances; but it is owing to those six
- globes being outside our physical means of perception, or plane
- of being. It is not only that their material density, weight, or
- fabric are entirely different from those of our earth and the
- other known planets; but they are (to us) on an entirely different
- _layer_ of space, so to speak; a layer not to be perceived or felt
- by our physical senses. And when I say “layer,” please do not
- allow your fancy to suggest to you layers like strata or beds laid
- one over the other, for this would only lead to another absurd
- misconception. What I mean by “layer” is that plane of infinite
- space which by its nature cannot fall under our ordinary waking
- perceptions, whether mental or physical; but which exists in
- nature outside of our normal mentality or consciousness, outside
- of our three dimensional space, and outside of our division of
- time. Each of the seven fundamental planes (or layers) in space—of
- course as a whole, as the pure space of Locke’s definition, not as
- our finite space—has its own objectivity and subjectivity, its own
- space and time, its own consciousness and set of senses. But all
- this will be hardly comprehensible to one trained in the modern
- ways of thought.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean by a different set of senses? Is there anything
- on our human plane that you could bring as an illustration of what
- you say, just to give a clearer idea of what you may mean by this
- variety of senses, spaces, and respective perceptions?
-
- THEO. None; except, perhaps, that which for Science would be rather a
- handy peg on which to hang a counter-argument. We have a different
- set of senses in dream-life, have we not? We feel, talk, hear,
- see, taste and function in general on a different plane; the
- change of state of our consciousness being evidenced by the fact
- that a series of acts and events embracing years, as we think,
- pass ideally through our mind in one instant. Well, that extreme
- rapidity of our mental operations in dreams, and the perfect
- naturalness, for the time being, of all the other functions, show
- us that we are on quite another plane. Our philosophy teaches
- us that, as there are seven fundamental forces in nature, and
- seven planes of being, so there are seven states of consciousness
- in which man can live, think, remember and have his being. To
- enumerate these here is impossible, and for this one has to turn
- to the study of Eastern metaphysics. But in these two states—the
- waking and the dreaming—every ordinary mortal, from a learned
- philosopher down to a poor untutored savage, has a good proof that
- such states differ.
-
- ENQ. You do not accept, then, the well-known explanations of biology
- and physiology to account for the dream state?
-
- THEO. We do not. We reject even the hypotheses of your psychologists,
- preferring the teachings of Eastern Wisdom. Believing in seven
- planes of Kosmic being and states of Consciousness, with regard
- to the Universe or the Macrocosm, we stop at the fourth plane,
- finding it impossible to go with any degree of certainty beyond.
- But with respect to the Microcosm, or man, we speculate freely on
- his seven states and principles.
-
- ENQ. How do you explain these?
-
- THEO. We find, first of all, two distinct beings in man; the spiritual
- and the physical, the man who thinks, and the man who records as
- much of these thoughts as he is able to assimilate. Therefore we
- divide him into two distinct natures; the upper or the spiritual
- being, composed of three “principles” or _aspects_; and the lower
- or the physical quaternary, composed of _four_—in all _seven_.
-
-
-THE SEPTENARY NATURE OF MAN.
-
- ENQ. Is it what we call Spirit and Soul, and the man of flesh?
-
- THEO. It is not. That is the old Platonic division. Plato was an
- Initiate, and therefore could not go into forbidden details; but
- he who is acquainted with the archaic doctrine finds the seven
- in Plato’s various combinations of Soul and Spirit. He regarded
- man as constituted of two parts—one eternal, formed of the same
- essence as the Absoluteness, the other mortal and corruptible,
- deriving its constituent parts from the _minor_ “created” Gods.
- Man is composed, he shows, of (1) A mortal body, (2) An immortal
- principle, and (3) A “separate mortal kind of Soul.” It is that
- which we respectively call the physical man, the Spiritual Soul
- or Spirit, and the animal Soul (the _Nous_ and _psuche_). This
- is the division adopted by Paul, another Initiate, who maintains
- that there is a psychical body which is sown in the corruptible
- (astral soul or body), and a _spiritual_ body that is raised in
- incorruptible substance. Even James (iii. 15) corroborates the
- same by saying that the “wisdom” (of our lower soul) descendeth
- not from the above, but is terrestrial (“psychical,” “demoniacal,”
- _vide_ Greek text); while the other is heavenly wisdom. Now so
- plain is it that Plato and even Pythagoras, while speaking but of
- three “principles,” give them seven separate functions, in their
- various combinations, that if we contrast our teachings this will
- become quite plain. Let us take a cursory view of these seven
- aspects by drawing two tables.
-
-
-THEOSOPHICAL DIVISION.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- { SANSCRIT TERMS. | EXOTERIC MEANING.| EXPLANATORY.
- {------------------------------------------------------------------
- L { | |
- o {(_a_) Rupa, or |(_a_) Physical |(_a_) Is the vehicle of
- w { Sthula-Sarira. | body. | all the other
- e { | | “principles” during
- r { | | life.
- {(_b_) Pranâ. |(_b_) Life, or |(_b_) Necessary only to
- { | Vital principle.| _a_, _c_, _d_, and
- Q { | | the functions of the
- u { | | lower _Manas_, which
- a { | | embrace all those
- t { | | limited to the
- e { | | (_physical_) brain.
- r {(_c_) Linga Sharira.|(_c_) Astral Body.|(_c_) The _Double_, the
- n { | | phantom body.
- a {(_d_) Kama rupa. |(_d_) The seat of |(_d_) This is the centre
- r { | animal desires| of the animal man,
- y { | and passions. | wherelies the line
- . { | | of demarcation which
- { | | separates the mortal
- { | | man from the
- { | | immortal entity.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- { | |
- { SANSCRIT TERMS. | EXOTERIC MEANING. | EXPLANATORY.
- { | |
- T {-------------------------------------------------------------------
- H {(_e_) _Manas_—a |(_e_) Mind, Intelligence:|(_e_) The future state
- E { dual principle| which is the higher | and the Karmic
- { in its | human mind, whose | destiny of man
- U { functions. | light, or radiation, | depend on whether
- P { | links the MONAD, for | Manas gravitates
- P { | the lifetime, to the | more downward to
- E { | mortal man. | Kama rupa, the
- R { | | seat of the animal
- { | | passions, or
- I { | | upwards to_Buddhi_,
- M { | | Spiritual _Ego_. In
- P { | | the latter case,
- E { | | the higher
- R { | | consciousness of
- I { | | the individual
- S { | | Spiritual
- H { | | aspirations of
- A { | | _mind_ (Manas),
- B { | | assimilating
- L { | | Buddhi, are
- E { | | absorbed by it
- { | | and form the _Ego_,
- T { | | which goes into
- R { | | Devachanic bliss.[19]
- I {(_f_) Buddhi. |(_f_) The Spiritual |(_f_) The vehicle of
- A { | Soul. | pure universal
- D { | | spirit.
- . {(_g_) Atma. |(_g_) Spirit. |(_g_) One with the
- { | | Absolute, as its
- { | | radiation.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Now what does Plato teach? He speaks of the _interior_ man as
- constituted of two parts—one immutable and always the same,
- formed of the same _substance_ as Deity, and the other mortal and
- corruptible. These “two parts” are found in our upper _Triad_,
- and the lower _Quaternary_ (_vide_ Table). He explains that when
- the Soul, _psuche_, “allies herself to the Nous (divine spirit
- or substance[20]), she does everything aright and felicitously”;
- but the case is otherwise when she attaches herself to _Anoia_,
- (folly, or the irrational animal Soul). Here, then, we have
- _Manas_ (or the Soul in general) in its two aspects: when
- attaching itself to _Anoia_ (our _Kama rupa_, or the “Animal Soul”
- in “Esoteric Buddhism,”) it runs towards entire annihilation, as
- far as the personal Ego is concerned; when allying itself to the
- _Nous_ (Atma-Buddhi) it merges into the immortal, imperishable
- Ego, and then its spiritual consciousness of the personal that
- _was_, becomes immortal.
-
-
-THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN SOUL AND SPIRIT.
-
- ENQ. Do you really teach, as you are accused of doing by some
- Spiritualists and French Spiritists, the annihilation of every
- personality?
-
- THEO. We do not. But as this question of the duality—the
- _individuality_ of the Divine Ego, and the _personality_ of the
- human animal—involves that of the possibility of the real immortal
- Ego appearing in _Séance rooms_ as a “materialised spirit,” which
- we deny as already explained, our opponents have started the
- nonsensical charge.
-
- ENQ. You have just spoken of _psuche_ running towards its entire
- annihilation if it attaches itself to _Anoia_. What did Plato, and
- do you mean by this?
-
- THEO. The _entire_ annihilation of the _personal_ consciousness, as an
- exceptional and rare case, I think. The general and almost
- invariable rule is the merging of the personal into the individual
- or immortal consciousness of the Ego, a transformation or a divine
- transfiguration, and the entire annihilation only of the lower
- _quaternary_. Would you expect the man of flesh, or the _temporary
- personality_, his shadow, the “astral,” his animal instincts
- and even physical life, to survive with the “spiritual Ego” and
- become sempiternal? Naturally all this ceases to exist, either
- at, or soon after corporeal death. It becomes in time entirely
- disintegrated and disappears from view, being annihilated as a
- whole.
-
- ENQ. Then you also reject _resurrection in the flesh_?
-
- THEO. Most decidedly we do! Why should we, who believe in the archaic
- esoteric philosophy of the Ancients, accept the unphilosophical
- speculations of the later Christian theology, borrowed from the
- Egyptian and Greek exoteric Systems of the Gnostics?
-
- ENQ. The Egyptians revered Nature-Spirits, and deified even onions:
- your Hindus are _idolaters_, to this day; the Zoroastrians
- worshipped, and do still worship, the Sun; and the best Greek
- philosophers were either dreamers or materialists—witness Plato
- and Democritus. How can you compare?
-
- THEO. It may be so in your modern Christian and even Scientific
- catechism; it is not so for unbiased minds. The Egyptians
- revered the “One-Only-One,” as _Nout_; and it is from this word
- that Anaxagoras got his denomination _Nous_, or as he calls it,
- Νους αυτοχρατης, “the Mind or Spirit Self-Potent,” the αρχητης
- χινηδεως, the leading motor, or _primum-mobile_ of all. With
- him the _Nous_ was God, and the _logos_ was man, his emanation.
- The _Nous_ is the spirit (whether in Kosmos or in man), and the
- _logos_, whether Universe or astral body, the emanation of the
- former, the physical body being merely the animal. Our external
- powers perceive _phenomena_; our _Nous_ alone is able to recognise
- their _noumena_. It is the logos alone, or the _noumenon_, that
- survives, because it is immortal in its very nature and essence,
- and the _logos_ in man is the Eternal Ego, that which reincarnates
- and lasts for ever. But how can the evanescent or external shadow,
- the temporary clothing of that divine Emanation which returns
- to the source whence it proceeded, be that _which is raised in
- incorruptibility_?
-
- ENQ. Still you can hardly escape the charge of having invented a new
- division of man’s spiritual and psychic constituents; for no
- philosopher speaks of them, though you believe that Plato does.
-
- THEO. And I support the view. Besides Plato, there is Pythagoras, who
- also followed the same idea.[21] He described the _Soul_ as a
- self-moving Unit (_monad_) composed of three elements, the _Nous_
- (Spirit), the _phren_ (mind), and the _thumos_ (life, breath or
- the _Nephesh_ of the Kabalists) which three correspond to our
- “Atma-Buddhi,” (higher Spirit-Soul), to _Manas_ (The EGO), and
- to _Kama-rupa_ in conjunction with the _lower_ reflection of
- Manas. That which the Ancient Greek philosophers termed _Soul_,
- in general, we call Spirit, or Spiritual _Soul_, _Buddhi_, as the
- vehicle of _Atma_ (the _Agathon_, or Plato’s Supreme Deity). The
- fact that Pythagoras and others state that _phren_ and _thumos_
- are shared by us with the brutes, proves that in this case the
- _lower_ Manasic reflection (instinct) and _Kama-rupa_ (animal
- living passions) are meant. And as Socrates and Plato accepted
- the clue and followed it, if to these five, namely, _Agathon_
- (Deity or Atma), _Psuche_ (Soul in its collective sense), _Nous_
- (Spirit or Mind), _Phren_ (physical mind), and _Thumos_ (Kama-rupa
- or passions) we add the _eidolon_ of the Mysteries, the shadowy
- _form_ or the human double, and the _physical body_, it will be
- easy to demonstrate that the ideas of both Pythagoras and Plato
- were identical with ours. Even the Egyptians held to the Septenary
- division. In its exit, they taught, the Soul (EGO) had to pass
- through its seven chambers, or principles, those it left behind,
- and those it took along with itself. The only difference is that,
- ever bearing in mind the penalty of revealing Mystery-doctrines,
- which was _death_, they gave out the teaching in a broad outline,
- while we elaborate it and explain it in its details. But though
- we do give out to the world as much as is lawful, even in our
- doctrine more than one important detail is withheld, which those
- who study the esoteric philosophy and are pledged to silence, _are
- alone entitled to know_.
-
-
-THE GREEK TEACHINGS.
-
- ENQ. We have magnificent Greek and Latin, Sanskrit and Hebrew scholars.
- How is it that we find nothing in their translations that would
- afford us a clue to what you say?
-
- THEO. Because your translators, their great learning notwithstanding,
- have made of the philosophers, the Greeks especially, _misty_
- instead of mystic writers. Take as an instance Plutarch, and read
- what he says of “the principles” of man. That which he describes
- was accepted literally and attributed to metaphysical superstition
- and ignorance. Let me give you an illustration in point: “Man,”
- says Plutarch, “is compound; and they are _mistaken who think him
- to be compounded of two parts only_. For they imagine that the
- understanding (brain intellect) is a part of the soul (the upper
- Triad), but they err in this no less than those who make the soul
- to be a part of the body, _i.e._, those who make of the _Triad_
- part of the corruptible mortal _quaternary_. For the understanding
- (nous) as far exceeds the soul, as the soul is better and diviner
- than the body. Now this composition of the soul (ψυχη) with the
- understanding (νοῦς) makes reason; and with the body (or thumos,
- the animal soul) passion; of which the one is the beginning or
- principle of pleasure and pain, and the other of virtue and
- vice. Of these three parts conjoined and compacted together, the
- earth has given the body, the moon the soul, and the sun the
- understanding to the generation of man.”
-
- This last sentence is purely allegorical, and will be comprehended
- only by those who are versed in the esoteric science of
- correspondences and know which planet is _related to every
- principle_. Plutarch divides the latter into three groups, and
- makes of the body a compound of physical frame, astral shadow,
- and breath, or the triple lower part, which “from earth was
- taken and to earth returns”; of the middle principle and the
- instinctual soul, the second part, derived _from_ and _through_
- and ever influenced by the moon[22]; and only of the higher part
- or the _Spiritual Soul_, with the Atmic and Manasic elements in
- it does he make a direct emanation of the Sun, who stands here
- for _Agathon_ the Supreme Deity. This is proven by what he says
- further as follows:
-
- “Now of the deaths we die, the one makes man two of three and
- the other one of (out of) two. The former is in the region
- and jurisdiction of Demeter, whence the name given to the
- Mysteries, τελειν, resembled that given to death, τελευταν.
- The Athenians also heretofore called the deceased sacred to
- Demeter. As for the other death, it is in the moon or region of
- Persephone.”
-
- Here you have our doctrine, which shows man a _septenary_ during
- life; a _quintile_ just after death, in Kama-loka; and a threefold
- _Ego_, Spirit-Soul, and consciousness in _Devachan_. This
- separation, first in “the Meadows of Hades,” as Plutarch calls
- the _Kama-loka_, then in Devachan, was part and parcel of the
- performances during the sacred Mysteries, when the candidates for
- initiation enacted the whole drama of death, and the resurrection
- as a glorified spirit, by which name we mean _Consciousness_. This
- is what Plutarch means when he says:—
-
- “And as with the one, the terrestrial, so with the other
- celestial Hermes doth dwell. This suddenly and with violence
- plucks the soul from the body; but Proserpina mildly and in a
- long time disjoins the understanding from the soul.[23] For
- this reason she is called _Monogenes, only begotten_, or rather
- _begetting one alone_; for _the better part of man becomes
- alone when it is separated by her_. Now both the one and the
- other happens thus according to nature. It is ordained by Fate
- (Fatum or Karma) that every soul, whether with or without
- understanding (mind), when gone out of the body, should wander
- for a time, though not all for the same, in the region lying
- between the earth and moon (_Kama-loka_).[24] For those that
- have been unjust and dissolute suffer then the punishment due
- to their offences; but the good and virtuous are there detained
- till they are purified, and have, by expiation, purged out of
- them all the infections they might have contracted from the
- contagion of the body, as if from foul health, living in the
- mildest part of the air, called the Meadows of Hades, where
- they must remain for a certain prefixed and appointed time. And
- then, as if they were returning from a wandering pilgrimage
- or long exile into their country, they have a taste of joy,
- such as they principally receive who are initiated into Sacred
- Mysteries, mixed with trouble, admiration, and each one’s
- proper and peculiar hope.”
-
- This is Nirvanic bliss, and no Theosophist could describe in
- plainer though esoteric language the mental joys of Devachan,
- where every man has his paradise around him, erected by his
- consciousness. But you must beware of the general error into
- which too many even of our Theosophists fall. Do not imagine that
- because man is called septenary, then _quintuple_ and a triad, he
- is a compound of seven, five, or three _entities_; or, as well
- expressed by a Theosophical writer, of skins to be peeled off like
- the skins of an onion. The “principles,” as already said, save the
- body, the life, and the astral _eidolon_, all of which disperse
- at death, are simply _aspects_ and _states of consciousness_.
- There is but one _real_ man, enduring through the cycle of life
- and immortal in essence, if not in form, and this is _Manas_, the
- Mind-man or embodied Consciousness. The objection made by the
- materialists, who deny the possibility of mind and consciousness
- acting without matter is worthless in our case. We do not deny
- the soundness of their argument; but we simply ask our opponents,
- “Are you acquainted _with all the states of matter_, you who knew
- hitherto but of three? And how do you know whether that which we
- refer to as ABSOLUTE CONSCIOUSNESS or Deity for ever invisible
- and unknowable, be not that which, though it eludes for ever our
- human _finite_ conception, is still universal Spirit-matter or
- matter-Spirit _in its absolute infinitude_?” It is then one of the
- lowest, and in its manvantaric manifestations _fractioned_-aspects
- of this Spirit-matter, which is the conscious _Ego_ that creates
- its own paradise, a fool’s paradise, it may be, still a state of
- bliss.
-
- ENQ. But what is _Devachan_?
-
- THEO. The “land of gods” literally; a condition, a state of mental
- bliss. Philosophically a mental condition analogous to, but far
- more vivid and real than, the most vivid dream. It is the state
- after death of most mortals.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[19] In Mr. Sinnett’s “Esoteric Buddhism” _d_, _e_, and _f_, are
-respectively called the Animal, the Human, and the Spiritual Souls,
-which answers as well. Though the principles in _Esoteric Buddhism_ are
-numbered, this is, strictly speaking, useless. The dual _Monad_ alone
-(_Atma-Buddhi_) is susceptible of being thought of as the two highest
-numbers (the 6th and 7th). As to all others, since _that_ “principle”
-only which is predominant in man has to be considered as the first and
-foremost, no numeration is possible as a general rule. In some men it
-is the higher Intelligence (Manas or the 5th) which dominates the rest;
-in others the Animal Soul (Kama-rupa) that reigns supreme, exhibiting
-the most bestial instincts, etc.
-
-[20] Paul calls Plato’s _Nous_ “Spirit”; but as this spirit is
-“substance,” then, of course, _Buddhi_ and not _Atma_ is meant, as
-the latter cannot philosophically be called “substance” under any
-circumstance. We include Atma among the human “principles” in order not
-to create additional confusion. In reality it is no “human” but the
-universal _absolute_ principle of which Buddhi, the Soul-Spirit, is the
-carrier.
-
-[21] “Plato and Pythagoras,” says Plutarch, “distribute the soul into
-two parts, the rational (noetic) and irrational (agnoia); that that
-part of the soul of man which is rational is eternal; for though it
-be not God, yet it is the product of an eternal deity, but that part
-of the soul which is divested of reason (agnoia) dies.” The modern
-term _Agnostic_ comes from _Agnosis_, a cognate word. We wonder why
-Mr. Huxley, the author of the word, should have connected his great
-intellect with “the soul divested of reason” which dies? Is it the
-exaggerated humility of the modern materialist?
-
-[22] The Kabalists who know the relation of Jehovah, the life and
-children-giver, to the Moon, and the influence of the latter on
-generation, will again see the point as much as some astrologers will.
-
-[23] Proserpina, or Persephone, stands here for post mortem Karma,
-which is said to regulate the separation of the lower from the higher
-“principles”: the _Soul_, as _Nephesh_, the breath of animal life,
-which remains for a time in Kama-loka, from the higher compound _Ego_,
-which goes into the state of Devachan, or bliss.
-
-[24] Until the separation of the higher, spiritual “principle” takes
-place from the lower ones, which remain in the Kama-loka until
-disintegrated.
-
-
-
-
-VII. ON THE VARIOUS POST MORTEM STATES.
-
-
-THE PHYSICAL AND THE SPIRITUAL MAN.
-
- ENQ. I am glad to hear you believe in the immortality of the Soul.
-
- THEO. Not of “the Soul,” but of the divine Spirit; or rather in the
- immortality of the reincarnating Ego.
-
- ENQ. What is the difference?
-
- THEO. A very great one in our philosophy, but this is too abstruse and
- difficult a question to touch lightly upon. We shall have to
- analyse them separately, and then in conjunction. We may begin
- with Spirit.
-
- We say that the Spirit (the “Father in secret” of Jesus), or _Atman_,
- is no individual property of any man, but is the Divine essence
- which has no body, no form, which is imponderable, invisible and
- indivisible, that which does not _exist_ and yet _is_, as the
- Buddhists say of Nirvana. It only overshadows the mortal; that
- which enters into him and pervades the whole body being only
- its omnipresent rays, or light, radiated through _Buddhi_, its
- vehicle and direct emanation. This is the secret meaning of the
- assertions of almost all the ancient philosophers, when they said
- that “the _rational_ part of man’s soul”[25] never entered wholly
- into the man, but only overshadowed him more or less through the
- _irrational_ spiritual Soul or Buddhi.[26]
-
- ENQ. I laboured under the impression that the “Animal Soul” alone was
- irrational, not the Divine.
-
- THEO. You have to learn the difference between that which is
- negatively, or _passively_ “irrational,” because undifferentiated,
- and that which is irrational because too _active_ and positive.
- Man is a correlation of spiritual powers, as well as a correlation
- of chemical and physical forces, brought into function by what we
- call “principles.”
-
- ENQ. I have read a good deal upon the subject, and it seems to me that
- the notions of the older philosophers differed a great deal from
- those of the mediæval Kabalists, though they do agree in some
- particulars.
-
- THEO. The most substantial difference between them and us is this.
- While we believe with the Neo-Platonists and the Eastern teachings
- that the spirit (Atma) never descends hypostatically into the
- living man, but only showers more or less its radiance on the
- _inner_ man (the psychic and spiritual compound of the _astral_
- principles), the Kabalists maintain that the human Spirit,
- detaching itself from the ocean of light and Universal Spirit,
- enters man’s Soul, where it remains throughout life imprisoned
- in the astral capsule. All Christian Kabalists still maintain
- the same, as they are unable to break quite loose from their
- anthropomorphic and Biblical doctrines.
-
- ENQ. And what do you say?
-
- THEO. We say that we only allow the presence of the radiation of Spirit
- (or Atma) in the astral capsule, and so far only as that spiritual
- radiancy is concerned. We say that man and Soul have to conquer
- their immortality by ascending towards the unity with which, if
- successful, they will be finally linked and into which they are
- finally, so to speak, absorbed. The individualization of man after
- death depends on the spirit, not on his soul and body. Although
- the word “personality,” in the sense in which it is usually
- understood, is an absurdity if applied literally to our immortal
- essence, still the latter is, as our individual Ego, a distinct
- entity, immortal and eternal, _per se_. _It is only in the case
- of black magicians or of criminals beyond redemption, criminals
- who have been such during a long series of lives_—that the shining
- thread, which links the spirit to the _personal_ soul from the
- moment of the birth of the child, is violently snapped, and the
- disembodied entity becomes divorced from the personal soul, the
- latter being annihilated without leaving the smallest impression
- of itself on the former. If that union between the lower, or
- personal Manas, and the individual reincarnating Ego, has not
- been effected during life, then the former is left to share the
- fate of the lower animals, to gradually dissolve into ether, and
- have its personality annihilated. But even then the Ego remains a
- distinct being. It (the spiritual Ego) only loses one Devachanic
- state—after that special, and in that case indeed useless,
- life—as that idealized _Personality_, and is reincarnated, after
- enjoying for a short time its freedom as a planetary spirit,
- almost immediately.
-
- ENQ. It is stated in _Isis Unveiled_ that such planetary Spirits or
- Angels, “the gods of the Pagans or the Archangels of the
- Christians,” will never be men on our planet.
-
- THEO. Quite right. Not “_such_,” but _some_ classes of higher Planetary
- Spirits. They will never be men on this planet, because they are
- liberated Spirits from a previous, earlier world, and as such they
- cannot re-become men on this one. Yet all these will live again in
- the next and far higher Mahamanvantara, after this “great Age,”
- and “Brahma _pralaya_,” (a little period of 16 figures or so) is
- over. For you must have heard, of course, that Eastern philosophy
- teaches us that mankind consists of such “Spirits” imprisoned in
- human bodies? The difference between animals and men is this: the
- former are ensouled by the “principles” _potentially_, the latter
- _actually_.[27] Do you understand now the difference?
-
- ENQ. Yes; but this specialisation has been in all ages the
- stumbling-block of metaphysicians.
-
- THEO. It was. The whole esotericism of the Buddhistic philosophy is
- based on this mysterious teaching, understood by so few persons,
- and so totally misrepresented by many of the most learned modern
- scholars. Even metaphysicians are too inclined to confound the
- effect with the cause. An Ego who has won his immortal life as
- spirit will remain the same inner self throughout all his rebirths
- on earth; but this does not imply necessarily that he must either
- remain the Mr. Smith or Mr. Brown he was on earth, or lose his
- individuality. Therefore, the astral soul and the terrestrial
- body of man may, in the dark hereafter, be absorbed into the
- cosmical ocean of sublimated elements, and cease to feel his last
- _personal_ Ego (if it did not deserve to soar higher), and the
- _divine_ Ego still remain the same unchanged entity, though this
- terrestrial experience of his emanation may be totally obliterated
- at the instant of separation from the unworthy vehicle.
-
- ENQ. If the “Spirit,” or the divine portion of the soul, is
- pre-existent as a distinct being from all eternity, as Origen,
- Synesius, and other semi-Christians and semi-Platonic philosophers
- taught, and if it is the same, and nothing more than the
- metaphysically-objective soul, how can it be otherwise than
- eternal? And what matters it in such a case, whether man leads a
- pure life or an animal, if, do what he may, he can never lose his
- individuality?
-
- THEO. This doctrine, as you have stated it, is just as pernicious in
- its consequences as that of vicarious atonement. Had the latter
- dogma, in company with the false idea that we are all immortal,
- been demonstrated to the world in its true light, humanity would
- have been bettered by its propagation.
-
- Let me repeat to you again. Pythagoras, Plato, Timaeus of Locris, and
- the old Alexandrian School, derived the _Soul_ of man (or
- his higher “principles” and attributes) from the Universal
- World Soul, the latter being, according to their teachings,
- _Aether_ (Pater-Zeus). Therefore, neither of these “principles”
- can be _unalloyed_ essence of the Pythagorean Monas, or our
- _Atma-Buddhi_, because the _Anima Mundi_ is but the effect, the
- subjective emanation or rather radiation of the former. Both the
- _human_ Spirit (or the individuality), the reincarnating Spiritual
- Ego, and Buddhi, the Spiritual soul, are pre-existent. But, while
- the former exists as a distinct entity, an individualization,
- the soul exists as pre-existing breath, an unscient portion
- of an intelligent whole. Both were originally formed from the
- Eternal Ocean of light; but as the Fire-Philosophers, the
- mediæval Theosophists, expressed it, there is a visible as well
- as invisible spirit in fire. They made a difference between the
- _anima bruta_ and the _anima divina_. Empedocles firmly believed
- all men and animals to possess two souls; and in Aristotle we find
- that he calls one the reasoning soul, νους and the other, the
- animal soul, ψυχη. According to these philosophers, the reasoning
- soul comes from _within_ the universal soul, and the other from
- _without_.
-
- ENQ. Would you call the Soul, _i.e._, the human thinking Soul, or what
- you call the Ego—matter?
-
- THEO. Not matter, but substance assuredly; nor would the word “matter,”
- if prefixed with the adjective, _primordial_, be a word to
- avoid. That matter, we say, is co-eternal with Spirit, and is
- not our visible, tangible, and divisible matter, but its extreme
- sublimation. Pure Spirit is but one remove from the _no_-Spirit,
- or the absolute _all_. Unless you admit that man was evolved
- out of this primordial Spirit-matter, and represents a regular
- progressive scale of “principles” from _meta_-Spirit down to the
- grossest matter, how can we ever come to regard the _inner_ man as
- immortal, and at the same time as a spiritual Entity and a mortal
- man?
-
- ENQ. Then why should you not believe in God as such an Entity?
-
- THEO. Because that which is infinite and unconditioned can have no
- form, and cannot be a being, not in any Eastern philosophy worthy
- of the name, at any rate. An “entity” is immortal, but is so only
- in its ultimate essence, not in its individual form. When at
- the last point of its cycle, it is absorbed into its primordial
- nature; and it becomes spirit, when it loses its name of Entity.
-
- Its immortality as a form is limited only to its life-cycle or
- the _Mahamanvantara_; after which it is one and identical with
- the Universal Spirit, and no longer a separate Entity. As to the
- _personal_ Soul—by which we mean the spark of consciousness that
- preserves in the Spiritual Ego the idea of the personal “I” of the
- last incarnation—this lasts, as a separate distinct recollection,
- only throughout the Devachanic period; after which time it is
- added to the series of other innumerable incarnations of the Ego,
- like the remembrance in our memory of one of a series of days,
- at the end of a year. Will you bind the infinitude you claim for
- your God to finite conditions? That alone which is indissolubly
- cemented by _Atma_ (_i.e._, Buddhi-Manas) is immortal. The Soul
- of man (_i.e._, of the personality) _per se_ is neither immortal,
- eternal nor divine. Says the _Zohar_ (vol. iii., p. 616), “the
- soul, when sent to this earth, puts on an earthly garment, to
- preserve herself here, so she receives above a shining garment,
- in order to be able to look without injury into the mirror, whose
- light proceeds from the Lord of Light.” Moreover, the _Zohar_
- teaches that the soul cannot reach the abode of bliss, unless she
- has received the “holy kiss,” or the reunion of the soul _with the
- substance from which she emanated_—spirit. All souls are dual,
- and, while the latter is a feminine principle, the spirit is
- masculine. While imprisoned in body, man is a trinity, unless his
- pollution is such as to have caused his divorce from the spirit.
- “Woe to the soul which prefers to her divine husband (spirit) the
- earthly wedlock with her terrestrial body,” records a text of the
- _Book of the Keys_, a Hermetic work. Woe indeed, for nothing will
- remain of that personality to be recorded on the imperishable
- tablets of the Ego’s memory.
-
- ENQ. How can that which, if not breathed by God into man, yet is on
- your own confession of an identical substance with the divine,
- fail to be immortal?
-
- THEO. Every atom and speck of matter, not of substance only, is
- _imperishable_ in its essence, but not in its _individual
- consciousness_. Immortality is but one’s unbroken consciousness;
- and the _personal_ consciousness can hardly last longer than
- the personality itself, can it? And such consciousness, as I
- already told you, survives only throughout Devachan, after which
- it is reabsorbed, first, in the _individual_, and then in the
- _universal_ consciousness. Better enquire of your theologians how
- it is that they have so sorely jumbled up the Jewish Scriptures.
- Read the Bible, if you would have a good proof that the writers
- of the _Pentateuch_, and _Genesis_ especially, never regarded
- _nephesh_, that which God breathes into Adam (Gen. ch. ii.), as
- the _immortal_ soul. Here are some instances:—“And God created ...
- every _nephesh_ (life) that moveth” (Gen i. 21), meaning animals;
- and (Gen. ii. 7) it is said: “And man became a _nephesh_” (living
- soul), which shows that the word _nephesh_ was indifferently
- applied to _immortal_ man and to _mortal_ beast. “And surely
- your blood of your _nepheshim_ (lives) will I require; at the
- hand of every beast will I require it, and at the hand of man”
- (Gen. ix. 5), “Escape for _nephesh_” (escape for thy _life_, it
- is translated), (Gen. xix. 17). “Let us not kill him,” reads
- the English version (Gen. xxxvii. 21). “Let us not kill his
- _nephesh_” is the Hebrew text. “_Nephesh_ for _nephesh_,” says
- Leviticus (xvii. 8). “He that killeth any man shall surely be put
- to death,” literally “He that smiteth the _nephesh_ of a man”
- (Lev. xxiv. 17); and from verse 18 and following it reads: “And he
- that killeth a beast (_nephesh_) shall make it good ... Beast for
- beast,” whereas the original text has it “nephesh for nephesh.”
- How could man _kill_ that which is immortal? And this explains
- also why the Sadducees denied the immortality of the soul, as it
- also affords another proof that very probably the Mosaic Jews—the
- uninitiated at any rate—never believed in the soul’s survival at
- all.
-
-
-ON ETERNAL REWARD AND PUNISHMENT; AND ON NIRVANA.
-
- ENQ. It is hardly necessary, I suppose, to ask you whether you believe
- in the Christian dogmas of Paradise and Hell, or in future rewards
- and punishments as taught by the Orthodox churches?
-
- THEO. As described in your catechisms, we reject them absolutely; least
- of all would we accept their eternity. But we believe firmly in
- what we call the _Law of Retribution_, and in the absolute justice
- and wisdom guiding this Law, or Karma. Hence we positively refuse
- to accept the cruel and unphilosophical belief in eternal reward
- or eternal punishment. We say with Horace:—
-
- “Let rules be fixed that may our rage contain,
- And punish faults _with a proportion’d pain_;
- But do not flay him who deserves alone
- A whipping for the fault that he has done.”
-
- This is a rule for all men, and a just one. Have we to believe
- that God, of whom you make the embodiment of wisdom, love and
- mercy, is less entitled to these attributes than mortal man?
-
- ENQ. Have you any other reasons for rejecting this dogma?
-
- THEO. Our chief reason for it lies in the fact of re-incarnation. As
- already stated, we reject the idea of a new soul created for every
- newly-born babe. We believe that every human being is the bearer,
- or _Vehicle_, of an _Ego_ coeval with every other Ego; because
- all _Egos_ are _of the same essence_ and belong to the primeval
- emanation from one universal infinite _Ego_. Plato calls the
- latter the _logos_ (or the second manifested God); and we, the
- manifested divine principle, which is one with the universal mind
- or soul, not the anthropomorphic, extra-cosmic and _personal_ God
- in which so many Theists believe. Pray do not confuse.
-
- ENQ. But where is the difficulty, once you accept a manifested
- principle, in believing that the soul of every new mortal is
- _created_ by that Principle, as all the Souls before it have been
- so created?
-
- THEO. Because that which is _impersonal_ can hardly create, plan and
- think, at its own sweet will and pleasure. Being a universal
- _Law_, immutable in its periodical manifestations, those of
- radiating and manifesting its own essence at the beginning of
- every new cycle of life, IT is not supposed to create men, only
- to repent a few years later of having created them. If we have to
- believe in a divine principle at all, it must be in one which is
- as absolute harmony, logic, and justice, as it is absolute love,
- wisdom, and impartiality; and a God who would _create_ every
- soul for the space of _one brief span of life_, regardless of
- the fact whether it has to animate the body of a wealthy, happy
- man, or that of a poor suffering wretch, hapless from birth to
- death though he has done nothing to deserve his cruel fate—would
- be rather a senseless _fiend_ than a God. (_Vide infra_, “On
- the Punishment of the Ego.”) Why, even the Jewish philosophers,
- believers in the Mosaic Bible (esoterically, of course), have
- never entertained such an idea; and, moreover, they believed in
- re-incarnation, as we do.
-
- ENQ. Can you give me some instances as a proof of this?
-
- THEO. Most decidedly I can. Philo Judæus says (in “De Somniis,” p.
- 455): “The air is full of them (of souls); those which are nearest
- the earth, descending to be tied to mortal bodies, παλινδρομοῦσιν
- αὖθις _return to other bodies, being desirous to live in them_.”
- In the _Zohar_, the soul is made to plead her freedom before
- God: “Lord of the Universe! I am happy in this world, and do
- not wish to go into another world, where I shall be a handmaid,
- and be exposed to all kinds of pollutions.”[28] The doctrine
- of fatal necessity, the everlasting immutable law, is asserted
- in the answer of the Deity: “Against thy will thou becomest an
- embryo, and against thy will thou art born.”[29] Light would be
- incomprehensible without darkness to make it manifest by contrast;
- good would be no longer good without evil to show the priceless
- nature of the boon; and so personal virtue could claim no merit,
- unless it had passed through the furnace of temptation. Nothing
- is eternal and unchangeable, save the concealed Deity. Nothing
- that is finite—whether because it had a beginning, or must have an
- end—can remain stationary. It must either progress or recede; and
- a soul which thirsts after a reunion with its spirit, which alone
- confers upon it immortality, must purify itself through cyclic
- transmigrations onward toward the only land of bliss and eternal
- rest, called in the _Zohar_, “The Palace of Love,” היבל אחכה; in
- the Hindu religion, “Moksha”; among the Gnostics, “The Pleroma of
- Eternal Light”; and by the Buddhists, “Nirvana.” And all these
- states are temporary, not eternal.
-
- ENQ. Yet there is no re-incarnation spoken of in all this.
-
- THEO. A soul which pleads to be allowed to remain where she is, _must
- be pre-existent_, and not have been created for the occasion. In
- the _Zohar_ (vol. iii., p. 61), however, there is a still better
- proof. Speaking of the reincarnating _Egos_ (the _rational_
- souls), those whose last personality has to fade out _entirely_,
- it is said: “All souls which have alienated themselves in heaven
- from the Holy One—blessed be His name—have thrown themselves into
- an abyss at their very existence, and have anticipated the time
- when they are to descend once more on earth.” “The Holy One” means
- here, esoterically, the Atman, or _Atma-Buddhi_.
-
- ENQ. Moreover, it is very strange to find _Nirvana_ spoken of as
- something synonymous with the Kingdom of Heaven, or the Paradise,
- since according to every Orientalist of note Nirvana is a synonym
- of annihilation!
-
- THEO. Taken literally, with regard to the personality and
- differentiated matter, not otherwise. These ideas on
- re-incarnation and the trinity of man were held by many of the
- early Christian Fathers. It is the jumble made by the translators
- of the New Testament and ancient philosophical treatises between
- soul and spirit, that has occasioned the many misunderstandings.
- It is also one of the many reasons why Buddha, Plotinus, and so
- many other Initiates are now accused of having longed for the
- total extinction of their souls: “absorption unto the Deity,”
- or “reunion with the universal soul,” meaning, according to
- modern ideas, annihilation. The personal soul must, of course,
- be disintegrated into its particles, before it is able to link
- its purer essence for ever with the immortal spirit. But the
- translators of both the _Acts_ and the _Epistles_, who laid the
- foundation of the _Kingdom of Heaven_, and the modern commentators
- on the Buddhist _Sutra of the Foundation of the Kingdom of
- Righteousness_, have muddled the sense of the great apostle of
- Christianity as of the great reformer of India. The former have
- smothered the word ψυχικος so that no reader imagines it to have
- any relation with _soul_; and with this confusion of _soul_ and
- _spirit_ together, _Bible_ readers get only a perverted sense of
- anything on the subject. On the other hand, the interpreters of
- Buddha have failed to understand the meaning and object of the
- Buddhist four degrees of Dhyâna. Ask the Pythagoreans, “Can that
- spirit, which gives life and motion and partakes of the nature of
- light, be reduced to nonentity?” “Can even that sensitive spirit
- in brutes which exercises memory, one of the rational faculties,
- die and become nothing?” observe the Occultists. In Buddhistic
- philosophy _annihilation_ means only a dispersion of matter, in
- whatever form or _semblance_ of form it may be, for everything
- that has form is temporary, and is, therefore, really an illusion.
- For in eternity the longest periods of time are as a wink of the
- eye. So with form. Before we have time to realize that we have
- seen it, it is gone like an instantaneous flash of lightning, and
- passed for ever. When the Spiritual _entity_ breaks loose for ever
- from every particle of matter, substance, or form, and re-becomes
- a Spiritual breath: then only does it enter upon the eternal and
- unchangeable _Nirvana_, lasting as long as the cycle of life has
- lasted—an eternity, truly. And then that Breath, existing _in
- Spirit_, is _nothing_ because it is _all_; as a form, a semblance,
- a shape, it is completely annihilated; as absolute Spirit it
- still is, for it has become _Be-ness_ itself. The very word used,
- “absorbed in the universal essence,” when spoken of the “Soul” as
- Spirit, means “_union with_.” It can never mean annihilation, as
- that would mean eternal separation.
-
- ENQ. Do you not lay yourself open to the accusation of preaching
- annihilation by the language you yourself use? You have just
- spoken of the Soul of man returning to its primordial elements.
-
- THEO. But you forget that I have given you the differences between the
- various meanings of the word “Soul,” and shown the loose way in
- which the term “Spirit” has been hitherto translated. We speak of
- an _animal_, a _human_, and a _spiritual_, Soul, and distinguish
- between them. Plato, for instance, calls “rational SOUL” that
- which we call _Buddhi_, adding to it the adjective of “spiritual,”
- however; but that which we call the reincarnating Ego, _Manas_, he
- calls Spirit, _Nous_, etc., whereas we apply the term _Spirit_,
- when standing alone and without any qualification, to Atma alone.
- Pythagoras repeats our archaic doctrine when stating that the
- _Ego_ (_Nous_) is eternal with Deity; that the soul only passed
- through various stages to arrive at divine excellence; while
- _thumos_ returned to the earth, and even the _phren_, the lower
- _Manas_, was eliminated. Again, Plato defines _Soul_ (Buddhi) as
- “the motion that is able to move itself.” “Soul,” he adds (Laws
- X.), “is the most ancient of all things, and the commencement of
- motion,” thus calling Atma-Buddhi “Soul,” and _Manas_ “Spirit,”
- which we do not.
-
- “Soul was generated prior to body, and body is posterior and
- secondary, as being according to nature, ruled over by the
- ruling soul.” “The soul which administers all things that are
- moved in every way, administers likewise the heavens.”
-
- “Soul then leads everything in heaven, and on earth, and in
- the sea, by its movements—the names of which are, to will,
- to consider, to take care of, to consult, to form opinions
- true and false, to be in a state of joy, sorrow, confidence,
- fear, hate, love, together with all such primary movements
- as are allied to these.... Being a goddess herself, she ever
- takes as an ally _Nous_, a god, and disciplines all things
- correctly and happily; but when with _Annoia_—not _nous_—it
- works out everything the contrary.”
-
- In this language, as in the Buddhist texts, the negative is
- treated as essential existence. _Annihilation_ comes under a
- similar exegesis. The positive state is essential being, but no
- manifestation as such. When the spirit, in Buddhistic parlance,
- enters _Nirvana_, it loses objective existence, but retains
- subjective being. To objective minds this is becoming absolute
- “nothing”; to subjective, NO-THING, nothing to be displayed to
- sense. Thus, their Nirvana means the certitude of individual
- immortality _in Spirit_, not in Soul, which, though “the most
- ancient of all things,” is still—along with all the other _Gods_—a
- finite emanation, in _forms_ and individuality, if not in
- substance.
-
- ENQ. I do not quite seize the idea yet, and would be thankful to have
- you explain this to me by some illustrations.
-
- THEO. No doubt it is very difficult to understand, especially to one
- brought up in the regular orthodox ideas of the Christian Church.
- Moreover, I must tell you one thing; and this is that unless you
- have studied thoroughly well the separate functions assigned to
- all the human “principles” and the state of all these _after
- death_, you will hardly realize our Eastern philosophy.
-
-
-ON THE VARIOUS “PRINCIPLES” IN MAN.
-
- ENQ. I have heard a good deal about this constitution of the “inner
- man” as you call it, but could never make “head or tail on’t” as
- Gabalis expresses it.
-
- THEO. Of course, it is most difficult, and, as you say, “puzzling” to
- understand correctly and distinguish between the various
- _aspects_, called by us, the “principles” of the real EGO. It is
- the more so as there exists a notable difference in the numbering
- of those principles by various Eastern schools, though at the
- bottom there is the same identical substratum of teaching.
-
- ENQ. Do you mean the Vedantins, as an instance? Don’t they divide your
- seven “principles” into five only?
-
- THEO. They do; but though I would not presume to dispute the point with
- a learned Vedantin, I may yet state as my private opinion that
- they have an obvious reason for it. With them it is only that
- compound spiritual aggregate which consists of various mental
- aspects that is called _Man_ at all, the physical body being in
- their view something beneath contempt, and merely an _illusion_.
- Nor is the Vedanta the only philosophy to reckon in this manner.
- Lao-Tze, in his _Tao-te-King_, mentions only five principles,
- because he, like the Vedantins, omits to include two principles,
- namely, the spirit (Atma) and the physical body, the latter of
- which, moreover, he calls “the cadaver.” Then there is the
- _Taraka Rajà Yogà_ School. Its teaching recognises only three
- “principles” in fact; but then, in reality, their _Sthulopadi_,
- or the physical body, in its waking conscious state, their
- _Sukshmopadhi_, the same body in _Svapna_, or the dreaming state,
- and their _Karanopadhi_ or “causal body,” or that which passes
- from one incarnation to another, are all dual in their aspects,
- and thus make six. Add to this Atma, the impersonal divine
- principle or the immortal element in Man, undistinguished from the
- Universal Spirit, and you have the same seven again.[30] They are
- welcome to hold to their division; we hold to ours.
-
- ENQ. Then it seems almost the same as the division made by the mystic
- Christians: body, soul and spirit?
-
- THEO. Just the same. We could easily make of the body the vehicle of
- the “vital Double”; of the latter the vehicle of Life or _Pranâ_;
- of _Kama-rupa_, or (animal) soul, the vehicle of the _higher_
- and the _lower_ mind, and make of this six principles, crowning
- the whole with the one immortal spirit. In Occultism every
- qualificative change in the state of our consciousness gives to
- man a new aspect, and if it prevails and becomes part of the
- living and acting Ego, it must be (and is) given a special name,
- to distinguish the man in that particular state from the man he is
- when he places himself in another state.
-
- ENQ. It is just that which it is so difficult to understand.
-
- THEO. It seems to me very easy, on the contrary, once that you have
- seized the main idea, _i.e._, that man acts on this or another
- plane of consciousness, in strict accordance with his mental and
- spiritual condition. But such is the materialism of the age that
- the more we explain the less people seem capable of understanding
- what we say. Divide the terrestrial being called man into
- three chief aspects, if you like, and unless you make of him a
- pure animal you cannot do less. Take his objective _body_; the
- thinking principle in him—which is only a little higher than the
- _instinctual_ element in the animal—or the vital conscious soul;
- and that which places him so immeasurably beyond and higher than
- the animal—_i.e._, his _reasoning_ soul or “spirit.” Well, if we
- take these three groups or representative entities, and subdivide
- them, according to the occult teaching, what do we get?
-
- First of all, Spirit (in the sense of the Absolute, and therefore,
- indivisible ALL), or Atma. As this can neither be located nor
- limited in philosophy, being simply that which IS in Eternity,
- and which cannot be absent from even the tiniest geometrical or
- mathematical point of the universe of matter or substance, it
- ought not to be called, in truth, a “human” principle at all.
- Rather, and at best, it is in Metaphysics, that point in space
- which the human Monad and its vehicle man occupy for the period
- of every life. Now that point is as imaginary as man himself,
- and in reality is an illusion, a _maya_; but then for ourselves,
- as for other personal Egos, we are a reality during that fit of
- illusion called life, and we have to take ourselves into account,
- in our own fancy at any rate, if no one else does. To make it
- more conceivable to the human intellect, when first attempting
- the study of Occultism, and to solve the A B C of the mystery
- of man, Occultism calls this _seventh_ principle the synthesis
- of the sixth, and gives it for vehicle the _Spiritual_ Soul,
- _Buddhi_. Now the latter conceals a mystery, which is never given
- to any one, with the exception of irrevocably pledged _chelas_,
- or those, at any rate, who can be safely trusted. Of course,
- there would be less confusion, could it only be told; but, as
- this is directly concerned with the power of projecting one’s
- double consciously and at will, and as this gift, like the “ring
- of Gyges,” would prove very fatal to man at large and to the
- possessor of that faculty in particular, it is carefully guarded.
- But let us proceed with the “principles.” This divine soul, or
- Buddhi, then, is the vehicle of the Spirit. In conjunction, these
- two are one, impersonal and without any attributes (on this
- plane, of course), and make two spiritual “principles.” If we
- pass on to the _Human_ Soul, _Manas_ or _mens_, every one will
- agree that the intelligence of man is _dual_ to say the least:
- _e.g._, the high-minded man can hardly become low-minded; the very
- intellectual and spiritual-minded man is separated by an abyss
- from the obtuse, dull, and material, if not animal-minded man.
-
- ENQ. But why should not man be represented by two “principles” or two
- aspects, rather?
-
- THEO. Every man has these two principles in him, one more active than
- the other, and in rare cases, one of these is entirely stunted
- in its growth, so to say, or paralysed by the strength and
- predominance of the other _aspect_, in whatever direction.
- These, then, are what we call the two principles or aspects of
- _Manas_, the higher and the lower; the former, the higher Manas,
- or the thinking, conscious EGO gravitating toward the spiritual
- Soul (Buddhi); and the latter, or its instinctual principle,
- attracted to _Kama_, the seat of animal desires and passions in
- man. Thus, we have _four_ “principles” justified; the last three
- being (1) the “Double,” which we have agreed to call Protean, or
- Plastic Soul; the vehicle of (2) the life _principle_; and (3)
- the physical body. Of course no physiologist or biologist will
- accept these principles, nor can he make head or tail of them.
- And this is why, perhaps, none of them understand to this day
- either the functions of the spleen, the physical vehicle of the
- Protean Double, or those of a certain organ on the right side of
- man, the seat of the above-mentioned desires, nor yet does he know
- anything of the pineal gland, which he describes as a horny gland
- with a little sand in it, which gland is in truth the very seat
- of the highest and divinest consciousness in man, his omniscient,
- spiritual and all-embracing mind. And this shows to you still more
- plainly that we have neither invented these seven principles, nor
- are they new in the world of philosophy, as we can easily prove.
-
- ENQ. But what is it that reincarnates, in your belief?
-
- THEO. The Spiritual thinking Ego, the permanent principle in man, or
- that which is the seat of _Manas_. It is not Atma, or even
- Atma-Buddhi, regarded as the dual _Monad_, which is the
- _individual_, or _divine_ man, but Manas; for Atman is the
- Universal ALL, and becomes the HIGHER-SELF of man only in
- conjunction with _Buddhi_, its vehicle, which links IT to the
- individuality (or divine man). For it is the Buddhi-Manas which is
- called the _Causal body_, (the United 5th and 6th Principles) and
- which is _Consciousness_, that connects it with every personality
- it inhabits on earth. Therefore, Soul being a generic term, there
- are in men three _aspects_ of soul—the terrestrial, or animal; the
- Human Soul; and the Spiritual Soul; these, strictly speaking, are
- one Soul in its three aspects. Now of the first aspect, nothing
- remains after death; of the second (_nous_ or Manas) only its
- divine essence _if left unsoiled_ survives, while the third in
- addition to being immortal becomes _consciously_ divine, by the
- assimilation of the higher Manas. But to make it clear, we have to
- say a few words first of all about Re-incarnation.
-
- ENQ. You will do well, as it is against this doctrine that your enemies
- fight the most ferociously.
-
- THEO. You mean the Spiritualists? I know; and many are the absurd
- objections laboriously spun by them over the pages of _Light_.
- So obtuse and malicious are some of them, that they will stop at
- nothing. One of them found recently a contradiction, which he
- gravely discusses in a letter to that journal, in two statements
- picked out of Mr. Sinnett’s lectures. He discovers that grave
- contradiction in these two sentences: “Premature returns to
- earth-life in the cases when they occur may be due to Karmic
- complication ...”; and “there is no _accident_ in the supreme act
- of divine justice guiding evolution.” So profound a thinker would
- surely see a contradiction of the law of gravitation if a man
- stretched out his hand to stop a falling stone from crushing the
- head of a child!
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[25] In its generic sense, the word “rational” meaning something
-emanating from the Eternal Wisdom.
-
-[26] _Irrational_ in the sense that as a _pure_ emanation of the
-Universal mind it can have no individual reason of its own on this
-plane of matter, but like the Moon, who borrows her light from the Sun
-and her life from the Earth, so _Buddhi_, receiving its light of Wisdom
-from Atma, gets its rational qualities from _Manas_. _Per se_, as
-something homogeneous, it is devoid of attributes.
-
-[27] _Vide_ “_Secret Doctrine_,” Vol. II., stanzas.
-
-[28] “_Zohar_,” Vol. II., p. 96.
-
-[29] “_Mishna_,” “Aboth,” Vol. IV., p. 29.
-
-[30] See “Secret Doctrine” for a clearer explanation. Vol. I., p. 157.
-
-
-
-
-VIII. ON RE-INCARNATION OR REBIRTH.
-
-
-WHAT IS MEMORY ACCORDING TO THEOSOPHICAL TEACHING?
-
- ENQ. The most difficult thing for you to do, will be to explain and
- give reasonable grounds for such a belief. No Theosophist has
- ever yet succeeded in bringing forward a single valid proof to
- shake my scepticism. First of all, you have against this theory of
- re-incarnation, the fact that no single man has yet been found to
- remember that he has lived, least of all who he was, during his
- previous life.
-
- THEO. Your argument, I see, tends to the same old objection; the loss
- of memory in each of us of our previous incarnation. You think it
- invalidates our doctrine? My answer is that it does not, and that
- at any rate such an objection cannot be final.
-
- ENQ. I would like to hear your arguments.
-
- THEO. They are short and few. Yet when you take into consideration
- (_a_) the utter inability of the best modern psychologists to
- explain to the world the nature of _mind_; and (_b_) their
- complete ignorance of its potentialities, and higher states,
- you have to admit that this objection is based on an _a priori_
- conclusion drawn from _primâ facie_ and circumstantial evidence
- more than anything else. Now what is “memory” in your conception,
- pray?
-
- ENQ. That which is generally accepted: the faculty in our mind of
- remembering and of retaining the knowledge of previous thoughts,
- deeds and events.
-
- THEO. Please add to it that there is a great difference between the
- three accepted forms of memory. Besides memory in general you have
- _Remembrance_, _Recollection_ and _Reminiscence_, have you not?
- Have you ever thought over the difference? Memory, remember, is a
- generic name.
-
- ENQ. Yet, all these are only synonyms.
-
- THEO. Indeed, they are not—not in philosophy, at all events. Memory is
- simply an innate power in thinking beings, and even in animals,
- of reproducing past impressions by an association of ideas
- principally suggested by objective things or by some action on our
- external sensory organs. Memory is a faculty depending entirely on
- the more or less healthy and normal functioning of our _physical_
- brain; and _remembrance_ and _recollection_ are the attributes
- and handmaidens of that memory. But _reminiscence_ is an entirely
- different thing. “Reminiscence” is defined by the modern
- psychologist as something intermediate between _remembrance_
- and _recollection_, or “a conscious process of recalling past
- occurrences, but _without that full and varied reference_ to
- particular things which characterises _recollection_.” Locke,
- speaking of recollection and remembrance, says: “When an _idea
- again_ recurs without the operation of the like object on the
- external sensory, it is _remembrance_; if it be sought after by
- the mind, and with pain and endeavour found and brought again into
- view, it is _recollection_.” But even Locke leaves _reminiscence_
- without any clear definition, because it is no faculty or
- attribute of our _physical_ memory, but an intuitional perception
- apart from and outside our physical brain; a perception which,
- covering as it does (being called into action by the ever-present
- knowledge of our spiritual Ego) all those visions in man which
- are regarded as _abnormal_—from the pictures suggested by genius
- to the _ravings_ of fever and even madness—are classed by science
- as having no _existence_ outside of our fancy. Occultism and
- Theosophy, however, regard _reminiscence_ in an entirely different
- light. For us, while _memory_ is physical and evanescent and
- depends on the physiological conditions of the brain—a fundamental
- proposition with all teachers of mnemonics, who have the
- researches of modern scientific psychologists to back them—we call
- _reminiscence_ the _memory of the soul_. And it is _this_ memory
- which gives the assurance to almost every human being, whether he
- understands it or not, of his having lived before and having to
- live again. Indeed, as Wordsworth has it:
-
- “Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting,
- The soul that rises with us, our life’s star,
- Hath elsewhere had its setting,
- And cometh from afar.”
-
- ENQ. If it is on this kind of memory—poetry and abnormal fancies, on
- your own confession—that you base your doctrine, then you will
- convince very few, I am afraid.
-
- THEO. I did not “confess” it was a fancy. I simply said that
- physiologists and scientists in general regard such reminiscences
- as hallucinations and fancy, to which _learned_ conclusion they
- are welcome. We do not deny that such visions of the past and
- glimpses far back into the corridors of time, are abnormal, as
- contrasted with our normal daily life experience and physical
- memory. But we do maintain with Professor W. Knight, that “the
- absence of memory of any action done in a previous state cannot
- be a conclusive argument against our having lived through it.”
- And every fair-minded opponent must agree with what is said in
- Butler’s _Lectures on Platonic Philosophy_—“that the feeling of
- extravagance with which it (pre-existence) affects us has its
- secret source in materialistic or semi-materialistic prejudices.”
- Besides which we maintain that memory, as Olympiodorus called it,
- is simply _phantasy_, and the most unreliable thing in us.[31]
- Ammonius Saccas asserted that the only faculty in man directly
- opposed to prognostication, or looking into futurity, is _memory_.
- Furthermore, remember that memory is one thing and mind or
- _thought_ is another; one is a recording machine, a register which
- very easily gets out of order; the other (thoughts) are eternal
- and imperishable. Would you refuse to believe in the existence of
- certain things or men only because your physical eyes have not
- seen them? Would not the collective testimony of past generations
- who have seen him be a sufficient guarantee that Julius Cæsar once
- lived? Why should not the same testimony of the psychic senses of
- the masses be taken into consideration?
-
- ENQ. But don’t you think that these are too fine distinctions to be
- accepted by the majority of mortals?
-
- THEO. Say rather by the majority of materialists. And to them we say,
- behold: even in the short span of ordinary existence, memory is
- too weak to register all the events of a lifetime. How frequently
- do even most important events lie dormant in our memory until
- awakened by some association of ideas, or aroused to function
- and activity by some other link. This is especially the case
- with people of advanced age, who are always found suffering from
- feebleness of recollection. When, therefore, we remember that
- which we know about the physical and the spiritual principles
- in man, it is not the fact that our memory has failed to record
- our precedent life and lives that ought to surprise us, but the
- contrary, were it to happen.
-
-
-WHY DO WE NOT REMEMBER OUR PAST LIVES?
-
- ENQ. You have given me a bird’s eye view of the seven principles; now
- how do they account for our complete loss of any recollection of
- having lived before?
-
- THEO. Very easily. Since those “principles” which we call physical, and
- none of which is denied by science, though it calls them by other
- names,[32] are disintegrated after death with their constituent
- elements, _memory_ along with its brain, this vanished memory of
- a vanished personality, can neither remember nor record anything
- in the subsequent re-incarnation of the EGO. Re-incarnation means
- that this Ego will be furnished with a _new_ body, a _new_ brain,
- and a _new_ memory. Therefore it would be as absurd to expect this
- _memory_ to remember that which it has never recorded as it would
- be idle to examine under a microscope a shirt never worn by a
- murderer, and seek on it for the stains of blood which are to be
- found only on the clothes he wore. It is not the clean shirt that
- we have to question, but the clothes worn during the perpetration
- of the crime; and if these are burnt and destroyed, how can you
- get at them?
-
- ENQ. Aye! how can you get at the certainty that the crime was ever
- committed at all, or that the “man in the clean shirt” ever lived
- before?
-
- THEO. Not by physical processes, most assuredly; nor by relying on the
- testimony of that which exists no longer. But there is such a
- thing as circumstantial evidence, since our wise laws accept it,
- more, perhaps, even than they should. To get convinced of the
- fact of re-incarnation and past lives, one must put oneself in
- _rapport_ with one’s real permanent Ego, not one’s evanescent
- memory.
-
- ENQ. But how can people believe in that which they _do not know_, nor
- have ever seen, far less put themselves in _rapport_ with it?
-
- THEO. If people, and the most learned, will believe in the Gravity,
- Ether, Force, and what not of Science, abstractions “and working
- hypotheses,” which they have neither seen, touched, smelt,
- heard, nor tasted—why should not other people believe, on the
- same principle, in one’s permanent Ego, a far more logical and
- important “working hypothesis” than any other?
-
- ENQ. What is, finally, this mysterious eternal principle? Can you
- explain its nature so as to make it comprehensible to all?
-
- THEO. The EGO which reincarnates, the _individual_ and
- immortal—not personal—“I”; the vehicle, in short, of the
- Atma-Buddhic MONAD, that which is rewarded in Devachan and
- punished on earth, and that, finally, to which the reflection only
- of the _Skandhas_, or attributes, of every incarnation attaches
- itself.[33]
-
- ENQ. What do you mean by _Skandhas_?
-
- THEO. Just what I said: “attributes,” among which is _memory_, all of
- which perish like a flower, leaving behind them only a feeble
- perfume. Here is another paragraph from H. S. Olcott’s “Buddhist
- Catechism”[34] which bears directly upon the subject. It deals
- with the question as follows:—“The aged man remembers the
- incidents of his youth, despite his being physically and mentally
- changed. Why, then, is not the recollection of past lives brought
- over by us from our last birth into the present birth? Because
- memory is included within the Skandhas, and the Skandhas having
- changed with the new existence, a memory, the record of that
- particular existence, develops. Yet the record or reflection
- of all the past lives must survive, for when Prince Siddhartha
- became Buddha, the full sequence of His previous births were seen
- by Him ... and any one who attains to the state of _Jhana_ can
- thus retrospectively trace the line of his lives.” This proves to
- you that while the undying qualities of the personality—such as
- love, goodness, charity, etc.—attach themselves to the immortal
- Ego, photographing on it, so to speak, a permanent image of the
- divine aspect of the man who was, his material Skandhas (those
- which generate the most marked Karmic effects) are as evanescent
- as a flash of lightning, and cannot impress the new brain of the
- new personality; yet their failing to do so impairs in no way the
- identity of the reincarnating Ego.
-
- ENQ. Do you mean to infer that that which survives is only the
- Soul-memory, as you call it, that Soul or Ego being one and the
- same, while nothing of the personality remains?
-
- THEO. Not quite; something of each personality, unless the latter was
- an _absolute_ materialist with not even a chink in his nature for
- a spiritual ray to pass through, must survive, as it leaves its
- eternal impress on the incarnating permanent Self or Spiritual
- Ego.[35] (See On _post mortem_ and _post natal_ Consciousness.)
- The personality with its Skandhas is ever changing with every new
- birth. It is, as said before, only the part played by the actor
- (the true Ego) for one night. This is why we preserve no memory on
- the physical plane of our past lives, though the _real_ “Ego” has
- lived them over and knows them all.
-
- ENQ. Then how does it happen that the real or Spiritual man does not
- impress his new personal “I” with this knowledge?
-
- THEO. How is it that the servant-girls in a poor farm-house could speak
- Hebrew and play the violin in their trance or somnambulic state,
- and knew neither when in their normal condition? Because, as every
- genuine psychologist of the old, not your modern, school, will
- tell you, the Spiritual Ego can act only when the personal Ego is
- paralysed. The Spiritual “I” in man is omniscient and has every
- knowledge innate in it; while the personal self is the creature of
- its environment and the slave of the physical memory. Could the
- former manifest itself uninterruptedly, and without impediment,
- there would be no longer men on earth, but we should all be gods.
-
- ENQ. Still there ought to be exceptions, and some ought to remember.
-
- THEO. And so there are. But who believes in their report? Such
- sensitives are generally regarded as hallucinated hysteriacs, as
- crack-brained enthusiasts, or humbugs, by modern materialism.
- Let them read, however, works on this subject, pre-eminently
- “Re-incarnation, a Study of Forgotten Truth” by E. D. Walker,
- F.T.S., and see in it the mass of proofs which the able author
- brings to bear on this vexed question. One speaks to people of
- soul, and some ask “What is Soul?” “Have you ever proved its
- existence?” Of course it is useless to argue with those who are
- materialists. But even to them I would put the question: “Can you
- remember what you were or did when a baby? Have you preserved
- the smallest recollection of your life, thoughts, or deeds, or
- that you lived at all during the first eighteen months or two
- years of your existence? Then why not deny that you have ever
- lived as a babe, on the same principle?” When to all this we add
- that the reincarnating Ego, or _individuality_, retains during
- the Devachanic period merely the essence of the experience of its
- past earth-life or personality, the whole physical experience
- involving into a state of _in potentia_, or being, so to speak,
- translated into spiritual formulæ; when we remember further that
- the term between two rebirths is said to extend from ten to
- fifteen centuries, during which time the physical consciousness is
- totally and absolutely inactive, having no organs to act through
- and therefore _no existence_, the reason for the absence of all
- remembrance in the purely physical memory is apparent.
-
- ENQ. You just said that the SPIRITUAL EGO was omniscient. Where, then,
- is that vaunted omniscience during his Devachanic life, as you call
- it?
-
- THEO. During that time it is latent and potential, because first of
- all, the Spiritual Ego (the compound of Buddhi-Manas) is _not_ the
- Higher SELF, which being one with the Universal Soul or Mind is
- alone omniscient; and, secondly, because Devachan is the idealized
- continuation of the terrestrial life just left behind, a period
- of retributive adjustment, and a reward for unmerited wrongs
- and sufferings undergone in that special life. It is omniscient
- only _potentially_ in Devachan, and _de facto_ exclusively in
- Nirvana, when the Ego is merged in the Universal Mind-Soul. Yet
- it re-becomes _quasi_ omniscient during those hours on earth when
- certain abnormal conditions and physiological changes in the body
- make the _Ego_ free from the trammels of matter. Thus the examples
- cited above of somnambulists, a poor servant speaking Hebrew, and
- another playing the violin, give you an illustration of the case
- in point. This does not mean that the explanations of these two
- facts offered us by medical science have no truth in them, for
- one girl had, years before, heard her master, a clergyman, read
- Hebrew works aloud, and the other had heard an artist playing a
- violin at their farm. But neither could have done so as perfectly
- as they did had they not been ensouled by THAT which, owing to the
- sameness of its nature with the Universal Mind, is omniscient.
- Here the higher principle acted on the Skandhas and moved them;
- in the other, the personality being paralysed, the individuality
- manifested itself. Pray do not confuse the two.
-
-
-ON INDIVIDUALITY AND PERSONALITY.[36]
-
- ENQ. But what is the difference between the two? I confess that I am
- still in the dark. Indeed it is just that difference, then, that
- you cannot impress too much on our minds.
-
- THEO. I try to; but alas, it is harder with some than to make them feel
- a reverence for childish impossibilities, only because they
- are _orthodox_, and because orthodoxy is respectable. To
- understand the idea well, you have to first study the dual sets
- of “principles”; the _spiritual_, or those which belong to the
- imperishable Ego; and the _material_, or those principles which
- make up the ever-changing bodies or the series of personalities of
- that Ego. Let us fix permanent names to these, and say that:—
-
- I. Atma, the “Higher Self,” is neither your Spirit nor mine, but
- like sunlight shines on all. It is the universally diffused
- “_divine principle_,” and is inseparable from its one and
- absolute _Meta_-Spirit, as the sunbeam is inseparable from
- sunlight.
-
- II. _Buddhi_ (the spiritual soul) is only its vehicle. Neither each
- separately, nor the two collectively, are of any more use
- to the body of man, then sunlight and its beams are for a
- mass of granite buried in the earth, _unless the divine Duad
- is assimilated by, and reflected in_, some _consciousness_.
- Neither Atma nor Buddhi are ever reached by Karma, because
- the former is the highest aspect of Karma, _its working
- agent_ of ITSELF in one aspect, and the other is unconscious
- _on this plane_. This consciousness or mind is,
-
- III. _Manas_,[37] the derivation or product in a reflected form of
- _Ahamkara_, “the conception of I,” or EGO-SHIP. It is,
- therefore, when inseparably united to the first two, called
- the SPIRITUAL EGO, and _Taijasi_ (the radiant).
-
- This is the real Individuality, or the divine man. It is this Ego
- which—having originally incarnated in the _senseless_ human form
- animated by, but unconscious (since it had no consciousness) of,
- the presence in itself of the dual monad—made of that human-like
- form _a real man_. It is that Ego, that “Causal Body,” which
- overshadows every personality Karma forces it to incarnate into;
- and this Ego which is held responsible for all the sins committed
- through, and in, every new body or personality—the evanescent
- masks which hide the true Individual through the long series of
- rebirths.
-
- ENQ. But is this just? Why should this EGO receive punishment as the
- result of deeds which it has forgotten?
-
- THEO. It has not forgotten them; it knows and remembers its misdeeds as
- well as you remember what you have done yesterday. Is it because
- the memory of that bundle of physical compounds called “body” does
- not recollect what its predecessor (the personality _that was_)
- did, that you imagine that the real Ego has forgotten them? As
- well say it is unjust that the new boots on the feet of a boy, who
- is flogged for stealing apples, should be punished for that which
- they know nothing of.
-
- ENQ. But are there no modes of communication between the Spiritual and
- human consciousness or memory?
-
- THEO. Of course there are; but they have never been recognised by your
- scientific modern psychologists. To what do you attribute
- intuition, the “voice of the conscience,” premonitions,
- vague undefined reminiscences, etc., etc., if not to such
- communications? Would that the majority of educated men, at least,
- had the fine spiritual perceptions of Coleridge, who shows how
- intuitional he is in some of his comments. Hear what he says with
- respect to the probability that “all thoughts are in themselves
- imperishable.” “If the intelligent faculty (sudden ‘revivals’
- of memory) should be rendered more comprehensive, it would
- require only a different and appropriate organization, the _body
- celestial_ instead of the _body terrestrial_, to bring before
- every human soul _the collective experience of its whole past
- existence_ (_existences_, rather).” And this _body celestial_ is
- our Manasic EGO.
-
-
-ON THE REWARD AND PUNISHMENT OF THE EGO.
-
- ENQ. I have heard you say that the _Ego_, whatever the life of the
- person he incarnated in may have been on Earth, is never visited
- with _post-mortem_ punishment.
-
- THEO. Never, save in very exceptional and rare cases of which we will
- not speak here, as the nature of the “punishment” in no way
- approaches any of your theological conceptions of damnation.
-
- ENQ. But if it is punished in this life for the misdeeds committed in a
- previous one, then it is this Ego that ought to be rewarded also,
- whether here, or when disincarnated.
-
- THEO. And so it is. If we do not admit of any punishment outside of
- this earth, it is because the only state the Spiritual Self knows
- of, hereafter, is that of unalloyed bliss.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean?
-
- THEO. Simply this: _crimes and sins committed on a plane of objectivity
- and in a world of matter, cannot receive punishment in a world
- of pure subjectivity_. We believe in no hell or paradise as
- localities; in no objective hell-fires and worms that never die,
- nor in any Jerusalems with streets paved with sapphires and
- diamonds. What we believe in is a _post-mortem state_ or mental
- condition, such as we are in during a vivid dream. We believe
- in an immutable law of absolute Love, Justice, and Mercy. And
- believing in it, we say: “Whatever the sin and dire results of the
- original Karmic transgression of the now incarnated Egos[38] no
- man (or the outer material and periodical form of the Spiritual
- Entity) can be held, with any degree of justice, responsible for
- the consequences of his birth. He does not ask to be born, nor can
- he choose the parents that will give him life. In every respect he
- is a victim to his environment, the child of circumstances over
- which he has no control; and if each of his transgressions were
- impartially investigated, there would be found nine out of every
- ten cases when he was the one sinned against, rather than the
- sinner. Life is at best a heartless play, a stormy sea to cross,
- and a heavy burden often too difficult to bear. The greatest
- philosophers have tried in vain to fathom and find out its _raison
- d’être_, and have all failed except those who had the key to it,
- namely, the Eastern sages. Life is, as Shakespeare describes it:—
-
- ... but a walking shadow—a poor player, That struts and frets his
- hour upon the stage, And then is heard no more. It is a tale Told
- by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing....”
-
- Nothing in its separate parts, yet of the greatest importance in
- its collectivity or series of lives. At any rate, almost every
- individual life is, in its full development, a sorrow. And are we
- to believe that poor, helpless men, after being tossed about like
- a piece of rotten timber on the angry billows of life, is, if he
- proves too weak to resist them, to be punished by a _sempiternity_
- of damnation, or even a temporary punishment? Never! Whether a
- great or an average sinner, good or bad, guilty or innocent, once
- delivered of the burden of physical life, the tired and worn-out
- _Manu_ (“thinking Ego”) has won the right to a period of absolute
- rest and bliss. The same unerringly wise and just rather than
- merciful Law, which inflicts upon the incarnated Ego the Karmic
- punishment for every sin committed during the preceding life on
- Earth, provided for the now disembodied Entity a long lease of
- mental rest, _i.e._, the entire oblivion of every sad event, aye,
- to the smallest painful thought, that took place in its last life
- as a personality, leaving in the soul-memory but the reminiscence
- of that which was bliss, or led to happiness. Plotinus, who said
- that our body was the true river of Lethe, for “souls plunged into
- it forget all,” meant more than he said. For, as our terrestrial
- body is like Lethe, so is our _celestial body_ in Devachan, and
- much more.
-
- ENQ. Then am I to understand that the murderer, the transgressor of law
- divine and human in every shape, is allowed to go unpunished?
-
- THEO. Who ever said that? Our philosophy has a doctrine of punishment
- as stern as that of the most rigid Calvinist, only far more
- philosophical and consistent with absolute justice. No deed,
- not even a sinful thought, will go unpunished; the latter more
- severely even than the former, as a thought is far more potential
- in creating evil results than even a deed.[39] We believe in an
- unerring law of Retribution, called KARMA, which asserts itself in
- a natural concatenation of causes and their unavoidable results.
-
- ENQ. And how, or where, does it act?
-
- THEO. Every labourer is worthy of his hire, saith Wisdom in the Gospel;
- every action, good or bad, is a prolific parent, saith the Wisdom
- of the Ages. Put the two together, and you will find the “why.”
- After allowing the Soul, escaped from the pangs of personal life,
- a sufficient, aye, a hundredfold compensation, Karma, with its
- army of Skandhas, waits at the threshold of Devachan, whence the
- _Ego_ re-emerges to assume a new incarnation. It is at this moment
- that the future destiny of the now-rested Ego trembles in the
- scales of just Retribution, as _it_ now falls once again under the
- sway of active Karmic law. It is in this re-birth which is ready
- for _it_, a re-birth selected and prepared by this mysterious,
- inexorable, but in the equity and wisdom of its decrees infallible
- LAW, that the sins of the previous life of the Ego are punished.
- Only it is into no imaginary Hell, with theatrical flames and
- ridiculous tailed and horned devils, that the Ego is cast, but
- verily on to this earth, the plane and region of his sins, where
- he will have to atone for every bad thought and deed. As he
- has sown, so will he reap. Re-incarnation will gather around
- him all those other Egos who have suffered, whether directly
- or indirectly, at the hands, or even through the unconscious
- instrumentality, of the past _personality_. They will be thrown
- by Nemesis in the way of the _new_ man, concealing the _old_, the
- eternal EGO, and ...
-
- ENQ. But where is the equity you speak of, since these _new_
- “personalities” are not aware of having sinned or been sinned
- against?
-
- THEO. Has the coat torn to shreds from the back of the man who stole
- it, by another man who was robbed of it and recognises his
- property, to be regarded as fairly dealt with? The new
- “personality” is no better than a fresh suit of clothes with its
- specific characteristics, colour, form and qualities; but the
- _real_ man who wears it is the same culprit as of old. It is the
- _individuality_ who suffers through his “personality.” And it is
- this, and this alone, that can account for the terrible, still
- only _apparent_, injustice in the distribution of lots in life
- to man. When your modern philosophers will have succeeded in
- showing to us a good reason, why so many apparently innocent and
- good men are born only to suffer during a whole lifetime; why so
- many are born poor unto starvation in the slums of great cities,
- abandoned by fate and men; why, while these are born in the
- gutter, others open their eyes to light in palaces; while a noble
- birth and fortune seem often given to the worst of men and only
- rarely to the worthy; while there are beggars whose _inner_ selves
- are peers to the highest and noblest of men; when this, and much
- more, is satisfactorily explained by either your philosophers or
- theologians, then only, but not till then, you will have the right
- to reject the theory of re-incarnation. The highest and grandest
- of poets have dimly perceived this truth of truths. Shelley
- believed in it, Shakespeare must have thought of it when writing
- on the worthlessness of Birth. Remember his words:
-
- “Why should my birth keep down my mounting spirit?
- Are not all creatures subject unto time?
- There’s legions now of beggars on the earth,
- That their original did spring from Kings,
- And many monarchs now, whose fathers were
- The riff-raff of their age....”
-
- Alter the word “fathers” into “Egos”—and you will have the truth.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[31] “The phantasy,” says Olympiodorus (in Platonis Phæd.) “is an
-impediment to our intellectual conceptions; and hence, when we are
-agitated by the inspiring influence of the Divinity, if the phantasy
-intervenes, the enthusiastic energy ceases: for enthusiasm and the
-ecstasy are contrary to each other. Should it be asked whether the soul
-is able to energise without the phantasy, we reply, that its perception
-of universals proves that it is able. It has perceptions, therefore,
-independent of the phantasy; at the same time, however, the phantasy
-attends in its energies, just as a storm pursues him who sails on the
-sea.”
-
-[32] Namely, the body, life, passional and animal instincts, and the
-astral eidolon of every man (whether perceived in thought or our
-mind’s eye, or objectively and separate from the physical body), which
-principles we call _Sthula sarira_, _Pranâ_, _Kama rupa_, and _Linga
-sarira_ (_vide supra_).
-
-[33] There are five _Skandhas_ or attributes in the Buddhist teachings:
-“_Rupa_ (form or body), material qualities; _Vedana_, sensation;
-_Sanna_, abstract ideas; _Samkhara_, tendencies of mind; _Vinnana_,
-mental powers. Of these we are formed; by them we are conscious of
-existence; and through them communicate with the world about us.”
-
-[34] By H. S. Olcott, President and Founder of the Theosophical
-Society. The accuracy of the teaching is sanctioned by the Rev. H.
-Sumangala, High Priest of the Sripada and Galle, and Principal of the
-_Widyodaya Parivena_ (College) at Colombo, as being in agreement with
-the Canon of the Southern Buddhist Church.
-
-[35] Or the _Spiritual_, in contradistinction to the personal _Self_.
-The student must not confuse this Spiritual Ego with the “HIGHER SELF”
-which is _Atma_, the God within us, and inseparable from the Universal
-Spirit.
-
-[36] Even in his _Buddhist Cathechism_, Col. Olcott, forced to it by
-the logic of Esoteric philosophy, found himself obliged to correct
-the mistakes of previous Orientalists who made no such distinction,
-and gives the reader his reason for it. Thus he says: “The successive
-appearances upon the earth, or ‘descents into generation,’ of the
-_tanhaically_ coherent parts (Skandhas) of a certain being are a
-succession of personalities. In each birth the PERSONALITY differs
-from that of a previous or next succeeding birth. Karma, the DEUS
-EX MACHINA, masks (or shall we say reflects?) itself now in the
-personality of a sage, again as an artisan, and so on throughout the
-string of births. But though personalities ever shift, the one line of
-life along which they are strung, like beads, runs unbroken; it is ever
-that _particular line_, never any other. It is therefore individual, an
-individual vital undulation, which began in Nirvana, or the subjective
-side of nature, as the light or heat undulation through æther began
-at its dynamic source; is careering through the objective side of
-nature under the impulse of Karma and the creative direction of _Tanha_
-(the unsatisfied desire for existence); and leads through many cyclic
-changes back to Nirvana. Mr. Rhys-Davids calls that which passes from
-personality to personality along the individual chain ‘character,’ or
-‘doing.’ Since ‘character’ is not a mere metaphysical abstraction, but
-the sum of one’s mental qualities and moral propensities, would it not
-help to dispel what Mr. Rhys-Davids calls ‘the desperate expedient of
-a mystery’ (_Buddhism_, p. 101) if we regarded the life-undulation as
-individuality, and each of its series of natal manifestations as a
-separate personality? The perfect individual, Buddhistically speaking,
-is a Buddha, I should say; for Buddha is but the rare flower of
-humanity, without the least supernatural admixture. And as countless
-generations (‘four _asankheyyas_ and a hundred thousand cycles,’
-Fausboll and Rhys-Davids’ BUDDHIST BIRTH STORIES, p. 13) are required
-to develop a _man_ into a Buddha, and _the iron will to become one_
-runs throughout all the successive births, what shall we call that
-which thus wills and perseveres? Character? One’s individuality: an
-individuality but partly manifested in any one birth, but built up of
-fragments from all the births?” (_Bud. Cat., Appendix_ A. 137.)
-
-[37] MAHAT or the “Universal Mind” is the source of Manas. The latter
-is Mahat, _i.e._, mind, in man. Manas is also called _Kshetrajna_,
-“embodied Spirit,” because it is, according to our philosophy, the
-_Manasa-putras_, or “Sons of the Universal Mind,” who _created_, or
-rather produced, the _thinking_ man, “_manu_,” by incarnating in the
-_third Race_ mankind in our Round. It is Manas, therefore, which is the
-real incarnating and permanent _Spiritual Ego_, the INDIVIDUALITY, and
-our various and numberless personalities only its external masks.
-
-[38] It is on this transgression that the cruel and illogical dogma of
-the Fallen Angels has been built. It is explained in Vol. II. of the
-_Secret Doctrine_. All our “Egos” are thinking and rational entities
-(_Manasa-putras_) who had lived, whether under human or other forms,
-in the precedent _life-cycle_ (Manvantara), and whose Karma it was to
-incarnate in the _man_ of this one. It was taught in the MYSTERIES
-that, having delayed to comply with this law (or having “refused to
-create” as Hinduism says of the _Kumaras_ and Christian legend of the
-Archangel Michael), _i.e._, having failed to incarnate in due time, the
-bodies predestined for them got defiled (Vide Stanzas VIII. and IX.
-in the “Slokas of Dzyan,” Vol. II. Secret Doctrine, pp. 19 and 20),
-hence the original sin of the senseless forms and the punishment of
-the _Egos_. That which is meant by the rebellious angels being hurled
-down into Hell is simply explained by these pure Spirits or Egos being
-imprisoned in bodies of unclean matter, flesh.
-
-[39] “Verily, I say unto you, that whosoever looketh at a woman to lust
-after her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart.”
-(Matt. v., 28.)
-
-
-
-
-IX. ON THE KAMA-LOKA AND DEVACHAN.
-
-
-ON THE FATE OF THE LOWER “PRINCIPLES.”
-
- ENQ. You spoke of _Kama-loka_, what is it?
-
- THEO. When the man dies, his lower three principles leave him for ever;
- _i.e._, body, life, and the vehicle of the latter, the astral
- body or the double of the _living_ man. And then, his four
- principles—the central or middle principle, the animal soul or
- _Kama-rupa_, with what it has assimilated from the lower Manas,
- and the higher triad find themselves in _Kama-loka_. The latter
- is an astral locality, the _limbus_ of scholastic theology, the
- _Hades_ of the ancients, and, strictly speaking, a _locality_
- only in a relative sense. It has neither a definite area nor
- boundary, but exists _within_ subjective space; _i.e._, is beyond
- our sensuous perceptions. Still it exists, and it is there
- that the astral _eidolons_ of all the beings that have lived,
- animals included, await their _second death_. For the animals
- it comes with the disintegration and the entire fading out of
- their _astral_ particles to the last. For the human _eidolon_ it
- begins when the Atma-Buddhi-Manasic triad is said to “separate”
- itself from its lower principles, or the reflection of the
- _ex-personality_, by falling into the Devachanic state.
-
- ENQ. And what happens after this?
-
- THEO. Then the _Kama-rupic_ phantom, remaining bereft of its informing
- thinking principle, the higher _Manas_, and the lower aspect of
- the latter, the animal intelligence, no longer receiving light
- from the higher mind, and no longer having a physical brain to
- work through, collapses.
-
- ENQ. In what way?
-
- THEO. Well, 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.”
-
- ENQ. And is it _this_ nonentity which we find materializing in Séance
- rooms with Mediums?
-
- THEO. It is this nonentity. 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 _jelly-fish_,
- 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.
- But this would lead us too far, and upon other people’s grounds,
- whereon I have no desire to trespass. Let us keep to the subject
- of re-incarnation.
-
- ENQ. What of the latter? How long does the incarnating _Ego_ remain in
- the Devachanic state?
-
- THEO. This, we are taught, depends on the degree of spirituality and
- the merit or demerit of the last incarnation. The average time is
- from ten to fifteen centuries, as I already told you.
-
- ENQ. But why could not this Ego manifest and communicate with mortals
- as Spiritualists will have it? What is there to prevent a mother
- from communicating with the children she left on earth, a husband
- with his wife, and so on? It is a most consoling belief, I must
- confess; nor do I wonder that those who believe in it are so
- averse to give it up.
-
- THEO. Nor are they forced to, unless they happen to prefer truth to
- fiction, however “consoling.” Uncongenial our doctrines may be to
- Spiritualists; yet, nothing of what we believe in and teach is
- half as selfish and cruel as what they preach.
-
- ENQ. I do not understand you. What is selfish?
-
- THEO. Their doctrine of the return of Spirits, the real “personalities”
- as they say; and I will tell you why. If _Devachan_—call it
- “paradise” if you like, a “place of bliss and of supreme
- felicity,” if it is anything—is such a place (or say _state_),
- logic tells us that no sorrow or even a shade of pain can be
- experienced therein. “God shall wipe away all the tears from the
- eyes” of those in paradise, we read in the book of many promises.
- And if the “Spirits of the dead” are enabled to return and see all
- that is going on on earth, and especially _in their homes_, what
- kind of bliss can be in store for them?
-
-
-WHY THEOSOPHISTS DO NOT BELIEVE IN THE RETURN OF PURE “SPIRITS.”
-
- ENQ. What do you mean? Why should this interfere with their bliss?
-
- THEO. Simply this; and here is an instance. A mother dies, leaving
- behind her little helpless children—orphans whom she
- adores—perhaps a beloved husband also. We say that her “_Spirit_”
- or _Ego_—that individuality which is now all impregnated, for the
- entire Devachanic period, with the noblest feelings held by its
- late _personality_, _i.e._, love for her children, pity for those
- who suffer, and so on—we say that it is now entirely separated
- from the “vale of tears,” that its future bliss consists in that
- blessed ignorance of all the woes it left behind. Spiritualists
- say, on the contrary, that it is as vividly aware of them, _and
- more so than before_, for “Spirits see more than mortals in the
- flesh do.” We say that the bliss of the _Devachanee_ consists in
- its complete conviction that it has never left the earth, and that
- there is no such thing as death at all; that the _post-mortem_
- spiritual _consciousness_ of the mother will represent to her that
- she lives surrounded by her children and all those whom she loved;
- that no gap, no link, will be missing to make her disembodied
- state the most perfect and absolute happiness. The Spiritualists
- deny this point blank. According to their doctrine, unfortunate
- man is not liberated even by death from the sorrows of this life.
- Not a drop from the life-cup of pain and suffering will miss his
- lips; and _nolens volens_, since he sees everything now, shall he
- drink it to the bitter dregs. Thus, the loving wife, who during
- her lifetime was ready to save her husband sorrow at the price of
- her heart’s blood, is now doomed to see, in utter helplessness,
- his despair, and to register every hot tear he sheds for her
- loss. Worse than that, she may see the tears dry too soon, and
- another beloved face shine on him, the father of her children;
- find another woman replacing her in his affections; doomed to hear
- her orphans giving the holy name of “mother” to one indifferent
- to them, and to see those little children neglected, if not
- ill-treated. According to this doctrine the “gentle wafting to
- immortal life” becomes without any transition the way into a new
- path of mental suffering! And yet, the columns of the “Banner of
- Light,” the veteran journal of the American Spiritualists, are
- filled with messages from the dead, the “dear departed ones,”
- who all write to say how very _happy_ they are! Is such a state
- of knowledge consistent with bliss? Then “bliss” stands in such
- a case for the greatest curse, and orthodox damnation must be a
- relief in comparison to it!
-
- ENQ. But how does your theory avoid this? How can you reconcile the
- theory of Soul’s omniscience with its blindness to that which is
- taking place on earth?
-
- THEO. Because such is the law of love and mercy. During every
- Devachanic period the Ego, omniscient as it is _per se_, clothes
- itself, so to say, with the _reflection_ of the “personality”
- that was. I have just told you that the _ideal_ efflorescence
- of all the abstract, therefore undying and eternal qualities
- or attributes, such as love and mercy, the love of the good,
- the true and the beautiful, that ever spoke in the heart of the
- living “personality,” clung after death to the Ego, and therefore
- followed it to Devachan. For the time being, then, the Ego becomes
- the ideal reflection of the human being it was when last on earth,
- and _that_ is not omniscient. Were it that, it would never be in
- the state we call Devachan at all.
-
- ENQ. What are your reasons for it?
-
- THEO. If you want an answer on the strict lines of our philosophy, then
- I will say that it is because everything is _illusion_ (_Maya_)
- outside of eternal truth, which has neither form, colour, nor
- limitation. He who has placed himself beyond the veil of maya—and
- such are the highest Adepts and Initiates—can have no Devachan.
- As to the ordinary mortal, his bliss in it is complete. It is
- an _absolute_ oblivion of all that gave it pain or sorrow in
- the past incarnation, and even oblivion of the fact that such
- things as pain or sorrow exist at all. 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 fulfilment of all
- its soul-yearnings. And thus it lives throughout long centuries
- an existence of _unalloyed_ happiness, which is the reward for
- its sufferings in earth-life. In short, it bathes in a sea of
- uninterrupted felicity spanned only by events of still greater
- felicity in degree.
-
- ENQ. But this is more than simple delusion, it is an existence of
- insane hallucinations!
-
- THEO. From your standpoint it may be, not so from that of philosophy.
- Besides which, is not our whole terrestrial life filled with such
- delusions? Have you never met men and women living for years in a
- fool’s paradise? And because you should happen to learn that the
- husband of a wife, whom she adores and believes herself as beloved
- by him, is untrue to her, would you go and break her heart and
- beautiful dream by rudely awakening her to the reality? I think
- not. I say it again, such oblivion and _hallucination_—if you call
- it so—are only a merciful law of nature and strict justice. At
- any rate, it is a far more fascinating prospect than the orthodox
- golden harp with a pair of wings. The assurance that “the soul
- that lives ascends frequently and runs familiarly through the
- streets of the heavenly Jerusalem, visiting the patriarchs and
- prophets, saluting the apostles, and admiring the army of martyrs”
- may seem of a more pious character to some. Nevertheless, it is
- a hallucination of a far more delusive character, since mothers
- love their children with an immortal love, we all know, while the
- personages mentioned in the “heavenly Jerusalem” are still of a
- rather doubtful nature. But I would, still, rather accept the “new
- Jerusalem,” with its streets paved like the show windows of a
- jeweller’s shop, than find consolation in the heartless doctrine
- of the Spiritualists. The idea alone that the _intellectual
- conscious souls_ of one’s father, mother, daughter or brother find
- their bliss in a “Summer land”—only a little more natural, but
- just as ridiculous as the “New Jerusalem” in its description—would
- be enough to make one lose every respect for one’s “departed
- ones.” To believe that a pure spirit can feel happy while doomed
- to witness the sins, mistakes, treachery, and, above all, the
- sufferings of those from whom it is severed by death and whom it
- loves best, without being able to help them, would be a maddening
- thought.
-
- ENQ. There is something in your argument. I confess to having never
- seen it in this light.
-
- THEO. Just so, and one must be selfish to the core and utterly devoid
- of the sense of retributive justice, to have ever imagined such a
- thing. We are with those whom we have lost in material form, and
- far, far nearer to them now, than when they were alive. And it is
- not only in the fancy of the _Devachanee_, as some may imagine,
- but in reality. For pure divine love is not merely the blossom
- of a human heart, but has its roots in eternity. Spiritual holy
- love is immortal, and Karma brings sooner or later all those who
- loved each other with such a spiritual affection to incarnate once
- more in the same family group. Again we say that love beyond the
- grave, illusion though you may call it, has a magic and divine
- potency which reacts on the living. A mother’s _Ego_ filled with
- love for the imaginary children it sees near itself, living a life
- of happiness, as real to _it_ as when on earth—that love will
- always be felt by the children in flesh. It will manifest in their
- dreams, and often in various events—in _providential_ protections
- and escapes, for love is a strong shield, and is not limited by
- space or time. As with this Devachanic “mother,” so with the rest
- of human relationships and attachments, save the purely selfish or
- material. Analogy will suggest to you the rest.
-
- ENQ. In no case, then, do you admit the possibility of the
- communication of the living with the _disembodied_ spirit?
-
- THEO. Yes, there is a case, and even two exceptions to the rule. The
- first exception is during the few days that follow immediately the
- death of a person and before the _Ego_ passes into the Devachanic
- state. Whether any living mortal, save a few exceptional
- cases—(when the intensity of the desire in the dying person to
- return for some purpose forced the higher consciousness _to
- remain awake_, and therefore it was really the _individuality_,
- the “Spirit” that communicated)—has derived much benefit from
- the return of the spirit into the _objective_ plane is another
- question. The spirit is dazed after death and falls very soon
- into what we call “_pre-devachanic_ unconsciousness.” The second
- exception is found in the _Nirmanakayas_.
-
- ENQ. What about them? And what does the name mean for you?
-
- THEO. It is the name given to those who, though they have won the right
- to Nirvana and cyclic rest—(_not_ “Devachan,” as the latter is
- an illusion of our consciousness, a happy dream, and as those
- who are fit for Nirvana must have lost entirely every desire or
- possibility of the world’s illusions)—have out of pity for mankind
- and those they left on earth renounced the Nirvanic state. Such
- an adept, or Saint, or whatever you may call him, believing it
- a selfish act to rest in bliss while mankind groans under the
- burden of misery produced by ignorance, renounces Nirvana, and
- determines to remain invisible _in spirit_ on this earth. They
- have no material body, as they have left it behind; but otherwise
- they remain with all their principles even _in astral life_ in our
- sphere. And such can and do communicate with a few elect ones,
- only surely not with _ordinary_ mediums.
-
- ENQ. I have put you the question about _Nirmanakayas_ because I read in
- some German and other works that it was the name given to the
- terrestrial appearances or bodies assumed by Buddhas in the
- Northern Buddhistic teachings.
-
- THEO. So they are, only the Orientalists have confused this terrestrial
- body by understanding it to be _objective_ and _physical_ instead
- of purely astral and subjective.
-
- ENQ. And what good can they do on earth?
-
- THEO. Not much, as regards individuals, as they have no right to
- interfere with Karma, and can only advise and inspire mortals for
- the general good. Yet they do more beneficent actions than you
- imagine.
-
- ENQ. To this Science would never subscribe, not even modern psychology.
- For them, no portion of intelligence can survive the physical
- brain. What would you answer them?
-
- THEO. I would not even go to the trouble of answering, but would simply
- say, in the words given to “M.A. Oxon,” “Intelligence is
- perpetuated after the body is dead. Though it is not a question
- of the brain only.... It is reasonable to propound the
- indestructibility of the human spirit from what we know” (_Spirit
- Identity_, p. 69).
-
- ENQ. But “M.A. Oxon” is a Spiritualist?
-
- THEO. Quite so, and the only _true_ Spiritualist I know of, though we
- may still disagree with him on many a minor question. Apart from
- this, no Spiritualist comes nearer to the occult truths than he
- does. Like any one of us he speaks incessantly “of the surface
- dangers that beset the ill-equipped, feather-headed muddler
- with the occult, who crosses the threshold without counting the
- cost.”[40] Our only disagreement rests in the question of “Spirit
- Identity.” Otherwise, I, for one, coincide almost entirely with
- him, and accept the three propositions he embodied in his address
- of July, 1884. It is this eminent Spiritualist, rather, who
- disagrees with us, not we with him.
-
- ENQ. What are these propositions?
-
- THEO.
-
- “1. That there is a life coincident with, and independent of the
- physical life of the body.”
-
- “2. That, as a necessary corollary, this life extends beyond the
- life of the body” (we say it extends throughout Devachan).
-
- “3. That there is communication between the denizens of that state
- of existence and those of the world in which we now live.”
-
- All depend, you see, on the minor and secondary aspects of these
- fundamental propositions. Everything depends on the views we
- take of Spirit and Soul, or _Individuality_ and _Personality_.
- Spiritualists confuse the two “into one”; we separate them, and
- say that, with the exceptions above enumerated, no _Spirit_ will
- revisit the earth, though the animal Soul may. But let us return
- once more to our direct subject, the Skandhas.
-
- ENQ. I begin to understand better now. It is the Spirit, so to say, of
- those Skandhas which are the most ennobling, which, attaching
- themselves to the incarnating Ego, survive, and are added to
- the stock of its angelic experiences. And it is the attributes
- connected with the material Skandhas, with selfish and personal
- motives, which, disappearing from the field of action between two
- incarnations, reappear at the subsequent incarnation as Karmic
- results to be atoned for; and therefore the Spirit will not leave
- Devachan. Is it so?
-
- THEO. Very nearly so. If you add to this that the law of retribution,
- or Karma, rewarding the highest and most spiritual in Devachan,
- never fails to reward them again on earth by giving them a further
- development, and furnishing the Ego with a body fitted for it,
- then you will be quite correct.
-
-
-A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE SKANDHAS.
-
- ENQ. What becomes of the other, the lower Skandhas of the personality,
- after the death of the body? Are they quite destroyed?
-
- THEO. They are and yet they are not—a fresh metaphysical and occult
- mystery for you. They are destroyed as the working stock in hand
- of the personality; they remain as _Karmic effects_, as germs,
- hanging in the atmosphere of the terrestrial plane, ready to come
- to life, as so many avenging fiends, to attach themselves to the
- new personality of the Ego when it reincarnates.
-
- ENQ. This really passes my comprehension, and is very difficult to
- understand.
-
- THEO. Not once that you have assimilated all the details. For then you
- will see that for logic, consistency, profound philosophy, divine
- mercy and equity, this doctrine of Re-incarnation has not its
- equal on earth. It is a belief in a perpetual progress for each
- incarnating Ego, or divine soul, in an evolution from the outward
- into the inward, from the material to the Spiritual, arriving at
- the end of each stage at absolute unity with the divine Principle.
- From strength to strength, from beauty and perfection of one plane
- to the greater beauty and perfection of another, with accessions
- of new glory, of fresh knowledge and power in each cycle, such is
- the destiny of every Ego, which thus becomes its own Saviour in
- each world and incarnation.
-
- ENQ. But Christianity teaches the same. It also preaches progression.
-
- THEO. Yes, only with the addition of something else. It tells us of the
- _impossibility_ of attaining Salvation without the aid of a
- miraculous Saviour, and therefore dooms to perdition all those who
- will not accept the dogma. This is just the difference between
- Christian theology and Theosophy. The former enforces belief in
- the Descent of the Spiritual Ego into the _Lower Self_ the latter
- inculcates the necessity of endeavouring to elevate oneself to the
- Christos, or Buddhi state.
-
- ENQ. By teaching the annihilation of consciousness in case of failure,
- however, don’t you think that it amounts to the annihilation of
- _Self_, in the opinion of the non-metaphysical?
-
- THEO. From the standpoint of those who believe in the resurrection of
- the body _literally_, and insist that every bone, every artery and
- atom of flesh will be raised bodily on the Judgment Day—of course
- it does. If you still insist that it is the perishable form and
- finite qualities that make up _immortal_ man, then we shall hardly
- understand each other. And if you do not understand that, by
- limiting the existence of every Ego to one life on earth, you make
- of Deity an ever-drunken Indra of the Puranic dead letter, a cruel
- Moloch, a god who makes an inextricable mess on Earth, and yet
- claims thanks for it, then the sooner we drop the conversation the
- better.
-
- ENQ. But let us return, now that the subject of the Skandhas is
- disposed of, to the question of the consciousness which survives
- death. This is the point which interests most people. Do we
- possess more knowledge in Devachan than we do in Earth life?
-
- THEO. In one sense, we can acquire more knowledge; that is, we can
- develop further any faculty which we loved and strove after during
- life, provided it is concerned with abstract and ideal things,
- such as music, painting, poetry, etc., since Devachan is merely an
- idealized and subjective continuation of earth-life.
-
- ENQ. But if in Devachan the Spirit is free from matter, why should it
- not possess all knowledge?
-
- THEO. Because, as I told you, the Ego is, so to say, wedded to the
- memory of its last incarnation. Thus, if you think over what I
- have said, and string all the facts together, you will realize
- that the Devachanic state is not one of omniscience, but a
- transcendental continuation of the personal life just terminated.
- It is the rest of the soul from the toils of life.
-
- ENQ. But the scientific materialists assert that after the death of man
- nothing remains; that the human body simply disintegrates into
- its component elements; and that what we call soul is merely a
- temporary self-consciousness produced as a bye-product of organic
- action, which will evaporate like steam. Is not theirs a strange
- state of mind?
-
- THEO. Not strange at all, that I see. If they say that
- self-consciousness ceases with the body, then in their case they
- simply utter an unconscious prophecy, for once they are firmly
- convinced of what they assert, no conscious after-life is possible
- for them. For there _are_ exceptions to every rule.
-
-
-ON POST-MORTEM AND POST-NATAL CONSCIOUSNESS.[41]
-
- ENQ. But if human self-consciousness survives death as a rule, why
- should there be exceptions?
-
- THEO. In the fundamental principles of the spiritual world no exception
- is possible. But there are rules for those who see, and rules for
- those who prefer to remain blind.
-
- ENQ. Quite so, I understand. This is but an aberration of the blind
- man, who denies the existence of the sun because he does not see
- it. But after death his spiritual eyes will certainly compel him
- to see. Is this what you mean?
-
- THEO. He will not be compelled, nor will he see anything. Having
- persistently denied during life the continuance of existence after
- death, he will be unable to see it, because his spiritual capacity
- having been stunted in life, it cannot develop after death, and
- he will remain blind. By insisting that he _must_ see it, you
- evidently mean one thing and I another. You speak of the spirit
- from the spirit, or the flame from the flame—of Atma, in short—and
- you confuse it with the human soul—Manas.... You do not understand
- me; let me try to make it clear. The whole gist of your question
- is to know whether, in the case of a downright materialist, the
- complete loss of self-consciousness and self-perception after
- death is possible? Isn’t it so? I answer, It is possible. Because,
- believing firmly in our Esoteric Doctrine, which refers to the
- _post-mortem_ period, or the interval between two lives or births
- as merely a transitory state, I say, whether that interval between
- two acts of the illusionary drama of life lasts one year or a
- million, that _post-mortem_ state may, without any breach of the
- fundamental law, prove to be just the same state as that of a man
- who is in a dead faint.
-
- ENQ. But since you have just said that the fundamental laws of the
- after death state admit of no exceptions, how can this be?
-
- THEO. Nor do I say that it does admit of an exception. But the
- spiritual law of continuity applies only to things which are truly
- real. To one who has read and understood Mundakya Upanishad and
- Vedanta-Sara all this becomes very clear. I will say more: it is
- sufficient to understand what we mean by Buddhi and the duality
- of Manas to gain a clear perception why the materialist may fail
- to have a self-conscious survival after death. Since Manas, in
- its lower aspect, is the seat of the terrestrial mind, it can,
- therefore, give only that perception of the Universe which is
- based on the evidence of that mind; it cannot give spiritual
- vision. It is said in the Eastern school, that between Buddhi and
- Manas (the _Ego_), or Iswara and Pragna[42] there is in reality
- no more difference than _between a forest and its trees, a lake
- and its waters_, as the Mundakya teaches. One or hundreds of trees
- dead from loss of vitality, or uprooted, are yet incapable of
- preventing the forest from being still a forest.
-
- ENQ. But, as I understand it, Buddhi represents in this simile the
- forest, and Manas-taijasi[43] the trees. And if Buddhi is
- immortal, how can that which is similar to it, _i.e._,
- Manas-taijasi, entirely lose its consciousness till the day of its
- new incarnation? I cannot understand it.
-
- THEO. You cannot, because you will mix up an abstract representation of
- the whole with its casual changes of form. Remember that if it
- can be said of Buddhi-Manas that it is unconditionally immortal,
- the same cannot be said of the lower Manas, still less of
- Taijasi, which is merely an attribute. Neither of these, neither
- Manas nor Taijasi, can exist apart from Buddhi, the divine
- soul, because the first (_Manas_) is, in its lower aspect, a
- qualificative attribute of the terrestrial personality, and the
- second (_Taijasi_) is identical with the first, because it is the
- same Manas only with the light of Buddhi reflected on it. In its
- turn, Buddhi would remain only an impersonal spirit without this
- element which it borrows from the human soul, which conditions
- and makes of it, in this illusive Universe, _as it were something
- separate_ from the universal soul for the whole period of the
- cycle of incarnation. Say rather that _Buddhi-Manas_ can neither
- die nor lose its compound self-consciousness in Eternity, nor the
- recollection of its previous incarnations in which the two—_i.e_,
- the spiritual and the human soul—had been closely linked together.
- But it is not so in the case of a materialist, whose human soul
- not only receives nothing from the divine soul, but even refuses
- to recognise its existence. You can hardly apply this axiom to the
- attributes and qualifications of the human soul, for it would be
- like saying that because your divine soul is immortal, therefore
- the bloom on your cheek must also be immortal; whereas this bloom,
- like Taijasi, is simply a transitory phenomenon.
-
- ENQ. Do I understand you to say that we must not mix in our minds the
- noumenon with the phenomenon, the cause with its effect?
-
- THEO. I do say so, and repeat that, limited to Manas or the human soul
- alone, the radiance of Taijasi itself becomes a mere question
- of time; because both immortality and consciousness after death
- become, for the terrestrial personality of man, simply conditioned
- attributes, as they depend entirely on conditions and beliefs
- created by the human soul itself during the life of its body.
- Karma acts incessantly; we reap _in our after-life_ only the fruit
- of that which we have ourselves sown in this.
-
- ENQ. But if my Ego can, after the destruction of my body, become
- plunged in a state of entire unconsciousness, then where can be
- the punishment for the sins of my past life?
-
- THEO. Our philosophy teaches that Karmic punishment reaches Ego only in
- its next incarnation. After death it receives only the reward for
- the unmerited sufferings endured during its past incarnation.[44]
- The whole punishment after death, even for the materialist,
- consists, therefore, in the absence of any reward, and the utter
- loss of the consciousness of one’s bliss and rest. Karma is the
- child of the terrestrial Ego, the fruit of the actions of the tree
- which is the objective personality visible to all, as much as
- the fruit of all the thoughts and even motives of the spiritual
- “I”; but Karma is also the tender mother, who heals the wounds
- inflicted by her during the preceding life, before she will begin
- to torture this Ego by inflicting upon him new ones. If it may
- be said that there is not a mental or physical suffering in the
- life of a mortal which is not the direct fruit and consequence of
- some sin in a preceding existence; on the other hand, since he
- does not preserve the slightest recollection of it in his actual
- life, and feels himself not deserving of such punishment, and
- therefore thinks he suffers for no guilt of his own, this alone is
- sufficient to entitle the human soul to the fullest consolation,
- rest, and bliss in his _post-mortem_ existence. Death comes to
- our spiritual selves ever as a deliverer and friend. For the
- materialist, who, notwithstanding his materialism, was not a bad
- man, the interval between the two lives will be like the unbroken
- and placid sleep of a child, either entirely dreamless, or filled
- with pictures of which he will have no definite perception; while
- for the average mortal it will be a dream as vivid as life, and
- full of realistic bliss and visions.
-
- ENQ. Then the personal man must always go on suffering _blindly_ the
- Karmic penalties which the Ego has incurred?
-
- THEO. Not quite so. At the solemn moment of death every man, even when
- death is sudden, sees the whole of his past life marshalled before
- him, in its minutest details. For one short instant the _personal_
- becomes one with the _individual_ and all-knowing _Ego_. But this
- instant is enough to show to him the whole claim of causes which
- have been at work during his life. He sees and now understands
- himself as he is, unadorned by flattery or self-deception. He
- reads his life, remaining as a spectator looking down into the
- arena he is quitting; he feels and knows the justice of all the
- suffering that has overtaken him.
-
- ENQ. Does this happen to everyone?
-
- THEO. Without any exception. Very good and holy men see, we are taught,
- not only the life they are leaving, but even several preceding
- lives in which were produced the causes that made them what they
- were in the life just closing. They recognise the law of Karma in
- all its majesty and justice.
-
- ENQ. Is there anything corresponding to this before re-birth?
-
- THEO. There is. As the man at the moment of death has a retrospective
- insight into the life he has led, so, at the moment he is reborn
- on to earth, the _Ego_, awaking from the state of Devachan, has
- a prospective vision of the life which awaits him, and realizes
- all the causes that have led to it. He realizes them and sees
- futurity, because it is between Devachan and re-birth that the
- _Ego_ regains his full _manasic_ consciousness, and re-becomes for
- a short time the god he was, before, in compliance with Karmic
- law, he first descended into matter and incarnated in the first
- man of flesh. The “golden thread” sees all its “pearls” and misses
- not one of them.
-
-
-WHAT IS REALLY MEANT BY ANNIHILATION.
-
- ENQ. I have heard some Theosophists speak of a golden thread on which
- their lives were strung. What do they mean by this?
-
- THEO. In the Hindu Sacred books it is said that that which undergoes
- periodical incarnation is the _Sutratma_, which means literally
- the “Thread Soul.” It is a synonym of the reincarnating Ego—Manas
- conjoined with _Buddhi_—which absorbs the Manasic recollections
- of all our preceding lives. It is so called, because, like the
- pearls on a thread, so is the long series of human lives strung
- together on that one thread. In some Upanishad these recurrent
- rebirths are likened to the life of a mortal which oscillates
- periodically between sleep and waking.
-
- ENQ. This, I must say, does not seem very clear, and I will tell you
- why. For the man who awakes, another day commences, but that man
- is the same in soul and body as he was the day before; whereas
- at every incarnation a full change takes place not only of the
- external envelope, sex, and personality, but even of the mental
- and psychic capacities. The simile does not seem to me quite
- correct. The man who arises from sleep remembers quite clearly
- what he has done yesterday, the day before, and even months and
- years ago. But none of us has the slightest recollection of a
- preceding life or of any fact or event concerning it.... I may
- forget in the morning what I have dreamt during the night, still I
- know that I have slept and have the certainty that I lived during
- sleep; but what recollection can I have of my past incarnation
- until the moment of death? How do you reconcile this?
-
- THEO. Some people do recollect their past incarnations during life; but
- these are Buddhas and Initiates. This is what the Yogis call
- Samma-Sambuddha, or the knowledge of the whole series of one’s
- past incarnations.
-
- ENQ. But we ordinary mortals who have not reached Samma-Sambuddha, how
- are we to understand this simile?
-
- THEO. By studying it and trying to understand more correctly the
- characteristics and the three kinds of sleep. Sleep is a general
- and immutable law for man as for beast, but there are different
- kinds of sleep and still more different dreams and visions.
-
- ENQ. But this takes us to another subject. Let us return to the
- materialist who, while not denying dreams, which he could hardly
- do, yet denies immortality in general and the survival of his own
- individuality.
-
- THEO. And the materialist, without knowing it, is right. One who has no
- inner perception of, and faith in, the immortality of his soul,
- in that man the soul can never become Buddhi-taijasi, but will
- remain simply Manas, and for Manas alone there is no immortality
- possible. In order to live in the world to come a conscious
- life, one has to believe first of all in that life during the
- terrestrial existence. On these two aphorisms of the Secret
- Science all the philosophy about the _post-mortem_ consciousness
- and the immortality of the soul is built. The Ego receives always
- according to its deserts. After the dissolution of the body,
- there commences for it a period of full awakened consciousness,
- or a state of chaotic dreams, or an utterly dreamless sleep
- undistinguishable from annihilation, and these are the three
- kinds of sleep. If our physiologists find the cause of dreams and
- visions in an unconscious preparation for them during the waking
- hours, why cannot the same be admitted for the _post-mortem_
- dreams? I repeat it: _death is sleep_. After death, before the
- spiritual eyes of the soul, begins a performance according to
- a programme learnt and very often unconsciously composed by
- ourselves: the practical carrying out of _correct_ beliefs or of
- illusions which have been created by ourselves. The Methodist will
- be Methodist, the Mussulman a Mussulman, at least for some time—in
- a perfect fool’s paradise of each man’s creation and making. These
- are the _post-mortem_ fruits of the tree of life. Naturally, our
- belief or unbelief in the fact of conscious immortality is unable
- to influence the unconditioned reality of the fact itself, once
- that it exists; but the belief or unbelief in that immortality
- as the property of independent or separate entities, cannot fail
- to give colour to that fact in its application to each of these
- entities. Now do you begin to understand it?
-
- ENQ. I think I do. The materialist, disbelieving in everything that
- cannot be proven to him by his five senses, or by scientific
- reasoning, based exclusively on the data furnished by these senses
- in spite of their inadequacy, and rejecting every spiritual
- manifestation, accepts life as the only conscious existence.
- Therefore according to their beliefs so will it be unto them. They
- will lose their personal Ego, and will plunge into a dreamless
- sleep until a new awakening. Is it so?
-
- THEO. Almost so. Remember the practically universal teaching of the two
- kinds of conscious existence: the terrestrial and the spiritual.
- The latter must be considered real from the very fact that it is
- inhabited by the eternal, changeless and immortal Monad; whereas
- the incarnating Ego dresses itself up in new garments entirely
- different from those of its previous incarnations, and in which
- all except its spiritual prototype is doomed to a change so
- radical as to leave no trace behind.
-
- ENQ. How so? Can my conscious terrestrial “I” perish not only for a
- time, like the consciousness of the materialist, but so entirely
- as to leave no trace behind?
-
- THEO. According to the teaching, it must so perish and in its fullness,
- all except the principle which, having united itself with the
- Monad, has thereby become a purely spiritual and indestructible
- essence, one with it in the Eternity. But in the case of an
- out-and-out materialist, in whose personal “I” no Buddhi has ever
- reflected itself, how can the latter carry away into the Eternity
- one particle of that terrestrial personality? Your spiritual “I”
- is immortal; but from your present self it can carry away into
- Eternity that only which has become worthy of immortality, namely,
- the aroma alone of the flower that has been mown by death.
-
- ENQ. Well, and the flower, the terrestrial “I”?
-
- THEO. The flower, as all past and future flowers which have blossomed
- and will have to blossom on the mother bough, the _Sutratma_,
- all children of one root or Buddhi—will return to dust. Your
- present “I,” as you yourself know, is not the body now sitting
- before me, nor yet is it what I would call Manas-Sutratma, but
- Sutratma-Buddhi.
-
- ENQ. But this does not explain to me, at all, why you call life after
- death immortal, infinite and real, and the terrestrial life a
- simple phantom or illusion; since even that _post-mortem_ life has
- limits, however much wider they may be than those of terrestrial
- life.
-
- THEO. No doubt. The spiritual Ego of man moves in eternity like a
- pendulum between the hours of birth and death. But if these hours,
- marking the periods of life terrestrial and life spiritual, are
- limited in their duration, and if the very number of such stages
- in Eternity between sleep and awakening, illusion and reality,
- has its beginning and its end, on the other hand, the spiritual
- pilgrim is eternal. Therefore are the hours of his _post-mortem_
- life, when, disembodied, he stands face to face with truth and
- not the mirages of his transitory earthly existences, during
- the period of that pilgrimage which we call “the cycle of
- rebirths”—the only reality in our conception. Such intervals,
- their limitation notwithstanding, do not prevent the Ego, while
- ever perfecting itself, from following undeviatingly, though
- gradually and slowly, the path to its last transformation, when
- that Ego, having reached its goal, becomes a divine being. These
- intervals and stages help towards this final result instead of
- hindering it; and without such limited intervals the divine
- Ego could never reach its ultimate goal. I have given you once
- already a familiar illustration by comparing the _Ego_, or the
- _individuality_, to an actor, and its numerous and various
- incarnations to the parts it plays. Will you call these parts or
- their costumes the individuality of the actor himself? Like that
- actor, the Ego is forced to play during the cycle of necessity,
- up to the very threshold of _Paranirvana_, many parts such as
- may be unpleasant to it. But as the bee collects its honey from
- every flower, leaving the rest as food for the earthly worms, so
- does our spiritual individuality, whether we call it Sutratma or
- Ego. Collecting from every terrestrial personality, into which
- Karma forces it to incarnate, the nectar alone of the spiritual
- qualities and self-consciousness, it unites all these into one
- whole and emerges from its chrysalis as the glorified Dhyan
- Chohan. So much the worse for those terrestrial personalities
- from which it could collect nothing. Such personalities cannot
- assuredly outlive consciously their terrestrial existence.
-
- ENQ. Thus, then, it seems that, for the terrestrial personality,
- immortality is still conditional. Is, then, immortality itself
- _not_ unconditional?
-
- THEO. Not at all. But immortality cannot touch the _non-existent_: for
- all that which exists as SAT, or emanates from SAT, immortality
- and Eternity are absolute. Matter is the opposite pole of spirit,
- and yet the two are one. The essence of all this, _i.e._, Spirit,
- Force and Matter, or the three in one, is as endless as it is
- beginningless; but the form acquired by this triple unity during
- its incarnations, its externality, is certainly only the illusion
- of our personal conceptions. Therefore do we call Nirvana and the
- Universal life alone a reality, while relegating the terrestrial
- life, its terrestrial personality included, and even its
- Devachanic existence, to the phantom realm of illusion.
-
- ENQ. But why in such a case call sleep the reality, and waking the
- illusion?
-
- THEO. It is simply a comparison made to facilitate the grasping of the
- subject, and from the standpoint of terrestrial conceptions it is
- a very correct one.
-
- ENQ. And still I cannot understand, if the life to come is based on
- justice and the merited retribution for all our terrestrial
- suffering, how in the case of materialists, many of whom are
- really honest and charitable men, there should remain of their
- personality nothing but the refuse of a faded flower.
-
- THEO. No one ever said such a thing. No materialist, however
- unbelieving, can die for ever in the fulness of his spiritual
- individuality. What was said is that consciousness can disappear
- either fully or partially in the case of a materialist, so that no
- conscious remains of his personality survive.
-
- ENQ. But surely this is annihilation?
-
- THEO. Certainly not. One can sleep a dead sleep and miss several
- stations during a long railway journey, without the slightest
- recollection or consciousness, and awake at another station and
- continue the journey past innumerable other halting-places till
- the end of the journey or the goal is reached. Three kinds of
- sleep were mentioned to you: the dreamless, the chaotic, and
- the one which is so real, that to the sleeping man his dreams
- become full realities. If you believe in the latter why can’t you
- believe in the former; according to the after life a man has
- believed in and expected, such is the life he will have. He who
- expected no life to come will have an absolute blank, amounting
- to annihilation, in the interval between the two rebirths.
- This is just the carrying out of the programme we spoke of, a
- programme created by the materialists themselves. But there are
- various kinds of materialists, as you say. A selfish, wicked
- Egoist, one who never shed a tear for anyone but himself, thus
- adding entire indifference to the whole world to his unbelief,
- must, at the threshold of death, drop his personality for ever.
- This personality having no tendrils of sympathy for the world
- around and hence nothing to hook on to Sutratma, it follows that
- with the last breath every connection between the two is broken.
- There being no Devachan for such a materialist, the Sutratma will
- reincarnate almost immediately. But those materialists who erred
- in nothing but their disbelief will oversleep but one station. And
- the time will come when that ex-materialist will perceive himself
- in the Eternity and perhaps repent that he lost even one day, one
- station, from the life eternal.
-
- ENQ. Still, would it not be more correct to say that death is birth
- into a new life, or a return once more into eternity?
-
- THEO. You may if you like. Only remember that births differ, and that
- there are births of “still-born” beings, which are _failures_ of
- nature. Moreover, with your Western fixed ideas about material
- life, the words “living” and “being” are quite inapplicable to
- the pure subjective state of _post-mortem_ existence. It is just
- because, save in a few philosophers who are not read by the many,
- and who themselves are too confused to present a distinct picture
- of it, it is just because your Western ideas of life and death
- have finally become so narrow, that on the one hand they have
- led to crass materialism, and on the other, to the still more
- material conception of the other life, which the spiritualists
- have formulated in their Summer-land. There the souls of men eat,
- drink, marry, and live in a paradise quite as sensual as that
- of Mohammed, but even less philosophical. Nor are the average
- conceptions of the uneducated Christians any better, being if
- possible still more material. What between truncated angels, brass
- trumpets, golden harps, and material hell-fires, the Christian
- heaven seems like a fairy scene at a Christmas pantomime.
-
- It is because of these narrow conceptions that you find such
- difficulty in understanding. It is just because the life of the
- disembodied soul, while possessing all the vividness of reality,
- as in certain dreams, is devoid of every grossly objective form of
- terrestrial life, that the Eastern philosophers have compared it
- with visions during sleep.
-
-
-DEFINITE WORDS FOR DEFINITE THINGS.
-
- ENQ. Don’t you think it is because there are no definite and fixed
- terms to indicate each “Principle” in man, that such a confusion
- of ideas arises in our minds with respect to the respective
- functions of these “Principles”?
-
- THEO. I have thought of it myself. The whole trouble has arisen from
- this: we have started our expositions of, and discussion about,
- the “Principles” using their Sanskrit names instead of coining
- immediately, for the use of Theosophists, their equivalents in
- English. We must try and remedy this now.
-
- ENQ. You will do well, as it may avoid further confusion; no two
- theosophical writers, it seems to me, have hitherto agreed to call
- the same “Principle” by the same name.
-
- THEO. The confusion is more apparent than real, however. I have heard
- some of our Theosophists express surprise at, and criticize
- several essays speaking of these “principles”; but, when examined,
- there was no worse mistake in them than that of using the word
- “Soul” to cover the three principles without specifying the
- distinctions. The first, as positively the clearest of our
- Theosophical writers, Mr. A. P. Sinnett, has some comprehensive
- and admirably-written passages on the “Higher Self.”[45] His real
- idea has also been misconceived by some, owing to his using the
- word “Soul” in a general sense. Yet here are a few passages which
- will show to you how clear and comprehensive is all that he writes
- on the subject:—
-
- ... “The human soul, once launched on the streams of evolution
- as a human individuality,[46] passes through alternate periods of
- physical and relatively spiritual existence. It passes from the
- one plane, or stratum, or condition of nature to the other under
- the guidance of its Karmic affinities; living in incarnations the
- life which its Karma has pre-ordained; modifying its progress
- within the limitations of circumstances, and,—developing fresh
- Karma by its use or abuse of opportunities,—it returns to
- spiritual existence (Devachan) after each physical life,—through
- the intervening region of Kamaloca—for rest and refreshment and
- for the gradual absorption into its essence, as so much cosmic
- progress, of the life’s experience gained ‘on earth’ or during
- physical existence. This view of the matter will, moreover, have
- suggested many collateral inferences to anyone thinking over the
- subject; for instance, that the transfer of consciousness from
- the Kamaloca to the Devachanic stage of this progression would
- necessarily be gradual[47]; that in truth, no hard-and-fast line
- separates the varieties of spiritual conditions; that even the
- spiritual and physical planes, as psychic faculties in living
- people show, are not so hopelessly walled off from one another
- as materialistic theories would suggest; that all states of
- nature are all around us simultaneously, and appeal to different
- perceptive faculties; and so on.... It is clear that during
- physical existence people who possess psychic faculties remain in
- connection with the planes of superphysical consciousness; and
- although most people may not be endowed with such faculties, we
- all, as the phenomena of sleep, even, and especially ... those
- of somnambulism or mesmerism, show, are capable of entering into
- conditions of consciousness that the five physical senses have
- nothing to do with. We—the souls within us—are not as it were
- altogether adrift in the ocean of matter. We clearly retain some
- surviving interest or rights in the shore from which, for a time,
- we have floated off. The process of incarnation, therefore, is
- not fully described when we speak of an _alternate_ existence on
- the physical and spiritual planes, and thus picture the soul as a
- complete entity slipping entirely from the one state of existence
- to the other. The more correct definitions of the process would
- probably represent incarnation as taking place on this physical
- plane of nature by reason of an efflux emanating from the soul.
- The Spiritual realm would all the while be the proper habitat
- of the Soul, which would never entirely quit it; _and that
- non-materializable portion of the Soul which abides permanently
- on the spiritual plane may fitly_, perhaps, be spoken of as the
- HIGHER SELF.”
-
- This “Higher Self” is ATMA, and of course it is
- “non-materializable,” as Mr. Sinnett says. Even more, it can
- never be “objective” under any circumstances, even to the
- highest spiritual perception. For _Atman_ or the “Higher Self”
- is really Brahma, the ABSOLUTE, and indistinguishable from it.
- In hours of _Samadhi_, the higher spiritual consciousness of the
- Initiate is entirely absorbed in the ONE essence, which is Atman,
- and therefore, being one with the whole, there can be nothing
- objective for it. Now some of our Theosophists have got into
- the habit of using the words “Self” and “Ego” as synonymous, of
- associating the term “Self” with only man’s higher individual
- or even personal “Self” or _Ego_, whereas this term ought never
- to be applied except _to the One universal Self_. Hence the
- confusion. Speaking of Manas, the “causal body,” we may call
- it—when connecting it with the Buddhic radiance—the “HIGHER EGO,”
- never the “Higher Self.” For even Buddhi, the “Spiritual Soul,”
- is not the SELF, but the vehicle only of SELF. All the other
- “_Selves_”—such as the “Individual” self and “personal” self—ought
- never to be spoken or written of without their qualifying and
- characteristic adjectives.
-
- Thus in this most excellent essay on the “Higher Self,” this term
- is applied to the _sixth principle_ or _Buddhi_ (of course in
- conjunction with Manas, as without such union there would be no
- _thinking_ principle or element in the spiritual soul); and has
- in consequence given rise to just such misunderstandings. The
- statement that “a child does not acquire its _sixth_ principle—or
- become a morally responsible being capable of generating
- Karma—until seven years old,” proves what is meant therein by
- the HIGHER SELF. Therefore, the able author is quite justified
- in explaining that after the “Higher Self” has passed into the
- human being and saturated the personality—in some of the finer
- organizations only—with its consciousness “people with psychic
- faculties may indeed perceive this Higher Self through their finer
- senses from time to time.” But so are those, who limit the term
- “Higher Self” to the Universal Divine Principle, “justified” in
- misunderstanding him. For, when we read, without being prepared
- for this shifting of metaphysical terms,[48] that while “fully
- manifesting on the physical plane ... the Higher Self still
- remains a conscious spiritual Ego on the corresponding plane of
- Nature”—we are apt to see in the “Higher Self” of this sentence,
- “Atma,” and in the spiritual Ego, “Manas,” or rather Buddhi-Manas,
- and forthwith to criticise the whole thing as incorrect.
-
- To avoid henceforth such misrepresentations, I propose to
- translate literally from the Occult Eastern terms their
- equivalents in English, and offer these for future use.
-
- { Atma, the inseparable ray of the Universal
- THE HIGHER { and ONE SELF. It is the God _above_, more
- SELF is { than within, us. Happy the man who succeeds
- { in saturating his _inner Ego_ with it!
-
- THE SPIRITUAL { the Spiritual soul or _Buddhi_, in close union
- _divine_ { with _Manas_, the mind-principle, without
- EGO is { which it is no EGO at all, but only the Atmic
- { _Vehicle_.
-
- { _Manas_, the “Fifth” Principle, so called,
- { independently of Buddhi. The Mind-Principle
- THE INNER, { is only the Spiritual Ego when merged
- or HIGHER { _into one_ with Buddhi,—no materialist being
- “Ego” is { supposed to have in him _such_ an Ego, however
- { great his intellectual capacities. It is
- { the permanent _Individuality_ or the “Reincarnating
- { Ego.”
-
- { the physical man in conjunction with his
- { _lower_ Self, _i.e._, animal instincts, passions,
- THE LOWER, { desires, etc. It is called the “false personality,”
- or PERSONAL { and consists of the _lower Manas_ combined
- “Ego” is { with Kama-rupa, and operating
- { through the Physical body and its phantom
- { or “double.”
-
- The remaining “Principle” “_Pranâ_,” or “Life,” is, strictly
- speaking, the radiating force or Energy of Atma—as the Universal
- Life and the ONE SELF,—ITS lower or rather (in its effects) more
- physical, because manifesting, aspect. Pranâ or Life permeates the
- whole being of the objective Universe; and is called a “principle”
- only because it is an indispensable factor and the _deus ex
- machinâ_ of the living man.
-
- ENQ. This division being so much simplified in its combinations will
- answer better, I believe. The other is much too metaphysical.
-
- THEO. If outsiders as well as Theosophists would agree to it, it would
- certainly make matters much more comprehensible.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[40] “Some things that I _do_ know of Spiritualism and some that I do
-_not_.”
-
-[41] A few portions of this chapter and of the preceding were
-published in _Lucifer_ in the shape of a “Dialogue on the Mysteries of
-After Life,” in the January number, 1889. The article was unsigned,
-as if it were written by the editor, but it came from the pen of the
-author of the present volume.
-
-[42] Iswara is the collective consciousness of the manifested deity,
-Brahma, _i.e._, the collective consciousness of the Host of Dhyan
-Chohans (_vide_ SECRET DOCTRINE); and Pragna is their individual wisdom.
-
-[43] _Taijasi_ means the radiant in consequence of its union with
-Buddhi; _i.e._, Manas, the human soul, illuminated by the radiance
-of the divine soul. Therefore, Manas-taijasi may be described as
-radiant mind; the _human_ reason lit by the light of the spirit; and
-Buddhi-Manas is the revelation of the divine _plus_ human intellect and
-self-consciousness.
-
-[44] Some Theosophists have taken exception to this phrase, but the
-words are those of Master, and the meaning attached to the word
-“unmerited” is that given above. In the T.P.S. pamphlet No. 6, a
-phrase, criticised subsequently in LUCIFER, was used which was intended
-to convey the same idea. In form, however, it was awkward and open to
-the criticism directed against it; but the essential idea was that men
-often suffer from the effects of the actions done by others, effects
-which thus do not strictly belong to their own Karma—and for these
-sufferings they of course deserve compensation.
-
-[45] _Vide_ Transactions of the LONDON LODGE _of the Theos. Soc._, No.
-7, Oct., 1885.
-
-[46] The “reincarnating Ego,” or “Human Soul,” as he called it, the
-_Causal Body_ with the Hindus.
-
-[47] The length of this “transfer” depends, however, on the degree of
-spirituality in the ex-personality of the disembodied Ego. For those
-whose lives were very spiritual this transfer, though gradual, is very
-rapid. The time becomes longer with the materialistically inclined.
-
-[48] “Shifting of _Metaphysical terms_” applies here only to the
-shifting of their translated equivalents from the Eastern expressions;
-for to this day there never existed any such terms in English, every
-Theosophist having to coin his own terms to render his thought. It is
-nigh time then to settle on some definite nomenclature.
-
-
-
-
-X. ON THE NATURE OF OUR THINKING PRINCIPLE.
-
-
-THE MYSTERY OF THE EGO.
-
- ENQ. I perceive in the quotation you brought forward a little while ago
- from the _Buddhist Catechism_ a discrepancy that I would like
- to hear explained. It is there stated that the Skandhas—memory
- included—change with every new incarnation. And yet, it is
- asserted that the reflection of the past lives, which, we are
- told, are entirely made up of Skandhas, “must survive.” At the
- present moment I am not quite clear in my mind as to what it is
- precisely that survives, and I would like to have it explained.
- What is it? Is it only that “reflection,” or those Skandhas, or
- always that same Ego, the Manas?
-
- THEO. I have just explained that the reincarnating Principle, or that
- which we call the _divine_ man, is indestructible throughout
- the life cycle: indestructible as a thinking _Entity_, and
- even as an ethereal form. The “reflection” is only the
- spiritualised _remembrance_, during the Devachanic period, of
- the _ex-personality_, Mr. A. or Mrs. B.—with which the _Ego_
- identifies itself during that period. Since the latter is but
- the continuation of the earth-life, so to say, the very acme and
- pitch, in an unbroken series, of the few happy moments in that
- now past existence, the _Ego_ has to identify itself with the
- _personal_ consciousness of that life, if anything shall remain of
- it.
-
- ENQ. This means that the _Ego_, notwithstanding its divine nature,
- passes every such period between two incarnations in a state of
- mental obscuration, or temporary insanity.
-
- THEO. You may regard it as you like. Believing that, outside the ONE
- Reality, nothing is better than a passing illusion—the whole
- Universe included—we do not view it as insanity, but as a very
- natural sequence or development of the terrestrial life. What
- is life? A bundle of the most varied experiences, of daily
- changing ideas, emotions, and opinions. In our youth we are often
- enthusiastically devoted to an ideal, to some hero or heroine whom
- we try to follow and revive; a few years later, when the freshness
- of our youthful feelings has faded out and sobered down, we are
- the first to laugh at our fancies. And yet there was a day when
- we had so thoroughly identified our own personality with that
- of the ideal in our mind—especially if it was that of a living
- being—that the former was entirely merged and lost in the latter.
- Can it be said of a man of fifty that he is the same being that
- he was at twenty? The _inner_ man is the same; the outward living
- personality is completely transformed and changed. Would you also
- call these changes in the human mental states insanity?
-
- ENQ. How would _you_ name them, and especially how would you explain
- the permanence of one and the evanescence of the other?
-
- THEO. We have our own doctrine ready, and to us it offers no
- difficulty. The clue lies in the double consciousness of our mind,
- and also, in the dual nature of the mental “principle.” There is a
- spiritual consciousness, the Manasic mind illumined by the light
- of Buddhi, that which subjectively perceives abstractions; and the
- sentient consciousness (the lower _Manasic_ light), inseparable
- from our physical brain and senses. This latter consciousness is
- held in subjection by the brain and physical senses, and, being
- in its turn equally dependent on them, must of course fade out
- and finally die with the disappearance of the brain and physical
- senses. It is only the former kind of consciousness, whose root
- lies in eternity, which survives and lives for ever, and may,
- therefore, be regarded as immortal. Everything else belongs to
- passing illusions.
-
- ENQ. What do you really understand by illusion in this case?
-
- THEO. It is very well described in the just-mentioned essay on “The
- Higher Self.” Says its author:
-
- “The theory we are considering (the interchange of ideas
- between the _Higher Ego_ and the lower self) harmonizes very
- well with the treatment of this world in which we live as a
- phenomenal world of illusion, the spiritual plans of nature
- being on the other hand the noumenal world or plane of reality.
- That region of nature in which, so to speak, the permanent
- soul is rooted is more real than that in which its transitory
- blossoms appear for a brief space to wither and fall to pieces,
- while the plant recovers energy for sending forth a fresh
- flower. Supposing flowers only were perceptible to ordinary
- senses, and their roots existed in a state of Nature intangible
- and invisible to us, philosophers in such a world who divined
- that there were such things as roots in another plane of
- existence would be apt to say of the flowers, These are not
- the real plants; they are of no relative importance, merely
- illusive phenomena of the moment.”
-
- This is what I mean. The world in which blossom the transitory and
- evanescent flowers of personal lives is not the real permanent
- world; but that one in which we find the root of consciousness,
- that root which is beyond illusion and dwells in the eternity.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean by the root dwelling in eternity?
-
- THEO. I mean by this root the thinking entity, the Ego which
- incarnates, whether we regard it as an “Angel,” “Spirit,” or
- a Force. Of that which falls under our sensuous perceptions
- only what grows directly from, or is attached to this invisible
- root above, can partake of its immortal life. Hence every noble
- thought, idea and aspiration of the personality it informs,
- proceeding from and fed by this root, must become permanent. As
- to the physical consciousness, as it is a quality of the sentient
- but lower “principle,” (Kama-rupa or animal instinct, illuminated
- by the lower _manasic_ reflection), or the human Soul—it must
- disappear. That which displays activity, while the body is
- asleep or paralysed, is the higher consciousness, our memory
- registering but feebly and inaccurately—because automatically—such
- experiences, and often failing to be even slightly impressed by
- them.
-
- ENQ. But how is it that MANAS, although you call it _Nous_, a “God,” is
- so weak during its incarnations, as to be actually conquered and
- fettered by its body?
-
- THEO. I might retort with the same question and ask: “How is it that
- he, whom you regard as ‘the God of Gods’ and the One living God,
- _is so weak_ as to allow evil (or the Devil) to have the best of
- _him_ as much as of all his creatures, whether while he remains
- in Heaven, or during the time he was incarnated on this earth?”
- You are sure to reply again: “This is a Mystery; and we are
- forbidden to pry into the mysteries of God.” Not being forbidden
- to do so by our religious philosophy, I answer your question that,
- unless a God descends as an _Avatar_, no divine principle can be
- otherwise than cramped and paralysed by turbulent, animal matter.
- Heterogeneity will always have the upper hand over homogeneity,
- on this plane of illusions, and the nearer an essence is to its
- root-principle, Primordial Homogeneity, the more difficult it is
- for the latter to assert itself on earth. Spiritual and divine
- powers lie dormant in every human Being; and the wider the sweep
- of his spiritual vision the mightier will be the God within him.
- But as few men can feel that God, and since, as an average rule,
- deity is always bound and limited in our thought by earlier
- conceptions, those ideas that are inculcated in us from childhood,
- therefore, it is so difficult for you to understand our philosophy.
-
- ENQ. And is it this Ego of ours which is our God?
-
- THEO. Not at all; “_A_ God” is not the universal deity, but only a
- spark from the one ocean of Divine Fire. Our God _within_ us, or
- “our Father in Secret” is what we call the “HIGHER SELF,” _Atma_.
- Our incarnating Ego was a God in its origin, as were all the
- primeval emanations of the One Unknown Principle. But since its
- “fall into Matter,” having to incarnate throughout the cycle, in
- succession, from first to last, it is no longer a free and happy
- god, but a poor pilgrim on his way to regain that which he has
- lost. I can answer your more fully by repeating what is said of
- the INNER MAN in ISIS UNVEILED (Vol. II. 593):—
-
- “From the remotest antiquity _mankind_ as a whole _have
- always been convinced of the existence of a personal
- spiritual entity within the personal physical man_. This
- inner entity was more or less divine, according to its
- proximity to the _crown_. The closer the union the more
- serene man’s destiny, the less dangerous the external
- conditions. This belief is neither bigotry nor superstition,
- only an ever-present, instinctive feeling of the proximity
- of another spiritual and invisible world, which, though it
- be subjective to the senses of the outward man, is perfectly
- objective to the inner ego. Furthermore, they believed that
- _there are external and internal conditions which affect the
- determination of our will upon our actions_. They rejected
- fatalism, for fatalism implies a blind course of some still
- blinder power. But they believed in _destiny_ or _Karma_,
- which from birth to death every man is weaving thread by
- thread around himself, as a spider does his cobweb; and
- this destiny is guided by that presence termed by some the
- guardian angel, or our more intimate astral inner man, who
- is but too often the evil genius of the man of flesh or
- the _personality_. Both these lead on MAN, but one of them
- must prevail; and from the very beginning of the invisible
- affray the stern and implacable _law of compensation and
- retribution_ steps in and takes its course, following
- faithfully the fluctuations of the conflict. When the last
- strand is woven, and man is seemingly enwrapped in the
- network of his own doing, then he finds himself completely
- under the empire of this _self-made_ destiny. It then either
- fixes him like the inert shell against the immovable rock, or
- like a feather carries him away in a whirlwind raised by his
- own actions.”
-
- Such is the destiny of the MAN—the true Ego, not the Automaton,
- the _shell_ that goes by that name. It is for him to become the
- conqueror over matter.
-
-
-THE COMPLEX NATURE OF MANAS.
-
- ENQ. But you wanted to tell me something of the essential nature of
- Manas, and of the relation in which the Skandhas of physical man
- stand to it?
-
- THEO. It is this nature, mysterious, Protean, beyond any grasp, and
- almost shadowy in its correlations with the other principles, that
- is most difficult to realise, and still more so to explain. Manas
- is a “principle,” and yet it is an “Entity” and individuality or
- Ego. He is a “God,” and yet he is doomed to an endless cycle of
- incarnations, for each of which he is made responsible, and for
- each of which he has to suffer. All this seems as contradictory as
- it is puzzling; nevertheless, there are hundreds of people, even
- in Europe, who realise all this perfectly, for they comprehend the
- Ego not only in its integrity but in its many aspects. Finally, if
- I would make myself comprehensible, I must begin by the beginning
- and give you the genealogy of this Ego in a few lines.
-
- ENQ. Say on.
-
- THEO. Try to imagine a “Spirit,” a celestial Being, whether we call it
- by one name or another, divine in its essential nature, yet
- not pure enough to be _one with the_ ALL, and having, in order
- to achieve this, to so purify its nature as to finally gain
- that goal. It can do so only by passing _individually_ and
- _personally_, _i.e._, spiritually and physically, through
- every experience and feeling that exists in the manifold or
- differentiated Universe. It has, therefore, after having gained
- such experience in the lower kingdoms, and having ascended higher
- and still higher with every rung on the ladder of being, to pass
- through every experience on the human planes. In its very essence
- it is THOUGHT, and is, therefore, called in its plurality _Manasa
- putra_, “the Sons of the (Universal) mind.” This _individualised_
- “Thought” is what we Theosophists call the _real_ human EGO, the
- thinking Entity imprisoned in a case of flesh and bones. This
- is surely a Spiritual Entity, not _Matter_, and such Entities
- are the incarnating EGOS that inform the bundle of animal matter
- called mankind, and whose names are _Manasa_ or “Minds.” But
- once imprisoned, or incarnate, their essence becomes dual: that
- is to say, the _rays_ of the eternal divine Mind, considered as
- individual entities, assume a two-fold attribute which is (_a_)
- their _essential_ inherent characteristic, heaven-aspiring mind
- (higher _Manas_) and (_b_) the human quality of thinking, or
- animal cogitation, rationalised owing to the superiority of the
- human brain, the Kama-tending or lower Manas. One gravitates
- toward Buddhi, the other, tending downward, to the seat of
- passions and animal desires. The latter have no room in Devachan,
- nor can they associate with the divine triad which ascends as ONE
- into mental bliss. Yet it is the Ego, the Manasic Entity, which is
- held responsible for all the sins of the lower attributes, just
- as a parent is answerable for the transgressions of his child, so
- long as the latter remains irresponsible.
-
- ENQ. Is this “child” the “personality”?
-
- THEO. It is. When, therefore, it is stated that the “personality” dies
- with the body it does not state all. The body, which was only the
- objective symbol of Mr. A. or Mrs. B., fades away with all its
- material Skandhas, which are the visible expressions thereof. But
- all that which constituted during life the _spiritual_ bundle of
- experiences, the noblest aspirations, undying affections, and
- _unselfish_ nature of Mr. A. or Mrs. B. clings for the time of
- the Devachanic period to the EGO, which is identified with the
- spiritual portion of that terrestrial Entity, now passed away out
- of sight. The ACTOR is so imbued with the _rôle_ just played by
- him that he dreams of it during the whole Devachanic night, which
- _vision_ continues till the hour strikes for him to return to the
- stage of life to enact another part.
-
- ENQ. But how is it that this doctrine, which you say is as old as
- thinking men, has found no room, say, in Christian theology?
-
- THEO. You are mistaken, it has; only theology has disfigured it out of
- all recognition, as it has many other doctrines. Theology calls
- the EGO the Angel that God gives us at the moment of our birth,
- _to take care of our Soul_. Instead of holding that “Angel”
- responsible for the transgressions of the poor helpless “Soul,” it
- is the latter which, according to theological logic, is punished
- for all the sins of both flesh and mind! It is the Soul, the
- immaterial _breath_ of God and his _alleged creation_, which, by
- some most amazing intellectual jugglery, is doomed to burn in a
- material hell without ever being consumed,[49] while the “Angel”
- escapes scot free after folding his white pinions and wetting them
- with a few tears. Aye, these are our “ministering Spirits,” the
- “messengers of mercy” who are sent, Bishop Mant tells us—
-
- “.... to fulfil
- Good for Salvation’s heirs, for us they still
- Grieve when we sin, rejoice when we repent;”
-
- Yet it becomes evident that if all the Bishops the world over
- were asked to define once for all what they mean by _Soul_ and
- its functions, they would be as unable to do so as to show us any
- shadow of logic in the orthodox belief!
-
-
-THE DOCTRINE IS TAUGHT IN ST. JOHN’S GOSPEL.
-
- ENQ. To this the adherents to this belief might answer, that if even
- the orthodox dogma does promise the impenitent sinner and
- materialist a bad time of it in a rather too realistic Inferno, it
- gives them, on the other hand, a chance for repentance to the last
- minute. Nor do they teach annihilation, or loss of personality,
- which is all the same.
-
- THEO. If the Church teaches nothing of the kind, on the other hand,
- Jesus does; and that is something to those, at least, who place
- Christ higher than Christianity.
-
- ENQ. Does Christ teach anything of the sort?
-
- THEO. He does; and every well-informed Occultist and even Kabalist will
- tell you so. Christ, or the fourth Gospel at any rate, teaches
- re-incarnation as also the annihilation of the personality, if
- you but forget the dead letter and hold to the esoteric Spirit.
- Remember verses 1 and 2 in chapter xv. of St. John. What does the
- parable speak about if not of the _upper triad_ in man? _Atma_
- is the Husbandman—the Spiritual Ego or _Buddhi_ (Christos) the
- Vine, while the animal and vital Soul, the _personality_, is the
- “branch.” “I am the _true_ vine, and my Father is the Husbandman.
- Every branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away.... As
- the branch cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the
- vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me. I am the Vine—ye
- are the branches. If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a
- branch, and is _withered_ and cast into the fire and burned.”
-
- Now we explain it in this way. Disbelieving in the hell-fires
- which theology discovers as underlying the threat to the
- _branches_, we say that the “Husbandman” means Atma, the Symbol
- for the infinite, impersonal Principle,[50] while the Vine stands
- for the Spiritual Soul, _Christos_, and each “branch” represents a
- new incarnation.
-
- ENQ. But what proofs have you to support such an arbitrary
- interpretation?
-
- THEO. Universal symbology is a warrant for its correctness and that it
- is not arbitrary. Hermas says of “God” that he “planted the
- Vineyard,” _i.e._, he created mankind. In the _Kabala_, it is
- shown that the Aged of the Aged, or the “Long Face,” plants a
- vineyard, the latter typifying mankind; and a vine, meaning Life.
- The Spirit of “_King_ Messiah” is, therefore, shown as washing
- his garments in _the wine_ from above, from the creation of the
- world.[51] And King _Messiah_ is the EGO purified _by washing his
- garments_ (_i.e._, his personalities in re-birth), in the _wine
- from_ above, or BUDDHI. Adam, or A-Dam, is “blood.” The Life of
- the flesh is in the blood (nephesh—soul), _Leviticus_ xvii. And
- Adam-Kadmon is the Only-Begotten. Noah also plants a vineyard—the
- allegorical hot-bed of future humanity. As a consequence of the
- adoption of the same allegory, we find it reproduced in the
- Nazarene _Codex_. Seven vines are procreated—which seven vines
- are our Seven Races with their seven Saviours or _Buddhas_—which
- spring from Iukabar Zivo, and Ferho (or Parcha) Raba waters
- them.[52] When the blessed will ascend among the creatures of
- Light, they shall see Iavar-Xivo, _Lord of_ LIFE, and the FIRST
- VINE.[53] These kabalistic metaphors are thus naturally repeated
- in the _Gospel according to St. John_ (xv., 1).
-
- Let us not forget that in the human system—even according to
- those philosophies which ignore our septenary division—the EGO
- or _thinking man_ is called the _Logos_, or the Son of Soul
- and Spirit. “Manas is the adopted Son of King —— and Queen ——”
- (esoteric equivalents for Atma and Buddhi), says an occult work.
- He is the “man-god” of Plato, who crucifies himself in _Space_
- (or the duration of the life cycle) for the redemption of MATTER.
- This he does by incarnating over and over again, thus leading
- mankind onward to perfection, and making thereby room for lower
- forms to develop into higher. Not for one life does he cease
- progressing himself and helping all physical nature to progress;
- even the occasional, very rare event of his losing one of his
- personalities, in the case of the latter being entirely devoid of
- even a spark of spirituality, helps toward his individual progress.
-
- ENQ. But surely, if the _Ego_ is held responsible for the
- transgressions of its personalities, it has to answer also for the
- loss, or rather the complete annihilation, of one of such.
-
- THEO. Not at all, unless it has done nothing to avert this dire fate.
- But if, all its efforts notwithstanding, its voice, _that of our
- conscience_, was unable to penetrate through the wall of matter,
- then the obtuseness of the latter proceeding from the imperfect
- nature of the material is classed with other failures of nature.
- The Ego is sufficiently punished by the loss of Devachan, and
- especially by having to incarnate almost immediately.
-
- ENQ. This doctrine of the possibility of losing one’s soul—or
- personality, do you call it?—militates against the ideal theories
- of both Christians and Spiritualists, though Swedenborg adopts it
- to a certain extent, in what he calls _Spiritual death_. They will
- never accept it.
-
- THEO. This can in no way alter a fact in nature, if it be a fact, or
- prevent such a thing occasionally taking place. The universe and
- everything in it, moral, mental, physical, psychic, or Spiritual,
- is built on a perfect law of equilibrium and harmony. As said
- before (_vide Isis Unveiled_), the centripetal force could not
- manifest itself without the centrifugal in the harmonious
- revolutions of the spheres, and all forms and their progress
- are the products of this dual force in nature. Now the Spirit
- (or _Buddhi_) is the centrifugal and the soul (_Manas_) the
- centripetal spiritual energy; and to produce one result they
- have to be in perfect union and harmony. Break or damage the
- centripetal motion of the earthly soul tending toward the centre
- which attracts it; arrest its progress by clogging it with a
- heavier weight of matter than it can bear, or than is fit for the
- Devachanic state, and the harmony of the whole will be destroyed.
- Personal life, or perhaps rather its ideal reflection, can only
- be continued if sustained by the two-fold force, that is by the
- close union of _Buddhi_ and _Manas_ in every re-birth or personal
- life. The least deviation from harmony damages it; and when it is
- destroyed beyond redemption the two forces separate at the moment
- of death. During a brief interval the _personal_ form (called
- indifferently _Kama rupa_ and _Mayavi rupa_), the spiritual
- efflorescence of which, attaching itself to the Ego, follows it
- into Devachan and gives to the permanent _individuality_ its
- _personal_ colouring (_pro tem._, so to speak), is carried off
- to remain in _Kama-loka_ and to be gradually annihilated. For
- it is after the death of the utterly depraved, the unspiritual
- and the wicked beyond redemption, that arrives the critical and
- supreme moment. If during life the ultimate and desperate effort
- of the INNER SELF (_Manas_), to unite something of the personality
- with itself and the high glimmering ray of the divine Buddhi is
- thwarted; if this ray is allowed to be more and more shut out
- from the ever-thickening crust of physical brain, the Spiritual
- EGO or Manas, once freed from the body, remains severed entirely
- from the ethereal relic of the personality; and the latter, or
- _Kama rupa_, following its earthly attractions, is drawn into
- and remains in Hades, which we call the _Kama-loka_. These are
- “the withered branches” mentioned by Jesus as being cut off
- from the _Vine_. Annihilation, however, is never instantaneous,
- and may require centuries sometimes for its accomplishment.
- But there the personality remains along with the _remnants_
- of other more fortunate personal Egos, and becomes with them
- a _shell_ and an _Elementary_. As said in _Isis_, it is these
- two classes of “Spirits,” the _shells_ and the _Elementaries_,
- which are the leading “Stars” on the great spiritual stage of
- “materialisations.” And you may be sure of it, it is not they
- who incarnate; and, therefore, so few of these “dear departed
- ones” know anything of re-incarnation, misleading thereby the
- Spiritualists.
-
- ENQ. But does not the author of “_Isis Unveiled_” stand accused of
- having preached against re-incarnation?
-
- THEO. By those who have misunderstood what was said, yes. At the
- time that work was written, re-incarnation was not believed in
- by any Spiritualists, either English or American, and what is
- said there of _re-incarnation_ was directed against the French
- Spiritists, whose theory is as unphilosophical and absurd as
- the Eastern teaching is logical and self-evident in its truth.
- The Re-incarnationists of the Allan Kardec School believe in an
- arbitrary and immediate re-incarnation. With them, the dead father
- can incarnate in his own unborn daughter, and so on. They have
- neither Devachan, Karma, nor any philosophy that would warrant
- or prove the necessity of consecutive rebirths. But how can the
- author of “Isis” argue against _Karmic_ re-incarnation, at long
- intervals varying between 1,000 and 1,500 years, when it is the
- fundamental belief of both Buddhists and Hindus?
-
- ENQ. Then you reject the theories of both the Spiritists and the
- Spiritualists, in their entirety?
-
- THEO. Not in their entirety, but only with regard to their respective
- fundamental beliefs. Both rely on what their “Spirits” tell them;
- and both disagree as much with each other as we Theosophists
- disagree with both. Truth is one; and when we hear the French
- spooks preaching re-incarnation, and the English spooks denying
- and denouncing the doctrine, we say that either the French or
- the English “Spirits” do not know what they are talking about.
- We believe with the Spiritualists and the Spiritists in the
- existence of “Spirits,” or invisible Beings endowed with more
- or less intelligence. But, while in our teachings their kinds
- and _genera_ are legion, our opponents admit of no other than
- human disembodied “Spirits,” which, to our knowledge, are mostly
- Kamalokic SHELLS.
-
- ENQ. You seem very bitter against Spirits. As you have given me your
- views and your reasons for disbelieving in the materialization
- of, and direct communication in _séances_, with the disembodied
- spirits—or the “spirits of the dead”—would you mind enlightening
- me as to one more fact? Why are some Theosophists never tired of
- saying how dangerous is intercourse with spirits, and mediumship?
- Have they any particular reason for this?
-
- THEO. We must suppose so. I know I have. Owing to my familiarity for
- over half a century with these invisible, yet but too tangible
- and undeniable “influences,” from the conscious Elementals,
- semi-conscious _shells_, down to the utterly senseless and
- nondescript spooks of all kinds, I claim a certain right to my
- views.
-
- ENQ. Can you give an instance or instances to show why these practices
- should be regarded as dangerous?
-
- THEO. This would require more time than I can give you. Every cause
- must be judged by the effects it produces. Go over the history of
- Spiritualism for the last fifty years, ever since its reappearance
- in this century in America—and judge for yourself whether it has
- done its votaries more good or harm. Pray understand me. I do not
- speak against real Spiritualism, but against the modern movement
- which goes under that name, and the so-called philosophy invented
- to explain its phenomena.
-
- ENQ. Don’t you believe in their phenomena at all?
-
- THEO. It is because I believe in them with too good reason, and (save
- some cases of deliberate fraud) know them to be as true as that
- you and I live, that all my being revolts against them. Once more
- I speak only of physical, not mental or even psychic phenomena.
- Like attracts like. There are several high-minded, pure, good
- men and women, known to me personally, who have passed years
- of their lives under the direct guidance and even protection of
- high “Spirits,” whether disembodied or planetary. But _these_
- Intelligences are not of the type of the John Kings and the
- Ernests who figure in _séance_ rooms. These Intelligences guide
- and control mortals only in rare and exceptional cases to which
- they are attracted and magnetically drawn by the Karmic past of
- the individual. It is not enough to sit “for development” in order
- to attract them. That only opens the door to a swarm of “spooks,”
- good, bad and indifferent, to which the medium becomes a slave for
- life. It is against such promiscuous mediumship and intercourse
- with goblins that I raise my voice, not against spiritual
- mysticism. The latter is ennobling and holy; the former is of just
- the same nature as the phenomena of two centuries ago, for which
- so many witches and wizards have been made to suffer. Read Glanvil
- and other authors on the subject of witchcraft, and you will find
- recorded there the parallels of most, if not all, of the physical
- phenomena of nineteenth century “Spiritualism.”
-
- ENQ. Do you mean to suggest that it is all witchcraft and nothing more?
-
- THEO. What I mean is that, whether conscious or unconscious, all this
- dealing with the dead is _necromancy_, and a most dangerous
- practice. For ages before Moses such raising of the dead was
- regarded by all the intelligent nations as sinful and cruel,
- inasmuch as it disturbs the rest of the souls and interferes with
- their evolutionary development into higher states. The collective
- wisdom of all past centuries has ever been loud in denouncing such
- practices. Finally, I say, what I have never ceased repeating
- orally and in print for fifteen years: While some of the so-called
- “spirits” do not know what they are talking about, repeating
- merely—like poll-parrots—what they find in the mediums’ and other
- people’s brains, others are most dangerous, and can only lead one
- to evil. These are two self-evident facts. Go into spiritualistic
- circles of the Allan Kardec school, and you find “spirits”
- asserting re-incarnation and speaking like Roman Catholics born.
- Turn to the “dear departed ones” in England and America, and you
- will hear them denying re-incarnation through thick and thin,
- denouncing those who teach it, and holding to Protestant views.
- Your best, your most powerful mediums, have all suffered in health
- of body and mind. Think of the sad end of Charles Foster, who
- died in an asylum, a raving lunatic; of Slade, an epileptic; of
- Eglinton—the best medium now in England—subject to the same. Look
- back over the life of D. D. Home, a man whose mind was steeped in
- gall and bitterness, who never had a good word to say of anyone
- whom he suspected of possessing psychic powers, and who slandered
- every other medium to the bitter end. This Calvin of Spiritualism
- suffered for years from a terrible spinal disease, brought on by
- his intercourse with the “spirits,” and died a perfect wreck.
- Think again of the sad fate of poor Washington Irving Bishop. I
- knew him in New York, when he was fourteen, and he was undeniably
- a medium. It is true that the poor man stole a march on his
- “spirits,” and baptized them “unconscious muscular action,” to
- the great _gaudium_ of all the corporations of highly learned and
- scientific fools, and to the replenishment of his own pocket.
- But _de mortuis nil nisi bonum_; his end was a sad one. He had
- strenuously concealed his epileptic fits—the first and strongest
- symptom of genuine mediumship—and who knows whether he was dead or
- in a trance when the _post-mortem_ examination was performed? His
- relatives insist that he was alive, if we are to believe Reuter’s
- telegrams. Finally, behold the veteran mediums, the founders and
- prime movers of modern spiritualism—the Fox sisters. After more
- than forty years of intercourse with the “Angels,” the latter
- have led them to become incurable sots, who are now denouncing,
- in public lectures, their own life-long work and philosophy as a
- fraud. What kind of spirits must they be who prompted them, I ask
- you?
-
- ENQ. But is your inference a correct one?
-
- THEO. What would you infer if the best pupils of a particular school of
- singing broke down from overstrained sore throats? That the method
- followed was a bad one. So I think the inference is equally fair
- with regard to Spiritualism when we see their best mediums fall a
- prey to such a fate. We can only say:—Let those who are interested
- in the question judge the tree of Spiritualism by its fruits,
- and ponder over the lesson. We Theosophists have always regarded
- the Spiritualists as brothers having the same mystic tendency
- as ourselves, but they have always regarded us as enemies. We,
- being in possession of an older philosophy, have tried to help
- and warn them; but they have repaid us by reviling and traducing
- us and our motives in every possible way. Nevertheless, the best
- English Spiritualists say just as we do, wherever they treat of
- their belief seriously. Hear “M.A. Oxon.” confessing this truth:
- “Spiritualists are too much inclined to dwell exclusively on the
- intervention of external spirits in this world of ours, _and to
- ignore the powers of the incarnate_ Spirit.”[54] Why vilify and
- abuse us, then, for saying precisely the same? Henceforward, we
- will have nothing more to do with Spiritualism. And now let us
- return to Re-incarnation.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[49] Being of “an _asbestos_-like nature,” according to the eloquent
-and fiery expression of a modern English Tertullian.
-
-[50] During the _Mysteries_, it is the Hierophant, the “Father,” who
-planted the Vine. Every symbol has Seven Keys to it. The discloser of
-the _Pleroma_ was always called “Father.”
-
-[51] _Zohar_ XL., 10.
-
-[52] _Codex Nazarœus_, Vol. III., pp. 60, 61.
-
-[53] Ibid., Vol. II., p. 281.
-
-[54] _Second Sight_, “Introduction.”
-
-
-
-
-XI. ON THE MYSTERIES OF RE-INCARNATION.
-
-
-PERIODICAL REBIRTHS.
-
- ENQ. You mean, then, that we have all lived on earth before, in many
- past incarnations, and shall go on so living?
-
- THEO. I do. The life-cycle, or rather the cycle of conscious life,
- begins with the separation of the mortal animal-man into sexes,
- and will end with the close of the last generation of men, in the
- seventh round and seventh race of mankind. Considering we are only
- in the fourth round and fifth race, its duration is more easily
- imagined than expressed.
-
- ENQ. And we keep on incarnating in new _personalities_ all the time?
-
- THEO. Most assuredly so; because this life-cycle or period of
- incarnation may be best compared to human life. As each such life
- is composed of days of activity separated by nights of sleep or of
- inaction, so, in the incarnation-cycle, an active life is followed
- by a Devachanic rest.
-
- ENQ. And it is this succession of births that is generally defined as
- re-incarnation?
-
- THEO. Just so. It is only through these births that the perpetual
- progress of the countless millions of Egos toward final perfection
- and final rest (as long as was the period of activity) can be
- achieved.
-
- ENQ. And what is it that regulates the duration, or special qualities
- of these incarnations?
-
- THEO. Karma, the universal law of retributive justice.
-
- ENQ. Is it an intelligent law?
-
- THEO. For the Materialist, who calls the law of periodicity which
- regulates the marshalling of the several bodies, and all the
- other laws in nature, blind forces and mechanical laws, no doubt
- Karma would be a law of chance and no more. For us, no adjective
- or qualification could describe that which is impersonal and no
- entity, but a universal operative law. If you question me about
- the causative intelligence in it, I must answer you I do not know.
- But if you ask me to define its effects and tell you what these
- are in our belief, I may say that the experience of thousands of
- ages has shown us that they are absolute and unerring _equity_,
- _wisdom_, and _intelligence_. For Karma in its effects, is an
- unfailing redresser of human injustice, and of all the failures
- of nature; a stern adjuster of wrongs; a retributive law which
- rewards and punishes with equal impartiality. It is, in the
- strictest sense, “no respecter of persons,” though, on the other
- hand, it can neither be propitiated, nor turned aside by prayer.
- This is a belief common to Hindus and Buddhists, who both believe
- in Karma.
-
- ENQ. In this Christian dogmas contradict both, and I doubt whether any
- Christian will accept the teaching.
-
- THEO. No; and Inman gave the reason for it many years ago. As he puts
- it, while “the Christians will accept any nonsense, if promulgated
- by the Church as a matter of faith ... the Buddhists hold that
- nothing which is contradicted by sound reason can be a true
- doctrine of Buddha.” They do not believe in any pardon for their
- sins, except after an adequate and just punishment for each evil
- deed or thought in a future incarnation, and a proportionate
- compensation to the parties injured.
-
- ENQ. Where is it so stated?
-
- THEO. In most of their sacred works. In the “_Wheel of the Law_”
- (p. 57) you may find the following Theosophical tenet:—“Buddhists
- believe that every act, word or thought has its consequence, which
- will appear sooner or later in the present or in the future state.
- Evil acts will produce evil consequences, good acts will produce
- good consequences: prosperity in this world, or birth in heaven
- (Devachan)... in the future state.”
-
- ENQ. Christians believe the same thing, don’t they?
-
- THEO. Oh, no; they believe in the pardon and the remission of all sins.
- They are promised that if they only believe in the blood of Christ
- (an _innocent_ victim!), in the blood offered by Him for the
- expiation of the sins of the whole of mankind, it will atone for
- every mortal sin. And we believe neither in vicarious atonement,
- nor in the possibility of the remission of the smallest sin by any
- god, not even by a “_personal_ Absolute” or “Infinite,” if such
- a thing could have any existence. What we believe in, is strict
- and impartial justice. Our idea of the unknown Universal Deity,
- represented by Karma, is that it is a Power which cannot fail,
- and can, therefore, have neither wrath nor mercy, only absolute
- Equity, which leaves every cause, great or small, to work out its
- inevitable effects. The saying of Jesus: “With what measure you
- mete it shall be measured to you again” (Matth. vii., 2), neither
- by expression nor implication points to any hope of future mercy
- or salvation by proxy. This is why, recognising as we do in our
- philosophy the justice of this statement, we cannot recommend
- too strongly mercy, charity, and forgiveness of mutual offences.
- _Resist not evil_, and _render good for evil_, are Buddhist
- precepts, and were first preached in view of the implacability
- of Karmic law. For man to take the law into his own hands is
- anyhow a sacrilegious presumption. Human Law may use restrictive
- not punitive measures; but a man who, believing in Karma, still
- revenges himself and refuses to forgive every injury, thereby
- rendering good for evil, is a criminal and only hurts himself. As
- Karma is sure to punish the man who wronged him, by seeking to
- inflict an additional punishment on his enemy, he, who instead
- of leaving that punishment to the great Law adds to it his own
- mite, only begets thereby a cause for the future reward of his own
- enemy and a future punishment for himself. The unfailing Regulator
- affects in each incarnation the quality of its successor; and the
- sum of the merit or demerit in preceding ones determines it.
-
- ENQ. Are we then to infer a man’s past from his present?
-
- THEO. Only so far as to believe that his present life is what it justly
- should be, to atone for the sins of the past life. Of course—seers
- and great adepts excepted—we cannot as average mortals know what
- those sins were. From our paucity of data, it is impossible for us
- even to determine what an old man’s youth must have been; neither
- can we, for like reasons, draw final conclusions merely from what
- we see in the life of some man, as to what his past life may have
- been.
-
-
-WHAT IS KARMA?
-
- ENQ. But what is Karma?
-
- THEO. As I have said, we consider it as the _Ultimate Law_ of the
- Universe, the source, origin and fount of all other laws which
- exist throughout Nature. Karma is the unerring law which adjusts
- effect to cause, on the physical, mental and spiritual planes of
- being. As no cause remains without its due effect from greatest
- to least, from a cosmic disturbance down to the movement of your
- hand, and as like produces like, _Karma_ is that unseen and
- unknown law _which adjusts wisely, intelligently and equitably_
- each effect to its cause, tracing the latter back to its producer.
- Though itself _unknowable_, its action is perceivable.
-
- ENQ. Then it is the “Absolute,” the “Unknowable” again, and is not of
- much value as an explanation of the problems of life?
-
- THEO. On the contrary. For, though we do not know what Karma is _per
- se_, and in its essence, we _do_ know _how_ it works, and we can
- define and describe its mode of action with accuracy. We only
- do _not_ know its ultimate _Cause_, just as modern philosophy
- universally admits that the _ultimate_ Cause of anything is
- “unknowable.”
-
- ENQ. And what has Theosophy to say in regard to the solution of the
- more practical needs of humanity? What is the explanation which
- it offers in reference to the awful suffering and dire necessity
- prevalent among the so-called “lower classes.”
-
- THEO. To be pointed, according to our teaching all these great social
- evils, the distinction of classes in Society, and of the sexes in
- the affairs of life, the unequal distribution of capital and of
- labour—all are due to what we tersely but truly denominate KARMA.
-
- ENQ. But, surely, all these evils which seem to fall upon the masses
- somewhat indiscriminately are not actual merited and INDIVIDUAL
- Karma?
-
- THEO. No, they cannot be so strictly defined in their effects as to
- show that each individual environment, and the particular
- conditions of life in which each person finds himself, are nothing
- more than the retributive Karma which the individual generated in
- a previous life. We must not lose sight of the fact that every
- atom is subject to the general law governing the whole body to
- which it belongs, and here we come upon the wider track of the
- Karmic law. Do you not perceive that the aggregate of individual
- Karma becomes that of the nation to which those individuals
- belong, and further, that the sum total of National Karma is that
- of the World! The evils that you speak of are not peculiar to the
- individual or even to the Nation, they are more or less universal;
- and it is upon this broad line of Human interdependence that the
- law of Karma finds its legitimate and equable issue.
-
- ENQ. Do I, then, understand that the law of Karma is not necessarily an
- individual law?
-
- THEO. That is just what I mean. It is impossible that Karma could
- readjust the balance of power in the world’s life and progress,
- unless it had a broad and general line of action. It is held as
- a truth among Theosophists that the interdependence of Humanity
- is the cause of what is called Distributive Karma, and it is this
- law which affords the solution to the great question of collective
- suffering and its relief. It is an occult law, moreover, that no
- man can rise superior to his individual failings, without lifting,
- be it ever so little, the whole body of which he is an integral
- part. In the same way, no one can sin, nor suffer the effects of
- sin, alone. In reality, there is no such thing as “Separateness”;
- and the nearest approach to that selfish state, which the laws of
- life permit, is in the intent or motive.
-
- ENQ. And are there no means by which the distributive or national Karma
- might be concentred or collected, so to speak, and brought to its
- natural and legitimate fulfilment without all this protracted
- suffering?
-
- THEO. As a general rule, and within certain limits which define the age
- to which we belong, the law of Karma cannot be hastened or
- retarded in its fulfilment. But of this I am certain, the point
- of possibility in either of these directions has never yet been
- touched. Listen to the following recital of one phase of national
- suffering, and then ask yourself whether, admitting the working
- power of individual, relative, and distributive Karma, these evils
- are not capable of extensive modification and general relief.
- What I am about to read to you is from the pen of a National
- Saviour, one who, having overcome Self, and being free to choose,
- has elected to serve Humanity, in bearing at least as much as a
- woman’s shoulders can possibly bear of National Karma. This is
- what she says:—
-
- “Yes, Nature always does speak, don’t you think? only sometimes
- we make so much noise that we drown her voice. That is why it
- is so restful to go out of the town and nestle awhile in the
- Mother’s arms. I am thinking of the evening on Hampstead Heath
- when we watched the sun go down; but oh! upon what suffering
- and misery that sun had set! A lady brought me yesterday a
- big hamper of wild flowers. I thought some of my East-end
- family had a better right to it than I, and so I took it down
- to a very poor school in Whitechapel this morning. You should
- have seen the pallid little faces brighten! Thence I went to
- pay for some dinners at a little cookshop for some children.
- It was in a back street, narrow, full of jostling people;
- stench indescribable, from fish, meat, and other comestibles,
- all reeking in a sun that, in Whitechapel, festers instead
- of purifying. The cookshop was the quintessence of all the
- smells. Indescribable meat-pies at 1d., loathsome lumps of
- ‘food’ and swarms of flies, a very altar of Beelzebub! All
- about, babies on the prowl for scraps, one, with the face of
- an angel, gathering up cherrystones as a light and nutritious
- form of diet. I came westward with every nerve shuddering and
- jarred, wondering whether anything can be done with some
- parts of London save swallowing them up in an earthquake and
- starting their inhabitants afresh, after a plunge into some
- purifying Lethe, out of which not a memory might emerge! And
- then I thought of Hampstead Heath, and—pondered. If by any
- sacrifice one could win the power to save these people, the
- cost would not be worth counting; but, you see, THEY must be
- changed—and how can that be wrought? In the condition they now
- are, they would not profit by any environment in which they
- might be placed; and yet, in their present surroundings they
- must continue to putrefy. It breaks my heart, this endless,
- hopeless misery, and the brutish degradation that is at once
- its outgrowth and its root. It is like the banyan tree; every
- branch roots itself and sends out new shoots. What a difference
- between these feelings and the peaceful scene at Hampstead!
- and yet we, who are the brothers and sisters of these poor
- creatures, have only a right to use Hampstead Heaths to
- gain strength to save Whitechapels.” (_Signed by a name too
- respected and too well known to be given to scoffers._)
-
- ENQ. That is a sad but beautiful letter, and I think it presents with
- painful conspicuity the terrible workings of what you have called
- “Relative and Distributive Karma.” But alas! there seems no
- immediate hope of any relief short of an earthquake, or some such
- general ingulfment!
-
- THEO. What right have we to think so while one-half of humanity is in a
- position to effect an immediate relief of the privations which are
- suffered by their fellows? When every individual has contributed
- to the general good what he can of money, of labour, and of
- ennobling thought, then, and only then, will the balance of
- National Karma be struck, and until then we have no right nor
- any reasons for saying that there is more life on the earth than
- Nature can support. It is reserved for the heroic souls, the
- Saviours of our Race and Nation, to find out the cause of this
- unequal pressure of retributive Karma, and by a supreme effort to
- readjust the balance of power, and save the people from a moral
- ingulfment a thousand times more disastrous and more permanently
- evil than the like physical catastrophe, in which you seem to see
- the only possible outlet for this accumulated misery.
-
- ENQ. Well, then, tell me generally how you describe this law of Karma?
-
- THEO. We describe Karma as that Law of readjustment which ever tends to
- restore disturbed equilibrium in the physical, and broken harmony
- in the moral world. We say that Karma does not act in this or that
- particular way always; but that it always _does_ act so as to
- restore Harmony and preserve the balance of equilibrium, in virtue
- of which the Universe exists.
-
- ENQ. Give me an illustration.
-
- THEO. Later on I will give you a full illustration. Think now of a
- pond. A stone falls into the water and creates disturbing waves.
- These waves oscillate backwards and forwards till at last,
- owning to the operation of what physicists call the law of the
- dissipation of energy, they are brought to rest, and the water
- returns to its condition of calm tranquillity. Similarly _all_
- action, on every plane, produces disturbance in the balanced
- harmony of the Universe, and the vibrations so produced will
- continue to roll backwards and forwards, if its area is limited,
- till equilibrium is restored. But since each such disturbance
- starts from some particular point, it is clear that equilibrium
- and harmony can only be restored by the reconverging _to that
- same point_ of all the forces which were set in motion from it.
- And here you have proof that the consequences of a man’s deeds,
- thoughts, etc., must all react upon _himself_ with the same force
- with which they were set in motion.
-
- ENQ. But I see nothing of a moral character about this law. It looks to
- me like the simple physical law that action and reaction are equal
- and opposite.
-
- THEO. I am not surprised to hear you say that. Europeans have got so
- much into the ingrained habit of considering right and wrong,
- good and evil, as matters of an arbitrary code of law laid
- down either by men, or imposed upon them by a Personal God. We
- Theosophists, however, say that “Good” and “Harmony,” and “Evil”
- and “Dis-harmony,” are synonymous. Further we maintain that all
- pain and suffering are results of want of Harmony, and that the
- one terrible and only cause of the disturbance of Harmony is
- selfishness in some form or another. Hence Karma gives back to
- every man the _actual consequences_ of his own actions, without
- any regard to their moral character; but since he receives his due
- for _all_, it is obvious that he will be made to atone for all
- sufferings which he has caused, just as he will reap in joy and
- gladness the fruits of all the happiness and harmony he had helped
- to produce. I can do no better than quote for your benefit certain
- passages from books and articles written by our Theosophists—those
- who have a correct idea of Karma.
-
- ENQ. I wish you would, as your literature seems to be very sparing on
- this subject?
-
- THEO. Because it is _the_ most difficult of all our tenets. Some short
- time ago there appeared the following objection from a Christian
- pen:—
-
- “Granting that the teaching in regard to Theosophy is correct,
- and that ‘man must be his own saviour, must overcome self and
- conquer the evil that is in his dual nature, to obtain the
- emancipation of his soul,’ what is man to do after he has
- been awakened and converted to a certain extent from evil or
- wickedness? How is he to get emancipation, or pardon, or the
- blotting out of the evil or wickedness he has already done?”
-
- To this Mr. J. H. Connelly replies very pertinently that no one
- can hope to “make the theosophical engine run on the theological
- track.” As he has it:—
-
- “The possibility of shirking individual responsibility is not
- among the concepts of Theosophy. In this faith there is no such
- thing as pardoning, or ‘blotting out of evil or wickedness
- already done,’ otherwise than by the adequate punishment
- therefor of the wrong-doer and the restoration of the harmony
- in the universe that had been disturbed by his wrongful act.
- The evil has been his own, and while others must suffer its
- consequences, atonement can be made by nobody but himself.
-
- “The condition contemplated ... in which a man shall have
- been ‘awakened and converted to a certain extent from evil
- or wickedness,’ is that in which a man shall have realized
- that his deeds are evil and deserving of punishment. In that
- realization a sense of personal responsibility is inevitable,
- and just in proportion to the extent of his awakening or
- ‘converting’ must be the sense of that awful responsibility.
- While it is strong upon him is the time when he is urged to
- accept the doctrine of vicarious atonement.
-
- “He is told that he must also repent, but nothing is easier
- than that. It is an amiable weakness of human nature that
- we are quite prone to regret the evil we have done when our
- attention is called, and we have either suffered from it
- ourselves or enjoyed its fruits. Possibly, close analysis of
- the feeling would show us that that which we regret is rather
- the necessity that seemed to require the evil as a means of
- attainment of our selfish ends than the evil itself.
-
- “Attractive as this prospect of casting our burden of sins
- ‘at the foot of the cross’ may be to the ordinary mind, it
- does not commend itself to the Theosophic student. He does not
- apprehend why the sinner by attaining knowledge of his evil
- can thereby merit any pardon for or the blotting out of his
- past wickedness; or why repentance and future right living
- entitle him to a suspension in his favour of the universal law
- of relation between cause and effect. The results of his evil
- deeds continue to exist; the suffering caused to others by his
- wickedness is not blotted out. The Theosophical student takes
- the result of wickedness upon the innocent into his problem. He
- considers not only the guilty person, but his victims.
-
- “Evil is an infraction of the laws of harmony governing the
- universe, and the penalty thereof must fall upon the violator
- of that law himself. Christ uttered the warning, ‘Sin no more,
- lest a worse thing come upon thee,’ and St. Paul said, ‘Work
- out your own salvation. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he
- also reap.’ That, by the way, is a fine metaphoric rendering of
- the sentence of the Puranas far antedating him—that ‘every man
- reaps the consequences of his own acts.’
-
- “This is the principle of the law of Karma which is taught by
- Theosophy. Sinnett, in his ‘Esoteric Buddhism,’ rendered Karma
- as ‘the law of ethical causation.’ ‘The law of retribution,’ as
- Mdme. Blavatsky translates its meaning, is better. It is the
- power which
-
- Just though mysterious, leads us on unerring
- Through ways unmarked from guilt to punishment.
-
- “But it is more. It rewards merit as unerringly and amply as it
- punishes demerit. It is the outcome of every act, of thought,
- word and deed, and by it men mould themselves, their lives and
- happenings. Eastern philosophy rejects the idea of a newly
- created soul for every baby born. It believes in a limited
- number of monads, evolving and growing more and more perfect
- through their assimilation of many successive personalities.
- Those personalities are the product of Karma and it is by Karma
- and re-incarnation that the human monad in time returns to its
- source—absolute deity.”
-
- E. D. Walker, in his “Re-incarnation,” offers the following
- explanation:—
-
- “Briefly, the doctrine of Karma is that we have made ourselves
- what we are by former actions, and are building our future
- eternity by present actions. There is no destiny but what we
- ourselves determine. There is no salvation or condemnation
- except what we ourselves bring about.... Because it offers
- no shelter for culpable actions and necessitates a sterling
- manliness, it is less welcome to weak natures than the easy
- religious tenets of vicarious atonement, intercession,
- forgiveness and death-bed conversions.... In the domain of
- eternal justice the offence and the punishment are inseparably
- connected as the same event, because there is no real
- distinction between the action and its outcome.... It is Karma,
- or our old acts, that draws us back into earthly life. The
- spirit’s abode changes according to its Karma, and this Karma
- forbids any long continuance in one condition, because _it_ is
- always changing. So long as action is governed by material and
- selfish motives, just so long must the effect of that action be
- manifested in physical rebirths. Only the perfectly selfless
- man can elude the gravitation of material life. Few have
- attained this, but it is the goal of mankind.”
-
- And then the writer quotes from the _Secret Doctrine_:
-
- “Those who believe in Karma have to believe in destiny, which,
- from birth to death, every man is weaving, thread by thread,
- around himself, as a spider does his cobweb, and this destiny
- is guided either by the heavenly voice of the invisible
- prototype outside of us, or by our more intimate astral or
- inner man, who is but too often the evil genius of the embodied
- entity called man. Both these lead on the outward man, but
- one of them must prevail; and from the very beginning of the
- invisible affray the stern and implacable law of compensation
- steps in and takes its course, faithfully following the
- fluctuations. When the last strand is woven, and man is
- seemingly enwrapped in the network of his own doing, then he
- finds himself completely under the empire of this self-made
- destiny.... An Occultist or a philosopher will not speak of the
- goodness or cruelty of Providence; but, identifying it with
- Karma-Nemesis, he will teach that, nevertheless, it guards
- the good and watches over them in this as in future lives;
- and that it punishes the evil-doer—aye, even to his seventh
- re-birth—so long, in short, as the effect of his having thrown
- into perturbation even the smallest atom in the infinite world
- of harmony has not been finally readjusted. For the only decree
- of Karma—an eternal and immutable decree—is absolute harmony
- in the world of matter as it is in the world of spirit. It is
- not, therefore, Karma that rewards or punishes, but it is we
- who reward or punish ourselves according to whether we work
- with, through and along with nature, abiding by the laws on
- which that harmony depends, or—break them. Nor would the ways
- of Karma be inscrutable were men to work in union and harmony,
- instead of disunion and strife. For our ignorance of those
- ways—which one portion of mankind calls the ways of Providence,
- dark and intricate; while another sees in them the action of
- blind fatalism; and a third simple chance, with neither gods
- nor devils to guide them—would surely disappear if we would
- but attribute all these to their correct cause.... We stand
- bewildered before the mystery of our own making and the riddles
- of life that we will not solve, and then accuse the great
- Sphinx of devouring us. But verily there is not an accident of
- our lives, not a misshapen day, or a misfortune, that could
- not be traced back to our own doings in this or in another
- life.... The law of Karma is inextricably interwoven with that
- of re-incarnation.... It is only this doctrine that can explain
- to us the mysterious problem of good and evil, and reconcile
- man to the terrible and apparent injustice of life. Nothing
- but such certainty can quiet our revolted sense of justice.
- For, when one unacquainted with the noble doctrine looks around
- him and observes the inequalities of birth and fortune, of
- intellect and capacities; when one sees honour paid to fools
- and profligates, on whom fortune has heaped her favours by
- mere privilege of birth, and their nearest neighbour, with
- all his intellect and noble virtues—far more deserving in
- every way—perishing for want and for lack of sympathy—when one
- sees all this and has to turn away, helpless to relieve the
- undeserved suffering, one’s ears ringing and heart aching
- with the cries of pain around him—that blessed knowledge of
- Karma alone prevents him from cursing life and men as well
- as their supposed Creator.... This law, whether conscious or
- unconscious, predestines nothing and no one. It exists from
- and in eternity truly, for it is eternity itself; and as such,
- since no act can be coequal with eternity, it cannot be said
- to act, for it is action itself. It is not the wave which
- drowns the man, but the personal action of the wretch who goes
- deliberately and places himself under the impersonal action
- of the laws that govern the ocean’s motion. Karma creates
- nothing, nor does it design. It is man who plants and creates
- causes, and Karmic law adjusts the effects, which adjustment is
- not an act but universal harmony, tending ever to resume its
- original position, like a bough, which, bent down too forcibly,
- rebounds with corresponding vigour. If it happen to dislocate
- the arm that tried to bend it out of its natural position,
- shall we say it is the bough which broke our arm or that our
- own folly has brought us to grief? Karma has never sought to
- destroy intellectual and individual liberty, like the god
- invented by the Monotheists. It has not involved its decrees
- in darkness purposely to perplex man, nor shall it punish him
- who dares to scrutinize its mysteries. On the contrary, he who
- unveils through study and meditation its intricate paths, and
- throws light on those dark ways, in the windings of which so
- many men perish owing to their ignorance of the labyrinth of
- life, is working for the good of his fellow-men. Karma is an
- absolute and eternal law in the world of manifestation; and as
- there can only be one Absolute, as one Eternal, ever-present
- Cause, believers in Karma cannot be regarded as atheists or
- materialists, still less as fatalists, for Karma is one with
- the Unknowable, of which it is an aspect, in its effects in the
- phenomenal world.”
-
- Another able Theosophic writer says (_Purpose of Theosophy_, by
- Mrs. P. Sinnett):—
-
- “Every individual is making Karma either good or bad in each
- action and thought of his daily round, and is at the same
- time working out in this life the Karma brought about by the
- acts and desires of the last. When we see people afflicted
- by congenital ailments it may be safely assumed that these
- ailments are the inevitable results of causes started by
- themselves in a previous birth. It may be argued that, as
- these afflictions are hereditary, they can have nothing to do
- with a past incarnation; but it must be remembered that the
- Ego, the real man, the individuality, has no spiritual origin
- in the parentage by which it is re-embodied, but it is drawn
- by the affinities which its previous mode of life attracted
- round it into the current that carries it, when the time comes
- for re-birth, to the home best fitted for the development of
- those tendencies.... This doctrine of Karma, when properly
- understood, is well calculated to guide and assist those
- who realize its truth to a higher and better mode of life,
- for it must not be forgotten that not only our actions but
- our thoughts also are most assuredly followed by a crowd of
- circumstances that will influence for good or for evil our own
- future, and, what is still more important, the future of many
- of our fellow-creatures. If sins of omission and commission
- could in any case be only self-regarding, the effect on the
- sinner’s Karma would be a matter of minor consequence. The fact
- that every thought and act through life carries with it for
- good or evil a corresponding influence on other members of the
- human family renders a strict sense of justice, morality, and
- unselfishness so necessary to future happiness or progress. A
- crime once committed, an evil thought sent out from the mind,
- are past recall—no amount of repentance can wipe out their
- results in the future. Repentance, if sincere, will deter a man
- from repeating errors; it cannot save him or others from the
- effects of those already produced, which will most unerringly
- overtake him either in this life or in the next re-birth.”
-
- Mr. J. H. Connelly proceeds—
-
- “The believers in a religion based upon such doctrine are
- willing it should be compared with one in which man’s destiny
- for eternity is determined by the accidents of a single,
- brief earthly existence, during which he is cheered by the
- promise that ‘as the tree falls so shall it lie’; in which
- his brightest hope, when he wakes up to a knowledge of his
- wickedness, is the doctrine of vicarious atonement, and in
- which even that is handicapped, according to the Presbyterian
- Confession of Faith.
-
- “By the decree of God, for the manifestation of his glory, some
- men and angels are predestinated unto everlasting life and
- others foreordained to everlasting death.
-
- “These angels and men thus predestinated and foreordained are
- particularly and unchangeably designed; and their number is
- so certain and definite that it cannot be either increased or
- diminished. ... As God hath appointed the elect unto glory....
- Neither are any other redeemed by Christ effectually called,
- justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only.
-
- “The rest of mankind God was pleased, according to the
- unsearchable counsel of his own will, whereby he extendeth
- or withholdeth mercy as he pleaseth, for the glory of his
- sovereign power over his creatures, to pass by and to ordain
- them to dishonour and wrath for their sin to the praise of his
- glorious justice.”
-
- This is what the able defender says. Nor can we do any better than
- wind up the subject as he does, by a quotation from a magnificent
- poem. As he says:—
-
- “The exquisite beauty of Edwin Arnold’s exposition of Karma in
- ‘The Light of Asia’ tempts to its reproduction here, but it is
- too long for quotation in full. Here is a portion of it:—
-
- Karma—all that total of a soul
- Which is the things it did, the thoughts it had,
- The “self” it wove with woof of viewless time
- Crossed on the warp invisible of acts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- 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.
-
- It will not be contemned of anyone;
- Who thwarts it loses, and who serves it gains:
- The hidden good it pays with peace and bliss,
- The hidden ill with pains.
-
- It seeth everywhere and marketh all;
- Do right—it recompenseth! Do one wrong—
- The equal retribution must be made,
- Though Dharma tarry long.
-
- It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter-true,
- Its measures mete, its faultless balance weighs;
- Times are as naught, to-morrow it will judge
- Or after many days.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Such is the law which moves to righteousness,
- Which none at last can turn aside or stay;
- The heart of it is love, the end of it
- Is peace and consummation sweet. Obey.
-
- And now I advise you to compare our Theosophic views upon Karma,
- the law of Retribution, and say whether they are not both more
- philosophical and just than this cruel and idiotic dogma which
- makes of “God” a senseless fiend; the tenet, namely, that the
- “elect only” will be saved, and the rest doomed to eternal
- perdition!
-
- ENQ. Yes, I see what you mean generally; but I wish you could give some
- concrete example of the action of Karma?
-
- THEO. That I cannot do. We can only feel sure, as I said before, that
- our present lives and circumstances are the direct results of our
- own deeds and thoughts in lives that are past. But we, who are not
- Seers or Initiates, cannot know anything about the details of the
- working of the law of Karma.
-
- ENQ. Can anyone, even an Adept or Seer, follow out this Karmic process
- of readjustment in detail?
-
- THEO. Certainly: “Those who _know_” can do so by the exercise of powers
- which are latent even in all men.
-
-
-WHO ARE THOSE WHO KNOW?
-
- ENQ. Does this hold equally of ourselves as of others?
-
- THEO. Equally. As just said, the same limited vision exists for all,
- save those who have reached in the present incarnation the acme of
- spiritual vision and clairvoyance. We can only perceive that, if
- things with us ought to have been different, they would have been
- different; that we are what we have made ourselves, and have only
- what we have earned for ourselves.
-
- ENQ. I am afraid such a conception would only embitter us.
-
- THEO. I believe it is precisely the reverse. It is disbelief in the
- just law of retribution that is more likely to awaken every
- combative feeling in man. A child, as much as a man, resents a
- punishment, or even a reproof he believes to be unmerited, far
- more than he does a severer punishment, if he feels that it is
- merited. Belief in Karma is the highest reason for reconcilement
- to one’s lot in this life, and the very strongest incentive
- towards effort to better the succeeding re-birth. Both of these,
- indeed, would be destroyed if we supposed that our lot was the
- result of anything but strict _Law_, or that destiny was in any
- other hands than our own.
-
- ENQ. You have just asserted that this system of Re-incarnation under
- Karmic law commended itself to reason, justice, and the moral
- sense. But, if so, is it not at some sacrifice of the gentler
- qualities of sympathy and pity, and thus a hardening of the finer
- instincts of human nature?
-
- THEO. Only apparently, not really. No man can receive more or less than
- his deserts without a corresponding injustice or partiality to
- others; and a law which could be averted through compassion would
- bring about more misery than it saved, more irritation and curses
- than thanks. Remember also, that we do not administer the law, if
- we do create causes for its effects; it administers itself; and
- again, that the most copious provision for the manifestation of
- _just_ compassion and mercy is shown in the state of Devachan.
-
- ENQ. You speak of Adepts as being an exception to the rule of our
- general ignorance. Do they really know more than we do of
- Re-incarnation and after states?
-
- THEO. They do, indeed. By the training of faculties we all possess, but
- which they alone have developed to perfection, they have entered
- in spirit these various planes and states we have been discussing.
- For long ages, one generation of Adepts after another has studied
- the mysteries of being, of life, death, and re-birth, and all have
- taught in their turn some of the facts so learned.
-
- ENQ. And is the production of Adepts the aim of Theosophy?
-
- THEO. Theosophy considers humanity as an emanation from divinity on its
- return path thereto. At an advanced point upon the path, Adeptship
- is reached by those who have devoted several incarnations to its
- achievement. For, remember well, no man has ever reached Adeptship
- in the Secret Sciences in one life; but many incarnations are
- necessary for it after the formation of a conscious purpose and
- the beginning of the needful training. Many may be the men
- and women in the very midst of our Society who have begun this
- uphill work toward illumination several incarnations ago, and
- who yet, owing to the personal illusions of the present life,
- are either ignorant of the fact, or on the road to losing every
- chance in this existence of progressing any farther. They feel an
- irresistible attraction toward occultism and the _Higher Life_,
- and yet are too personal and self-opinionated, too much in love
- with the deceptive allurements of mundane life and the world’s
- ephemeral pleasures, to give them up; and so lose their chance
- in their present birth. But, for ordinary men, for the practical
- duties of daily life, such a far-off result is inappropriate as an
- aim and quite ineffective as a motive.
-
- ENQ. What, then, may be their object or distinct purpose in joining the
- Theosophical Society?
-
- THEO. Many are interested in our doctrines and feel instinctively that
- they are truer than those of any dogmatic religion. Others have
- formed a fixed resolve to attain the highest ideal of man’s duty.
-
-
-THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN FAITH AND KNOWLEDGE; OR, BLIND AND REASONED
-FAITH.
-
- ENQ. You say that they accept and believe in the doctrines of
- Theosophy. But, as they do not belong to those Adepts you have
- just mentioned, then they must accept your teachings on _blind
- faith_. In what does this differ from that of conventional
- religions?
-
- THEO. As it differs on almost all the other points, so it differs on
- this one. What you call “faith,” and that which is _blind
- faith_, in reality, and with regard to the dogmas of the
- Christian religions, becomes with us “_knowledge_,” the logical
- sequence of things _we know_, about _facts_ in nature. Your
- Doctrines are based upon interpretation, therefore, upon the
- _second-hand_ testimony of Seers; ours upon the invariable and
- unvarying testimony of Seers. The ordinary Christian theology for
- instance, holds that man is a creature of God, of three component
- parts—body, soul, and spirit—all essential to his integrity, and
- all, either in the gross form of physical earthly existence or
- in the etherealized form of post-resurrection experience, needed
- to so constitute him for ever, each man having thus a permanent
- existence separate from other men, and from the Divine. Theosophy,
- on the other hand, holds that man, being an emanation from the
- Unknown, yet ever present and infinite Divine Essence, his body
- and everything else is impermanent, hence an illusion; Spirit
- alone in him being the one enduring substance, and even that
- losing its separated individuality at the moment of its complete
- reunion with the _Universal Spirit_.
-
- ENQ. If we lose even our individuality, then it becomes simply
- annihilation.
-
- THEO. I say it _does not_, since I speak of _separate_, not of
- universal individuality. The latter becomes as a part transformed
- into the whole; the _dewdrop_ is not evaporated, but becomes the
- sea. Is physical man _annihilated_, when from a fœtus he becomes
- an old man? What kind of Satanic pride must be ours if we place
- our infinitesimally small consciousness and individuality higher
- than the universal and infinite consciousness!
-
- ENQ. It follows, then, that there is, _de facto_, no man, but all is
- Spirit?
-
- THEO. You are mistaken. It thus follows that the union of Spirit with
- matter is but temporary; or, to put it more clearly, since
- Spirit and matter are one, being the two opposite poles of the
- _universal_ manifested substance—that Spirit loses its right
- to the name so long as the smallest particle and atom of its
- manifesting substance still clings to any form, the result of
- differentiation. To believe otherwise is _blind faith_.
-
- ENQ. Thus it is on _knowledge_, not on _faith_, that you assert that
- the permanent principle, the Spirit, simply makes a transit
- through matter?
-
- THEO. I would put it otherwise and say—we assert that the appearance of
- the permanent and one principle, Spirit, _as matter_ is transient,
- and, therefore, no better than an illusion.
-
- ENQ. Very well; and this, given out on knowledge not faith?
-
- THEO. Just so. But as I see very well what you are driving at, I may
- just as well tell you that we hold _faith_, such as you advocate,
- to be a mental disease, and real faith, _i.e._, the _pistis_ of
- the Greeks, as “_belief based on knowledge_,” whether supplied by
- the evidence of physical or _spiritual_ senses.
-
- ENQ. What do you mean?
-
- THEO. I mean, if it is the difference between the two that you want to
- know, then I can tell you that between _faith on authority_ and
- _faith on one’s spiritual intuition_, there is a very great
- difference.
-
- ENQ. What is it?
-
- THEO. One is human credulity and _superstition_, the other human belief
- and _intuition_. As Professor Alexander Wilder says in his
- “Introduction to the _Eleusinian Mysteries_,” “It is ignorance
- which leads to profanation. Men ridicule what they do not properly
- understand.... The undercurrent of this world is set towards
- one goal; and inside of human credulity ... is a power almost
- infinite, a holy faith capable of apprehending the supremest
- truths of all existence.” Those who limit that “credulity” to
- human authoritative dogmas alone, will never fathom that power
- nor even perceive it in their natures. It is stuck fast to the
- external plane and is unable to bring forth into play the essence
- that rules it; for to do this they have to claim their right of
- private judgment, and this they never _dare_ to do.
-
- ENQ. And is it that “intuition” which forces you to reject God as a
- personal Father, Ruler and Governor of the Universe?
-
- THEO. Precisely. We believe in an ever unknowable Principle, because
- blind aberration alone can make one maintain that the Universe,
- thinking man, and all the marvels contained even in the world
- of matter, could have grown without some _intelligent powers_
- to bring about the extraordinarily wise arrangement of all its
- parts. Nature may err, and often does, in its details and the
- external manifestations of its materials, never in its inner
- causes and results. Ancient pagans held on this question far
- more philosophical views than modern philosophers, whether
- Agnostics, Materialists or Christians; and no pagan writer has
- ever yet advanced the proposition that cruelty and mercy are
- not finite feelings, and can therefore be made the attributes of
- an _infinite_ god. Their gods, therefore, were all finite. The
- Siamese author of the _Wheel of the Law_, expresses the same idea
- about your personal god as we do; he says (p. 25):
-
- “A Buddhist might believe in the existence of a god; sublime
- above all human qualities and attributes—a perfect god, above
- love, and hatred, and jealousy, calmly resting in a quietude
- that nothing could disturb, and of such a god he would speak
- no disparagement, not from a desire to please him or fear
- to offend him, but from natural veneration; but he cannot
- understand a god with the attributes and qualities of men, a
- god who loves and hates, and shows anger; a Deity who, whether
- described as by Christian Missionaries or by Mahometans or
- Brahmins,[55] or Jews, falls below his standard of even an
- ordinary good man.”
-
- ENQ. Faith for faith, is not the faith of the Christian who believes,
- in his human helplessness and humility, that there is a merciful
- Father in Heaven who will protect him from temptation, help him in
- life, and forgive him his transgressions, better than the cold and
- proud, almost fatalistic faith of the Buddhists, Vedantins, and
- Theosophists?
-
- THEO. Persist in calling our belief “faith” if you will. But once we
- are again on this ever-recurring question, I ask in my turn:
- faith for faith, is not the one based on strict logic and reason
- better than the one which is based simply on human authority
- or—hero-worship? _Our_ “faith” has all the logical force of the
- arithmetical truism that 2 and 2 will produce 4. Your faith is
- like the logic of some emotional woman, of whom Tourgenyeff said
- that for them 2 and 2 were generally 5, and a tallow candle into
- the bargain. Yours is a faith, moreover, which clashes not only
- with every conceivable view of justice and logic, but which, if
- analysed, leads man to his moral perdition, checks the progress of
- mankind, and positively making of might, right—transforms every
- second man into a Cain to his brother Abel.
-
- ENQ. What do you allude to?
-
-
-HAS GOD THE RIGHT TO FORGIVE?
-
- THEO. To the Doctrine of Atonement; I allude to that dangerous dogma in
- which you believe, and which teaches us that no matter how
- enormous our crimes against the laws of God and of man, we have
- but to believe in the self-sacrifice of Jesus for the salvation
- of mankind, and his blood will wash out every stain. It is twenty
- years that I preach against it, and I may now draw your attention
- to a paragraph from _Isis Unveiled_, written in 1875. This is what
- Christianity teaches, and what we combat:—
-
- “God’s mercy is boundless and unfathomable. It is impossible
- to conceive of a human sin so damnable that the price paid
- in advance for the redemption of the sinner would not wipe
- it out if a thousandfold worse. And furthermore, it is never
- too late to repent. Though the offender wait until the last
- minute of the last hour of the last day of his mortal life,
- before his blanched lips utter the confession of faith, he may
- go to Paradise; the dying thief did it, and so may all others
- as vile. These are the assumptions of the Church, and of the
- Clergy; assumptions banged at the heads of your countrymen by
- England’s favourite preachers, right in the ‘light of the XIXth
- century,’” this most paradoxical age of all. Now to what does
- it lead?
-
- ENQ. Does it not make the Christian happier than the Buddhist or
- Brahmin?
-
- THEO. No; not the educated man, at any rate, since the majority of
- these have long since virtually lost all belief in this cruel
- dogma. But it leads those who still believe in it more _easily to
- the threshold of every conceivable crime_, than any other I know
- of. Let me quote to you from _Isis_ once more (_vide_ Vol. II.,
- pp. 542 and 543)—
-
- “If we step outside the little circle of creed and consider
- the universe as a whole balanced by the exquisite adjustment
- of parts, how all sound logic, how the faintest glimmering
- sense of Justice, revolts against this Vicarious Atonement!
- If the criminal sinned only against himself, and wronged no
- one but himself; if by sincere repentance he could cause the
- obliteration of past events, not only from the memory of man,
- but also from that imperishable record, which no deity—not
- even the Supremes, of the Supreme—can cause to disappear, then
- this dogma might not be incomprehensible. But to maintain that
- one may wrong his fellow-man, kill, disturb the equilibrium
- of society and the natural order of things, and then—through
- cowardice, hope, or compulsion, it matters not—be forgiven by
- believing that the spilling of one blood washes out the other
- blood spilt—this is preposterous! Can the _results_ of a crime
- be obliterated even though the crime itself should be pardoned?
- The effects of a cause are never limited to the boundaries of
- the cause, nor can the results of crime be confined to the
- offender and his victim. Every good as well as evil action has
- its effects, as palpably as the stone flung into calm water.
- The simile is trite, but it is the best ever conceived, so
- let us use it. The eddying circles are greater and swifter as
- the disturbing object is greater or smaller, but the smallest
- pebble, nay, the tiniest speck, makes its ripples. And this
- disturbance is not alone visible and on the surface. Below,
- unseen, in every direction—outward and downward—drop pushes
- drop until the sides and bottom are touched by the force. More,
- the air above the water is agitated, and this disturbance
- passes, as the physicists tell us, from stratum to stratum
- out into space forever and ever; an impulse has been given to
- matter, and that is never lost, can never be recalled!...
-
- “So with crime, and so with its opposite. The action may be
- instantaneous, the effects are eternal. When, after the stone
- is once flung into the pond, we can recall it to the hand,
- roll back the ripples, obliterate the force expended, restore
- the etheric waves to their previous state of non-being, and
- wipe out every trace of the act of throwing the missile, so
- that Time’s record shall not show that it ever happened, then,
- _then_ we may patiently hear Christians argue for the efficacy
- of this Atonement,”
-
- and—cease to believe in Karmic Law. As it now stands, we call upon
- the whole world to decide, which of our two doctrines is the most
- appreciative of deific justice, and which is more reasonable, even
- on simple human evidence and logic.
-
- ENQ. Yet millions believe in the Christian dogma and are happy.
-
- THEO. Pure sentimentalism overpowering their thinking faculties, which
- no true philanthropist or Altruist will ever accept. It is
- not even a dream of selfishness, but a nightmare of the human
- intellect. Look where it leads to, and tell me the name of that
- pagan country where crimes are more easily committed or more
- numerous than in Christian lands. Look at the long and ghastly
- annual records of crimes committed in European countries; and
- behold Protestant and Biblical America. There, _conversions_
- effected in prisons are more numerous than those made by public
- _revivals_ and preaching. See how the ledger-balance of Christian
- justice (!) stands; Red-handed murderers, urged on by the demons
- of lust, revenge, cupidity, fanaticism, or mere brutal thirst for
- blood, who kill their victims, in most cases, without giving them
- time to repent or call on Jesus. These, perhaps, died sinful, and,
- of course—consistently with theological logic—met the reward of
- their greater or lesser offences. But the murderer, overtaken by
- human justice, is imprisoned, wept over by sentimentalists, prayed
- with and at, pronounces the charmed words of conversion, and goes
- to the scaffold a redeemed child of Jesus! Except for the murder,
- he would not have been prayed with, redeemed, pardoned. Clearly
- this man did well to murder, for thus he gained eternal happiness!
- And how about the victim and his, or her family, relatives,
- dependents, social relations; has justice no recompense for them?
- Must they suffer in this world and the next, while he who wronged
- them sits beside the “holy thief” of Calvary, and is for ever
- blessed? On this question the clergy keep a prudent silence.
- (_Isis Unveiled._) And now you know why Theosophists—whose
- fundamental belief and hope is justice for all, in Heaven as on
- earth, and in Karma—reject this dogma.
-
- ENQ. The ultimate destiny of man, then, is not a Heaven presided over
- by God, but the gradual transformation of matter into its
- primordial element, Spirit?
-
- THEO. It is to that final goal to which all tends in nature.
-
- ENQ. Do not some of you regard this association or “fall of spirit into
- matter” as evil, and re-birth as a sorrow?
-
- THEO. Some do, and therefore strive to shorten their period of
- probation on earth. It is not an unmixed evil, however, since
- it ensures the experience upon which we mount to knowledge and
- wisdom. I mean that experience which _teaches_ that the needs of
- our spiritual nature can never be met by other than spiritual
- happiness. As long as we are in the body, we are subjected to
- pain, suffering and all the disappointing incidents occurring
- during life. Therefore, and to palliate this, we finally acquire
- knowledge which alone can afford us relief and hope of a better
- future.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[55] Sectarian Brahmins are here meant. The Parabrahm of the Vedantins
-is the Deity we accept and believe in.
-
-
-
-
-XII. WHAT IS PRACTICAL THEOSOPHY?
-
-
-DUTY.
-
- ENQ. Why, then, the need for rebirths, since all alike fail to secure a
- permanent peace?
-
- THEO. Because the final goal cannot be reached in any way but through
- life experiences and because the bulk of these consist in pain and
- suffering. It is only through the latter that we can learn. Joys
- and pleasures teach us nothing; they are evanescent, and can only
- bring in the long run satiety. Moreover, our constant failure to
- find any permanent satisfaction in life which would meet the wants
- of our higher nature, shows us plainly that those wants can be met
- only on their own plane, to-wit—the spiritual.
-
- ENQ. Is the natural result of this a desire to quit life by one means
- or another?
-
- THEO. If you mean by such desire “suicide,” then I say, most decidedly
- not. Such a result can never be a “natural” one, but is ever
- due to a morbid brain disease, or to most decided and strong
- materialistic views. It is the worst of crimes and dire in
- its results. But if by desire, you mean simply aspiration to
- reach spiritual existence, not a wish to quit the earth, then I
- would call it a very natural desire indeed. Otherwise voluntary
- death would be an abandonment of our present post and of the
- duties incumbent on us, as well as an attempt to shirk Karmic
- responsibilities, and thus involve the creation of new Karma.
-
- ENQ. But if actions on the material plane are unsatisfying, why should
- duties, which are such actions, be imperative?
-
- THEO. First of all, because our philosophy teaches us that the object
- of doing our duties to all men and to ourselves the last, is not
- the attainment of personal happiness, but of the happiness of
- others; the fulfilment of right for the sake of right, not for
- what it may bring us. Happiness, or rather contentment, may indeed
- follow the performance of duty, but is not and must not be the
- motive for it.
-
- ENQ. What do you understand precisely by “duty” in Theosophy? It cannot
- be the Christian duties preached by Jesus and his Apostles, since
- you recognize neither?
-
- THEO. You are once more mistaken. What you call “Christian duties” were
- inculcated by every great moral and religious Reformer ages before
- the Christian era. All that was great, generous, heroic, was, in
- days of old, not only talked about and preached from pulpits as
- in our own time, but _acted upon_ sometimes by whole nations.
- The history of the Buddhist reform is full of the most noble and
- most heroically unselfish acts. “Be ye all of one mind, having
- compassion one of another; love as brethren, be pitiful, be
- courteous; not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing;
- but contrariwise, blessing” was practically carried out by the
- followers of Buddha, several centuries before Peter. The Ethics of
- Christianity are grand, no doubt; but as undeniably they are not
- new, and have originated as “Pagan” duties.
-
- ENQ. And how would you define these duties, or “duty,” in general, as
- you understand the term?
-
- THEO. Duty is that which is _due_ to Humanity, to our fellow-men,
- neighbours, family, and especially that which we owe to all those
- who are poorer and more helpless than we are ourselves. This is
- a debt which, if left unpaid during life, leaves us spiritually
- insolvent and moral bankrupts in our next incarnation. Theosophy
- is the quintessence of _duty_.
-
- ENQ. So is Christianity when rightly understood and carried out.
-
- THEO. No doubt it is; but then, were it not a _lip-religion_ in
- practice, Theosophy would have little to do amidst Christians.
- Unfortunately it is but such lip-ethics. Those who practise their
- duty towards all, and for duty’s own sake, are few; and fewer
- still are those who perform that duty, remaining content with the
- satisfaction of their own secret consciousness. It is—
-
- “... the public voice
- Of praise that honours virtue and rewards it,”
-
- which is ever uppermost in the minds of the “world renowned”
- philanthropists. Modern ethics are beautiful to read about and
- hear discussed; but what are words unless converted into actions?
- Finally: if you ask me how we understand Theosophical duty
- practically and in view of Karma, I may answer you that our duty
- is to drink without a murmur to the last drop, whatever contents
- the cup of life may have in store for us, to pluck the roses of
- life only for the fragrance they may shed on _others_, and to be
- ourselves content but with the thorns, if that fragrance cannot be
- enjoyed without depriving some one else of it.
-
- ENQ. All this is very vague. What do you do more than Christians do?
-
- THEO. It is not what we members of the Theosophical Society do—though
- some of us try our best—but how much farther Theosophy leads to
- good than modern Christianity does. I say—_action_, enforced
- action, instead of mere intention and talk. A man may be what he
- likes, the most worldly, selfish and hard-hearted of men, even a
- deep-dyed rascal, and it will not prevent him from calling himself
- a Christian, or others from so regarding him. But no Theosophist
- has the right to this name, unless he is thoroughly imbued with
- the correctness of Carlyle’s truism: “The end of man is an
- _action_ and not a _thought_, though it were the noblest”—and
- unless he sets and models his daily life upon this truth. The
- profession of a truth is not yet the enactment of it; and the more
- beautiful and grand it sounds, the more loudly virtue or duty is
- talked about instead of being acted upon, the more forcibly it
- will always remind one of the Dead Sea fruit. _Cant_ is the most
- loathsome of all vices; and _cant_ is the most prominent feature
- of the greatest Protestant country of this century—England.
-
- ENQ. What do you consider as due to humanity at large?
-
-
- THEO. Full recognition of equal rights and privileges for all, and
- without distinction of race, colour, social position, or birth.
-
- ENQ. When would you consider such due not given?
-
- THEO. When there is the slightest invasion of another’s right—be that
- other a man or a nation; when there is any failure to show him the
- same justice, kindness, consideration or mercy which we desire for
- ourselves. The whole present system of politics is built on the
- oblivion of such rights, and the most fierce assertion of national
- selfishness. The French say: “Like master, like man”; they ought
- to add, “Like national policy, like citizen.”
-
- ENQ. Do you take any part in politics?
-
- THEO. As a Society, we carefully avoid them, for the reasons given
- below. To seek to achieve political reforms before we have
- affected a reform in _human nature, is like putting new wine into
- old bottles_. Make men feel and recognise in their innermost
- hearts what is their real, true duty to all men, and every old
- abuse of power, every iniquitous law in the national policy, based
- on human, social or political selfishness, will disappear of
- itself. Foolish is the gardener who seeks to weed his flower-bed
- of poisonous plants by cutting them off from the surface of
- the soil, instead of tearing them out by the roots. No lasting
- political reform can be ever achieved with the same selfish men at
- the head of affairs as of old.
-
-
-THE RELATIONS OF THE T.S. TO POLITICAL REFORMS.
-
- ENQ. The Theosophical Society is not, then, a political organization?
-
- THEO. Certainly not. It is international in the highest sense in that
- its members comprise men and women of all races, creeds, and forms
- of thought, who work together for one object, the improvement of
- humanity; but as a society it takes absolutely no part in any
- national or party politics.
-
- ENQ. Why is this?
-
- THEO. Just for the reasons I have mentioned. Moreover, political action
- must necessarily vary with the circumstances of the time and with
- the idiosyncracies of individuals. While from the very nature of
- their position as Theosophists the members of the T.S. are agreed
- on the principles of Theosophy, or they would not belong to the
- society at all, it does not thereby follow that they agree on
- every other subject. As a society they can only act together in
- matters which are common to all—that is, in Theosophy itself; as
- individuals, each is left perfectly free to follow out his or
- her particular line of political thought and action, so long as
- this does not conflict with Theosophical principles, or hurt the
- Theosophical Society.
-
- ENQ. But surely the T.S. does not stand altogether aloof from the
- social questions which are now so fast coming to the front?
-
- THEO. The very principles of the T.S. are a proof that it does not—or,
- rather, that most of its members do not—so stand aloof. If
- humanity can only be developed mentally and spiritually by the
- enforcement, first of all, of the soundest and most scientific
- physiological laws, it is the bounden duty of all who strive
- for this development to do their utmost to see that those laws
- shall be generally carried out. All Theosophists are only too
- sadly aware that, in Occidental countries especially, the social
- condition of large masses of the people renders it impossible for
- either their bodies or their spirits to be properly trained, so
- that the development of both is thereby arrested. As this training
- and development is one of the express objects of Theosophy, the
- T.S. is in thorough sympathy and harmony with all true efforts in
- this direction.
-
- ENQ. But what do you mean by “true efforts”? Each social reformer has
- his own panacea, and each believes his to be the one and only
- thing which can improve and save humanity?
-
- THEO. Perfectly true, and this is the real reason why so little
- satisfactory social work is accomplished. In most of these
- panaceas there is no really guiding principle, and there is
- certainly no one principle which connects them all. Valuable time
- and energy are thus wasted; for men, instead of co-operating,
- strive one against the other, often, it is to be feared, for the
- sake of fame and reward rather than for the great cause which they
- profess to have at heart, and which should be supreme in their
- lives.
-
- ENQ. How, then, should Theosophical principles be applied so that
- social co-operation may be promoted and true efforts for social
- amelioration be carried on?
-
- THEO. Let me briefly remind you what these principles are—universal
- Unity and Causation; Human Solidarity; the Law of Karma;
- Re-incarnation. These are the four links of the golden chain which
- should bind humanity into one family, one universal Brotherhood.
-
- ENQ. How?
-
- THEO. In the present state of society, especially in so-called
- civilized countries, we are continually brought face to face with
- the fact that large numbers of people are suffering from misery,
- poverty and disease. Their physical condition is wretched, and
- their mental and spiritual faculties are often almost dormant. On
- the other hand, many persons at the opposite end of the social
- scale are leading lives of careless indifference, material luxury,
- and selfish indulgence. Neither of these forms of existence
- is mere chance. Both are the effects of the conditions which
- surround those who are subject to them, and the neglect of social
- duty on the one side is most closely connected with the stunted
- and arrested development on the other. In sociology, as in all
- branches of true science, the law of universal causation holds
- good. But this causation necessarily implies, as its logical
- outcome, that human solidarity on which Theosophy so strongly
- insists. If the action of one reacts on the lives of all, and this
- is the true scientific idea, then it is only by all men becoming
- brothers and all women sisters, and by all practising in their
- daily lives true brotherhood and true sisterhood, that the real
- human solidarity, which lies at the root of the elevation of the
- race, can ever be attained. It is this action and interaction,
- this true brotherhood and sisterhood, in which each shall live for
- all and all for each, which is one of the fundamental Theosophical
- principles that every Theosophist should be bound, not only to
- teach, but to carry out in his or her individual life.
-
- ENQ. All this is very well as a general principle, but how would you
- apply it in a concrete way?
-
- THEO. Look for a moment at what you would call the concrete facts of
- human society. Contrast the lives not only of the masses of the
- people, but of many of those who are called the middle and upper
- classes, with what they might be under healthier and nobler
- conditions, where justice, kindness, and love were paramount,
- instead of the selfishness, indifference, and brutality which
- now too often seem to reign supreme. All good and evil things in
- humanity have their roots in human character, and this character
- is, and has been, conditioned by the endless chain of cause and
- effect. But this conditioning applies to the future as well as
- to the present and the past. Selfishness, indifference, and
- brutality can never be the normal state of the race—to believe so
- would be to despair of humanity—and that no Theosophist can do.
- Progress can be attained, and only attained, by the development
- of the nobler qualities. Now, true evolution teaches us that
- by altering the surroundings of the organism we can alter and
- improve the organism; and in the strictest sense this is true
- with regard to man. Every Theosophist, therefore, is bound to do
- his utmost to help on, by all the means in his power, every wise
- and well-considered social effort which has for its object the
- amelioration of the condition of the poor. Such efforts should be
- made with a view to their ultimate social emancipation, or the
- development of the sense of duty in those who now so often neglect
- it in nearly every relation of life.
-
- ENQ. Agreed. But who is to decide whether social efforts are wise or
- unwise?
-
- THEO. No one person and no society can lay down a hard-and-fast rule in
- this respect. Much must necessarily be left to the individual
- judgment. One general test may, however, be given. Will the
- proposed action tend to promote that true brotherhood which it is
- the aim of Theosophy to bring about? No real Theosophist will
- have much difficulty in applying such a test; once he is satisfied
- of this, his duty will lie in the direction of forming public
- opinion. And this can be attained only by inculcating those higher
- and nobler conceptions of public and private duties which lie
- at the root of all spiritual and material improvement. In every
- conceivable case he himself must be a center of spiritual action,
- and from him and his own daily individual life must radiate those
- higher spiritual forces which alone can regenerate his fellow-men.
-
- ENQ. But why should he do this? Are not he and all, as you teach,
- conditioned by their Karma, and must not Karma necessarily work
- itself out on certain lines?
-
- THEO. It is this very law of Karma which gives strength to all that I
- have said. The individual cannot separate himself from the race,
- nor the race from the individual. The law of Karma applies equally
- to all, although all are not equally developed. In helping on the
- development of others, the Theosophist believes that he is not
- only helping them to fulfil their Karma, but that he is also, in
- the strictest sense, fulfilling his own. It is the development of
- humanity, of which both he and they are integral parts, that he
- has always in view, and he knows that any failure on his part to
- respond to the highest within him retards not only himself but
- all, in their progressive march. By his actions, he can make it
- either more difficult or more easy for humanity to attain the next
- higher plane of being.
-
- ENQ. How does this bear on the fourth of the principles you mentioned,
- viz., Re-incarnation?
-
- THEO. The connection is most intimate. If our present lives depend upon
- the development of certain principles which are a growth from
- the germs left by a previous existence, the law holds good as
- regards the future. Once grasp the idea that universal causation
- is not merely present, but past, present and future, and every
- action on our present plane falls naturally and easily into its
- true place, and is seen in its true relation to ourselves and to
- others. Every mean and selfish action sends us backward and not
- forward, while every noble thought and every unselfish deed are
- stepping-stones to the higher and more glorious planes of being.
- If this life were all, then in many respects it would indeed be
- poor and mean; but regarded as a preparation for the next sphere
- of existence, it may be used as the golden gate through which
- we may pass, not selfishly and alone, but in company with our
- fellows, to the palaces which lie beyond.
-
-
-ON SELF-SACRIFICE.
-
- ENQ. Is equal justice to all and love to every creature the highest
- standard of Theosophy?
-
- THEO. No; there is an even far higher one.
-
- ENQ. What can it be?
-
- THEO. The giving to others _more_ than to oneself—_self-sacrifice_.
- Such was the standard and abounding measure which marked
- so pre-eminently the greatest Teachers and Masters of
- Humanity—_e.g._, Gautama Buddha in History, and Jesus of Nazareth
- as in the Gospels. This trait alone was enough to secure to them
- the perpetual reverence and gratitude of the generations of men
- that come after them. We say, however, that self-sacrifice has to
- be performed with discrimination; and such a self-abandonment,
- if made without justice, or blindly, regardless of subsequent
- results, may often prove not only made in vain, but harmful.
- One of the fundamental rules of Theosophy is, justice to
- oneself—viewed as a unit of collective humanity, not as a personal
- self-justice, not more but not less than to others; unless,
- indeed, by the sacrifice of the _one_ self we can benefit the many.
-
- ENQ. Could you make your idea clearer by giving an instance?
-
- THEO. There are many instances to illustrate it in history.
- Self-sacrifice for practical good to save many, or several people,
- Theosophy holds as far higher than self-abnegation for a sectarian
- idea, such as that of “saving the heathen from _damnation_,”
- for instance. In our opinion, Father Damien, the young man of
- thirty who offered his whole life in sacrifice for the benefit
- and alleviation of the sufferings of the lepers at Molokai, and
- who went to live for eighteen years alone with them, to finally
- catch the loathsome disease and die, _has not died in vain_. He
- has given relief and relative happiness to thousands of miserable
- wretches. He has brought to them consolation, mental and physical.
- He threw a streak of light into the black and dreary night of
- an existence, the hopelessness of which is unparalleled in the
- records of human suffering. He was a _true Theosophist_, and his
- memory will live for ever in our annals. In our sight this poor
- Belgian priest stands immeasurably higher than—for instance—all
- those sincere but vain-glorious fools, the Missionaries who have
- sacrificed their lives in the South Sea Islands or China. What
- good have they done? They went in one case to those who are not
- yet ripe for any truth; and in the other to a nation whose systems
- of religious philosophy are as grand as any, if only the men who
- have them would live up to the standard of Confucius and their
- other sages. And they died victims of irresponsible cannibals and
- savages, and of popular fanaticism and hatred. Whereas, by going
- to the slums of Whitechapel or some other such locality of those
- that stagnate right under the blazing sun of our civilization,
- full of Christian savages and mental leprosy, they might have done
- real good, and preserved their lives for a better and worthier
- cause.
-
- ENQ. But the Christians do not think so?
-
- THEO. Of course not, because they act on an erroneous belief. They
- think that by baptising the body of an irresponsible savage they
- save his soul from damnation. One church forgets her martyrs,
- the other beatifies and raises statues to such men as Labro, who
- sacrificed his body for forty years only to benefit the vermin
- which it bred. Had we the means to do so, we would raise a statue
- to Father Damien, the true, practical saint, and perpetuate his
- memory for ever as a living exemplar of Theosophical heroism and
- of Buddha- and Christ-like mercy and self-sacrifice.
-
- ENQ. Then you regard self-sacrifice as a duty?
-
- THEO. We do; and explain it by showing that altruism is an integral
- part of self-development. But we have to discriminate. A man has
- no right to starve himself _to death_ that another man may have
- food, unless the life of that man is obviously more useful to the
- many than is his own life. But it is his duty to sacrifice his own
- comfort, and to work for others if they are unable to work for
- themselves. It is his duty to give all that which is wholly his
- own and can benefit no one but himself if he selfishly keeps it
- from others. Theosophy teaches self-abnegation, but does not teach
- rash and useless self-sacrifice, nor does it justify fanaticism.
-
- ENQ. But how are we to reach such an elevated status?
-
- THEO. By the enlightened application of our precepts to practice. By
- the use of our higher reason, spiritual intuition and moral sense,
- and by following the dictates of what we call “the still small
- voice” of our conscience, which is that of our EGO, and which
- speaks louder in us than the earthquakes and the thunders of
- Jehovah, wherein “the Lord is not.”
-
- ENQ. If such are our duties to humanity at large, what do you
- understand by our duties to our immediate surroundings?
-
- THEO. Just the same, plus those that arise from special obligations
- with regard to family ties.
-
- ENQ. Then it is not true, as it is said, that no sooner does a man
- enter into the Theosophical Society than he begins to be gradually
- severed from his wife, children, and family duties?
-
- THEO. It is a groundless calumny, like so many others. The first of the
- Theosophical duties is to do one’s duty by _all_ men, and
- especially by those to whom one’s _specific_ responsibilities are
- due, because one has either voluntarily undertaken them, such as
- marriage ties, or because one’s destiny has allied one to them; I
- mean those we owe to parents or next of kin.
-
- ENQ. And what may be the duty of a Theosophist to himself?
-
- THEO. To control and conquer, _through the Higher, the lower self_. To
- purify himself inwardly and morally; to fear no one, and nought,
- save the tribunal of his own conscience. Never to do a thing by
- halves; _i.e._, if he thinks it the right thing to do, let him do
- it openly and boldly, and if wrong, never touch it at all. It is
- the duty of a Theosophist to lighten his burden by thinking of the
- wise aphorism of Epictetus, who says: “Be not diverted from your
- duty _by any idle reflection the silly world may make upon you_,
- for their censures are not in your power, and consequently should
- not be any part of your concern.”
-
- ENQ. But suppose a member of your Society should plead inability to
- practice altruism by other people, on the ground that “charity
- begins at home”; urging that he is too busy, or too poor, to
- benefit mankind or even any of its units—what are your rules in
- such a case?
-
- THEO. No man has a right to say that he can do nothing for others, on
- any pretext whatever. “By doing the proper duty in the proper
- place, a man may make the world his debtor,” says an English
- writer. A cup of cold water given in time to a thirsty wayfarer is
- a nobler duty and more worth, than a dozen of dinners given away,
- out of season, to men who can afford to pay for them. No man who
- has not got it in him will ever become a _Theosophist_; but he may
- remain a member of our Society all the same. We have no rules by
- which we could force any man to become a practical Theosophist, if
- he does not desire to be one.
-
- ENQ. Then why does he enter the Society at all?
-
- THEO. That is best known to him who does so. For, here again, we have
- no right to pre-judge a person, not even if the voice of a whole
- community should be against him, and I may tell you why. In our
- day, _vox populi_ (so far as regards the voice of the educated,
- at any rate) is no longer _vox dei_, but ever that of prejudice,
- of selfish motives, and often simply that of unpopularity. Our
- duty is to sow seeds broadcast for the future, and see they are
- good; not to stop to enquire _why_ we should do so, and how and
- wherefore we are obliged to lose our time, since those who will
- reap the harvest in days to come will never be ourselves.
-
-
-ON CHARITY.
-
- ENQ. How do you Theosophists regard the Christian duty of charity?
-
- THEO. What charity do you mean? Charity of mind, or practical charity
- in the physical plane?
-
- ENQ. I mean practical charity, as your idea of Universal brotherhood
- would include, of course, charity of mind.
-
- THEO. Then you have in your mind the practical carrying out of the
- commandments given by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount?
-
- ENQ. Precisely so.
-
- THEO. Then why call them “Christian”? Because, although your Saviour
- preached and practised them, the last thing the Christians of
- to-day think of is to carry them out in their lives.
-
- ENQ. And yet many are those who pass their lives in dispensing charity?
-
- THEO. Yes, out of the surplus of their great fortunes. But point out to
- me that Christian, among the most philanthropic, who would give to
- the shivering and starving thief, who would steal his coat, his
- cloak also; or offer his right cheek to him who smote him on the
- left, and never think of resenting it!
-
- ENQ. Ah, but you must remember that these precepts have not to be taken
- literally. Times and circumstances have changed since Christ’s
- day. Moreover, He spoke in Parables.
-
- THEO. Then why don’t your Churches teach that the doctrine of damnation
- and hell-fire is to be understood as a _parable_ too? Why do
- some of your most popular preachers, while virtually allowing
- these “parables” to be understood as you take them, insist on the
- literal meaning of the fires of Hell and the _physical_ tortures
- of an “Asbestos-like” soul? If one is a “parable,” then the other
- is. If Hell-fire is a literal truth, then Christ’s commandments
- in the Sermon on the Mount have to be obeyed to the very letter.
- And I tell you that many who do not believe in the Divinity of
- Christ—like Count Leo Tolstoi and more than one Theosophist—do
- carry out these noble, because universal, precepts literally; and
- many more good men and women would do so, were they not more than
- certain that such a walk in life would very probably land them in
- a lunatic asylum—so _Christian are your laws_!
-
- ENQ. But surely every one knows that millions and millions are spent
- annually on private and public charities?
-
- THEO. Oh, yes; half of which sticks to the hands it passes through
- before getting to the needy; while a good portion or remainder
- gets into the hands of professional beggars, those who are too
- lazy to work, thus doing no good whatever to those who are really
- in misery and suffering. Haven’t you heard that the first result
- of the great outflow of charity towards the East-end of London was
- to raise the rents in _Whitechapel_ by some 20 per cent.?
-
- ENQ. What would you do, then?
-
- THEO. Act individually and not collectively; follow the Northern
- Buddhist precepts: “Never put food into the mouth of the hungry by
- the hand of another”; “Never let the shadow of thy neighbour (_a
- third person_) come between thyself and the object of thy bounty”;
- “Never give to the Sun time to dry a tear before thou hast wiped
- it.” Again “Never give money to the needy, or food to the priest,
- who begs at thy door, _through thy servants_, lest thy money
- should diminish gratitude, and thy food turn to gall.”
-
- ENQ. But how can this be applied practically?
-
- THEO. The Theosophical ideas of charity mean _personal_ exertion for
- others; _personal_ mercy and kindness; _personal_ interest in the
- welfare of those who suffer; _personal_ sympathy, forethought
- and assistance in their troubles or needs. We Theosophists do
- not believe in giving money (N.B., if we had it) through other
- people’s hands or organizations. We believe in giving to the
- money a thousandfold greater power and effectiveness by our
- personal contact and sympathy with those who need it. We believe
- in relieving the starvation of the soul, as much if not more than
- the emptiness of the stomach; for gratitude does more good to
- the man who feels it, than to him for whom it is felt. Where’s
- the gratitude which your “millions of pounds” should have called
- forth, or the good feelings provoked by them? Is it shown in
- the hatred of the East-End poor for the rich? in the growth of
- the party of anarchy and disorder? or by those thousands of
- unfortunate working girls, victims to the “sweating” system,
- driven daily to eke out a living by going on the streets? Do
- your helpless old men and women thank you for the workhouses; or
- your poor for the poisonously unhealthy dwellings in which they
- are allowed to breed new generations of diseased, scrofulous
- and rickety children, only to put money into the pockets of the
- insatiable Shylocks who own houses? Therefore it is that every
- sovereign of all those “millions,” contributed by good and
- would-be charitable people, falls like a burning curse instead
- of a blessing on the poor whom it should relieve. We call this
- _generating national Karma_, and terrible will be its results on
- the day of reckoning.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY FOR THE MASSES.
-
- ENQ. And you think that Theosophy would, by stepping in, help to remove
- these evils, under the practical and adverse conditions of our
- modern life?
-
- THEO. Had we more money, and had not most of the Theosophists to work
- for their daily bread, I firmly believe we could.
-
- ENQ. How? Do you expect that your doctrines could ever take hold of the
- uneducated masses, when they are so abstruse and difficult that
- well-educated people can hardly understand them?
-
- THEO. You forget one thing, which is that your much-boasted modern
- education is precisely that which makes it difficult for you
- to understand Theosophy. Your mind is so full of intellectual
- subtleties and preconceptions that your natural intuition
- and perception of the truth cannot act. It does not require
- metaphysics or education to make a man understand the broad
- truths of Karma and Re-incarnation. Look at the millions of
- poor and uneducated Buddhists and Hindoos, to whom Karma and
- re-incarnation are solid realities, simply because their minds
- have never been cramped and distorted by being forced into an
- unnatural groove. They have never had the innate human sense of
- justice perverted in them by being told to believe that their
- sins would be forgiven because another man had been put to death
- for their sakes. And the Buddhists, note well, live up to their
- beliefs without a murmur against Karma, or what they regard as a
- just punishment, whereas, the Christian populace neither lives
- up it to its moral ideal, nor accepts its lot contentedly. Hence
- murmuring and dissatisfaction, and the intensity of the struggle
- for existence in Western lands.
-
- ENQ. But this contentedness, which you praise so much, would do away
- with all motive for exertion and bring progress to a stand-still.
-
- THEO. And we, Theosophists, say that your vaunted progress and
- civilization are no better than a host of will-o’-the-wisps,
- flickering over a marsh which exhales a poisonous and deadly
- miasma. This, because we see selfishness, crime, immorality,
- and all the evils imaginable, pouncing upon unfortunate mankind
- from this Pandora’s box which you call an age of progress,
- and increasing _pari passu_ with the growth of your material
- civilization. At such a price, better the inertia and inactivity
- of Buddhist countries, which have arisen only as a consequence of
- ages of political slavery.
-
- ENQ. Then is all this metaphysics and mysticism with which you occupy
- yourself so much, of no importance?
-
- THEO. To the masses, who need only practical guidance and support, they
- are not of much consequence; but for the educated, the natural
- leaders of the masses, those whose modes of thought and action
- will sooner or later be adopted by those masses, they are of the
- greatest importance. It is only by means of the philosophy that an
- intelligent and educated man can avoid the intellectual suicide
- of believing on blind faith; and it is only by assimilating the
- strict continuity and logical coherence of the Eastern, if not
- esoteric, doctrines, that he can realize their truth. Conviction
- breeds enthusiasm, and “Enthusiasm,” says Bulwer Lytton, “is the
- genius of sincerity, and truth accomplishes no victories without
- it”; while Emerson most truly remarks that “every great and
- commanding movement in the annals of the world is the triumph of
- enthusiasm.” And what is more calculated to produce such a feeling
- than a philosophy so grand, so consistent, so logical, and so
- all-embracing as our Eastern Doctrines?
-
- ENQ. And yet its enemies are very numerous, and every day Theosophy
- acquires new opponents.
-
- THEO. And this is precisely that which proves its intrinsic excellence
- and value. People hate only the things they fear, and no one goes
- out of his way to overthrow that which neither threatens nor rises
- beyond mediocrity.
-
- ENQ. Do you hope to impart this enthusiasm, one day, to the masses?
-
- THEO. Why not? since history tells us that the masses adopted Buddhism
- with enthusiasm, while, as said before, the practical effect upon
- them of this philosophy of ethics is still shown by the smallness
- of the percentage of crime amongst Buddhist populations as
- compared with every other religion. The chief point is, to uproot
- that most fertile source of all crime and immorality—the belief
- that it is possible for them to escape the consequences of their
- own actions. Once teach them that greatest of all laws, _Karma_
- and _Re-incarnation_, and besides feeling in themselves the true
- dignity of human nature, they will turn from evil and eschew it as
- they would a physical danger.
-
-
-HOW MEMBERS CAN HELP THE SOCIETY.
-
- ENQ. How do you expect the Fellows of your Society to help in the work?
-
- THEO. First by studying and comprehending the theosophical doctrines,
- so that they may teach others, especially the young people.
- Secondly, by taking every opportunity of talking to others and
- explaining to them what Theosophy is, and what it is not; by
- removing misconceptions and spreading an interest in the subject.
- Thirdly, by assisting in circulating our literature, by buying
- books when they have the means, by lending and giving them and
- by inducing their friends to do so. Fourthly, by defending
- the Society from the unjust aspersions cast upon it, by every
- legitimate device in their power. Fifth, and most important of
- all, by the example of their own lives.
-
- ENQ. But all this literature, to the spread of which you attach so much
- importance, does not seem to me of much practical use in helping
- mankind. This is not practical charity.
-
- THEO. We think otherwise. We hold that a good book which gives people
- food for thought, which strengthens and clears their minds, and
- enables them to grasp truths which they have dimly felt but could
- not formulate—we hold that such a book does a real, substantial
- good. As to what you call practical deeds of charity, to benefit
- the bodies of our fellow-men, we do what little we can; but, as
- I have already told you, most of us are poor, whilst the Society
- itself has not even the money to pay a staff of workers. All of us
- who toil for it, give our labour gratis, and in most cases money
- as well. The few who have the means of doing what are usually
- called charitable actions, follow the Buddhist precepts and do
- their work themselves, not by proxy or by subscribing publicly to
- charitable funds. What the Theosophist has to do above all is to
- forget his personality.
-
-
-WHAT A THEOSOPHIST OUGHT NOT TO DO.
-
- ENQ. Have you any prohibitory laws or clauses for Theosophists in your
- Society?
-
- THEO. Many, but, alas! none of them are enforced. They express the
- ideal of our organization,—but the practical application of such
- things we are compelled to leave to the discretion of the Fellows
- themselves. Unfortunately, the state of men’s minds in the present
- century is such that, unless we allow these clauses to remain, so
- to speak, obsolete, no man or woman would dare to risk joining the
- Theosophical Society. This is precisely why I feel forced to lay
- such a stress on the difference between true Theosophy and its
- hard-struggling and well-intentioned, but still unworthy vehicle,
- the Theosophical Society.
-
- ENQ. May I be told what are these perilous reefs in the open sea of
- Theosophy?
-
- THEO. Well may you call them reefs, as more than one otherwise sincere
- and well-meaning F.T.S. has had his Theosophical canoe shattered
- into splinters on them! And yet to avoid certain things seems the
- easiest thing in the world to do. For instance, here is a series
- of such negatives, screening positive Theosophical duties:—
-
- No Theosophist should be silent when he hears evil reports or slanders
- spread about the Society, or innocent persons, whether they be his
- colleagues or outsiders.
-
- ENQ. But suppose what one hears is the truth, or may be true without
- one knowing it?
-
- THEO. Then you must demand good proofs of the assertion, and hear both
- sides impartially before you permit the accusation to go
- uncontradicted. You have no right to believe in evil, until you
- get undeniable proof of the correctness of the statement.
-
- ENQ. And what should you do then?
-
- THEO. Pity and forbearance, charity and long-suffering, ought to be
- always there to prompt us to excuse our sinning brethren, and
- to pass the gentlest sentence possible upon those who err. A
- Theosophist ought never to forget what is due to the shortcomings
- and infirmities of human nature.
-
- ENQ. Ought he to forgive entirely in such cases?
-
- THEO. In every case, especially he who is sinned against.
-
- ENQ. But if by so doing, he risks to injure, or allow others to be
- injured? What ought he to do then?
-
- THEO. His duty; that which his conscience and higher nature suggests to
- him; but only after mature deliberation. Justice consists in doing
- no injury to any living being; but justice commands us also never
- to allow injury to be done to the many, or even to one innocent
- person, by allowing the guilty one to go unchecked.
-
- ENQ. What are the other negative clauses?
-
- THEO. No Theosophist ought to be contented with an idle or frivolous
- life, doing no real good to himself and still less to others. He
- should work for the benefit of the few who need his help if he is
- unable to toil for Humanity, and thus work for the advancement of
- the Theosophical cause.
-
- ENQ. This demands an exceptional nature, and would come rather hard
- upon some persons.
-
- THEO. Then they had better remain outside the T. S. instead of sailing
- under false colours. No one is asked to give more than he can
- afford, whether in devotion, time, work or money.
-
- ENQ. What comes next?
-
- THEO. No working member should set too great value on his personal
- progress or proficiency in Theosophic studies; but must be
- prepared rather to do as much altruistic work as lies in his
- power. He should not leave the whole of the heavy burden and
- responsibility of the Theosophical movement on the shoulders of
- the few devoted workers. Each member ought to feel it his duty to
- take what share he can in the common work, and help it by every
- means in his power.
-
- ENQ. This is but just. What comes next?
-
- THEO. No Theosophist should place his personal vanity, or feelings,
- above those of his Society as a body. He who sacrifices the
- latter, or other people’s reputations on the altar of his personal
- vanity, worldly benefit, or pride, ought not to be allowed to
- remain a member. One cancerous limb diseases the whole body.
-
- ENQ. Is it the duty of every member to teach others and preach
- Theosophy?
-
- THEO. It is indeed. No fellow has a right to remain idle, on the excuse
- that he knows too little to teach. For he may always be sure that
- he will find others who know still less than himself. And also
- it is not until a man begins to try to teach others, that he
- discovers his own ignorance and tries to remove it. But this is a
- minor clause.
-
- ENQ. What do you consider, then, to be the chief of these negative
- Theosophical duties?
-
- THEO. To be ever prepared to recognize and confess one’s faults. To
- rather sin through exaggerated praise than through too little
- appreciation of one’s neighbour’s efforts. Never to back-bite or
- slander another person. Always to say openly and direct to his
- face anything you have against him. Never to make yourself the
- echo of anything you may hear against another, nor harbour revenge
- against those who happen to injure you.
-
- ENQ. But it is often dangerous to tell people the truth to their faces.
- Don’t you think so? I know of one of your members who was bitterly
- offended, left the Society, and became its greatest enemy, only
- because he was told some unpleasant truths to his face, and was
- blamed for them.
-
- THEO. Of such we have had many. No member, whether prominent or
- insignificant, has ever left us without becoming our bitter enemy.
-
- ENQ. How do you account for it?
-
- THEO. It is simply this. Having been, in most cases, intensely devoted
- to the Society at first, and having lavished upon it the most
- exaggerated praises, the only possible excuse such a backslider
- can make for his subsequent behaviour and past short-sightedness,
- is _to pose as an innocent and deceived victim_, thus casting
- the blame from his own shoulders on to those of the Society in
- general, and its leaders especially. Such persons remind one of
- the old fable about the man with a distorted face, who broke his
- looking-glass on the ground that it reflected his countenance
- crookedly.
-
- ENQ. But what makes these people turn against the Society?
-
- THEO. Wounded vanity in some form or other, almost in every case.
- Generally, because their dicta and advice are not taken as
- final and authoritative; or else, because they are of those who
- would rather reign in Hell than serve in Heaven. Because, in
- short, they cannot bear to stand second to anybody in anything.
- So, for instance, one member—a true “Sir Oracle”—criticized,
- and almost defamed every member in the T.S. to outsiders as
- much as to Theosophists, under the pretext that they were _all
- untheosophical_, blaming them precisely for what he was himself
- doing all the time. Finally, he left the Society, giving as his
- reason a profound conviction that we were all (the Founders
- especially)—FRAUDS! Another one, after intriguing in every
- possible way to be placed at the head of a large Section of the
- Society, finding that the members would not have him, turned
- against the Founders of the T. S., and became their bitterest
- enemy, denouncing one of them whenever he could, simply
- because the latter could not, and would not, _force him_ upon
- the Members. This was simply a case of an outrageous wounded
- vanity. Still another wanted to, and virtually did, practise
- _black-magic_—_i.e._, undue personal psychological influence on
- certain Fellows, while pretending devotion and every Theosophical
- virtue. When this was put a stop to, the Member broke with
- Theosophy, and now slanders and lies against the same hapless
- leaders in the most virulent manner, endeavouring to break up the
- society by blackening the reputation of those whom that worthy
- “Fellow” was unable to deceive.
-
- ENQ. What would you do with such characters?
-
- THEO. Leave them to their Karma. Because one person does evil that is
- no reason for others to do so.
-
- ENQ. But, to return to slander, where is the line of demarcation
- between backbiting and just criticism to be drawn? Is it not one’s
- duty to warn one’s friends and neighbors against those whom one
- knows to be dangerous associates?
-
- THEO. If by allowing them to go on unchecked other persons may be
- thereby injured, it is certainly our duty to obviate the danger by
- warning them privately. But true or false, no accusation against
- another person should ever be spread abroad. If true, and the
- fault hurts no one but the sinner, then leave him to his Karma.
- If false, then you will have avoided adding to the injustice of
- the world. Therefore, keep silent about such things with every
- one not directly concerned. But if your discretion and silence are
- likely to hurt or endanger others, then I add: _Speak the truth
- at all costs_, and say, with Annesly, “Consult duty, not events.”
- There are cases when one is forced to exclaim, “Perish discretion,
- rather than allow it to interfere with duty.”
-
- ENQ. Methinks, if you carry out these maxims, you are likely to reap a
- nice crop of troubles!
-
- THEO. And so we do. We have to admit that we are now open to the same
- taunt as the early Christians were. “See, how these Theosophists
- love one another!” may now be said of us without a shadow of
- injustice.
-
- ENQ. Admitting yourself that there is at least as much, if not more,
- backbiting, slandering, and quarrelling in the T.S. as in the
- Christian Churches, let alone Scientific Societies—What kind of
- Brotherhood is this? I may ask.
-
- THEO. A very poor specimen, indeed, as at present, and, until carefully
- sifted and reorganized, _no_ better than all others. Remember,
- however, that human nature is the same _in_ the Theosophical
- Society as _out_ of it. Its members are no saints: they are at
- best sinners trying to do better, and liable to fall back owing
- to personal weakness. Add to this that our “Brotherhood” is no
- “recognised” or established body, and stands, so to speak, outside
- of the pale of jurisdiction. Besides which, it is in a chaotic
- condition, and as unjustly _unpopular as is no other body_. What
- wonder, then, that those members who fail to carry out its ideal
- should turn, after leaving the Society, for sympathetic protection
- to our enemies, and pour all their gall and bitterness into their
- too willing ears! Knowing that they will find support, sympathy,
- and ready credence for every accusation, however absurd, that
- it may please them to launch against the Theosophical Society,
- they hasten to do so, and vent their wrath on the innocent
- looking-glass, which reflected too faithfully their faces. _People
- never forgive those whom they have wronged._ The sense of kindness
- received, and repaid by them with ingratitude, drives them into
- a madness of self-justification before the world and their own
- consciences. The former is but too ready to believe in anything
- said against a society it hates. The latter—but I will say no
- more, fearing I have already said too much.
-
- ENQ. Your position does not seem to me a very enviable one.
-
- THEO. It is not. But don’t you think that there must be something very
- noble, very exalted, very true, behind the Society and its
- philosophy, when the leaders and the founders of the movement
- still continue to work for it with all their strength? They
- sacrifice to it all comfort, all worldly prosperity, and success,
- even to their good name and reputation—aye, even to their
- honour—to receive in return incessant and ceaseless obloquy,
- relentless persecution, untiring slander, constant ingratitude,
- and misunderstanding of their best efforts, blows, and buffets
- from all sides—when by simply dropping their work they would
- find themselves immediately released from every responsibility,
- shielded from every further attack.
-
- ENQ. I confess, such a perseverance seems to me very astounding, and I
- wondered why you did all this.
-
- THEO. Believe me for no self-gratification; only in the hope of
- training a few individuals to carry on our work for humanity by
- its original programme when the Founders are dead and gone. They
- have already found a few such noble and devoted souls to replace
- them. The coming generations, thanks to these few, will find the
- path to peace a little less thorny, and the way a little widened,
- and thus all this suffering will have produced good results, and
- their self-sacrifice will not have been in vain. At present, the
- main, fundamental object of the Society is to sow germs in the
- hearts of men, which may in time sprout, and under more propitious
- circumstances lead to a healthy reform, conducive of more
- happiness _to the masses_ than they have hitherto enjoyed.
-
-
-
-
-XIII. ON THE MISCONCEPTIONS ABOUT THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY AND ASCETICISM.
-
- ENQ. I have heard people say that your rules require all members to be
- vegetarians, celibates, and rigid ascetics; but you have not told
- me anything of the sort yet. Can you tell the truth once for all
- about this?
-
- THEO. The truth is that our rules require nothing of the kind. The
- Theosophical Society does not even expect, far less require of
- _any_ of its members that they should be ascetics in any way,
- except—if you call _that_ asceticism—that they should try and
- benefit other people and be unselfish in their own lives.
-
- ENQ. But still many of your members are strict vegetarians, and openly
- avow their intention of remaining unmarried. This, too, is most
- often the case with those who take a prominent part in connection
- with the work of your Society.
-
- THEO. That is only natural, because most of our really earnest workers
- are members of the Inner Section of the Society, which I told you
- about before.
-
- ENQ. Oh! then you do require ascetic practices in that Inner Section?
-
- THEO. No; we do not _require_ or _enjoin_ them even there; but I see
- that I had better give you an explanation of our views on the
- subject of asceticism in general, and then you will understand
- about vegetarianism and so on.
-
- ENQ. Please proceed.
-
- THEO. As I have already told you, most people who become really earnest
- students of Theosophy, and active workers in our Society, wish to
- do more than study theoretically the truths we teach. They wish
- to _know_ the truth by their own direct personal experience, and
- to study Occultism with the object of acquiring the wisdom and
- power, which they feel that they need in order to help others,
- effectually and judiciously, instead of blindly and at haphazard.
- Therefore, sooner or later, they join the Inner Section.
-
- ENQ. But you said that “ascetic practices” are not obligatory even in
- that Inner Section?
-
- THEO. No more they are; but the first thing which the members learn
- there is a true conception of the relation of the body, or
- physical sheath, to the inner, the true man. The relation and
- mutual interaction between these two aspects of human nature are
- explained and demonstrated to them, so that they soon become
- imbued with the supreme importance of the inner man over the outer
- case or body. They are taught that blind unintelligent asceticism
- is mere folly; that such conduct as that of St. Labro which I
- spoke of before, or that of the Indian Fakirs and jungle ascetics,
- who cut, burn and macerate their bodies in the most cruel and
- horrible manner, is simply self-torture for selfish ends, _i.e._,
- to develop will-power, but is perfectly useless for the purpose of
- assisting true spiritual, or Theosophic, development.
-
- ENQ. I see, you regard only _moral_ asceticism as necessary. It is as a
- means to an end, that end being the perfect equilibrium of the
- _inner_ nature of man, and the attainment of complete mastery over
- the body with all its passions and desires?
-
- THEO. Just so. But these means must be used intelligently and wisely,
- not blindly and foolishly; like an athlete who is training and
- preparing for a great contest, not like the miser who starves
- himself into illness that he may gratify his passion for gold.
-
- ENQ. I understand now your general idea; but let us see how you apply
- it in practice. How about vegetarianism, for instance?
-
- THEO. One of the great German scientists has shown that every kind of
- animal tissue, however you may cook it, still retains certain
- marked characteristics of the animal which it belonged to,
- which characteristics can be recognised. And apart from that,
- every one knows by the taste what meat he is eating. We go
- a step farther, and prove that when the flesh of animals is
- assimilated by man as food, it imparts to him, physiologically,
- some of the characteristics of the animal it came from.
- Moreover, occult science teaches and proves this to its students
- by ocular demonstration, showing also that this “coarsening”
- or “animalizing” effect on man is greatest from the flesh of
- the larger animals, less for birds, still less for fish and
- other cold-blooded animals, and least of all when he eats only
- vegetables.
-
- ENQ. Then he had better not eat at all?
-
- THEO. If he could live without eating, of course it would. But as the
- matter stands, he must eat to live, and so we advise really
- earnest students to eat such food as will least clog and weight
- their brains and bodies, and will have the smallest effect in
- hampering and retarding the development of their intuition, their
- inner faculties and powers.
-
- ENQ. Then you do not adopt all the arguments which vegetarians in
- general are in the habit of using?
-
- THEO. Certainly not. Some of their arguments are very weak, and often
- based on assumptions which are quite false. But, on the other
- hand, many of the things they say are quite true. For instance, we
- believe that much disease, and especially the great predisposition
- to disease which is becoming so marked a feature in our time, is
- very largely due to the eating of meat, and especially of tinned
- meats. But it would take too long to go thoroughly into this
- question of vegetarianism on its merits; so please pass on to
- something else.
-
- ENQ. One question more. What are your members of the Inner Section to
- do with regard to their food when they are ill?
-
- THEO. Follow the best practical advice they can get, of course. Don’t
- you grasp yet that we never impose any hard-and-fast obligations
- in this respect? Remember once for all that in all such questions
- we take a rational, and never a fanatical, view of things. If
- from illness or long habit a man cannot go without meat, why, by
- all means let him eat it. It is no crime; it will only retard
- his progress a little; for after all is said and done, the purely
- bodily actions and functions are of far less importance than what
- a man _thinks_ and _feels_, what desires he encourages in his
- mind, and allows to take root and grow there.
-
- ENQ. Then with regard to the use of wine and spirits, I suppose you do
- not advise people to drink them?
-
- THEO. They are worse for his moral and spiritual growth than meat, for
- alcohol in all its forms has a direct, marked, and very
- deleterious influence on man’s psychic condition. Wine and spirit
- drinking is only less destructive to the development of the inner
- powers, than the habitual use of hashish, opium, and similar drugs.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY AND MARRIAGE.
-
- ENQ. Now to another question; must a man marry or remain a celibate?
-
- THEO. It depends on the kind of man you mean. If you refer to one who
- intends to live _in_ the world, one who, even though a good,
- earnest Theosophist, and an ardent worker for our cause, still has
- ties and wishes which bind him to the world, who, in short, does
- not feel that he has done for ever with what men call life, and
- that he desires one thing and one thing only—to know the truth,
- and to be able to help others—then for such a one I say there
- is no reason why he should not marry, if he likes to take the
- risks of that lottery where there are so many more blanks than
- prizes. Surely you cannot believe us so absurd and fanatical as
- to preach against marriage altogether? On the contrary, save in a
- few exceptional cases of practical Occultism, marriage is the only
- remedy against immorality.
-
- ENQ. But why cannot one acquire this knowledge and power when living a
- married life?
-
- THEO. My dear sir, I cannot go into physiological questions with you;
- but I can give you an obvious and, I think, a sufficient answer,
- which will explain to you the moral reasons we give for it. Can
- a man serve two masters? No! Then it is equally impossible for
- him to divide his attention between the pursuit of Occultism and
- a wife. If he tries to, he will assuredly fail in doing either
- properly; and, let me remind you, practical Occultism is far too
- serious and dangerous a study for a man to take up, unless he is
- in the most deadly earnest, and ready to sacrifice _all, himself
- first of all_, to gain his end. But this does not apply to the
- members of our Inner Section. I am only referring to those who
- are determined to tread that path of discipleship which leads to
- the highest goal. Most, if not all of those who join our Inner
- Section, are only beginners, preparing themselves in this life to
- enter in reality upon that path in lives to come.
-
-
-THEOSOPHY AND EDUCATION.
-
- ENQ. One of your strongest arguments for the inadequacy of the existing
- forms of religion in the West, as also to some extent the
- materialistic philosophy which is now so popular, but which you
- seem to consider as an abomination of desolation, is the large
- amount of misery and wretchedness which undeniably exists,
- especially in our great cities. But surely you must recognize how
- much has been, and is being done to remedy this state of things by
- the spread of education and the diffusion of intelligence.
-
- THEO. The future generations will hardly thank you for such a
- “diffusion of intelligence,” nor will your present education do
- much good to the poor starving masses.
-
- ENQ. Ah! but you must give us time. It is only a few years since we
- began to educate the people.
-
- THEO. And what, pray, has your Christian religion been doing ever since
- the fifteenth century, once you acknowledge that the education
- of the masses has not been attempted till now—the very work,
- if ever there could be one, which a _Christian_, _i.e._, a
- Christ-following church and people, ought to perform?
-
- ENQ. Well, you may be right; but now—
-
- THEO. Just let us consider this question of education from a broad
- standpoint, and I will prove to you that you are doing harm not
- good, with many of your boasted improvements. The schools for the
- poorer children, though far less useful than they ought to be,
- are good in contrast with the vile surroundings to which they
- are doomed by your modern Society. The _infusion_ of a little
- practical Theosophy would help a hundred times more in life
- the poor suffering masses than all this infusion of (useless)
- intelligence.
-
- ENQ. But, really——
-
- THEO. Let me finish, please. You have opened a subject on which we
- Theosophists feel deeply, and I must have my say. I quite agree
- that there is a great advantage to a small child bred in the
- slums, having the gutter for playground, and living amid continued
- coarseness of gesture and word, in being placed daily in a bright,
- clean school-room hung with pictures, and often gay with flowers.
- There it is taught to be clean, gentle, orderly; there it learns
- to sing and to play; has toys that awaken its intelligence; learns
- to use its fingers deftly; is spoken to with a smile instead of
- a frown; is gently rebuked or coaxed instead of cursed. All this
- humanises the children, arouses their brains, and renders them
- susceptible to intellectual and moral influences. The schools are
- not all they might be and ought to be; but, compared with the
- homes, they are paradises; and they slowly are reacting on the
- homes. But while this is true of many of the Board schools, your
- system deserves the worst one can say of it.
-
- ENQ. So be it; go on.
-
- THEO. What is the _real_ object of modern education? Is it to cultivate
- and develop the mind in the right direction; to teach the
- disinherited and hapless people to carry with fortitude the burden
- of life (allotted them by Karma); to strengthen their will; to
- inculcate in them the love of one’s neighbour and the feeling of
- mutual interdependence and brotherhood; and thus to train and form
- the character for practical life? Not a bit of it. And yet, these
- are undeniably the objects of all true education. No one denies
- it; all your educationalists admit it, and talk very big indeed
- on the subject. But what is the practical result of their action?
- Every young man and boy, nay, every one of the younger generation
- of schoolmasters will answer: “The object of modern education is
- to pass examinations,” a system not to develop right emulation,
- but to generate and breed jealousy, envy, hatred almost, in
- young people for one another, and thus train them for a life of
- ferocious selfishness and struggle for honours and emoluments
- instead of kindly feeling.
-
- ENQ. I must admit you are right there.
-
- THEO. And what are these examinations—the terror of modern boyhood and
- youth? They are simply a method of classification by which the
- results of your school teaching are tabulated. In other words,
- they form the practical application of the modern science methods
- to the _genus homo, qua_ intellection. Now “science” teaches
- that intellect is a result of the mechanical interaction of the
- brain-stuff; therefore it is only logical that modern education
- should be almost entirely mechanical—a sort of automatic machine
- for the fabrication of intellect by the ton. Very little
- experience of examinations is enough to show that the education
- they produce is simply a training of the physical memory, and,
- sooner or later, all your schools will sink to this level. As to
- any real, sound cultivation of the thinking and reasoning power,
- it is simply impossible while everything has to be judged by the
- results as tested by competitive examinations. Again, school
- training is of the very greatest importance in forming character,
- especially in its moral bearing. Now, from first to last, your
- modern system is based on the so-called scientific revelations:
- “The struggle for existence” and the “survival of the fittest.”
- All through his early life, every man has these driven into him by
- practical example and experience, as well as by direct teaching,
- till it is impossible to eradicate from his mind the idea that
- “self,” the lower, personal, animal self, is the end-all, and
- be-all, of life. Here you get the great source of all the
- after-misery, crime, and heartless selfishness, which you admit
- as much as I do. Selfishness, as said over and over again, is the
- curse of humanity, and the prolific parent of all the evils and
- crimes in this life; and it is your schools which are the hotbeds
- of such selfishness.
-
- ENQ. That is all very fine as generalities, but I should like a few
- facts, and to learn also how this can be remedied.
-
- THEO. Very well, I will try and satisfy you. There are three great
- divisions of scholastic establishments, board, middle-class
- and public schools, running up the scale from the most grossly
- commercial to the idealistic classical, with many permutations
- and combinations. The practical commercial begets the modern
- side, and the ancient and orthodox classical reflects its heavy
- respectability even as far as the School Board pupil teacher’s
- establishments. Here we plainly see the scientific and material
- commercial supplanting the effete orthodox and classical. Neither
- is the reason very far to seek. The objects of this branch of
- education are, then, pounds, shillings, and pence, the _summum
- bonum_ of the XIXth century. Thus, the energies generated by the
- brain molecules of its adherents are all concentrated on one
- point, and are, therefore, to some extent, an organized army
- of _educated_ and speculative intellects of the minority of
- men, trained against the hosts of the ignorant, simple-minded
- masses doomed to be vampirised, lived and sat upon by their
- intellectually stronger brethren. Such training is not only
- _untheosophical_, it is simply UNCHRISTIAN. Result: The direct
- outcome of this branch of education is an overflooding of the
- market with money-making machines, with heartless selfish
- men—animals—who have been most carefully trained to prey on their
- fellows and take advantage of the ignorance of their weaker
- brethren!
-
- ENQ. Well, but you cannot assert that of our great public schools, at
- any rate?
-
- THEO. Not exactly, it is true. But though the _form_ is different, the
- animating spirit is the same: _untheosophical_ and _unchristian_,
- whether Eton and Harrow turn out scientists or divines and
- theologians.
-
- ENQ. Surely you don’t mean to call Eton and Harrow “commercial”?
-
- THEO. No. Of course the Classical system is above all things
- _respectable_, and in the present day is productive of some good.
- It does still remain the favourite at our great public schools,
- where not only an intellectual, but also a social education
- is obtainable. It is, therefore, of prime importance that the
- dull boys of aristocratic and wealthy parents should go to such
- schools to meet the rest of the young life of the “blood” and
- money classes. But unfortunately there is a huge competition even
- for entrance; for the moneyed classes are increasing, and poor
- but clever boys seek to enter the public schools by the rich
- scholarships, both at the schools themselves and from them to the
- Universities.
-
- ENQ. According to this view, the wealthier “dullards” have to work even
- harder than their poorer fellows?
-
- THEO. It is so. But, strange to say, the faithful of the cult of the
- “Survival of the fittest” do not practice their creed; for their
- whole exertion is to make the naturally unfit supplant the
- fit. Thus, by bribes of large sums of money, they allure the
- best teachers from their natural pupils to mechanicalise their
- naturally unfit progeny into professions which they uselessly
- overcrowd.
-
- ENQ. And you attribute all this to what?
-
- THEO. All this is owing to the perniciousness of a system which turns
- out goods to order, irrespective of the natural proclivities
- and talents of the youth. The poor little candidate for this
- progressive paradise of learning, comes almost straight from the
- nursery to the treadmill of a preparatory school for sons of
- gentlemen. Here he is immediately seized upon by the workmen of
- the materio-intellectual factory, and crammed with Latin, French
- and Greek Accidence, Dates and Tables, so that if he have any
- natural genius it is rapidly squeezed out of him by the rollers of
- what Carlyle has so well-called “dead vocables.”
-
- ENQ. But surely he is taught something besides “dead vocables,” and
- much of that which may lead him direct to _Theosophy_, if not
- entirely into the Theosophical Society?
-
- THEO. Not much. For of history, he will attain only sufficient
- knowledge of his own particular nation to fit him with a
- steel armour of prejudice against all other peoples, and be
- steeped in the foul cess-pools of chronicled national hate and
- blood-thirstiness; and surely, you would not call that—_Theosophy_?
-
- ENQ. What are your further objections?
-
- THEO. Added to this is a smattering of selected, so-called, Biblical
- facts, from the study of which all intellect is eliminated. It is
- simply a memory lesson, the “Why” of the teacher being a “Why” of
- circumstances and not of reason.
-
- ENQ. Yes; but I have heard you congratulate yourself at the
- ever-increasing number of the Agnostics and Atheists in our day,
- so that it appears that even people trained in the system you
- abuse so heartily _do_ learn to think and reason for themselves.
-
- THEO. Yes; but it is rather owing to a healthy reaction from that
- system than due to it. We prefer immeasurably more in our Society
- Agnostics, and even rank Atheists, to bigots of whatever religion.
- An Agnostic’s mind is ever opened to the truth; whereas the latter
- blinds the bigot like the sun does an owl. The best—_i.e._, the
- most truth-loving, philanthropic, and honest—of our Fellows were,
- and are, Agnostics and Atheists (disbelievers in a _personal_
- God). But there are no _free_-thinking boys and girls, and
- generally early training will leave its mark behind in the shape
- of a cramped and distorted mind. A proper and sane system of
- education should produce the most vigorous and liberal mind,
- strictly trained in logical and accurate thought, and not in blind
- faith. How can you ever expect good results, while you pervert
- the reasoning faculty of your children by bidding them believe in
- the miracles of the Bible on Sunday, while for the six other days
- of the week you teach them that such things are scientifically
- impossible?
-
- ENQ. What would you have, then?
-
- THEO. If we had money, we would found schools which would turn out
- something else than reading and writing candidates for starvation.
- Children should above all be taught self-reliance, love for all
- men, altruism, mutual charity, and more than anything else, to
- think and reason for themselves. We would reduce the purely
- mechanical work of the memory to an absolute minimum, and devote
- the time to the development and training of the inner senses,
- faculties and latent capacities. We would endeavour to deal with
- each child as a unit, and to educate it so as to produce the most
- harmonious and equal unfoldment of its powers, in order that its
- special aptitudes should find their full natural development. We
- should aim at creating _free_ men and women, free intellectually,
- free morally, unprejudiced in all respects, and above all things,
- _unselfish_. And we believe that much if not all of this could be
- obtained by _proper and truly theosophical_ education.
-
-
-WHY, THEN, IS THERE SO MUCH PREJUDICE AGAINST THE T.S.?
-
- ENQ. If Theosophy is even half of what you say, why should there exist
- such a terrible ill-feeling against it? This is even more of a
- problem than anything else.
-
- THEO. It is; but you must bear in mind how many powerful adversaries we
- have aroused ever since the formation of our Society. As I just
- said, if the Theosophical movement were one of those numerous
- modern crazes, as harmless at the end as they are evanescent, it
- would be simply laughed at—as it is now by those who still do not
- understand its real purport—and left severely alone. But it is
- nothing of the kind. Intrinsically, Theosophy is the most serious
- movement of this age; and one, moreover, which threatens the very
- life of most of the time-honoured humbugs, prejudices, and social
- evils of the day—those evils which fatten and make happy the upper
- ten and their imitators and sycophants, the wealthy dozens of the
- middle classes, while they positively crush and starve out of
- existence the millions of the poor. Think of this, and you will
- easily understand the reason of such a relentless persecution by
- those others who, more observant and perspicacious, do see the
- true nature of Theosophy, and therefore dread it.
-
- ENQ. Do you mean to tell me that it is because a few have understood
- what Theosophy leads to, that they try to crush the movement? But
- if Theosophy leads only to good, surely you cannot be prepared to
- utter such a terrible accusation of perfidious heartlessness and
- treachery even against those few?
-
- THEO. I am so prepared, on the contrary. I do not call the enemies we
- have had to battle with during the first nine or ten years of the
- Society’s existence either powerful or “dangerous”; but only those
- who have arisen against us in the last three or four years. And
- these neither speak, write nor preach against Theosophy, but work
- in silence and behind the backs of the foolish puppets who act as
- their visible _marionnettes_. Yet if _invisible_ to most of the
- members of our Society, they are well known to the true “Founders”
- and the protectors of our Society. But they must remain for
- certain reasons unnamed at present.
-
- ENQ. And are they known to many of you, or to yourself alone?
-
- THEO. I never said _I_ knew them. I may or may not know them—but I know
- _of them_, and this is sufficient; and _I defy them to do their
- worst_. They may achieve great mischief and throw confusion
- into our ranks, especially among the faint-hearted, and those
- who can judge only by appearances. _They will not crush the
- Society_, do what they may. Apart from these truly dangerous
- enemies—“dangerous,” however, only to those Theosophists who
- are unworthy of the name, and whose place is rather _outside_
- than _within_ the T.S.—the number of our opponents is more than
- considerable.
-
- ENQ. Can you name these, at least, if you will not speak of the others?
-
- THEO. Of course I can. We have to contend against (1) the hatred of the
- Spiritualists, American, English, and French; (2) the constant
- opposition of the clergy of all denominations; (3) especially
- the relentless hatred and persecution of the missionaries in
- India; (4) this led to the famous and infamous attack on our
- Theosophical Society by the Society for Psychical Research, an
- attack which was stirred up by a regular conspiracy organized by
- the missionaries in India. Lastly, we must count the defection
- of various prominent (?) members, for reasons I have already
- explained, all of whom have contributed their utmost to increase
- the prejudice against us.
-
- ENQ. Cannot you give me more details about these, so that I may know
- what to answer when asked—a brief history of the Society, in
- short; and why the world believes all this?
-
- THEO. The reason is simple. Most outsiders knew absolutely nothing of
- the Society itself, its motives, objects or beliefs. From its very
- beginning the world has seen in Theosophy nothing but certain
- marvellous phenomena, in which two-thirds of the non-spiritualists
- do not believe. Very soon the Society came to be regarded as a
- body pretending to the possession of “miraculous” powers. The
- world never realised that the Society taught absolute disbelief
- in _miracle_ or even the possibility of such; that in the Society
- there were only a few people who possessed such psychic powers
- and but few who cared for them. Nor did it understand that the
- phenomena were never produced publicly, but only privately for
- friends, and merely given as an accessory, to prove by direct
- demonstration that such things could be produced without dark
- rooms, spirits, mediums, or any of the usual paraphernalia.
- Unfortunately, this misconception was greatly strengthened and
- exaggerated by the first book on the subject which excited much
- attention in Europe—Mr. Sinnett’s “_Occult World_.” If this work
- did much to bring the Society into prominence, it attracted still
- more obloquy, derision and misrepresentation upon the hapless
- heroes and heroine thereof. Of this the author was more than
- warned in the _Occult World_, but did not pay attention to the
- _prophecy_—for such it was, though half-veiled.
-
- ENQ. For what, and since when, do the Spiritualists hate you?
-
- THEO. From the first day of the Society’s existence. No sooner the fact
- became known that, as a body, the T.S. did not believe in
- communications with the spirits of the dead, but regarded the
- so-called “spirits” as, for the most part, astral reflections of
- disembodied personalities, shells, etc., than the Spiritualists
- conceived a violent hatred to us and especially to the Founders.
- This hatred found expression in every kind of slander,
- uncharitable personal remarks, and absurd misrepresentations of
- the Theosophical teachings in all the American Spiritualistic
- organs. For years we were persecuted, denounced and abused. This
- began in 1875 and continues to the present day. In 1879, the
- headquarters of the T.S. were transferred from New York to Bombay,
- India, and then permanently to Madras. When the first branch of
- our Society, the British T.S., was founded in London, the English
- Spiritualists came out in arms against us, as the Americans had
- done; and the French Spiritists followed suit.
-
- ENQ. But why should the clergy be hostile to you, when, after all, the
- main tendency of the Theosophical doctrines is opposed to
- Materialism, the great enemy of all forms of religion in our day?
- THEO. The Clergy opposed us on the general principle that “He who
- is not with me is against me.” Since Theosophy does not agree with
- any one Sect or Creed, it is considered the enemy of all alike,
- because it teaches that they are all, more or less, mistaken. The
- missionaries in India hated and tried to crush us because they saw
- the flower of the educated Indian youth and the Brahmins, who are
- almost inaccessible to them, joining the Society in large numbers.
- And yet, apart from this general class hatred, the T.S. counts in
- its ranks many clergymen, and even one or two bishops.
-
- ENQ. And what led the S.P.R. to take the field against you? You were
- both pursuing the same line of study, in some respects, and
- several of the Psychic Researchers belonged to your society.
-
- THEO. First of all we were very good friends with the leaders of the
- S.P.R.; but when the attack on the phenomena appeared in the
- _Christian College Magazine_, supported by the pretended
- revelations of a menial, the S.P.R. found that they had
- compromised themselves by publishing in their “Proceedings” too
- many of the phenomena which had occurred in connection with the
- T.S. Their ambition is to pose as an _authoritative_ and _strictly
- scientific_ body; so that they had to choose between retaining
- that position by throwing overboard the T.S. and even trying to
- destroy it, and seeing themselves merged, in the opinion of the
- Sadducees of the _grand monde_, with the “credulous” Theosophists
- and Spiritualists. There was no way for them out of it, no two
- choices, and they chose to throw us overboard. It was a matter of
- dire necessity for them. But so hard pressed were they to find
- any apparently reasonable motive for the life of devotion and
- ceaseless labour led by the two Founders, and for the complete
- absence of any pecuniary profit or other advantage to them, that
- our enemies were obliged to resort to the thrice-absurd, eminently
- ridiculous, and now famous “Russian spy theory,” to explain this
- devotion. But the old saying, “The blood of the martyr is the seed
- of the Church,” proved once more correct. After the first shock of
- this attack, the T.S. doubled and tripled its numbers, but the bad
- impression produced still remains. A French author was right in
- saying, “_Calomniez, calomniez toujours et encore, il en restera
- toujours quelque chose._” Therefore it is, that unjust prejudices
- are current, and that everything connected with the T.S., and
- especially with its Founders, is so falsely distorted, because
- based on malicious hearsay alone.
-
- ENQ. Yet in the 14 years during which the Society has existed, you must
- have had ample time and opportunity to show yourselves and your
- work in their true light?
-
- THEO. How, or when, have we been given such an opportunity? Our most
- prominent members had an aversion to anything that looked like
- publicly justifying themselves. Their policy has ever been: “We
- must live it down”; and “What does it matter what the newspapers
- say, or people think?” The Society was too poor to send out
- public lecturers, and therefore the expositions of our views
- and doctrines were confined to a few Theosophical works that
- met with success, but which people often misunderstood, or
- only knew of through hearsay. Our journals were, and still are,
- boycotted; our literary works ignored; and to this day no one
- seems even to feel quite certain whether the Theosophists are
- a kind of Serpent-and-Devil worshippers, or simply “Esoteric
- Buddhists”—whatever that may mean. It was useless for us to go
- on denying, day after day and year after year, every kind of
- inconceivable cock-and-bull stories about us; for, no sooner was
- one disposed of, than another, a still more absurd and malicious
- one, was born out of the ashes of the first. Unfortunately,
- human nature is so constituted that any good said of a person
- is immediately forgotten and never repeated. But one has only
- to utter a calumny, or to start a story—no matter how absurd,
- false or incredible it may be, if only it is connected with some
- unpopular character—for it to be successful and forthwith accepted
- as a historical fact. Like _Don Basilio’s_ “CALUMNIA,” the rumour
- springs up, at first, as a soft gentle breeze hardly stirring the
- grass under your feet, and arising no one knows whence; then, in
- the shortest space of time, it is transformed into a strong wind,
- begins to blow a gale, and forthwith becomes a roaring storm! A
- calumny among news, is what an octopus is among fishes; it sucks
- into one’s mind, fastens upon our memory, which feeds upon it,
- leaving indelible marks even after the calumny has been bodily
- destroyed. A calumnious lie is the only master-key that will open
- any and every brain. It is sure to receive welcome and hospitality
- in every human mind, the highest as the lowest, if only a little
- prejudiced, and no matter from however base a quarter and motive
- it has started.
-
- ENQ. Don’t you think your assertion altogether too sweeping? The
- Englishman has never been over-ready to believe in anything said,
- and our nation is proverbially known for its love of fair play. A
- lie has no legs to stand upon for long, and—
-
- THEO. The Englishman is as ready to believe evil as a man of any other
- nation; for it is human nature, and not a national feature. As
- to lies, if they have no legs to stand upon, according to the
- proverb, they have exceedingly rapid wings; and they can and do
- fly farther and wider than any other kind of news, in England
- as elsewhere. Remember lies and calumny are the only kind of
- literature we can always get gratis, and without paying any
- subscription. We can make the experiment if you like. Will you,
- who are so interested in Theosophical matters, and have heard
- so much about us, will you put me questions on as many of these
- rumours and “hearsays” as you can think of? I will answer you
- the truth, and nothing but the truth, subject to the strictest
- verification.
-
- ENQ. Before we change the subject, let us have the whole truth on this
- one. Now, some writers have called your teachings “immoral
- and pernicious”; others, on the ground that many so-called
- “authorities” and Orientalists find in the Indian religions
- nothing but sex-worship in its many forms, accuse you of teaching
- nothing better than Phallic worship. They say that since modern
- Theosophy is so closely allied with Eastern, and particularly
- Indian, thought, it cannot be free from this taint. Occasionally,
- even, they go so far as to accuse European Theosophists of
- reviving the practices connected with this cult. How about this?
-
- THEO. I have heard and read about this before, and I answer that no
- more utterly baseless and lying calumny has ever been invented
- and circulated. “Silly people can see but silly dreams,” says
- a Russian proverb. It makes one’s blood boil to hear such vile
- accusations made without the slightest foundation, and on the
- strength of mere inferences. Ask the hundreds of honourable
- English men and women who have been members of the Theosophical
- Society for years whether an _immoral_ precept or a _pernicious_
- doctrine was ever taught to them. Open the _Secret Doctrine_,
- and you will find page after page denouncing the Jews and other
- nations precisely on account of this devotion to Phallic rites,
- due to the dead letter interpretation of nature symbolism, and
- the grossly materialistic conceptions of her dualism in all the
- _exoteric_ creeds. Such ceaseless and malicious misrepresentation
- of our teachings and beliefs is really disgraceful.
-
- ENQ. But you cannot deny that the Phallic element _does_ exist in the
- religions of the East?
-
- THEO. Nor do I deny it; only I maintain that this proves no more than
- does its presence in Christianity, the religion of the West. Read
- Hargrave Jenning’s _Rosicrucians_, if you would assure yourself of
- it. In the East, the Phallic symbolism is, perhaps, more crude,
- because more true to nature, or I would rather say, more _naïve_
- and sincere than in the West. But it is not more licentious,
- nor does it suggest to the Oriental mind the same gross and
- coarse ideas as to the Western, with, perhaps, one or two
- exceptions, such as the shameful sect known as the “Maharajah,” or
- _Vallabhachârya_ sect.
-
- ENQ. A writer in the _Agnostic_ journal—one of your accusers—has just
- hinted that the followers of this disgraceful sect are
- Theosophists, and “claim true Theosophic insight.”
-
- THEO. He wrote a falsehood, and that’s all. There never was, nor is
- there at present, one single Vallabhachârya in our Society. As to
- their having, or claiming Theosophic insight, that is another fib,
- based on crass ignorance about the Indian Sects. Their “Maharajah”
- only claims a right to the money, wives and daughters of his
- foolish followers and no more. This sect is despised by all the
- other Hindus.
-
- But you will find the whole subject dealt with at length in the _Secret
- Doctrine_, to which I must again refer you for detailed
- explanations. To conclude, the very soul of Theosophy is dead
- against Phallic worship; and its occult or esoteric section more
- so even than the exoteric teachings. There never was a more lying
- statement made than the above. And now ask me some other questions.
-
-
-IS THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY A MONEY-MAKING CONCERN?
-
- ENQ. Agreed. Well, have either of the Founders, Colonel H. S. Olcott or
- H. P. Blavatsky, ever made any money, profit, or derived any
- worldly benefit from the T.S., as some papers say?
-
- THEO. Not one penny. The papers lie. On the contrary, they have both
- given all they had, and literally beggared themselves. As for
- “worldly benefits,” think of the calumnies and vilification they
- have been subjected to, and then ask the question!
-
- ENQ. Yet I have read in a good many missionary organs that the entrance
- fees and subscriptions much more than covered all expenses; and
- one said that the Founders were making twenty thousand pounds a
- year!
-
- THEO. This is a fib, like many others. In the published accounts of
- January, 1889, you will find an exact statement of _all_ the money
- ever received from any source since 1879. The total received from
- all sources (entrance fees, donations, etc., etc.) during these
- ten years is under six thousand pounds, and of this a large part
- was contributed by the Founders themselves from the proceeds of
- their private resources and their literary work. All this has been
- openly and officially admitted, even by our enemies, the Psychic
- Research Society. And now both the Founders are penniless; one,
- too old and ill to work as she did before, unable to spare time
- for outside literary work to help the Society in money, can only
- write for the Theosophical cause; the other keeps labouring for it
- as before, and receives as little thanks for it.
-
- ENQ. But surely they need money to live?
-
- THEO. Not at all. So long as they have food and lodging, even though
- they owe it to the devotion of a few friends, they need little
- more.
-
- ENQ. But could not Madame Blavatsky, especially, make more than enough
- to live upon by her writings?
-
- THEO. When in India she received on the average some thousand rupees a
- year for articles contributed to Russian and other papers, but
- gave it all away to the Society.
-
- ENQ. Political articles?
-
- THEO. Never. Everything she has written throughout the seven years of
- her stay in India is all there in print. It deals only with
- the religions, ethnology, and customs of India, and with
- Theosophy—never with politics, of which she knows nothing and
- cares less. Again, two years ago she refused several contracts
- amounting together to about 1,200 roubles in gold per month; for
- she could not accept them without abandoning her work for the
- Society, which needed all her time and strength. She has documents
- to prove it.
-
- ENQ. But why could not both she and Colonel Olcott do as others—notably
- many Theosophists—do; follow out their respective professions and
- devote the surplus of their time to the work of the Society?
-
- THEO. Because by serving two masters, either the professional or the
- philanthropic work would have had to suffer. Every true
- Theosophist is morally bound to sacrifice the personal to the
- impersonal, his own _present_ good to the _future_ benefit of
- other people. If the Founders do not set the example, who will?
-
- ENQ. And are there many who follow it?
-
- THEO. I am bound to answer you the truth. In Europe about half-a-dozen
- in all, out of more than that number of Branches.
-
- ENQ. Then it is not true that the Theosophical Society has a large
- capital or endowment of its own?
-
- THEO. It is false, for it has none at all. Now that the entrance fee of
- £1 and the small annual due have been abolished, it is even a
- doubtful question whether the staff at the headquarters in India
- will not soon be starved to death.
-
- ENQ. Then why not raise subscriptions?
-
- THEO. We are not the Salvation Army; we _cannot_ and _have never_
- begged; nor have we ever followed the example of the Churches and
- sects and “taken up collections.” That which is occasionally sent
- for the support of the Society, the small sums contributed by some
- devoted Fellows, are all voluntary donations.
-
- ENQ. But I have heard of large sums of money given to Mdme. Blavatsky.
- It was said four years ago that she got £5,000 from one rich,
- young “Fellow,” who went out to join them in India and £10,000
- from another wealthy and well-known American gentleman, one of
- your members who died in Europe four years ago.
-
- THEO. Say to those who told you this, that they either themselves
- utter, or repeat, a gross falsehood. _Never has_ “Madame
- Blavatsky” _asked or received_ ONE PENNY from the two above-named
- gentlemen, nor anything like that from anyone else, since the
- Theosophical Society was founded. Let any man living try to
- substantiate this calumny, and it will be easier for him to
- prove that the Bank of England is a bankrupt than that the said
- “Founder” has ever made any money out of Theosophy. These two
- calumnies have been started by two high-born ladies, belonging
- to the London aristocracy, and have been immediately traced
- and disproved. They are the dead bodies, the carcases of two
- inventions, which, after having been buried in the sea of
- oblivion, are once more raised on the surface of the stagnant
- waters of slander.
-
- ENQ. Then I have been told of several large _legacies_ left to the T.S.
- One—some £8,000—was left to it by some eccentric Englishman,
- who did not even belong to the Society. The other—£3,000 or
- £4,000—were testated by an Australian F.T.S. Is this true?
-
- THEO. I heard of the first; and I also know that, whether legally left
- or not, the T.S. has never profited by it, nor have the Founders
- ever been officially notified of it. For, as our Society was not
- then a chartered body, and thus had no legal existence, the Judge
- at the Court of Probate, as we were told, paid no attention to
- such legacy and turned over the sum to the heirs. So much for the
- first. As for the second, it is quite true. The testator was one
- of our devoted Fellows, and willed all he had to the T.S. But when
- the President, Colonel Olcott, came to look into the matter, he
- found that the testator had children whom he had disinherited for
- some family reasons. Therefore, he called a council, and it was
- decided that the legacy should be refused, and the moneys passed
- to the legal heirs. The Theosophical Society would be untrue to
- its name were it to profit by money to which others are entitled
- virtually, at any rate on Theosophical principles, if not legally.
-
- ENQ. Again, and I say this on the authority of your own Journal, the
- _Theosophist_, there’s a Rajah of India who donated to the Society
- 25,000 rupees. Have you not thanked him for his great bounty in
- the January _Theosophist_ for 1888?
-
- THEO. We have, in these words, “That the thanks of the Convention be
- conveyed to H. H. the Maharajah ... for his _promised munificent
- gift_ of Rupees 25,000 to the Society’s Fund.” The thanks were
- duly conveyed, but the money is still a “promise,” and has never
- reached the Headquarters.
-
- ENQ. But surely, if the Maharajah promised and received thanks for his
- gift publicly and in print, he will be as good as his promise?
-
- THEO. He may, though the promise is 18 months old. I speak of the
- present and not of the future.
-
- ENQ. Then how do you propose to go on?
-
- THEO. So long as the T.S. has a few devoted members willing to work for
- it without reward and thanks, so long as a few good Theosophists
- support it with occasional donations, so long will it exist, and
- nothing can crush it.
-
- ENQ. I have heard many Theosophists speak of a “power behind the
- Society” and of certain “Mahatmas,” mentioned also in Mr.
- Sinnett’s works, that are said to have founded the Society, to
- watch over and protect it.
-
- THEO. You may laugh, but it is so.
-
-
-THE WORKING STAFF OF THE T.S.
-
- ENQ. These men, I have heard, are great Adepts, Alchemists, and what
- not. If, then, they can change lead into gold and make as much
- money as they like, besides doing all kinds of miracles at will,
- as related in Mr. Sinnett’s “Occult World,” why do not they find
- you money, and support the Founders and the Society in comfort?
-
- THEO. Because they did not found a “miracle club.” Because the Society
- is intended to help men to develop the powers latent in them
- through their own exertions and merit. Because whatever they may
- or may not produce in the way of phenomena, they are not _false
- coiners_; nor would they throw an additional and very strong
- temptation on the path of members and candidates: _Theosophy is
- not to be bought_. Hitherto, for the past 14 years, not a single
- working member has ever received pay or salary from either the
- Masters or the Society.
-
- ENQ. Then are none of your workers paid at all?
-
- THEO. Till now, not one. But as every one has to eat, drink, and clothe
- himself, all those who are without any means of their own, and
- devote their whole time to the work of the society, are provided
- with the necessaries of life at the Headquarters at Madras, India,
- though these “necessaries” are humble enough, in truth! (See
- Rules at the end.) But now that the Society’s work has increased
- so greatly and still goes on in increasing (N.B., _owing to
- slanders_) in Europe, we need more working hands. We hope to have
- a few members who will henceforth be remunerated—if the word _can_
- be used in the cases in question. For every one of these Fellows,
- who are preparing to give _all_ their time to the Society, are
- quitting good official situations with excellent prospects, to
- work for us at _less than half their former salary_.
-
- ENQ. And who will provide the funds for this?
-
- THEO. Some of our Fellows who are just a little richer than the rest.
- The man who would speculate or make money on Theosophy would be
- unworthy to remain in our ranks.
-
- ENQ. But you must surely make money by your books, magazines, and other
- publications?
-
- THEO. The _Theosophist_ of Madras, alone among the magazines, pays a
- profit, and this has regularly been turned over to the Society,
- year by year, as the published accounts show. _Lucifer_ is
- slowly but steadily ingulfing money, never yet having paid
- expenses—thanks to its being boycotted by the pious booksellers
- and railway stalls. The _Lotus_, in France—started on the private
- and not very large means of a Theosophist, who has devoted to it
- his whole time and labour—has ceased to exist, owing to the same
- causes, alas! Nor does the New York _Path_ pay its way, while the
- _Revue Théosophique_ of Paris has only just been started, also
- from the private means of a lady-member. Moreover, whenever any of
- the works issued by the Theosophical Publishing Company in London
- do pay, the proceeds will be devoted to the service of the Society.
-
- ENQ. And now please tell me all you can about the Mahatmas. So many
- absurd and contradictory things are said about them, that one does
- not know what to believe, and all sorts of ridiculous stories
- become current.
-
- THEO. Well may you call them “ridiculous!”
-
-
-
-
-XIV. THE “THEOSOPHICAL MAHATMAS.”
-
-
-ARE THEY “SPIRITS OF LIGHT” OR “GOBLINS DAMN’D”?
-
- ENQ. Who are they, finally, those whom you call your “Masters”? Some
- say they are “Spirits,” or some other kind of supernatural beings,
- while others call them “myths.”
-
- THEO. They are neither. I once heard one outsider say to another that
- they were a sort of _male mermaids_, whatever such a creature may
- be. But if you listen to what people say, you will never have a
- true conception of them. In the first place they are _living men_,
- born as we are born, and doomed to die like every other mortal.
-
- ENQ. Yes, but it is rumoured that some of them are a thousand years
- old. Is this true?
-
- THEO. As true as the miraculous growth of hair on the head of
- Meredith’s Shagpat. Truly, like the “Identical,” no Theosophical
- shaving has hitherto been able to crop it. The more we deny them,
- the more we try to set people right, the more absurd do the
- inventions become. I have heard of Methuselah being 969 years
- old; but, not being forced to believe in it, have laughed at
- the statement, for which I was forthwith regarded by many as a
- blasphemous heretic.
-
- ENQ. Seriously, though, do they outlive the ordinary age of men?
-
- THEO. What do you call the ordinary age? I remember reading in the
- _Lancet_ of a Mexican who was almost 190 years old; but I have
- never heard of mortal man, layman, or Adept, who could live even
- half the years allotted to Methuselah. Some Adepts do exceed, by
- a good deal, what you would call the ordinary age; yet there is
- nothing miraculous in it, and very few of them care to live very
- long.
-
- ENQ. But what does the word “Mahatma” really mean?
-
- THEO. Simply a “great soul,” great through moral elevation and
- intellectual attainment. If the title of great is given to a
- drunken soldier like Alexander, why should we not call those
- “Great” who have achieved far greater conquests in Nature’s
- secrets, than Alexander ever did on the field of battle? Besides,
- the term is an Indian and a very old word.
-
- ENQ. And why do you call them “Masters”?
-
- THEO. We call them “Masters” because they are our teachers; and because
- from them we have derived all the Theosophical truths, however
- inadequately some of us may have expressed, and others understood,
- them. They are men of great learning, whom we term Initiates,
- and still greater holiness of life. They are not ascetics in
- the ordinary sense, though they certainly remain apart from the
- turmoil and strife of your western world.
-
- ENQ. But is it not selfish thus to isolate themselves?
-
- THEO. Where is the selfishness? Does not the fate of the Theosophical
- Society sufficiently prove that the world is neither ready to
- recognise them nor to profit by their teaching? Of what use
- would Professor Clerk Maxwell have been to instruct a class of
- little boys in their multiplication-table? Besides, they isolate
- themselves only from the West. In their own country they go about
- as publicly as other people do.
-
- ENQ. Don’t you ascribe to them supernatural powers?
-
- THEO. We believe in nothing supernatural, as I have told you already.
- Had Edison lived and invented his phonograph two hundred years
- ago, he would most probably have been burnt along with it, and the
- whole attributed to the devil. The powers which they exercise are
- simply the development of potencies lying latent in every man and
- woman, and the existence of which even official science begins to
- recognise.
-
- ENQ. Is it true that these men _inspire_ some of your writers, and that
- many, if not all, of your Theosophical works were written under
- their dictation?
-
- THEO. Some have. There are passages entirely dictated by them and
- _verbatim_, but in most cases they only inspire the ideas and
- leave the literary form to the writers.
-
- ENQ. But this in itself is miraculous; is, in fact, a _miracle_. How
- can they do it?
-
- THEO. My dear Sir, you are labouring under a great mistake, and it is
- science itself that will refute your arguments at no distant
- day. Why should it be a “miracle,” as you call it? A miracle is
- supposed to mean some operation which is supernatural, whereas
- there is really nothing above or beyond NATURE and Nature’s laws.
- Among the many forms of the “miracle” which have come under modern
- scientific recognition, there is Hypnotism, and one phase of its
- power is known as “Suggestion,” a form of thought transference,
- which has been successfully used in combating particular physical
- diseases, etc. The time is not far distant when the World of
- Science will be forced to acknowledge that there exists as much
- interaction between one mind and another, no matter at what
- distance, as between one body and another in closest contact.
- When two minds are sympathetically related, and the instruments
- through which they function are tuned to respond magnetically and
- electrically to one another, there is nothing which will prevent
- the transmission of thoughts from one to the other, at will;
- for since the mind is not of a tangible nature, that distance
- can divide it from the subject of its contemplation, it follows
- that the only difference that can exist between two minds is a
- difference of STATE. So if this latter hindrance is overcome,
- where is the “miracle” of _thought transference_, at whatever
- distance?
-
- ENQ. But you will admit that Hypnotism does nothing so miraculous or
- wonderful as that?
-
- THEO. On the contrary, it is a well-established fact that a Hypnotist
- can affect the brain of his subject so far as to produce an
- expression of his own thoughts, and even his words, through the
- organism of his subject; and although the phenomena attaching to
- this method of actual thought transference are as yet few in
- number, no one, I presume, will undertake to say how far their
- action may extend in the future, when the laws that govern their
- production are more scientifically established. And so, if such
- results can be produced by the knowledge of the mere rudiments of
- Hypnotism, what can prevent the Adept in Psychic and Spiritual
- powers from producing results which, with your present limited
- knowledge of their laws, you are inclined to call “miraculous”?
-
- ENQ. Then why do not our physicians experiment and try if they could
- not do as much?[56]
-
- THEO. Because, first of all, they are not Adepts with a thorough
- understanding of the secrets and laws of psychic and spiritual
- realms, but materialists, afraid to step outside the narrow groove
- of matter; and, secondly, because they _must fail_ at present, and
- indeed until they are brought to acknowledge that such powers are
- attainable.
-
- ENQ. And could they be taught?
-
- THEO. Not unless they were first of all prepared, by having the
- materialistic dross they have accumulated in their brains swept
- away to the very last atom.
-
- ENQ. This is very interesting. Tell me, have the Adepts thus inspired
- or dictated to many of your Theosophists?
-
- THEO. No, on the contrary, to very few. Such operations require special
- conditions. An unscrupulous but skilled Adept of the Black
- Brotherhood (“Brothers of the Shadow,” and Dugpas, we call
- them) has far less difficulties to labour under. For, having no
- laws of the Spiritual kind to trammel his actions, such a Dugpa
- “sorcerer” will most unceremoniously obtain control over any
- mind, and subject it entirely to his evil powers. But our Masters
- will never do that. They have no right, except by falling into
- Black Magic, to obtain full mastery over anyone’s immortal Ego,
- and can therefore act only on the physical and psychic nature of
- the subject, leaving thereby the free will of the latter wholly
- undisturbed. Hence, unless a person has been brought into psychic
- relationship with the Masters, and is assisted by virtue of his
- full faith in, and devotion to, his Teachers, the latter, whenever
- transmitting their thoughts to one with whom these conditions
- are not fulfilled, experience great difficulties in penetrating
- into the cloudy chaos of that person’s sphere. But this is no
- place to treat of a subject of this nature. Suffice it to say,
- that if the power exists, then there are Intelligences (embodied
- or disembodied) which guide this power, and living conscious
- instruments through whom it is transmitted and by whom it is
- received. We have only to beware of _black_ magic.
-
- ENQ. But what do you really mean by “black magic”?
-
- THEO. Simply _abuse of psychic powers_, or of any _secret of nature_;
- the fact of applying to selfish and sinful ends the powers of
- Occultism. A hypnotiser, who, taking advantage of his powers of
- “suggestion,” forces a subject to steal or murder, would be called
- a _black magician_ by us. The famous “rejuvenating system” of Dr.
- Brown-Sequard, of Paris, through a loathsome _animal injection_
- into human blood—a discovery all the medical papers of Europe are
- now discussing—if true, is _unconscious black magic_.
-
- ENQ. But this is mediæval belief in witchcraft and sorcery! Even Law
- itself has ceased to believe in such things?
-
- THEO. So much the worse for law, as it has been led, through such a
- lack of discrimination, into committing more than one judiciary
- mistake and crime. It is the term alone that frightens you with
- its “superstitious” ring in it. Would not law punish an abuse of
- hypnotic powers, as I just mentioned? Nay, it has so punished it
- already in France and Germany; yet it would indignantly deny that
- it applied punishment to a crime of evident _sorcery_. You cannot
- believe in the efficacy and reality of the _powers of suggestion_
- by physicians and mesmerisers (or hypnotisers), and then refuse to
- believe in the same powers when used for evil motives. And if you
- do, then you believe in _Sorcery_. Yon cannot believe in good and
- disbelieve in evil, accept genuine money and refuse to credit such
- a thing as false coin. Nothing can exist without its contrast, and
- no day, no light, no good could have any representation as such
- in your consciousness, were there no night, darkness nor evil to
- offset and contrast them.
-
- ENQ. Indeed, I have known men, who, while thoroughly believing in that
- which you call great psychic, or magic powers, laughed at the very
- mention of Witchcraft and Sorcery.
-
- THEO. What does it prove? Simply that they are illogical. So much the
- worse for them, again. And we, knowing as we do of the existence
- of good and holy Adepts, believe as thoroughly in the existence of
- bad and unholy Adepts, or—Dugpas.
-
- ENQ. But if the Masters exist, why don’t they come out before all men
- and refute once for all the many charges which are made against
- Mdme. Blavatsky and the Society?
-
- THEO. What charges?
-
- ENQ. That _they_ do not exist, and that she has invented them. That
- they are men of straw, “Mahatmas of muslin and bladders.” Does not
- all this injure her reputation?
-
- THEO. In what way can such an accusation injure her in reality? Did she
- ever make money on their presumed existence, or derive benefit,
- or fame, therefrom? I answer that she has gained only insults,
- abuse, and calumnies, which would have been very painful had she
- not learned long ago to remain perfectly indifferent to such
- false charges. For what does it amount to, after all? Why, to an
- _implied compliment_, which, if the fools, her accusers, were not
- carried away by their blind hatred, they would have thought twice
- before uttering. To say that she has invented the Masters comes
- to this: She must have invented every bit of philosophy that has
- ever been given out in Theosophical literature. She must be the
- author of the letters from which “Esoteric Buddhism” was written;
- the sole inventor of every tenet found in the “Secret Doctrine,”
- which, if the world were just, would be recognised as supplying
- many of the missing links of science, as will be discovered a
- hundred years hence. By saying what they do, they are also giving
- her the credit of being far cleverer than the hundreds of men,
- (many _very_ clever and not a few scientific men,) who believe in
- what she says—inasmuch as she must have fooled them all! If they
- speak the truth, then she must be several Mahatmas rolled into one
- like a nest of Chinese boxes; since among the so-called “Mahatma
- letters” are many in totally different and distinct styles, all of
- which her accusers declare that she has written.
-
- ENQ. It is just what they say. But is it not very painful to her to be
- publicly denounced as “the most accomplished impostor of the age,
- whose name deserves to pass to posterity,” as is done in the
- Report of the “Society for Psychical Research”?
-
- THEO. It might be painful if it were true, or came from people less
- rabidly materialistic and prejudiced. As it is, personally she
- treats the whole matter with contempt, while the Mahatmas simply
- laugh at it. In truth, it is the greatest compliment that could be
- paid to her. I say so, again.
-
- ENQ. But her enemies claim to have proved their case.
-
- THEO. Aye, it is easy enough to make such a claim when you have
- constituted yourself judge, jury, and prosecuting counsel at
- once, as they did. But who, except their direct followers and our
- enemies, believe in it?
-
- ENQ. But they sent a representative to India to investigate the matter,
- didn’t they?
-
- THEO. They did, and their final conclusion rests entirely on the
- unchecked statements and unverified assertions of this young
- gentleman. A lawyer who read through his report told a friend
- of mine that in all his experience he had never seen “such a
- _ridiculous_ and self-condemnatory document.” It was found to be
- full of suppositions and “_working_ hypotheses” which mutually
- destroy each other. Is this a serious charge?
-
- ENQ. Yet it has done the Society great harm. Why, then, did she not
- vindicate her own character, at least, before a Court of Law?
-
- THEO. Firstly, because as a Theosophist, it is her duty to leave
- unheeded all personal insults. Secondly, because neither the
- Society nor Mdme. Blavatsky had any money to waste over such a
- law-suit. And lastly, because it would have been ridiculous for
- both to be untrue to their principles, because of an attack made
- on them by a flock of stupid old British wethers, who had been led
- to butt at them by an over frolicksome lambkin from Australia.
-
- ENQ. This is complimentary. But do you not think that it would have
- done real good to the cause of Theosophy, if she had
- authoritatively disproved the whole thing once for all?
-
- THEO. Perhaps. But do you believe that any English jury or judge would
- have ever admitted the reality of psychic phenomena, even if
- entirely unprejudiced beforehand? And when you remember that
- they would have been set against us already by the “Russian Spy”
- scare, the charge of _Atheism and infidelity_, and all the other
- calumnies that have been circulated against us, you cannot fail to
- see that such an attempt to obtain justice in a Court of Law would
- have been worse than fruitless! All this the Psychic Researchers
- knew well, and they took a base and mean advantage of their
- position to raise themselves above our heads and save themselves
- at our expense.
-
- ENQ. The S.P.R. now denies completely the existence of the Mahatmas.
- They say that from beginning to end they were a romance which
- Madame Blavatsky has woven from her own brain?
-
- THEO. Well, she might have done many things less clever than this. At
- any rate, we have not the slightest objection to this theory. As
- she always says now, she almost prefers that people should not
- believe in the Masters. She declares openly that she would rather
- people should seriously think that the only Mahatmaland is the
- grey matter of her brain, and that, in short, she has evolved them
- out of the depths of her own inner consciousness, than that their
- names and grand ideal should be so infamously desecrated as they
- are at present. At first she used to protest indignantly against
- any doubts as to their existence. Now she never goes out of her
- way to prove or disprove it. Let people think what they like.
-
- ENQ. But, of course, these Masters _do_ exist?
-
- THEO. We affirm _they do_. Nevertheless, this does not help much. Many
- people, even some Theosophists and ex-Theosophists, say that
- they have never had any proof of their existence. Very well;
- then Mme. Blavatsky replies with this alternative:—If she has
- invented them, then she has also invented their philosophy and
- the practical knowledge which some few have acquired; and if
- so, what does it matter whether they do exist or not, since she
- herself is here, and _her own existence_, at any rate, can hardly
- be denied? If the knowledge supposed to have been imparted by
- them is good intrinsically, and it is accepted as such by many
- persons of more than average intelligence, why should there be
- such a _hullabaloo_ made over that question? The fact of her
- being an impostor _has never been proved_, and will always remain
- _sub judice_; whereas it is a certain and undeniable fact that,
- by whomsoever invented, the philosophy preached by the “Masters”
- is one of the grandest and most beneficent philosophies once it
- is properly understood. Thus the slanderers, while moved by the
- lowest and meanest feelings—those of hatred, revenge, malice,
- wounded vanity, or disappointed ambition,—seem quite unaware
- that they are paying the greatest tribute to her intellectual
- powers. So be it, if the poor fools will have it so. Really, Mme.
- Blavatsky has not the slightest objection to being represented by
- her enemies as a _triple_ Adept, and a “Mahatma” to boot. It is
- only her unwillingness to pose in her own sight as a crow parading
- in peacock’s feathers that compels her to this day to insist upon
- the truth.
-
- ENQ. But if you have such wise and good men to guide the Society, how
- is it that so many mistakes have been made?
-
- THEO. The Masters do _not_ guide the Society, not even the Founders;
- and no one has ever asserted that they did: they only watch
- over and protect it. This is amply proved by the fact that no
- mistakes have been able to cripple it, and no scandals from
- within, nor the most damaging attacks from without, have been
- able to overthrow it. The Masters look at the future, not at the
- present, and every mistake is so much more accumulated wisdom for
- days to come. That other “Master” who sent the man with the five
- talents did not tell him how to double them, nor did he prevent
- the foolish servant from burying his one talent in the earth.
- Each must acquire wisdom by his own experience and merits. The
- Christian Churches, who claim a far higher “Master,” the very
- Holy Ghost itself, have ever been and are still guilty not only
- of “mistakes,” but of a series of bloody crimes throughout the
- ages. Yet, no Christian would deny, for all that, his belief in
- _that_ “Master,” I suppose? although his existence is far more
- _hypothetical_ than that of the Mahatmas; as no one has ever seen
- the Holy Ghost, and _his_ guidance of the Church, moreover, their
- own ecclesiastical history distinctly contradicts. _Errare humanum
- est._ Let us return to our subject.
-
-
-THE ABUSE OF SACRED NAMES AND TERMS.
-
- ENQ. Then, what I have heard, namely, that many of your Theosophical
- writers claim to have been inspired by these Masters, or to have
- seen and conversed with them, is not true?
-
- THEO. It may or it may not be true. How can I tell? The burden of proof
- rests with them. Some of them, a few—very few, indeed—have
- distinctly either _lied_ or were hallucinated when boasting of
- such inspiration; others were truly inspired by great Adepts.
- The tree is known by its fruits; and as all Theosophists have to
- be judged by their deeds and not by what they write or say, so
- _all_ Theosophical books must be accepted on their merits, and not
- according to any claim to authority which they may put forward.
-
- ENQ. But would Mdme. Blavatsky apply this to her own works—the _Secret
- Doctrine_, for instance?
-
- THEO. Certainly; she says expressly in the PREFACE that she gives out
- the doctrines that she has learnt from the Masters, but claims no
- inspiration whatever for what she has lately written. As for our
- best Theosophists, they would also in this case far rather that
- the names of the Masters had never been mixed up with our books
- in any way. With few exceptions, most of such works are not only
- imperfect, but positively erroneous and misleading. Great are
- the desecrations to which the names of two of the Masters have
- been subjected. There is hardly a medium who has not claimed to
- have seen them. Every bogus swindling Society, for commercial
- purposes, now claims to be guided and directed by “Masters,” often
- supposed to be far higher than ours! Many and heavy are the sins
- of those who advanced these claims, prompted either by desire for
- lucre, vanity, or irresponsible mediumship. Many persons have been
- plundered of their money by such societies, which offer to sell
- the secrets of power, knowledge, and spiritual truth for worthless
- gold. Worst of all, the sacred names of Occultism and the holy
- keepers thereof have been dragged in this filthy mire, polluted
- by being associated with sordid motives and immoral practices,
- while thousands of men have been held back from the path of truth
- and light through the discredit and evil report which such shams,
- swindles, and frauds have brought upon the whole subject. I say
- again, every earnest Theosophist regrets to-day, from the bottom
- of his heart, that these sacred names and things have ever been
- mentioned before the public, and fervently wishes that they had
- been kept secret within a small circle of trusted and devoted
- friends.
-
- ENQ. The names certainly do occur very frequently now-a-days, and I
- never remember hearing of such persons as “Masters” till quite
- recently.
-
- THEO. It is so; and had we acted on the wise principle of silence,
- instead of rushing into notoriety and publishing all we knew and
- heard, such desecration would never have occurred. Behold, only
- fourteen years ago, before the Theosophical Society was founded,
- all the talk was of “Spirits.” They were everywhere, in everyone’s
- mouth; and no one by any chance even dreamt of talking about
- living “Adepts,” “Mahatmas,” or “Masters.” One hardly heard even
- the name of the Rosicrucians, while the existence of such a thing
- as “Occultism” was suspected even but by very few. Now all that
- is changed. We Theosophists were, unfortunately, the first to
- talk of these things, to make the fact of the existence in the
- East of “Adepts” and “Masters” and Occult knowledge known; and
- now the name has become common property. It is on us, now, that
- the Karma, the consequences of the resulting desecration of holy
- names and things, has fallen. All that you now find about such
- matters in current literature—and there is not a little of it—all
- is to be traced back to the impulse given in this direction by
- the Theosophical Society and its Founders. Our enemies profit to
- this day by our mistake. The most recent book directed against
- our teachings is alleged to have been written _by an Adept of
- twenty years’ standing_. Now, it is a _palpable lie_. We know the
- amanuensis and his _inspirers_ (as he is himself too ignorant to
- have written anything of the sort). These “inspirers” are living
- persons, revengeful and unscrupulous in proportion to their
- intellectual powers; and these _bogus_ Adepts are not one, but
- several. The cycle of “Adepts,” used as sledge-hammers to break
- the theosophical heads with, began twelve years ago, with Mrs.
- Emma Hardinge Britten’s “Louis” of _Art Magic_ and _Ghost-Land_,
- and now ends with the “Adept” and “Author” of _The Light of
- Egypt_, a work written by Spiritualists against Theosophy and its
- teachings. But it is useless to grieve over what is done, and we
- can only suffer in the hope that our indiscretions may have made
- it a little easier for others to find the way to these Masters,
- whose names are now everywhere taken in vain, and under cover of
- which so many iniquities have already been perpetrated.
-
- ENQ. Do you reject “Louis” as an Adept?
-
- THEO. We denounce no one, leaving this noble task to our enemies. The
- spiritualistic author of _Art Magic_, etc., may or may not have
- been acquainted with such an Adept—and saying this, I say far
- less than what that lady has said and written about us and
- Theosophy for the last several years—that is her own business.
- Only when, in a solemn scene of mystic vision, an alleged “Adept”
- sees “spirits” presumably at Greenwich, England, through Lord
- Rosse’s telescope, which was built in, and never moved from,
- Parsonstown, Ireland,[57] I may well be permitted to wonder at the
- ignorance of that “Adept” in matters of science. This beats all
- the mistakes and blunders committed at times by the _chelas_ of
- our Teachers! And it is this “Adept” that is used now to break the
- teachings of our Masters!
-
- ENQ. I quite understand your feeling in this matter, and think it only
- natural. And now, in view of all that you have said and explained
- to me, there is one subject on which I should like to ask you a
- few questions.
-
- THEO. If I can answer them I will. What is that?
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[56] Such, for instance, as Prof. Bernheim and Dr. C. Lloyd Tuckey of
-England; Professors Beaunis and Liégeois, of Nancy; Delbœuf of Liège;
-Burot and Bourru, of Rochefort; Fontain and Sigard, of Bordeaux; Forel,
-of Zurich; and Drs. Despine, of Marseilles; Van Renterghem and Van
-Eeden, of Amsterdam; Wetterstrand, of Stockholm; Schrenck-Notzing, of
-Leipzig, and many other physicians and writers of eminence.
-
-[57] Vide “Ghost Land,” Part I., p. 133, _et seq._
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION.
-
-
-THE FUTURE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.
-
- ENQ. Tell me, what do you expect for Theosophy in the future?
-
- THEO. If you speak of THEOSOPHY, I answer that, as it has existed
- eternally throughout the endless cycles upon cycles of the Past,
- so it will ever exist throughout the infinitudes of the Future,
- because Theosophy is synonymous with EVERLASTING TRUTH.
-
- ENQ. Pardon me; I meant to ask you rather about the prospects of the
- Theosophical Society.
-
- THEO. Its future will depend almost entirely upon the degree of
- selflessness, earnestness, devotion, and last, but not least, on
- the amount of knowledge and wisdom possessed by those members on
- whom it will fall to carry on the work, and to direct the Society
- after the death of the Founders.
-
- ENQ. I quite see the importance of their being selfless and devoted,
- but I do not quite grasp how their _knowledge_ can be as vital
- a factor in the question as these other qualities. Surely the
- literature which already exists, and to which constant additions
- are still being made, ought to be sufficient?
-
- THEO. I do not refer to technical knowledge of the esoteric doctrine,
- though that is most important; I spoke rather of the great
- need which our successors in the guidance of the Society will
- have of unbiased and clear judgment. Every such attempt as the
- Theosophical Society has hitherto ended in failure, because,
- sooner or later, it has degenerated into a sect, set up
- hard-and-fast dogmas of its own, and so lost by imperceptible
- degrees that vitality which living truth alone can impart. You
- must remember that all our members have been bred and born in some
- creed or religion, that all are more or less of their generation
- both physically and mentally, and consequently that their
- judgment is but too likely to be warped and unconsciously biased
- by some or all of these influences. If, then, they cannot be
- freed from such inherent bias, or at least taught to recognise it
- instantly and so avoid being led away by it, the result can only
- be that the Society will drift off on to some sandbank of thought
- or another, and there remain a stranded carcass to moulder and die.
-
- ENQ. But if this danger be averted?
-
- THEO. Then the Society will live on into and through the twentieth
- century. It will gradually leaven and permeate the great mass of
- thinking and intelligent people with its large-minded and noble
- ideas of Religion, Duty, and Philanthropy. Slowly but surely
- it will burst asunder the iron fetters of creeds and dogmas,
- of social and caste prejudices; it will break down racial and
- national antipathies and barriers, and will open the way to the
- practical realisation of the Brotherhood of all men. Through its
- teaching, through the philosophy which it has rendered accessible
- and intelligible to the modern mind, the West will learn to
- understand and appreciate the East at its true value. Further, the
- development of the psychic powers and faculties, the premonitory
- symptoms of which are already visible in America, will proceed
- healthily and normally. Mankind will be saved from the terrible
- dangers, both mental and bodily, which are inevitable when that
- unfolding takes place, as it threatens to do, in a hot-bed of
- selfishness and all evil passions. Man’s mental and psychic
- growth will proceed in harmony with his moral improvement, while
- his material surroundings will reflect the peace and fraternal
- goodwill which will reign in his mind, instead of the discord and
- strife which is everywhere apparent around us to-day.
-
- ENQ. A truly delightful picture! But tell me, do you really expect all
- this to be accomplished in one short century?
-
- THEO. Scarcely. But I must tell you that during the last quarter of
- every hundred years an attempt is made by those “Masters,” of
- whom I have spoken, to help on the spiritual progress of Humanity
- in a marked and definite way. Towards the close of each century
- you will invariably find that an outpouring or upheaval of
- spirituality—or call it mysticism if you prefer—has taken place.
- Some one or more persons have appeared in the world as their
- agents, and a greater or less amount of occult knowledge and
- teaching has been given out. If you care to do so, you can trace
- these movements back, century by century, as far as our detailed
- historical records extend.
-
- ENQ. But how does this bear on the future of the Theosophical Society?
-
- THEO. If the present attempt, in the form of our Society, succeeds
- better than its predecessors have done, then it will be in
- existence as an organized, living and healthy body when the time
- comes for the effort of the XXth century. The general condition
- of men’s minds and hearts will have been improved and purified
- by the spread of its teachings, and, as I have said, their
- prejudices and dogmatic illusions will have been, to some extent
- at least, removed. Not only so, but besides a large and accessible
- literature ready to men’s hands, the next impulse will find a
- numerous and _united_ body of people ready to welcome the new
- torch-bearer of Truth. He will find the minds of men prepared for
- his message, a language ready for him in which to clothe the new
- truths he brings, an organization awaiting his arrival, which will
- remove the merely mechanical, material obstacles and difficulties
- from his path. Think how much one, to whom such an opportunity is
- given, could accomplish. Measure it by comparison with what the
- Theosophical Society actually _has_ achieved in the last fourteen
- years, without _any_ of these advantages and surrounded by hosts
- of hindrances which would not hamper the new leader. Consider
- all this, and then tell me whether I am too sanguine when I say
- that if the Theosophical Society survives and lives true to
- its mission, to its original impulses through the next hundred
- years—tell me, I say, if I go too far in asserting that earth will
- be a heaven in the twenty-first century in comparison with what it
- is now!
-
- FINIS.
-
-
-
-
- The United Lodge of Theosophists
-
- DECLARATION
-
- The policy of this Lodge is independent devotion to the cause
- of Theosophy, without professing attachment to any Theosophical
- organization. It is loyal to the great Founders of the Theosophical
- Movement, but does not concern itself with dissensions or differences
- of individual opinion.
-
- The work it has on hand and the end it keeps in view are too absorbing
- and too lofty to leave it the time or inclination to take part in side
- issues. That work and that end is the dissemination of the Fundamental
- Principles of the philosophy of Theosophy, and the exemplification
- in practice of those principles, through a truer realization of the
- SELF; a profounder conviction of Universal Brotherhood.
-
- It holds that the unassailable _Basis for Union_ among Theosophists,
- wherever and however situated, is “_similarity of aim, purpose and
- teaching_,” and therefore has neither Constitution, By-laws nor
- Officers, the sole bond between its Associates being that _basis_. And
- it aims to disseminate this idea among Theosophists in the furtherance
- of Unity.
-
- It regards as Theosophists all who are engaged in the true service
- of Humanity, without distinction of race, creed, sex, condition or
- organization, and
-
- It welcomes to its association all those who are in accord with its
- declared purposes and who desire to fit themselves, by study and
- otherwise, to be the better able to help and teach others.
-
- “_The true Theosophist belongs to no cult or sect, yet belongs to each
- and all._”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Being in sympathy with the purposes of this Lodge, as set
- forth in its “Declaration,” I hereby record my desire to
- be enrolled as an Associate; it being understood that such
- association calls for no obligation on my part other than
- that which I, myself, determine.
-
- The foregoing is the Form signed by Associates of the United Lodge of
- Theosophists.
-
- Inquiries are invited from all persons to whom this Movement may
- appeal. Cards for signature will be sent upon request, and every
- possible assistance furnished Associates in their studies and in
- efforts to form local Lodges. There are no dues of any kind, and no
- formalities to be complied with.
-
- _Correspondence should be addressed to_
- General Registrar, United Lodge of Theosophists
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
- 504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street
-
-
-
-
- “_To Spread Broadcast the Teachings of Theosophy, as Recorded
- in the Writings of H. P. Blavatsky and Wm. Q. Judge._”
-
- THEOSOPHY
-
- _A Magazine Devoted to the Theosophical Movement, the Brotherhood
- of Humanity, the Study of Occult Science and Philosophy, and Aryan
- Literature._
-
- THEOSOPHY is a Monthly Magazine devoted to the promulgation of
- Theosophy as it was given by those who brought it. Established in
- 1912 by the United Lodge of Theosophists, the magazine is now in the
- front rank of Theosophical publications and its circulation extends
- to every civilized country. The first eight volumes of the magazine
- contain reprints of the numerous original articles written by H. P.
- Blavatsky and William Q. Judge in explanation, exemplification and
- application of the philosophy recorded in their published books.
- These precious articles, replete with Occult instruction, were first
- published in _The Theosophist_, _Lucifer_, and _The Path_, now for
- many years out of print, so that their surpassing value was lost and
- inaccessible to Students of the present generation. THEOSOPHY has
- made them once more available. In addition to these reprints the
- magazine contains many original articles written by Robert Crosbie
- and other devoted Pupils and Students of the Messengers of the
- Theosophical Movement of the nineteenth century. Not the least of
- the contents of the magazine are the Studies of the Teachings, the
- historical articles relating to the Theosophical Movement, the Parent
- Theosophical Society, and the many allied and related organizations
- and societies of the present day. The entire contents of the magazine
- are universal in scope and application, unbiased in treatment, and
- free from sectarian or partisan influence. In order to preserve at
- all times the impersonality of its tone, and that readers may form
- their judgment from the inherent value perceived in the articles
- and not from the names signed to them, the Editors and Contributors
- remain anonymous, no living person’s name being mentioned in
- connection with the authorship of any article published.
-
- BACK VOLUMES and Back Numbers can be supplied at $5.00 per
- Volume and 50 cents per Number.
-
- SUBSCRIPTIONS can begin with any desired Number of the current
- Volume. Subscription price, $2.00 per annum; single copies 25 cents
- each.
-
- Address all communications and remittances to
-
- =Theosophy, Metropolitan Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal.=
-
-
-
-
-Students interested in obtaining a clear and correct understanding of
-the actual Teachings of THEOSOPHY, as recorded in the writings
-of the Messengers of the Theosophical Movement of the nineteenth
-century or in writings recommended by Them, should have the following
-books.
-
- KEY TO THEOSOPHY, _By_ H. P. BLAVATSKY, $2.50
- An Exposition in the form of question and answer. The
- best Manual for daily study and reference. A _verbatim_
- reprint of the Original Edition. Large type, durably and
- artistically bound in Buckram.
-
- THE OCEAN OF THEOSOPHY, _By_ WILLIAM Q. JUDGE, $1.25
- A succinct presentation of the philosophy free from
- technical expressions; a perfect condensation of the
- Secret Doctrines of Man and Nature. Cloth.
-
- THE OCCULT WORLD
- ESOTERIC BUDDHISM _By_ A. P. SINNETT, _Each_, $2.00
- The two earliest popular presentations of Theosophical
- Teachings, containing extracts from Letters written by
- the _Mahatma_ K. H. From the Plates of the Original
- American Editions. Cloth.
-
- ISIS UNVEILED, Two Volumes, _By_ H. P. BLAVATSKY, $10.00
- Volume i, Science; Volume ii, Theology.
- A reprint of the Original Edition of 1877. This, the
- first great work of H. P. B., contains a vast wealth of
- information and instruction not to be had elsewhere.
- Cloth.
-
- THE SECRET DOCTRINE, Two Volumes, _By_ H. P. BLAVATSKY, $15.00
- Volume I, Cosmogenesis; Volume II, Anthropogenesis.
- The Original Edition, published in 1888, is now out of
- print. This Edition, published in London, contains some
- unwarrantable changes, but is in the main accurate and
- is the only one available. Written “_for the instruction
- of students of Occultism_,” it is _sui generis_ and
- absolutely invaluable to the true student of the
- mysteries of Life and Being. Cloth.
-
- ABRIDGMENT OF THE SECRET DOCTRINE, _By_ KATHERINE HILLARD, $3.00
- A very good condensation of the major teachings of Madame
- Blavatsky’s “Secret Doctrine” in the language of the
- Author. Cloth.
-
- THEOSOPHICAL GLOSSARY, _By_ H. P. BLAVATSKY, $5.00
- A reprint of the Original Edition, containing an
- exhaustive and scholarly treatment of the Sanskrit
- and other technical terms employed in Theosophical
- literature. Cloth.
-
-
-
-
- THOSE who find the Teachings of Theosophy to be comprehensive,
- self-explanatory, and a complete solution of all the problems of
- Life from a philosophical, logical and scientific standpoint, and
- who may desire to follow the Path shown in order to realize in and
- for themselves the noble Ideal of Brotherhood exemplified by the
- MASTERS OF WISDOM, are urged to read, ponder and assimilate to the
- utmost extent possible to them, the following Treatises on the
- _Heart Doctrine_:
-
- THE VOICE OF THE SILENCE. Chosen Fragments
- from The Book of the Golden Precepts. Translated
- and annotated by H. P. Blavatsky. Leather, $1.50
- Cloth, 1.25
-
- THE BHAGAVAD-GITA, The Book of Devotion.
- Containing the Dialogue between _Krishna_, the Supreme
- Master of Devotion, and _Arjuna_, his Disciple.
- Rendered into exquisite parallel terms in the English
- tongue by William Q. Judge. Leather, 1.50
- Cloth, 1.25
-
- NOTES ON THE BHAGAVAD-GITA. Commentaries
- of the greatest service to sincere students of to-day.
- The first Seven Chapters by W. Q. Judge; the remainder
- by his friend and Colleague Robert Crosbie.
- Leather, 1.50
-
- YOGA APHORISMS OF PATANJALI. The _Thought_
- of this Ancient Master, whose Aphorisms have been
- the guide of Disciples in the East for untold thousands
- of years. Done into English terms with
- Notes, by William Q. Judge. Leather, 1.50
- Cloth, 1.25
-
- LIGHT ON THE PATH. A treatise for the personal
- use of those who are ignorant of the Eastern Wisdom,
- and who desire to enter within its Influence. An exact
- reprint of the Original Edition of 1885, together
- with the Comments originally published in _Lucifer_.
- Written down by M. C.
- Leather, 1.50
- Cloth, 1.25
-
- LETTERS THAT HAVE HELPED ME. Actual Letters,
- by William Q. Judge, embodying Lessons and Guidance of
- direct personal value to every Student and Disciple.
- Volume I, Cloth, 1.00
- Volume II, Cloth, 1.00
- The Two Volumes bound in One, Cloth, 1.50
-
- THE VOICE OF THE SILENCE, THE BHAGAVAD-GITA,
- And PATANJALI’S YOGA APHORISMS,
- Bound in One Volume, Leather, 3.00
-
-
-
-
- PARENTS and others interested in the Spiritual and Moral welfare
- of Children and averse to the sectarian dogmas and false ideas
- prevalent under the name of religious teachings, have long
- felt the necessity for literature which should impart true
- fundamental conceptions of Nature, of Life and of Duty to the
- growing generation. As a portion of its Fraternal activities the
- United Lodge of Theosophists has long maintained a _Children’s
- School of Theosophy_. To this School come children of all
- ages, Theosophists and Non-Theosophists as to Parentage. They
- are taught the primary truths common to all religions and
- philosophies, dealing with Birth, Life, Death, Law, Action,
- and Duty. The Eternal Verities thus inculcated make for clean,
- sturdy, wholesome physical, mental, as well as moral and
- spiritual happiness and well-being. The experience thus gained
- in actual practice has been embodied in two books, wherein the
- lessons and instructions found helpful and formative to the
- highest character are plainly and clearly outlined, with all
- necessary suggestions and directions to enable Parents, Teachers
- and others to fit themselves to be the better able to help and
- guide the plastic minds of the Children to true perceptions of
- Life and Action.
-
- BECAUSE—FOR THE CHILDREN WHO ASK WHY.
- Interesting, comprehensible and assimilable, in clear
- and reverent fashion this Book presents to Children the
- answers to those questions of Self that Parents find it
- most difficult to meet, and affords a common basis of
- understanding to Parent and Child.
- Cloth, $1.25
-
- THE ETERNAL VERITIES. A Series of Lessons in basic
- truths and ideas, with complete chart and programme so
- that its full value may be availed of in the instruction
- of Children of all ages, whether in the School or the
- Home. Original Songs, Chants, Music, Allegories and
- Tales of Symbolism, in a manner not only to interest but
- to carry the Lessons into the Hearts and Minds of the
- Learners.
- Cloth, $1.50
-
- IN ORDER, further, to afford the maximum possible assistance
- to Parents and others interested in the proper education of
- Children, The United Lodge of Theosophists maintains a Bureau
- of Correspondence to which particular problems connected with
- the bringing-up of Children may be addressed. Replies to
- enquiries are in all cases by Women Associates of the Lodge who
- are themselves Mothers and Teachers and who voluntarily and
- gladly give their time and experience to benefit their perplexed
- Sisters. There are no fees or charges of any description in
- connection with this labor of love, and all Mothers and Teachers
- are invited to benefit by it. Address,
-
- =CHILDREN’S SCHOOL OF THEOSOPHY=
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
- 504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street
-
-
-
-
- NO MORE important work exists for the Theosophical Student than
- to be in a position to direct inquirers to channels where they
- may inform themselves of the leading Principles of the teachings
- of THEOSOPHY in their philosophical, ethical and scientific
- bearings. The following are recommended for their exact
- accuracy, their simplicity and clarity in the presentation of
- the Wisdom-Religion.
-
- ECHOES FROM THE ORIENT, _By_ WILLIAM Q. JUDGE.
- A Series of Chapters written in the most admirable
- style, giving an outline of Theosophy and the
- Theosophical Movement, and treating of the great
- Subjects of Masters, Karma, Re-incarnation and
- Evolution. Cloth, $0.60
- Paper, .35
-
- CONVERSATIONS ON THEOSOPHY. A Pamphlet giving
- the fundamental teachings of the Secret Doctrine.
- From the writings of H. P. Blavatsky and William Q.
- Judge.
- Paper, envelope size, .10
- In quantities for propaganda purposes, 50 copies for 2.50
-
- KARMA AND RE-INCARNATION. A large and attractively
- bound pamphlet, envelope size, containing the famous
- _Aphorisms on Karma_, and a notably clear and
- comprehensive treatment of the subjects of Karma and
- Re-incarnation. .15
- In quantities for propaganda purposes, 50 copies for 4.00
-
- CULTURE OF CONCENTRATION, And OF OCCULT POWERS.
- Two related Essays by William Q. Judge on subjects
- of supreme importance. .10
-
- EXTRACTS FROM A LETTER THAT HAS HELPED ME.
- Being a statement of the _Gospel of Hope and
- Responsibility_. This Letter has brought consolation
- and the comfort of understanding to many regarding
- the Great Mystery. .10
-
- THOUGHTS FOR THINKERS. A Pamphlet designed for the
- “man in the street,” who is often an open-minded
- practical philosopher and thinker of the first rank.
- These THOUGHTS are undogmatic, non-argumentative and
- very suggestive. .10
-
- The foregoing and other Books advertised in the preceding
- pages may all be obtained on order through your local
- Bookseller, or orders may be sent direct to the undersigned.
-
- Inquiries are invited regarding any Theosophical Books
- and Publications not specifically mentioned herein.
- Correspondence and questions are also invited on
- Theosophical problems and subjects from all interested.
-
- _Address all orders and inquiries
- and make all remittances payable to_
-
- UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS
-
- LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
-
- 504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Key to Theosophy, by H. P. Blavatsky
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Key to Theosophy
- Being A Clear Exposition, In The Form Of Question And
- Answer Of The Ethics, Science And Philosophy
-
-Author: H. P. Blavatsky
-
-Release Date: September 24, 2017 [EBook #55618]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KEY TO THEOSOPHY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Edwards, Paul Marshall and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-book was produced from scanned images of public domain
-material from the Google Books project.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="figcenter covernote">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Book Cover." width="600" height="648" />
-</div>
-
-<h1>The Key to Theosophy</h1>
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ilo_01.jpg" alt="Book Cover." width="341" height="60" />
-</div>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p class="center"><b>THE</b></p>
-<p class="f200"><b>KEY TO THEOSOPHY</b></p>
-
-<p class="f90 space-above2">BEING</p>
-<p class="f120"><i>A CLEAR EXPOSITION, IN THE FORM OF QUESTION AND ANSWER</i></p>
-
-<p class="f90 space-above2">OF THE</p>
-<p class="f150"><b>ETHICS, SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY</b></p>
-
-<p class="f90 space-above2">FOR THE STUDY OF WHICH THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY</p>
-<p class="f90 space-below3">HAS BEEN FOUNDED</p>
-
-<p class="f90 space-above2">BY</p>
-<p class="f150"><b>H. P. BLAVATSKY</b></p>
-
-<p class="center space-below2">[Reprinted Verbatim from the Original Edition first published in 1889.]</p>
-
-<p class="center space-above2">THE UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS<br />LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA<br />1920</p>
-<hr class="r25" />
-<p class="center"><i>Dedicated</i><br /><br />by<br />“<i>H. P. B.</i>”</p>
-<p class="center space-above2"><i>To all her Pupils<br />that</i></p>
-<p class="center"><i>They may Learn and Teach<br />in their turn</i></p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="f150"><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
-<table class="space-below3" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents." cellpadding="0">
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdc u"><br />SECTION I.</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br /><span class="smcap">page</span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Theosophy and the Theosophical Society</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Meaning of the Name</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_1_1">&nbsp;1</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Policy of the Theosophical Society</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_1_2">&nbsp;3</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Wisdom-Religion Esoteric in all Ages</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_1_3">&nbsp;5</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophy is not Buddhism</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_1_4">10</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION II.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Exoteric and Esoteric Theosophy</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">What the Modern Theosophical Society is not</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_2_1">12</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophists and Members of the “T.S.”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_2_2">15</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Difference between Theosophy and Occultism</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_2_3">19</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Difference between Theosophy and Spiritualism</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_2_4">21</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"> Why is Theosophy accepted?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_2_5">27</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION III.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">The Working System of the T.S.</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Objects of the Society</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_3_1">30</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Common Origin of Man</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_3_2">31</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Our other Objects</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_3_3">36</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On the Sacredness of the Pledge</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_3_4">37</a>
- <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION IV.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">The Relations of the Theosophical Society to Theosophy</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On Self-Improvement</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_4_1">40</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Abstract and the Concrete</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_4_2">43</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION V.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">The Fundamental Teachings of Theosophy</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On God and Prayer</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_5_1">47</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Is it Necessary to Pray?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_5_2">50</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Prayer Kills Self-Reliance</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_5_3">55</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On the Source of the Human Soul</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_5_4">57</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Buddhist Teachings on the above</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_5_5">59</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION VI.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Theosophical Teachings as to Nature and Man</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Unity of All in All</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_1">64</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Evolution and Illusion</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_2">65</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Septenary Constitution of our Planet</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_3">67</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Septenary Nature of Man</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_4">69</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Distinction between Soul and Spirit</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_5">72</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Greek Teachings</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_6_6">75</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION VII.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On the Various Post-mortem States</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Physical and the Spiritual Man</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_7_1">79</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Our Eternal Reward and Punishment; and on Nirvana</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_7_2">85</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On the Various “Principles” in Man</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_7_3">91</a>
- <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</a></span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION VIII.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On Re-incarnation or Rebirth</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">What is Memory according to Theosophical Teaching?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_8_1">96</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"> Why do we not Remember our Past Lives?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_8_2">99</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On Individuality and Personality</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_8_3">104</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On the Reward and Punishment of the Ego</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_8_4">107</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION IX.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On the Kama-Loka and Devachan</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On the Fate of the Lower “Principles”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_1">112</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Why Theosophists do not believe in the Return of Pure “Spirits”&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_2">114</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">A few Words about the Skandhas</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_3">120</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On Post-mortem and Post-natal Consciousness</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_4">123</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">What is really meant by Annihilation</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_5">127</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Definite Words for Definite Things</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_9_6">134</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION X.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On the Nature of our Thinking Principle</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Mystery of the Ego</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_10_1">139</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Complex Nature of Manas</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_10_2">143</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Doctrine is Taught in St. John’s Gospel</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_10_3">146</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION XI.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On the Mysteries of Re-incarnation</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Periodical Rebirths</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_11_1">155</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">What is Karma?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_11_2">158</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Who are Those who Know?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_11_3">170</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Difference between Faith and Knowledge;</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;&emsp;&emsp;&nbsp;or, Blind and Reasoned Faith</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_11_4">172</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Has God the Right to Forgive?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_11_5">176</a>
- <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</a></span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION XII.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">What is Practical Theosophy?</span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Duty</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_1">180</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Relations of the T.S. to Political Reforms</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_2">183</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On Self-Sacrifice</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_3">188</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">On Charity</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_4">192</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophy for the Masses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_5">194</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">How Members can Help the Society</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_6">196</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">What a Theosophist ought not to do</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_12_7">197</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION XIII.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">On the Misconceptions about the Theosophical Society</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophy and Asceticism</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_1">204</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophy and Marriage</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_2">207</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Theosophy and Education</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_3">208</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Why, then, is there so much Prejudice against the T.S?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_4">214</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Is the Theosophical Society a Money-making Concern?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_5">221</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Working Staff of the T.S.</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_13_6">225</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />SECTION XIV.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_neg" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">The “Theosophical Mahatmas”</span>:</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">Are They “Spirits of Light” or “Goblins Damn’d”?</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_14_1">228</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Abuse of Sacred Names and Terms</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_14_2">237</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc u" colspan="2"><br />CONCLUSION.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">The Future of the Theosophical Society</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#SECTION_15_1">241</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</a></span></td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap"/>
-<p class="f150"><b>PREFACE</b></p>
-
-<p class="indent">The purpose of this book is exactly expressed in its title,
-“<span class="smcap">The Key to Theosophy</span>,” and needs but few words of
-explanation. It is not a complete or exhaustive text-book of Theosophy, but
-only a key to unlock the door that leads to the deeper study. It traces the
-broad outlines of the Wisdom Religion, and explains its fundamental
-principles; meeting, at the same time, the various objections raised by
-the average Western enquirer, and endeavouring to present unfamiliar
-concepts in a form as simple and in language as clear as possible.
-That it should succeed in making Theosophy intelligible without mental
-effort on the part of the reader, would be too much to expect; but it
-is hoped that the obscurity still left is of the thought not of the
-language, is due to depth not to confusion. To the mentally lazy or
-obtuse, Theosophy must remain a riddle; for in the world mental as in
-the world spiritual each man must progress by his own efforts. The
-writer cannot do the reader’s thinking for him, nor would the latter
-be any the better off if such vicarious thought were possible. The
-need for such an exposition as the present has long been felt among
-those interested in the Theosophical Society and its work, and it
-is hoped that it will supply information, as free as possible from
-technicalities, to many whose attention has been awakened, but who, as
-yet, are merely puzzled and not convinced.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Some care has been taken in disentangling some part
-of what is true from what is false in Spiritualistic teachings as to
-the post-mortem life, and to showing the true nature of Spiritualistic
-phænomena. Previous explanations of a similar kind have drawn much
-wrath upon the writer’s devoted head; the Spiritualists, like too many
-others, preferring to believe what is pleasant rather than what is
-true, and becoming very angry with anyone who destroys an agreeable
-delusion. For the past year Theosophy has been the target for every
-poisoned arrow of Spiritualism, as though the possessors of a half
-truth felt more antagonism to the possessors of the whole truth than
-those who had no share to boast of.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Very hearty thanks are due from the author to many
-Theosophists who have sent suggestions and questions, or have otherwise
-contributed help during the writing of this book. The work will be the
-more useful for their aid, and that will be their best reward.</p>
-
-<p class="author">H. P. B.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-<p class="f200"><b>THE KEY TO THEOSOPHY.</b></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_1_1" id="SECTION_1_1"></a>
-<h2>I. <br />THEOSOPHY AND THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.</h2></div>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<h3>THE MEANING OF THE NAME.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enquirer.</span> Theosophy and its doctrines
-are often referred to as a new-fangled religion. Is it a religion?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theosophist.</span> It is not.
-Theosophy is Divine Knowledge or Science.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is the real meaning of the term?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> “Divine Wisdom,”
-<b>Θεοσοφία</b> (Theosophia) or Wisdom of the gods, as <b>Θεογονία</b> (theogonia),
-genealogy of the gods. The word <b>Θεὸς</b> means a god in Greek, one of the
-divine beings, certainly not “God” in the sense attached in our day to
-the term. Therefore, it is not “Wisdom of God,” as translated by some,
-but <i>Divine Wisdom</i> such as that possessed by the gods. The term is
-many thousand years old.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is the origin of the name?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It comes
-to us from the Alexandrian philosophers, called lovers of truth,
-Philatheians, from <b>φιλ</b> (phil) “loving,” and <b>ἀλήθεια</b> (aletheia) “truth.”
-The name Theosophy dates from the third century of our era, and began
-with Ammonius Saccas and his disciples,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-who started the Eclectic Theosophical system.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What was the object of this system?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First of all
-to inculcate certain great moral truths upon its disciples, and all
-those who were “lovers of the truth.” Hence the motto adopted by the
-Theosophical Society: “There is no religion higher than
-truth.”<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>
-The chief aim of the Founders of the Eclectic Theosophical School was
-one of the three objects of its modern successor, the Theosophical
-Society, namely, to reconcile all religions, sects and nations under a
-common system of ethics, based on eternal verities.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p> <span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What have you to show that this is
-not an impossible dream; and that all the world’s religions <i>are</i> based
-on the one and the same truth?
-
-<span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Their comparative study and analysis.
-The “Wisdom-Religion” was one in antiquity; and the sameness of
-primitive religious philosophy is proven to us by the identical
-doctrines taught to the Initiates during the MYSTERIES, an institution
-once universally diffused. “All the old worships indicate the existence
-of a single Theosophy anterior to them. The key that is to open
-one must open all; otherwise it cannot be the right key.”
-(Eclect. Philo.)</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_1_2" id="SECTION_1_2"></a>THE POLICY OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> In the days of Ammonius there were several ancient
-great religions, and numerous were the sects in Egypt and
-Palestine alone. How could he reconcile them?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By doing that which we again try to do now.
-The Neo-Platonists were a large body, and belonged to various
-religious philosophies<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-so do our Theosophists. In those days, the Jew Aristobulus affirmed
-that the ethics of Aristotle represented the <i>esoteric</i> teachings
-of the Law of Moses; Philo Judæus endeavoured to reconcile the
-<i>Pentateuch</i> with the Pythagorean and Platonic philosophy; and
-Josephus proved that the Essenes of Carmel were simply the copyists
-and followers of the Egyptian Therapeutæ (the healers). So it is in
-our day. We can show the line of descent of every Christian religion,
-as of every, even the smallest, sect. The latter are the minor twigs
-or shoots grown on the larger branches; but shoots and branches spring
-from the same trunk—the WISDOM-RELIGION. To prove this was the aim of
-Ammonius, who endeavoured to induce Gentiles and Christians, Jews and
-Idolators, to lay aside their contentions and strifes, remembering
-only that they were all in possession of the same truth under various
-vestments, and were all the children of a common
-mother.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
-This is the aim of Theosophy likewise.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are your authorities for saying this of the
-ancient Theosophists of Alexandria?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> An almost countless number of well-known writers.
-Mosheim, one of them, says that:—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Ammonius taught that the religion of the
-multitude went hand-in-hand with philosophy, and with her had shared
-the fate of being by degrees corrupted and obscured with mere human
-conceits, superstitions, and lies; that it ought, therefore, to be
-brought back to its original purity by purging it of this dross
-and expounding it upon philosophical principles; and the whole
-Christ had in view was to reinstate and restore to its primitive
-integrity the wisdom of the ancients; to reduce within bounds the
-universally-prevailing dominion of superstition; and in part to
-correct, and in part to exterminate the various errors that had found
-their way into the different popular religions.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">This, again, is precisely what the modern Theosophists say.
-Only while the great Philaletheian was supported and helped
-in the policy he pursued by two Church Fathers, Clement and
-Athenagoras, by all the learned Rabbis of the Synagogue, the
-Academy and the Groves, and while he taught a common doctrine
-for all, we, his followers on the same line, receive no
-recognition, but, on the contrary, are abused and persecuted.
-People 1,500 years ago are thus shown to have been more tolerant
-than they are in this <i>enlightened</i> century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Was he encouraged and supported
-by the Church because, notwithstanding his heresies, Ammonius taught
-Christianity and was a Christian?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all. He was born a Christian, but
-never accepted Church Christianity. As said of him by the same writer:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“He had but to propound his instructions according
-to the ancient pillars of Hermes, which Plato and Pythagoras knew
-before, and from them constituted their philosophy. Finding the same
-in the prologue of the Gospel according to St. John, he very properly
-supposed that the purpose of Jesus was to restore the great doctrine of
-wisdom in its primitive integrity. The narratives of the Bible and the
-stories of the gods he considered to be allegories illustrative of the
-truth, or else fables to be rejected.” Moreover, as says the <i>Edinburgh
-Encyclopedia</i>, “he acknowledged that Jesus Christ was an excellent
-<i>man</i> and the ‘friend of God,’ but alleged that it was not his design
-entirely to abolish the worship of demons (gods), and that his only
-intention was to purify the ancient religion.”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_1_3" id="SECTION_1_3"></a>THE WISDOM-RELIGION ESOTERIC IN ALL AGES.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Since Ammonius never committed anything to writing,
-how can one feel sure that such were his teachings?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Neither did Buddha, Pythagoras, Confucius, Orpheus,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-Socrates, or even Jesus, leave behind them any writings. Yet most
-of these are historical personages, and their teachings have all
-survived. The disciples of Ammonius (among whom Origen and Herennius)
-wrote treatises and explained his ethics. Certainly the latter are as
-historical, if not more so, than the Apostolic writings. Moreover,
-his pupils—Origen, Plotinus, and Longinus (counsellor of the famous
-Queen Zenobia)—have all left voluminous records of the Philaletheian
-System—so far, at all events, as their public profession of faith
-was known, for the school was divided into exoteric and <i>esoteric</i>
-teachings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How have the latter tenets
-reached our day, since you hold that what is properly called the
-WISDOM-RELIGION was esoteric?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The WISDOM-RELIGION was ever one,
-and being the last word of possible human knowledge, was, therefore,
-carefully preserved. It preceded by long ages the Alexandrian
-Theosophists, reached the modern, and will survive every other religion
-and philosophy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Where and by whom was it so preserved?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Among Initiates of every country;
-among profound seekers after truth—their disciples; and in those
-parts of the world where such topics have always been most valued and
-pursued: in India, Central Asia, and Persia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you give me some proofs of its
-esotericism?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The best proof you can have of
-the fact is that every ancient religious, or rather philosophical,
-cult consisted of an esoteric or secret teaching, and an exoteric
-(outward public) worship. Furthermore, it is a well-known fact that the
-MYSTERIES of the ancients comprised with every nation the “greater”
-(secret) and “Lesser” (public) MYSTERIES—<i>e.g.</i>, in the celebrated
-solemnities called the <i>Eleusinia</i>, in Greece. From the Hierophants of
-Samothrace, Egypt, and the initiated Brahmins of the India of old, down
-to the later Hebrew Rabbis, all preserved, for fear of profanation, their real
-<i>bona fide</i> beliefs secret. The Jewish Rabbis called their secular religious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-series the <i>Mercavah</i> (the exterior body), “the vehicle,” or, <i>the
-covering which contains the hidden soul</i>—<i>i.e.</i>, their highest secret
-knowledge. Not one of the ancient nations ever imparted through its
-priests its real philosophical secrets to the masses, but allotted to
-the latter only the husks. Northern Buddhism has its “greater” and
-its “lesser” vehicle, known as the <i>Mahayana</i>, the esoteric, and the
-<i>Hinayana</i>, the exoteric, Schools. Nor can you blame them for such
-secrecy; for surely you would not think of feeding your flock of sheep
-on learned dissertations on botany instead of on grass? Pythagoras
-called his <i>Gnosis</i> “the knowledge of things that are,” or ἡ γνῶσις τῶν
-ὄντων, and preserved that knowledge for his pledged disciples only:
-for those who could digest such mental food and feel satisfied; and
-he pledged them to silence and secrecy. Occult alphabets and secret
-ciphers are the development of the old Egyptian <i>hieratic</i> writings,
-the secret of which was, in the days of old, in the possession only
-of the Hierogrammatists, or initiated Egyptian priests. Ammonius
-Saccas, as his biographers tell us, bound his pupils by oath not to
-divulge <i>his higher doctrines</i> except to those who had already been
-instructed in preliminary knowledge, and who were also bound by a
-pledge. Finally, do we not find the same even in early Christianity,
-among the Gnostics, and even in the teachings of Christ? Did he not
-speak to the multitudes in parables which had a two-fold meaning, and
-explain his reasons only to his disciples? “To you,” he says, “it is
-given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven; but unto them
-that are without, all these things are done in parables” (Mark iv. 11).
-“The Essenes of Judea and Carmel made similar distinctions, dividing
-their adherents into neophytes, brethren, and the <i>perfect</i>, or those
-initiated” (Eclec. Phil.). Examples might be brought from every country
-to this effect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you attain the “Secret Wisdom”
-simply by study? Encyclopædias define <i>Theosophy</i> pretty much as
-Webster’s Dictionary does, <i>i.e.</i>, as “<i>supposed intercourse with God
-and superior spirits, and consequent attainment of superhuman
-knowledge by physical means and chemical processes</i>.” Is this so?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I think not. Nor is there any
-lexicographer capable of explaining, whether to himself or others,
-how <i>superhuman</i> knowledge can be attained by <i>physical</i> or chemical
-processes. Had Webster said “by <i>metaphysical</i> and alchemical
-processes,” the definition would be approximately correct: as it is,
-it is absurd. Ancient Theosophists claimed, and so do the modern, that
-the infinite cannot be known by the finite—<i>i.e.</i>, sensed by the finite
-Self—but that the divine essence could be communicated to the higher
-Spiritual Self in a state of ecstacy. This condition can hardly be
-attained, like <i>hypnotism</i>, by “physical and chemical means.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is your explanation of it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Real ecstacy was defined by
-Plotinus as “the liberation of the mind from its finite consciousness,
-becoming one and identified with the infinite.” This is the highest
-condition, says Prof. Wilder, but not one of permanent duration, and
-it is reached only by the very <i>very</i> few. It is, indeed, identical
-with that state which is known in India as <i>Samadhi</i>. The latter is
-practised by the Yogis, who facilitate it physically by the greatest
-abstinence in food and drink, and mentally by an incessant endeavour
-to purify and elevate the mind. Meditation is silent and <i>unuttered</i>
-prayer, or, as Plato expressed it, “the ardent turning of the soul
-toward the divine; not to ask any particular good (as in the common
-meaning of prayer), but for good itself—for the universal Supreme Good”
-of which we are a part on earth, and out of the essence of which we
-have all emerged. Therefore, adds Plato, “remain silent in the presence
-of the <i>divine ones</i>, till they remove the clouds from thy eyes and
-enable thee to see by the light which issues from themselves, not what
-appears as good to thee, but what is intrinsically
-good.”<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Theosophy, then, is not, as held by
-some, a newly devised scheme?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Only ignorant people can thus refer
-to it. It is as old as the world, in its teachings and ethics, if not
-in name, as it is also the broadest and most catholic system among
-all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How comes it, then, that Theosophy
-has remained so unknown to the nations of the Western Hemisphere?
-Why should it have been a sealed book to races confessedly the most
-cultured and advanced?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We believe there were nations as
-cultured in days of old and certainly more spiritually “advanced” than
-we are. But there are several reasons for this willing ignorance. One
-of them was given by St. Paul to the cultured Athenians—a loss, for
-long centuries, of real spiritual insight, and even interest, owing to
-their too great devotion to things of sense and their long slavery to
-the dead letter of dogma and ritualism. But the strongest reason for
-its lies in the fact that real Theosophy has ever been kept secret.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You have brought forward proofs that
-such secrecy has existed; but what was the real cause for it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The causes for it were: <i>Firstly</i>,
-the perversity of average human nature and its selfishness, always
-tending to the gratification of <i>personal</i> desires to the detriment of
-neighbours and next of kin. Such people could never be entrusted with
-<i>divine</i> secrets. <i>Secondly</i>, their unreliability to keep the sacred
-and divine knowledge from desecration. It is the latter that led to the
-perversion of the most sublime truths and symbols, and to the gradual
-transformation of things spiritual into anthropomorphic, concrete, and
-gross imagery—in other words, to the dwarfing of the god-idea and to idolatry.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_1_4" id="SECTION_1_4"></a>THEOSOPHY IS NOT BUDDHISM.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You are often spoken of as “Esoteric
-Buddhists.” Are you then all followers of Gautama Buddha?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No more than musicians are all
-followers of Wagner. Some of us are Buddhists by religion; yet there
-are far more Hindus and Brahmins than Buddhists among us, and more
-Christian-born Europeans and Americans than <i>converted</i> Buddhists.
-The mistake has arisen from a misunderstanding of the real meaning of
-the title of Mr. Sinnett’s excellent work, “Esoteric Buddhism,” which
-last word ought to have been spelt <i>with one, instead of two, d’s</i>,
-as then <i>Budhism</i> would have meant what it was intended for, merely
-“Wisdom<i>ism</i>” (Bodha, bodhi, “intelligence,” “wisdom”) instead of
-<i>Buddhism</i>, Gautama’s religious philosophy. Theosophy, as already said,
-is the WISDOM-RELIGION.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is the difference between
-Buddhism, the religion founded by the Prince of Kapilavastu,
-and <i>Budhism</i>, the “Wisdomism” which you say is synonymous with
-Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just the same difference as
-there is between the secret teachings of Christ, which are called
-“the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven,” and the later ritualism
-and dogmatic theology of the Churches and Sects. <i>Buddha</i> means the
-“Enlightened” by <i>Bodha</i>, or understanding, Wisdom. This has passed
-root and branch into the <i>esoteric</i> teachings that Gautama imparted to
-his chosen <i>Arhats</i> only.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But some Orientalists deny that
-Buddha ever taught any esoteric doctrine at all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They may as well deny that Nature
-has any hidden secrets for the men of science. Further on I will prove
-it by Buddha’s conversation with his disciple Ananda. His esoteric
-teachings were simply the <i>Gupta Vidya</i> (secret knowledge) of the
-ancient Brahmins, the key to which their modern successors have, with
-few exceptions, completely lost. And this <i>Vidya</i> has passed into what
-is now known as the <i>inner</i> teachings of the <i>Mahayana</i> school of
-Northern Buddhism. Those who deny it are simply ignorant pretenders
-to Orientalism. I advise you to read the Rev. Mr. Edkins’ <i>Chinese
-Buddhism</i>—especially the chapters on the Exoteric and <i>Esoteric</i>
-schools and teachings—and then compare the testimony of the whole
-ancient world upon the subject.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But are not the ethics of Theosophy identical with
-those taught by Buddha?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly, because these ethics are the soul of
-the Wisdom-Religion, and were once the common property of the
-initiates of all nations. But Buddha was the first to embody
-these lofty ethics in his public teachings, and to make them
-the foundation and the very essence of his public system. It
-is herein that lies the immense difference between exoteric
-Buddhism and every other religion. For while in other religions
-ritualism and dogma hold the first and most important place,
-in Buddhism it is the ethics which have always been the most
-insisted upon. This accounts for the resemblance, amounting
-almost to identity, between the ethics of Theosophy and those of
-the religion of Buddha.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Are there any great points of
-difference?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> One great distinction between
-Theosophy and <i>exoteric</i> Buddhism is that the latter, represented by
-the Southern Church, entirely denies (a) the existence of any Deity,
-and (b) any conscious <i>post-mortem</i> life, or even any self-conscious
-surviving individuality in man. Such at least is the teaching of the
-Siamese sect, now considered as the <i>purest</i> form of exoteric Buddhism.
-And it is so, if we refer only to Buddha’s public teachings; the reason
-for such reticence on his part I will give further on. But the schools
-of the Northern Buddhist Church, established in those countries to
-which his initiated Arhats retired after the Master’s death, teach
-all that is now called Theosophical doctrines, because they form part
-of the knowledge of the initiates—thus proving how the truth has been
-sacrificed to the dead-letter by the too-zealous orthodoxy of Southern
-Buddhism. But how much grander and more noble, philosophical and
-scientific, even in its dead-letter, is this teaching than that of any
-other Church or religion. Yet Theosophy is not Buddhism.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_2_1" id="SECTION_2_1"></a>
-<h2>II. <br />EXOTERIC AND ESOTERIC THEOSOPHY.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>WHAT THE MODERN THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY IS NOT.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Your doctrines, then, are not a
-revival of Buddhism, nor are they entirely copied from the Neo-Platonic
-Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are not. But to these
-questions I cannot give you a better answer than by quoting from a
-paper read on “Theosophy” by Dr. J. D. Buck, F.T.S., before the last
-Theosophical Convention, at Chicago, America (April, 1889). No living
-theosophist has better expressed and understood the real essence of
-Theosophy than our honoured friend Dr. Buck:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The Theosophical Society was organized for
-the purpose of promulgating the Theosophical doctrines, and for the
-promotion of the Theosophic life. The present Theosophical Society is
-not the first of its kind. I have a volume entitled: ‘Theosophical
-Transactions of the Philadelphian Society,’ published in London in
-1697; and another with the following title: ‘Introduction to Theosophy,
-or the Science of the Mystery of Christ; that is, of Deity, Nature, and
-Creature, embracing the philosophy of all the working powers of life,
-magical and spiritual, and forming a practical guide to the sublimest
-purity, sanctity, and evangelical perfection; also to the attainment
-of divine vision, and the holy angelic arts, potencies, and other
-prerogatives of the regeneration,’ published in London in 1855. The
-following is the dedication of this volume:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot2">‘To the students of Universities, Colleges, and
-schools of Christendom: To Professors of Metaphysical, Mechanical,
-and Natural Science in all its forms: To men and women of Education
-generally, of fundamental orthodox faith: To Deists, Arians,
-Unitarians, Swedenborgians, and other defective and ungrounded
-creeds, rationalists, and sceptics of every kind: To just-minded and
-enlightened Mohammedans, Jews, and oriental Patriarch-religionists:
-but especially to the gospel minister and missionary, whether to the
-barbaric or intellectual peoples, this introduction to Theosophy, or
-the science of the ground and mystery of all things, is most humbly and
-affectionately dedicated.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">In the following year (1856) another volume was
-issued, royal octavo, of 600 pages, diamond type, of ‘Theosophical
-Miscellanies.’ Of the last-named work 500 copies only were issued, for
-gratuitous distribution to Libraries and Universities. These earlier
-movements, of which there were many, originated within the Church, with
-persons of great piety and earnestness, and of unblemished character;
-and all of these writings were in orthodox form, using the Christian
-expressions, and, like the writings of the eminent Churchman William
-Law, would only be distinguished by the ordinary reader for their great
-earnestness and piety. These were one and all but attempts to derive
-and explain the deeper meanings and original import of the Christian
-Scriptures, and to illustrate and unfold the Theosophic life. These
-works were soon forgotten, and are now generally unknown. They sought
-to reform the clergy and revive genuine piety, and were never welcomed.
-That one word, “Heresy,” was sufficient to bury them in the limbo of
-all such Utopias. At the time of the Reformation John Reuchlin made a
-similar attempt with the same result, though he was the intimate and
-trusted friend of Luther. Orthodoxy never desired to be informed and
-enlightened. These reformers were informed, as was Paul by Festus, that
-too much learning had made them mad, and that it would be dangerous
-to go farther. Passing by the verbiage, which was partly a matter of
-habit and education with these writers, and partly due to religious
-restraint through secular power, and coming to the core of the matter,
-these writings were Theosophical in the strictest sense, and pertain
-solely to man’s knowledge of his own nature and the higher life of the
-soul. The present Theosophical movement has sometimes been declared to
-be an attempt to convert Christendom to Buddhism, which means simply
-that the word ‘Heresy’ has lost its terrors and relinquished its power.
-Individuals in every age have more or less clearly apprehended the
-Theosophical doctrines and wrought them into the fabric of their lives.
-These doctrines belong exclusively to no religion, and are confined to
-no society or time. They are the birthright of every human soul. Such a
-thing as orthodoxy must be wrought out by each individual according to
-his nature and his needs, and according to his varying experience. This
-may explain why those who have imagined Theosophy to be a new religion
-have hunted in vain for its creed and its ritual. Its creed is Loyalty
-to Truth, and its ritual ‘To honour every truth by use.’
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">How little this principle of Universal Brotherhood
-is understood by the masses of mankind, how seldom its transcendent
-importance is recognised, may be seen in the diversity of opinion and
-fictitious interpretations regarding the Theosophical Society. This
-Society was organized on this one principle, the essential Brotherhood
-of Man, as herein briefly outlined and imperfectly set forth. It has
-been assailed as Buddhistic and anti-Christian, as though it could
-be both these together, when both Buddhism and Christianity, as set
-forth by their inspired founders, make brotherhood the one essential
-of doctrine and of life. Theosophy has been also regarded as something
-new under the sun, or at best as old mysticism masquerading under a new
-name. While it is true that many Societies founded upon, and united to
-support, the principles of altruism, or essential brotherhood, have
-borne various names, it is also true that many have also been called
-Theosophic, and with principles and aims as the present society bearing
-that name. With these societies, one and all, the essential doctrine
-has been the same, and all else has been incidental, though this does
-not obviate the fact that many persons are attracted to the incidentals
-who overlook or ignore the essentials.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">No better or more explicit answer—by a man who is
-one of our most esteemed and earnest Theosophists—could be given to
-your questions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Which system do you prefer or
-follow, in that case, besides Buddhistic ethics?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> None, and all. We hold to no
-religion, as to no philosophy in particular: we cull the good we find
-in each. But here, again, it must be stated that, like all other
-ancient systems, Theosophy is divided into Exoteric and <i>Esoteric</i>
-Sections.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is the difference?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The members of the Theosophical
-Society at large are free to profess whatever religion or philosophy
-they like, or none if they so prefer, provided they are in sympathy
-with, and ready to carry out one or more of the three objects of the
-Association. The Society is a philanthropic and scientific body for
-the propagation of the idea of brotherhood on <i>practical</i> instead of
-<i>theoretical</i> lines. The Fellows may be Christians or Mussulmen, Jews
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-or Parsees, Buddhists or Brahmins, Spiritualists or Materialists, it
-does not matter; but every member must be either a philanthropist, or a
-scholar, a searcher into Aryan and other old literature, or a psychic
-student. In short, he has to help, if he can, in the carrying out of at
-least one of the objects of the programme. Otherwise he has no reason
-for becoming a “Fellow.” Such are the majority of the exoteric Society,
-composed of “attached” and “unattached” members.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-These may, or may not, become Theosophists <i>de facto</i>. Members they
-are, by virtue of their having joined the Society; but the latter
-cannot make a Theosophist of one who has no sense for the <i>divine</i>
-fitness of things, or of him who understands Theosophy in his own—if
-the expression may be used—<i>sectarian</i> and egotistic way. “Handsome is,
-as handsome does” could be paraphrased in this case and be made to run:
-“Theosophist is, who Theosophy does.”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_2_2" id="SECTION_2_2"></a>THEOSOPHISTS AND MEMBERS OF THE “T.S.”</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This applies to lay members, as
-I understand. And what of those who pursue the esoteric study of
-Theosophy; are they the real Theosophists?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not necessarily, until they have
-proven themselves to be such. They have entered the inner group and
-pledged themselves to carry out, as strictly as they can, the rules
-of the occult body. This is a difficult undertaking, as the foremost
-rule of all is the entire renunciation of one’s personality—<i>i.e.</i>, a
-<i>pledged</i> member has to become a thorough altruist, never to think of
-himself, and to forget his own vanity and pride in the thought of the
-good of his fellow-creatures, besides that of his fellow-brothers in
-the esoteric circle. He has to live, if the esoteric instructions shall
-profit him, a life of abstinence in everything, of self-denial and
-strict morality, doing his duty by all men. The few real Theosophists
-in the T.S. are among these members. This does not imply that outside
-of the T.S. and the inner circle, there are no Theosophists; for there
-are, and more than people know of; certainly far more than are found
-among the lay members of the T.S.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then what is the good of joining the
-so-called Theosophical Society in that case? Where is the incentive?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> None, except the advantage
-of getting esoteric instructions, the genuine doctrines of the
-“Wisdom-Religion,” and if the real programme is carried out, deriving
-much help from mutual aid and sympathy. Union is strength and harmony,
-and well-regulated simultaneous efforts produce wonders. This has
-been the secret of all associations and communities since mankind
-existed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why could not a man of
-well-balanced mind and singleness of purpose, one, say, of indomitable
-energy and perseverance, become an Occultist and even an Adept if he
-works alone?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> He may; but there are ten thousand
-chances against one that he will fail. For one reason out of many
-others, no books on Occultism or Theurgy exist in our day which give
-out the secrets of alchemy or mediæval Theosophy in plain language. All
-are symbolical or in parables; and as the key to these has been lost
-for ages in the West, how can a man learn the correct meaning of what
-he is reading and studying? Therein lies the greatest danger, one that
-leads to unconscious <i>black</i> magic or the most helpless mediumship. He
-who has not an Initiate for a master had better leave the dangerous
-study alone. Look around you and observe. While two-thirds of
-<i>civilized</i> society ridicule the mere notion that there is anything
-in Theosophy, Occultism, Spiritualism, or in the Kabala, the other
-third is composed of the most heterogeneous and opposite elements.
-Some believe in the mystical, and even in the <i>supernatural</i> (!), but
-each believes in his own way. Others will rush single-handed into the
-study of the Kabala, Psychism, Mesmerism, Spiritualism, or some form or
-another of Mysticism. Result: no two men think alike, no two are agreed
-upon any fundamental occult principles, though many are those who claim
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-for themselves the <i>ultima thule</i> of knowledge, and would make
-outsiders believe that they are full-blown adepts. Not only is there
-no scientific and accurate knowledge of Occultism accessible in the
-West—not even of true astrology, the only branch of Occultism which, in
-its <i>exoteric</i> teachings, has definite laws and a definite system—but
-no one has any idea of what real Occultism means. Some limit ancient
-wisdom to the <i>Kabala</i> and the Jewish <i>Zohar</i>, which each interprets
-in his own way according to the dead-letter of the Rabbinical methods.
-Others regard Swedenborg or Boehme as the ultimate expressions of the
-highest wisdom; while others again see in mesmerism the great secret of
-ancient magic. One and all of those who put their theory into practice
-are rapidly drifting, through ignorance, into black magic. Happy are
-those who escape from it, as they have neither test nor criterion by
-which they can distinguish between the true and the false.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Are we to understand that the inner
-group of the T.S. claims to learn what it does from real initiates or
-masters of esoteric wisdom?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not directly. The personal presence
-of such masters is not required. Suffice it if they give instructions
-to some of those who have studied under their guidance for years,
-and devoted their whole lives to their service. Then, in turn, these
-can give out the knowledge so imparted to others, who had no such
-opportunity. A portion of the true sciences is better than a mass of
-undigested and misunderstood learning. An ounce of gold is worth a ton
-of dust.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how is one to know whether the
-ounce is real gold or only a counterfeit?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> A tree is known by its fruit, a
-system by its results. When our opponents are able to prove to us that
-any solitary student of Occultism throughout the ages has become a
-saintly adept like Ammonius Saccas, or even a Plotinus, or a Theurgist
-like Iamblichus, or achieved feats such as are claimed to have been
-done by St. Germain, without any master to guide him, and all this
-without being a medium, a self-deluded psychic, or a charlatan—then
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-shall we confess ourselves mistaken. But till then, Theosophists
-prefer to follow the proven natural law of the tradition of the Sacred
-Science. There are mystics who have made great discoveries in chemistry
-and physical sciences, almost bordering on alchemy and Occultism;
-others who, by the sole aid of their genius, have rediscovered
-portions, if not the whole, of the lost alphabets of the “Mystery
-language,” and are, therefore, able to read correctly Hebrew scrolls;
-others still, who, being seers, have caught wonderful <i>glimpses</i> of the
-hidden secrets of Nature. But all these are <i>specialists</i>. One is a
-theoretical inventor, another a Hebrew, <i>i.e.</i>, a Sectarian Kabalist, a
-third a Swedenborg of modern times, denying all and everything outside
-of his own particular science or religion. Not one of them can boast
-of having produced a universal or even a national benefit thereby,
-not even to himself. With the exception of a few healers—of that
-class which the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons would call
-quacks—none have helped with their science Humanity, nor even a number
-of men of the same community. Where are the Chaldees of old, those who
-wrought marvellous cures, “not by charms but by simples”? Where is an
-Apollonius of Tyana, who healed the sick and raised the dead under any
-climate and circumstances? We know some <i>specialists</i> of the former
-class in Europe, but none of the latter—except in Asia, where the
-secret of the Yogi, “to live in death,” is still preserved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is the production of such healing
-adepts the aim of Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Its aims are several; but the most
-important of all are those which are likely to lead to the relief of
-human suffering under any or every form, moral as well as physical.
-And we believe the former to be far more important than the latter.
-Theosophy has to inculcate ethics; it has to purify the soul, if
-it would relieve the physical body, whose ailments, save cases of
-accidents, are all hereditary. It is not by studying Occultism for
-selfish ends, for the gratification of one’s personal ambition, pride,
-or vanity, that one can ever reach the true goal: that of helping
-suffering mankind. Nor is it by studying one single branch of the
-esoteric philosophy that a man becomes an Occultist, but by studying,
-if not mastering, them all.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is help, then, to reach this most
-important aim, given only to those who study the esoteric sciences?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all. Every <i>lay</i> member
-is entitled to general instruction if he only wants it; but few are
-willing to become what is called “working members,” and most prefer to
-remain the <i>drones</i> of Theosophy. Let it be understood that private
-research is encouraged in the T.S., provided it does not infringe the
-limit which separates the exoteric from the esoteric, the <i>blind</i> from
-the <i>conscious</i> magic.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_2_3" id="SECTION_2_3"></a>THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALISM.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You speak of Theosophy and
-Occultism; are they identical?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By no means. A man may be a very
-good Theosophist indeed, whether <i>in</i> or <i>outside</i> of the Society,
-without being in any way an Occultist. But no one can be a true
-Occultist without being a real Theosophist; otherwise he is simply a
-black magician, whether conscious or unconscious.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I have said already that a true
-Theosophist must put in practice the loftiest moral ideal, must strive
-to realize his unity with the whole of humanity, and work ceaselessly
-for others. Now, if an Occultist does not do all this, he must act
-selfishly for his own personal benefit; and if he has acquired more
-practical power than other ordinary men, he becomes forthwith a far
-more dangerous enemy to the world and those around him than the average
-mortal. This is clear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then is an Occultist simply a man
-who possesses more power than other people?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Far more—if he is a <i>practical</i> and
-really learned Occultist, and not one only in name. Occult sciences are
-<i>not</i>, as described, in Encyclopædias, “those <i>imaginary</i> sciences of
-the Middle Ages which related to the <i>supposed</i> action or influence of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-Occult qualities or supernatural powers, as alchemy, magic, necromancy,
-and astrology,” for they are real, actual, and very dangerous sciences.
-They teach the secret potency of things in Nature, developing and
-cultivating the hidden powers “latent in man,” thus giving him
-tremendous advantages over more ignorant mortals. Hypnotism, now
-become so common and a subject of serious scientific inquiry, is a
-good instance in point. <i>Hypnotic</i> power has been discovered almost
-by accident, the way to it having been prepared by mesmerism; and now
-an able hypnotizer can do almost anything with it, from forcing a
-man, unconsciously to himself, to play the fool, to making him commit
-a crime—often by proxy for the hypnotizer, and <i>for the benefit of
-the latter</i>. Is not this a terrible power if left in the hands of
-unscrupulous persons? And please to remember that this is only one of
-the minor branches of Occultism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But are not all these Occult
-sciences, magic, and sorcery, considered by the most cultured and
-learned people as relics of ancient ignorance and superstition?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Let me remind you that this
-remark of yours cuts both ways. The “most cultured and learned” among
-you regard also Christianity and every other religion as a relic of
-ignorance and superstition. People begin to believe now, at any rate,
-in <i>hypnotism</i>, and some—even of the <i>most cultured</i>—in Theosophy and
-phenomena. But who among them, except preachers and blind fanatics,
-will confess to a belief in <i>Biblical miracles</i>? And this is where
-the point of difference comes in. There are very good and pure
-Theosophists who may believe in the supernatural, divine <i>miracles</i>
-included, but no Occultist will do so. For an Occultist practices
-<i>scientific</i> Theosophy, based on accurate knowledge of Nature’s secret
-workings; but a Theosophist, practising the powers called abnormal,
-<i>minus</i> the light of Occultism, will simply tend toward a dangerous
-form of mediumship, because, although holding to Theosophy and its
-highest conceivable code of ethics, he practises it in the dark, on
-sincere but <i>blind</i> faith. Anyone, Theosophist or Spiritualist, who
-attempts to cultivate one of the branches of Occult science—<i>e.g.</i>,
-Hypnotism, Mesmerism, or even the secrets of producing physical
-phenomena, etc.—without the knowledge of the philosophic <i>rationale</i> of
-those powers, is like a rudderless boat launched on a stormy ocean.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_2_4" id="SECTION_2_4"></a>THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEOSOPHY AND SPIRITUALISM.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But do you not believe in
-Spiritualism?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If by “Spiritualism” you mean the
-explanation which Spiritualists give of some abnormal phenomena, then
-decidedly <i>we do not</i>. They maintain that these manifestations are
-all produced by the “spirits” of departed mortals, generally their
-relatives, who return to earth, they say, to communicate with those
-they have loved or to whom they are attached. We deny this point blank.
-We assert that the spirits of the dead cannot return to earth—save
-in rare and exceptional cases, of which I may speak later; nor do
-they communicate with men except by <i>entirely subjective means</i>. That
-which does appear objectively, is only the phantom of the ex-physical
-man. But in <i>psychic</i>, and so to say, “Spiritual” Spiritualism, we do
-believe, most decidedly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you reject the phenomena also?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Assuredly not—save cases of
-conscious fraud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How do you account for them, then?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In many ways. The causes of
-such manifestations are by no means so simple as the Spiritualists
-would like to believe. Foremost of all, the <i>deus ex machinâ</i> of the
-so-called “materializations” is usually the astral body or “double”
-of the medium or of some one present. This <i>astral</i> body is also the
-producer or operating force in the manifestations of slate-writing,
-“Davenport”-like manifestations, and so on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You say “usually”; then <i>what</i>
-is it that produces the rest?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That depends on the nature of the
-manifestations. Sometimes the astral remains, the Kamalokic “shells”
-of the vanished <i>personalities</i> that were; at other times, Elementals.
-“Spirit” is a word of manifold and wide significance. I really do
-not know what Spiritualists mean by the term; but what we understand
-them to claim is that the physical phenomena are produced by the
-reincarnating <i>Ego</i>, the <i>Spiritual</i> and immortal “individuality.” And
-this hypothesis we entirely reject. The Conscious <i>Individuality</i> of
-the disembodied <i>cannot materialize</i>, nor can it return from
-its own mental Devachanic sphere to the plane of terrestrial objectivity.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But many of the communications
-received from the “spirits” show not only intelligence, but a knowledge
-of facts not known to the medium, and sometimes even not consciously
-present to the mind of the investigator, or any of those who compose
-the audience.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This does not necessarily prove
-that the intelligence and knowledge you speak of belong to <i>spirits</i>,
-or emanate from <i>disembodied</i> souls. Somnambulists have been known to
-compose music and poetry and to solve mathematical problems while in
-their trance state, without having ever learnt music or mathematics.
-Others answered intelligently to questions put to them, and even, in
-several cases, spoke languages, such as Hebrew and Latin, of which
-they were entirely ignorant when awake—all this in a state of profound
-sleep. Will you, then, maintain that this was caused by “spirits”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how would you explain it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We assert that the divine spark
-in man being one and identical in its essence with the Universal
-Spirit, our “spiritual Self” is practically omniscient, but that it
-cannot manifest its knowledge owing to the impediments of matter. Now
-the more these impediments are removed, in other words, the more the
-physical body is paralyzed, as to its own independent activity and
-consciousness, as in deep sleep or deep trance, or, again, in illness,
-the more fully can the <i>inner</i> Self manifest on this plane. This is
-our explanation of those truly wonderful phenomena of a higher order,
-in which undeniable intelligence and knowledge are exhibited. As to
-the lower order of manifestations, such as physical phenomena and the
-platitudes and common talk of the general “spirit,” to explain even the
-most important of the teachings we hold upon the subject would take up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-more space and time than can be allotted to it at present. We have no
-desire to interfere with the belief of the Spiritualists any more than
-with any other belief. The <i>onus probandi</i> must fall on the believers
-in “spirits.” And at the present moment, while still convinced that
-the higher sort of manifestations occur through the disembodied
-souls, their leaders and the most learned and intelligent among the
-Spiritualists are the first to confess that not <i>all</i> the phenomena
-are produced by spirits. Gradually they will come to recognize the
-whole truth; but meanwhile we have no right nor desire to proselytize
-them to our views. The less so, as in the cases of purely <i>psychic and
-spiritual manifestations</i> we believe in the intercommunication of the
-spirit of the living man with that of disembodied personalities.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This means that you reject the
-philosophy of Spiritualism <i>in toto</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If by “philosophy” you mean their
-crude theories, we do. But they have no philosophy, in truth. Their
-best, their most intellectual and earnest defenders say so. Their
-fundamental and only unimpeachable truth, namely, that phenomena occur
-through mediums controlled by invisible forces and intelligences—no
-one, except a blind materialist of the “Huxley big toe” school, will
-or <i>can</i> deny. With regard to their philosophy, however, let me read
-to you what the able editor of <i>Light</i>, than whom the Spiritualists
-will find no wiser nor more devoted champion, says of them and
-their philosophy. This is what “M.A. Oxon,” one of the very few
-<i>philosophical</i> Spiritualists, writes, with respect to their lack of
-organization and blind bigotry:—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">It is worth while to look steadily at this point, for
-it is of vital moment. We have an experience and a knowledge beside
-which all other knowledge is comparatively insignificant. The ordinary
-Spiritualist waxes wroth if anyone ventures to impugn his assured
-knowledge of the future and his absolute certainty of the life to come.
-Where other men have stretched forth feeble hands groping into the dark
-future, he walks boldly as one who has a chart and knows his way. Where
-other men have stopped short at a pious aspiration or have been content
-with a hereditary faith, it is his boast that he knows what they only
-believe, and that out of his rich stores he can supplement the fading
-faiths built only upon hope. He is magnificent in his dealings with
-man’s most cherished expectations. “You hope,” he seems to say, “for
-that which I can demonstrate. You have accepted a traditional belief in
-what I can experimentally prove according to the strictest scientific
-method. The old beliefs are fading; come out from them and be separate.
-They contain as much falsehood as truth. Only by building on a sure
-foundation of demonstrated fact can your superstructure be stable. All
-round you old faiths are toppling. Avoid the crash and get you out.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">When one comes to deal with this magnificent
-person in a practical way, what is the result? Very curious and very
-disappointing. He is so sure of his ground that he takes no trouble
-to ascertain the interpretation which others put upon his facts. The
-wisdom of the ages has concerned itself with the explanation of what
-he rightly regards as proven; but he does not turn a passing glance
-on its researches. He does not even agree altogether with his brother
-Spiritualist. It is the story over again of the old Scotch body who,
-together with her husband, formed a “kirk.” They had exclusive keys
-to Heaven, or, rather, she had, for she was “na certain aboot Jamie.”
-So the infinitely divided and subdivided and resubdivided sects of
-Spiritualists shake their heads, and are “na certain aboot” one
-another. Again, the collective experience of mankind is solid
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-and unvarying on this point that union is strength, and disunion a
-source of weakness and failure. Shoulder to shoulder, drilled and
-disciplined, a rabble becomes an army, each man a match for a hundred
-of the untrained men that may be brought against it. Organization
-in every department of man’s work means success, saving of time and
-labour, profit and development. Want of method, want of plan, haphazard
-work, fitful energy, undisciplined effort—these mean bungling failure.
-The voice of humanity attests the truth. Does the Spiritualist accept
-the verdict and act on the conclusion? Verily, no. He refuses to
-organize. He is a law unto himself, and a thorn in the side of his
-neighbours.—<i>Light</i>, June 22, 1889.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I was told that the Theosophical
-Society was originally founded to crush Spiritualism and belief in the
-survival of the individuality in man?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You are misinformed. Our beliefs
-are all founded on that immortal individuality. But then, like so many
-others, you confuse <i>personality</i> with individuality. Your Western
-psychologists do not seem to have established any clear distinction
-between the two. Yet it is precisely that difference which gives the
-key-note to the understanding of Eastern philosophy, and which lies at
-the root of the divergence between the Theosophical and Spiritualistic
-teachings. And though it may draw upon us still more the hostility of
-some Spiritualists, yet I must state here that it is Theosophy which
-is the <i>true</i> and unalloyed Spiritualism, while the modern scheme of
-that name is, as now practised by the masses, simply transcendental
-materialism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Please explain your idea more clearly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What I mean is that though our
-teachings insist upon the identity of spirit and matter, and though we
-say that spirit is <i>potential</i> matter, and matter simply crystallized
-spirit (<i>e.g.</i>, as ice is solidified steam), yet since the original
-and eternal condition of <i>all</i> is not spirit but <i>meta</i>-spirit, so
-to speak, (visible and solid matter being simply its periodical
-manifestation,) we maintain that the term spirit can only be applied to
-the <i>true</i> individuality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what is the distinction between
-this “true individuality” and the “I” or “Ego” of which we are all conscious?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Before I can answer you, we must
-argue upon what you mean by “I” or “Ego.” We distinguish between
-the simple fact of self-consciousness, the simple feeling that
-“I am I,” and the complex thought that “I am Mr. Smith” or “Mrs.
-Brown.” Believing as we do in a series of births for the same Ego,
-or re-incarnation, this distinction is the fundamental pivot of the
-whole idea. You see “Mr. Smith” really means a long series of daily
-experiences strung together by the thread of memory, and forming what
-Mr. Smith calls “himself.” But none of these “experiences” are really
-the “I” or the Ego, nor do they give “Mr. Smith” the feeling that he
-is himself, for he forgets the greater part of his daily experiences,
-and they produce the feeling of <i>Egoity</i> in him only while they
-last. We Theosophists, therefore, distinguish between this bundle
-of “experiences,” which we call the <i>false</i> (because so finite and
-evanescent) <i>personality</i>, and that element in man to which the feeling
-of “I am I” is due. It is this “I am I” which we call the <i>true</i>
-individuality; and we say that this “Ego” or individuality plays, like
-an actor, many parts on the stage of life.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
-Let us call every new life on earth of the same <i>Ego</i> a <i>night</i> on
-the stage of a theatre. One night the actor, or “Ego,” appears as
-“Macbeth,” the next as “Shylock,” the third as “Romeo,” the fourth as
-“Hamlet” or “King Lear,” and so on, until he has run through the whole
-cycle of incarnations. The Ego begins his life-pilgrimage as a sprite,
-an “Ariel,” or a “Puck”; he plays the part of a <i>super</i>, is a soldier,
-a servant, one of the chorus; rises then to “speaking parts,” plays
-leading <i>rôles</i>, interspersed with insignificant parts, till he finally
-retires from the stage as “Prospero,” the <i>magician</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I understand. You say, then,
-that this true <i>Ego</i> cannot return to earth after death. But surely
-the actor is at liberty, if he has preserved the sense of his
-individuality, to return if he likes to the scene of his former actions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We say not, simply because such a
-return to earth would be incompatible with any state of <i>unalloyed</i>
-bliss after death, as I am prepared to prove. We say that man suffers
-so much unmerited misery during his life, through the fault of others
-with whom he is associated, or because of his environment, that he is
-surely entitled to perfect rest and quiet, if not bliss, before taking
-up again the burden of life. However, we can discuss this in detail later.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_2_5" id="SECTION_2_5"></a>WHY IS THEOSOPHY ACCEPTED?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I understand to a certain extent;
-but I see that your teachings are far more complicated and metaphysical
-than either Spiritualism or current religious thought. Can you tell me,
-then, what has caused this system of Theosophy which you support to
-arouse so much interest and so much animosity at the same time?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> There are several reasons for it,
-I believe; among other causes that may be mentioned is, <i>firstly</i>, the
-great reaction from the crassly materialistic theories now prevalent
-among scientific teachers. <i>Secondly</i>, general dissatisfaction with
-the artificial theology of the various Christian Churches, and the
-number of daily increasing and conflicting sects. <i>Thirdly</i>, an
-ever-growing perception of the fact that the creeds which are so
-obviously self—and mutually—contradictory <i>cannot be true</i>, and that
-claims which are unverified <i>cannot be real</i>. This natural distrust of
-conventional religions is only strengthened by their complete failure
-to preserve morals and to purify society and the masses. <i>Fourthly</i>, a
-conviction on the part of many, and <i>knowledge</i> by a few, that there
-must be somewhere a philosophical and religious system which shall be
-scientific and not merely speculative. <i>Finally</i>, a belief, perhaps,
-that such a system must be sought for in teachings far antedating any
-modern faith.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how did this system come to be
-put forward just now?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just because the time was found
-to be ripe, which fact is shown by the determined effort of so many
-earnest students to reach <i>the truth</i>, at whatever cost and wherever
-it may be concealed. Seeing this, its custodians permitted that
-some portions at least of that truth should be proclaimed. Had the
-formation of the Theosophical Society been postponed a few years
-longer, one half of the civilized nations would have become by
-this time rank materialists, and the other half anthropomorphists
-and phenomenalists.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Are we to regard Theosophy in any
-way as a revelation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In no way whatever—not even in the
-sense of a new and direct disclosure from some higher, supernatural,
-or, at least, <i>superhuman beings</i>; but only in the sense of an
-“unveiling” of old, very old, truths to minds hitherto ignorant of
-them, ignorant even of the existence and preservation of any such
-archaic knowledge.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You spoke of “Persecution.” If truth
-is as represented by Theosophy, why has it met with such opposition,
-and with no general acceptance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> For many and various reasons again,
-one of which is the hatred felt by men for “innovations,” as they
-call them. Selfishness is essentially conservative, and hates being
-disturbed. It prefers an easy-going, unexacting <i>lie</i> to the greatest
-truth, if the latter requires the sacrifice of one’s smallest comfort.
-The power of mental inertia is great in anything that does not promise
-immediate benefit and reward. Our age is pre-eminently unspiritual
-and matter of fact. Moreover, there is the unfamiliar character of
-Theosophic teachings; the highly abstruse nature of the doctrines, some
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-of which contradict flatly many of the human vagaries cherished by
-sectarians, which have eaten into the very core of popular beliefs. If
-we add to this the personal efforts and great purity of life exacted
-of those who would become the disciples of the <i>inner</i> circle, and the
-very limited class to which an entirely unselfish code appeals, it will
-be easy to perceive the reason why Theosophy is doomed to such slow,
-uphill work. It is essentially the philosophy of those who suffer, and
-have lost all hope of being helped out of the mire of life by any other
-means. Moreover, the history of any system of belief or morals, newly
-introduced into a foreign soil, shows that its beginnings were impeded
-by every obstacle that obscurantism and selfishness could suggest. “The
-crown of the innovator is a crown of thorns” indeed! No pulling down of
-old, worm-eaten buildings can be accomplished without some danger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> All this refers rather to the ethics
-and philosophy of the T.S. Can you give me a general idea of the
-Society itself, its object and statutes?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This was never made secret. Ask,
-and you shall receive accurate answers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But I heard that you were bound by
-pledges?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Only in the <i>Arcane</i> or “Esoteric”
-Section.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And also, that some members after
-leaving did not regard themselves bound by them. Are they right?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This shows that their idea of
-honour is an imperfect one. How can they be right? As well said in
-the <i>Path</i>, our theosophical organ at New York, treating of such a
-case: “Suppose that a soldier is tried for infringement of oath and
-discipline, and is dismissed from the service. In his rage at the
-justice he has called down, and of whose penalties he was distinctly
-forewarned, the soldier turns to the enemy with false information,—a
-spy and traitor—as a revenge upon his former Chief, and claims that
-his punishment has released him from his oath of loyalty to a cause.”
-Is he justified, think you? Don’t you think he deserves being called a
-dishonourable man, a coward?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I believe so; but some think
-otherwise.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> So much the worse for them. But we
-will talk on this subject later, if you please.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_3_1" id="SECTION_3_1"></a>
-<h2>III. <br />THE WORKING SYSTEM OF THE
-T.S.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></h2></div>
-
-<h3>THE OBJECTS OF THE SOCIETY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are the objects of the
-“Theosophical Society”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are three, and have been so
-from the beginning. (1). To form the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood
-of Humanity without distinction of race, colour, or creed. (2). To
-promote the study of Aryan and other Scriptures, of the World’s
-religion and sciences, and to vindicate the importance of old Asiatic
-literature, namely, of the Brahmanical, Buddhist, and Zoroastrian
-philosophies. (3). To investigate the hidden mysteries of Nature under
-every aspect possible, and the psychic and spiritual powers latent in
-man especially. These are, broadly stated, the three chief objects of
-the Theosophical Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you give me some more detailed
-information upon these?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We may divide each of the three
-objects into as many explanatory clauses as may be found necessary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then let us begin with the first.
-What means would you resort to, in order to promote such a feeling of
-brotherhood among races that are known to be of the most diversified
-religions, customs, beliefs, and modes of thought?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Allow me to add that which you seem
-unwilling to express. Of course we know that with the exception of two
-remnants of races—the Parsees and the Jews—every nation is divided,
-not merely against all other nations, but even against itself. This is
-found most prominently among the so-called civilized Christian nations.
-Hence your wonder, and the reason why our first object appears to you a
-Utopia. Is it not so?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, yes; but what have you to say
-against it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Nothing against the fact; but
-much about the necessity of removing the causes which make Universal
-Brotherhood a Utopia at present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are, in your view, these causes?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First and foremost, the natural
-selfishness of human nature. This selfishness, instead of being
-eradicated, is daily strengthened and stimulated into a ferocious and
-irresistible feeling by the present religious education, which tends
-not only to encourage, but positively to justify it. People’s ideas
-about right and wrong have been entirely perverted by the literal
-acceptance of the Jewish Bible. All the unselfishness of the altruistic
-teachings of Jesus has become merely a theoretical subject for pulpit
-oratory; while the precepts of practical selfishness taught in the
-Mosaic Bible, against which Christ so vainly preached, have become
-ingrained into the innermost life of the Western nations. “An eye for
-an eye and a tooth for a tooth” has come to be the first maxim of your
-law. Now, I state openly and fearlessly, that the perversity of this
-doctrine and of so many others <i>Theosophy alone</i> can eradicate.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_3_2" id="SECTION_3_2"></a>THE COMMON ORIGIN OF MAN.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply by demonstrating on logical,
-philosophical, metaphysical, and even scientific grounds that:—(a)
-All men have spiritually and physically the same origin, which is the
-fundamental teaching of Theosophy. (b) As mankind is essentially of
-one and the same essence, and that essence is one—infinite, uncreate,
-and eternal, whether we call it God or Nature—nothing, therefore, can
-affect one nation or one man without affecting all other nations and
-all other men. This is as certain and as obvious as that a stone thrown
-into a pond will, sooner or later, set in motion every single drop of
-water therein.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this is not the teaching of
-Christ, but rather a pantheistic notion.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That is where your mistake lies. It
-is purely <i>Christian</i>, although <i>not</i> Judaic, and therefore, perhaps,
-your Biblical nations prefer to ignore it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is a wholesale and unjust
-accusation. Where are your proofs for such a statement?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are ready at hand. Christ is
-alleged to have said: “Love each other” and “Love your enemies”; for
-“if ye love them (only) which love you, what reward (or merit) have ye?
-Do not even the <i>publicans</i><a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
-the same? And if you salute your brethren only, what do ye more than
-others? Do not even publicans so?” These are Christ’s words. But
-Genesis ix. 25, says “Cursed be Canaan, a servant of servants shall he
-be unto his brethren.” And, therefore, Christian but Biblical people
-prefer the law of Moses to Christ’s law of love. They base upon the Old
-Testament, which panders to all their passions, their laws of conquest,
-annexation, and tyranny over races which they call <i>inferior</i>. What
-crimes have been committed on the strength of this infernal (if taken
-in its dead letter) passage in Genesis, history alone gives us an idea,
-however inadequate.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard you say that the
-identity of our physical origin is proved by science, that of our
-spiritual origin by the Wisdom-Religion. Yet we do not find Darwinists
-exhibiting great fraternal affection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so. This is what shows
-the deficiency of the materialistic systems, and proves that we
-Theosophists are in the right. The identity of our physical origin
-makes no appeal to our higher and deeper feelings. Matter, deprived of
-its soul and spirit, or its divine essence, cannot speak to the human
-heart. But the identity of the soul and spirit, of real, immortal
-man, as Theosophy teaches us, once proven and deep-rooted in our
-hearts, would lead us far on the road of real charity and brotherly
-goodwill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how does Theosophy explain the
-common origin of man?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By teaching that the <i>root</i> of all
-nature, objective and subjective, and everything else in the universe,
-visible and invisible, <i>is</i>, <i>was</i>, and <i>ever will be</i> one absolute
-essence, from which all starts, and into which everything returns.
-This is Aryan philosophy, fully represented only by the Vedantins, and
-the Buddhist system. With this object in view, it is the duty of all
-Theosophists to promote in every practical way, and in all countries,
-the spread of <i>non-sectarian</i> education.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do the written statutes of your
-Society advise its members to do besides this? On the physical plane, I mean?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In order to awaken brotherly
-feeling among nations we have to assist in the international exchange
-of useful arts and products, by advice, information, and co-operation
-with all worthy individuals and associations (provided, however,
-add the statutes, “that no benefit or percentage shall be taken by
-the Society or the ‘Fellows’ for its or their corporate services”).
-For instance, to take a practical illustration. The organization of
-Society, depicted by Edward Bellamy, in his magnificent work “Looking
-Backwards,” admirably represents the Theosophical idea of what should
-be the first great step towards the full realization of universal
-brotherhood. The state of things he depicts falls short of perfection,
-because selfishness still exists and operates in the hearts of men.
-But in the main, selfishness and individualism have been overcome by
-the feeling of solidarity and mutual brotherhood; and the scheme of
-life there described reduces the causes tending to create and foster
-selfishness to a minimum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then as a Theosophist you will take
-part in an effort to realize such an ideal?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly; and we have proved
-it by action. Have not you heard of the Nationalist clubs and party
-which have sprung up in America since the publication of Bellamy’s
-book? They are now coming prominently to the front, and will do so
-more and more as time goes on. Well, these clubs and this party were
-started in the first instance by Theosophists. One of the first, the
-Nationalist Club of Boston, Mass., has Theosophists for President and
-Secretary, and the majority of its executive belong to the T.S. In the
-constitution of all their clubs, and of the party they are forming,
-the influence of Theosophy and of the Society is plain, for they
-all take as their basis, their first and fundamental principle, the
-Brotherhood of Humanity as taught by Theosophy. In their declaration of
-Principles they state:—“The principle of the Brotherhood of Humanity
-is one of the eternal truths that govern the world’s progress on lines
-which distinguish human nature from brute nature.” What can be more
-Theosophical than this? But it is not enough. What is also needed is to
-impress men with the idea that, if the root of mankind is <i>one</i>, then
-there must also be one truth which finds expression in all the various
-religions—except in the Jewish, as you do not find it <i>expressed</i> even
-in the Kabala.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This refers to the common origin
-of religions, and you may be right there. But how does it apply to
-practical brotherhood on the physical plane?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First, because that which is true
-on the metaphysical plane must be also true on the physical. Secondly,
-because there is no more fertile source of hatred and strife than
-religious differences. When one party or another thinks himself the
-sole possessor of absolute truth, it becomes only natural that he
-should think his neighbour absolutely in the clutches of Error or the
-Devil. But once get a man to see that none of them has the <i>whole</i>
-truth, but that they are mutually complementary, that the complete
-truth can be found only in the combined views of all, after that which
-is false in each of them has been sifted out—then true brotherhood
-in religion will be established. The same applies in the physical
-world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Please explain further.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Take an instance. A plant consists
-of a root, a stem, and many shoots and leaves. As humanity, as a whole,
-is the stem which grows from the spiritual root, so is the stem the
-unity of the plant. Hurt the stem and it is obvious that every shoot
-and leaf will suffer. So it is with mankind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes, but if you injure a leaf or a
-shoot, you do not injure the whole plant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And therefore you think that by
-injuring <i>one</i> man you do not injure humanity? But how do <i>you</i> know?
-Are you aware that even materialistic science teaches that any injury,
-however slight, to a plant will affect the whole course of its future
-growth and development? Therefore, you are mistaken, and the analogy is
-perfect. If, however, you overlook the fact that a cut in the finger
-may often make the whole body suffer, and react on the whole nervous
-system, I must all the more remind you that there may well be other
-spiritual laws, operating on plants and animals as well as on mankind,
-although, as you do not recognize their action on plants and animals,
-you may deny their existence.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What laws do you mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We call them Karmic laws; but you
-will not understand the full meaning of the term unless you study
-Occultism. However, my argument did not rest on the assumption of
-these laws, but really on the analogy of the plant. Expand the idea,
-carry it out to a universal application, and you will soon find that
-in true philosophy every physical action has its moral and everlasting
-effect. Hurt a man by doing him bodily harm; you may think that his
-pain and suffering cannot spread by any means to his neighbours, least
-of all to men of other nations. We affirm <i>that it will, in good time</i>.
-Therefore, we say, that unless every man is brought to understand and
-accept <i>as an axiomatic truth</i> that by wronging one man we wrong not
-only ourselves but the whole of humanity in the long run, no brotherly
-feelings such as preached by all the great Reformers, pre-eminently by
-Buddha and Jesus, are possible on earth.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_3_3" id="SECTION_3_3"></a>OUR OTHER OBJECTS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Will you now explain the methods by
-which you propose to carry out the second object?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To collect for the library at our
-headquarters of Adyar, Madras, (and by the Fellows of their Branches
-for their local libraries,) all the good works upon the world’s
-religions that we can. To put into written form correct information
-upon the various ancient philosophies, traditions, and legends, and
-disseminate the same in such practicable ways as the translation
-and publication of original works of value, and extracts from and
-commentaries upon the same, or the oral instructions of persons learned
-in their respective departments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what about the third object, to
-develop in man his latent spiritual or psychic powers?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This has to be achieved also by
-means of publications, in those places where no lectures and personal
-teachings are possible. Our duty is to keep alive in man his spiritual
-intuitions. To oppose and counteract—after due investigation and proof
-of its irrational nature—bigotry in every form, religious, scientific,
-or social, and <i>cant</i> above all, whether as religious sectarianism or
-as belief in miracles or anything supernatural. What we have to do is
-to seek to obtain <i>knowledge</i> of all the laws of nature, and to diffuse
-it. To encourage the study of those laws least understood by modern
-people, the so-called Occult Sciences, <i>based on the true knowledge
-of nature</i>, instead of, as at present, on <i>superstitious beliefs based
-on blind faith and authority</i>. Popular folk-lore and traditions,
-however fanciful at times, when sifted may lead to the discovery of
-long-lost, but important, secrets of nature. The Society, therefore,
-aims at pursuing this line of inquiry, in the hope of widening the
-field of scientific and philosophical observation.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_3_4" id="SECTION_3_4"></a>ON THE SACREDNESS OF THE PLEDGE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Have you any ethical system that you
-carry out in the Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The ethics are there, ready and
-clear enough for whomsoever follow them. They are the essence and
-cream of the world’s ethics, gathered from the teachings of all the
-world’s great reformers. Therefore, you will find represented therein
-Confucius and Zoroaster, Lao-Tze and the Bhagavat-Gita, the precepts of
-Gautama Buddha and Jesus of Nazareth, of Hillel and his school, as of
-Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, and their schools.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do the members of your Society carry
-out these precepts? I have heard of great dissensions and quarrels
-among them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Very naturally, since although the
-reform (in its present shape) may be called new, the men and women to
-be reformed are the same human, sinning natures as of old. As already
-said, the earnest <i>working</i> members are few; but many are the sincere
-and well-disposed persons, who try their best to live up to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-Society’s and their own ideals. Our duty is to encourage and assist
-individual fellows in self-improvement, intellectual, moral, and
-spiritual; not to blame or condemn those who fail. We have, strictly
-speaking, no right to refuse admission to anyone—especially in the
-<i>Esoteric Section</i> of the Society, wherein “he who enters is as one
-newly born.” But if any member, his sacred pledges on his word of
-honour and immortal <i>Self</i>, notwithstanding, chooses to continue, after
-that “new birth,” with the new man, the vices or defects of his old
-life, and to indulge in them still in the Society, then, of course, he
-is more than likely to be asked to resign and withdraw; or, in case
-of his refusal, to be expelled. We have the strictest rules for such
-emergencies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can some of them be mentioned?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They can. To begin with, no Fellow
-in the Society, whether exoteric or esoteric, has a right to force
-his personal opinions upon another Fellow. “It is not lawful for <i>any
-officer of the Parent Society</i> to express in public, by word or act,
-any hostility to, or preference for, any one section,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-religious or philosophical, more than another. All have an equal right
-to have the essential features of their religious belief laid before
-the tribunal of an impartial world. And no officer of the Society, in
-his capacity as an officer, has the right to preach his own sectarian
-views and beliefs to members assembled, except when the meeting
-consists of his co-religionists. After due warning, violation of this
-rule shall be punished by suspension or expulsion.” This is one of the
-offenses in the Society at large. As regards the inner section, now
-called the <i>Esoteric</i>, the following rules have been laid down and
-adopted, so far back as 1880. “No Fellow shall put to his selfish use
-any knowledge communicated to him by any member of the first section
-(now a higher ‘degree’); violation of the rule being punished by
-expulsion.” Now, however, before any such knowledge can be imparted,
-the applicant has to bind himself by a solemn oath not to use it for
-selfish purposes, nor to reveal anything said except by permission.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is a man expelled, or resigning,
-from the section free to reveal anything he may have learned, or to
-break any clause of the pledge he has taken?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly not. His expulsion or
-resignation only relieves him from the obligation of obedience to the
-teacher, and from that of taking an active part in the work of the
-Society, but surely not from the sacred pledge of secrecy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is this reasonable and just?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most assuredly. To any man or
-woman with the slightest honourable feeling a pledge of secrecy taken
-even on one’s <i>word of honour</i>, much more to one’s Higher Self—the
-God within—is binding till death. And though he may leave the Section
-and the Society, no man or woman of honour will think of attacking or
-injuring a body to which he or she has been so pledged.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is not this going rather far?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Perhaps so, according to the low
-standard of the present time and morality. But if it does not bind as
-far as this, what use is a <i>pledge</i> at all? How can anyone expect to be
-taught secret knowledge, if he is to be at liberty to free himself from
-all the obligations he had taken, whenever he pleases? What security,
-confidence, or trust would ever exist among them, if pledges such as
-this were to have no really binding force at all? Believe me, the law
-of retribution (Karma) would very soon overtake one who so broke his
-pledge, and perhaps as soon as the contempt of every honourable man
-would, even on this physical plane. As well expressed in the N. Y.
-“Path” just cited on this subject, “<i>A pledge once taken, is for ever
-binding in both the moral and the occult worlds.</i> If we break it once
-and are punished, that does not justify us in breaking it again, and
-so long as we do, so long will the mighty lever of the Law (of Karma)
-react upon us.” (The <i>Path</i>, July, 1889.)
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_4_1" id="SECTION_4_1"></a>
-<h2>IV. <br />THE RELATIONS OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY TO THEOSOPHY.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>ON SELF-IMPROVEMENT.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is moral elevation, then, the
-principal thing insisted upon in your Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Undoubtedly! He who would be a true
-Theosophist must bring himself to live as one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If so, then, as I remarked before,
-the behaviour of some members strangely belies this fundamental
-rule.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Indeed it does. But this cannot
-be helped among us, any more than amongst those who call themselves
-Christians and act like fiends. This is no fault of our statutes and
-rules, but that of human nature. Even in some exoteric public branches,
-the members pledge themselves on their “Higher Self” to live <i>the</i> life
-prescribed by Theosophy. They have to bring their <i>Divine Self</i> to
-guide their every thought and action, every day and at every moment
-of their lives. A true Theosophist ought “to deal justly and walk
-humbly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean by this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply this: the one self has to
-forget itself for the many selves. Let me answer you in the words of
-a true Philaletheian, an F.T.S., who has beautifully expressed it in
-the <i>Theosophist</i>: “What every man needs first is to find himself, and
-then take an honest inventory of his subjective possessions, and, bad
-or bankrupt as it may be, it is not beyond redemption if we set about
-it in earnest.” But how many do? All are willing to work for their own
-development and progress; very few for those of others. To quote the
-same writer again: “Men have been deceived and deluded long enough;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-they must break their idols, put away their shams, and go to work for
-themselves—nay, there is one little word too much or too many, for
-he who works for himself had better not work at all; rather let him
-work himself for others, for all. For every flower of love and charity
-he plants in his neighbour’s garden, a loathsome weed will disappear
-from his own, and so this garden of the gods—Humanity—shall blossom as
-a rose. In all Bibles, all religions, this is plainly set forth—but
-designing men have at first misinterpreted and finally emasculated,
-materialized, besotted them. It does not require a new revelation. Let
-every man be a revelation unto himself. Let once man’s immortal spirit
-take possession of the temple of his body, drive out the money-changers
-and every unclean thing, and his own divine humanity will redeem him,
-for when he is thus at one with himself if he will know the ‘builder of
-the Temple.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is pure Altruism, I confess.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is. And if only one Fellow of
-the T.S. out of ten would practise it ours would be a body of elect
-indeed. But there are those among the outsiders who will always refuse
-to see the essential difference between Theosophy and the Theosophical
-Society, the idea and its imperfect embodiment. Such would visit
-every sin and shortcoming of the vehicle, the human body, on the pure
-spirit which sheds thereon its divine light. Is this just to either?
-They throw stones at an association that tries to work up to, and
-for the propagation of, its ideal with most tremendous odds against
-it. Some vilify the Theosophical Society only because it presumes to
-attempt to do that in which other systems—Church and State Christianity
-pre-eminently—have failed most egregiously; others because they would
-fain preserve the existing state of things: Pharisees and Sadducees in
-the seat of Moses, and publicans and sinners revelling in high places,
-as under the Roman Empire during its decadence. Fair-minded people, at
-any rate, ought to remember that the man who does all he can, does as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-much as he who has achieved the most, in this world of relative
-possibilities. This is a simple truism, an axiom supported for
-believers in the Gospels by the parable of the talents given by their
-Master; the servant who doubled his two talents was rewarded as much as
-that other fellow-servant who had received <i>five</i>. To every man it is
-given “according to his several ability.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet it is rather difficult to draw
-the line of demarcation between the abstract and the concrete in this
-case, as we have only the latter to our judgment by.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then why make an exception for the
-T.S.? Justice, like charity, ought to begin at home. Will you revile
-and scoff at the “Sermon on the Mount” because your social, political
-and even religious laws have, so far, not only failed to carry out its
-precepts in their spirit, but even in their dead letter? Abolish the
-oath in Courts, Parliament, Army and everywhere, and do as the Quakers
-do, if you <i>will</i> call yourselves Christians. Abolish the Courts
-themselves, for if you would follow the Commandments of Christ, you
-have to give away your coat to him who deprives you of your cloak, and
-turn your left cheek to the bully who smites you on the right. “Resist
-not evil, love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them
-that hate you,” for “whosoever shall break one of the least of these
-Commandments and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in
-the Kingdom of Heaven,” and “whosoever shall say ‘Thou fool’ shall be
-in danger of hell fire.” And why should you judge, if you would not be
-judged in your turn? Insist that between Theosophy and the Theosophical
-Society there is no difference, and forthwith you lay the system of
-Christianity and its very essence open to the same charges, only in a
-more serious form.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Why <i>more</i> serious?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because, while the leaders of the
-Theosophical movement, recognising fully their shortcomings, try all
-they can do to amend their ways and uproot the evil existing in the
-Society; and while their rules and by-laws are framed in the spirit of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-Theosophy, the Legislators and the Churches of nations and countries
-which call themselves Christian do the reverse. Our members, even the
-worst among them, are no worse than the average Christian. Moreover,
-if the Western Theosophists experience so much difficulty in leading
-the true Theosophical life, it is because they are all the children of
-their generation. Every one of them was a Christian, bred and brought
-up in the sophistry of his Church, his social customs, and even his
-paradoxical laws. He was this before he became a Theosophist, or
-rather, a member of the Society of that name, as it cannot be too often
-repeated that between the abstract ideal and its vehicle there is a
-most important difference.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_4_2" id="SECTION_4_2"></a>THE ABSTRACT AND THE CONCRETE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Please elucidate this difference a
-little more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Society is a great body of men
-and women, composed of the most heterogeneous elements. Theosophy,
-in its abstract meaning, is Divine Wisdom, or the aggregate of the
-knowledge and wisdom that underlie the Universe—the homogeneity of
-eternal GOOD; and in its concrete sense it is the sum total of the
-same as allotted to man by nature, on this earth, and no more. Some
-members earnestly endeavour to realize and, so to speak, to objectivize
-Theosophy in their lives; while others desire only to know of, not to
-practise it; and others still may have joined the Society merely out
-of curiosity, or a passing interest, or perhaps, again, because some
-of their friends belong to it. How, then, can the system be judged by
-the standard of those who would assume the name without any right to
-it? Is poetry or its muse to be measured only by those would-be poets
-who afflict our ears? The Society can be regarded as the embodiment
-of Theosophy only in its abstract motives; it can never presume to
-call itself its concrete vehicle so long as human imperfections and
-weaknesses are all represented in its body; otherwise the Society would
-be only repeating the great error and the outflowing sacrileges of the
-so-called Churches of Christ. If Eastern comparisons may be permitted,
-Theosophy is the shoreless ocean of universal truth, love, and wisdom,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-reflecting its radiance on the earth, while the Theosophical Society is
-only a visible bubble on that reflection. Theosophy is divine nature,
-visible and invisible, and its Society human nature trying to ascend
-to its divine parent. Theosophy, finally, is the fixed eternal sun,
-and its Society the evanescent comet trying to settle in an orbit to
-become a planet, ever revolving within the attraction of the sun of
-truth. It was formed to assist in showing to men that such a thing as
-Theosophy exists, and to help them to ascend towards it by studying and
-assimilating its eternal verities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I thought you said you had no tenets
-or doctrines of your own?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No more we have. The Society has
-no wisdom of its own to support or teach. It is simply the storehouse
-of all the truths uttered by the great seers, initiates, and prophets
-of historic and even pre-historic ages; at least, as many as it can
-get. Therefore, it is merely the channel through which more or less
-of truth, found in the accumulated utterances of humanity’s great
-teachers, is poured out into the world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is such truth unreachable
-outside of the Society? Does not every Church claim the same?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all. The undeniable
-existence of great initiates—true “Sons of God”—shows that such wisdom
-was often reached by isolated individuals, never, however, without the
-guidance of a master at first. But most of the followers of such, when
-they became masters in their turn, have dwarfed the catholicism of
-these teachings into the narrow groove of their own sectarian dogmas.
-The commandments of <i>a</i> chosen master alone were then adopted and
-followed, to the exclusion of all others—if followed at all, note well,
-as in the case of the Sermon on the Mount. Each religion is thus a bit
-of the divine truth, made to focus a vast panorama of human fancy which
-claimed to represent and replace that truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But Theosophy, you say, is not a religion?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most assuredly it is not, since
-it is the essence of all religion and of absolute truth, a drop of
-which only underlies every creed. To resort once more to metaphor.
-Theosophy, on earth, is like the white ray of the spectrum, and
-every religion only one of the seven prismatic colours. Ignoring all
-the others, and cursing them as false, every special coloured ray
-claims not only priority, but to be <i>that white ray</i> itself, and
-anathematizes even its own tints from light to dark, as heresies.
-Yet, as the sun of truth rises higher and higher on the horizon of
-man’s perception, and each coloured ray gradually fades out until it
-is finally reabsorbed in its turn, humanity will at last be cursed no
-longer with artificial polarizations, but will find itself bathing
-in the pure colourless sunlight of eternal truth. And this will be
-<i>Theosophia</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Your claim is, then, that all
-the great religions are derived from Theosophy, and that it is by
-assimilating it that the world will be finally saved from the curse of
-its great illusions and errors?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Precisely so. And we add that our
-Theosophical Society is the humble seed which, if watered and left to
-live, will finally produce the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil which
-is grafted on the Tree of Life Eternal. For it is only by studying the
-various great religions and philosophies of humanity, by comparing them
-dispassionately and with an unbiased mind, that men can hope to arrive
-at the truth. It is especially by finding out and noting their various
-points of agreement that we may achieve this result. For no sooner do
-we arrive—either by study, or by being taught by someone who knows—at
-their inner meaning, than we find, almost in every case, that it
-expresses some great truth in Nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> We have heard of a Golden Age that
-was, and what you describe would be a Golden Age to be realised at some
-future day. When shall it be?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not before humanity, as a whole,
-feels the need of it. A maxim in the Persian “Javidan Khirad” says:
-“Truth is of two kinds—one manifest and self-evident; the other
-demanding incessantly new demonstrations and proofs.” It is only when
-this latter kind of truth becomes as universally obvious as it is now
-dim, and therefore liable to be distorted by sophistry and casuistry;
-it is only when the two kinds will have become once more one, that all
-people will be brought to see alike.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely those few who have felt
-the need of such truths must have made up their minds to believe in
-something definite? You tell me that, the Society having no doctrines
-of its own, every member may believe as he chooses and accept what
-he pleases. This looks as if the Theosophical Society was bent upon
-reviving the confusion of languages and beliefs of the Tower of Babel
-of old. Have you no beliefs in common?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What is meant by the Society having
-no tenets or doctrines of its own is, that no special doctrines or
-beliefs are <i>obligatory</i> on its members; but, of course, this applies
-only to the body as a whole. The Society, as you were told, is divided
-into an outer and an inner body. Those who belong to the latter have,
-of course, a philosophy, or—if you so prefer it— a religious system of
-their own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> May we be told what it is?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We make no secret of it. It was
-outlined a few years ago in the <i>Theosophist</i> and “Esoteric Buddhism,”
-and may be found still more elaborated in the “Secret Doctrine.” It is
-based on the oldest philosophy in the world, called the Wisdom-Religion
-or the Archaic Doctrine. If you like, you may ask questions and have
-them explained.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_5_1" id="SECTION_5_1"></a>
-<h2>V. <br />THE FUNDAMENTAL TEACHINGS OF THEOSOPHY.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>ON GOD AND PRAYER.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you believe in God?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That depends what you mean by the
-term.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I mean the God of the Christians,
-the Father of Jesus, and the Creator: the Biblical God of Moses, in
-short.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In such a God we do not believe. We
-reject the idea of a personal, or an extra-cosmic and anthropomorphic
-God, who is but the gigantic shadow of <i>man</i>, and not of man at his
-best, either. The God of theology, we say—and prove it—is a bundle of
-contradictions and a logical impossibility. Therefore, we will have
-nothing to do with him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> State your reasons, if you
-please.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are many, and cannot all
-receive attention. But here are a few. This God is called by his
-devotees infinite and absolute, is he not?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I believe he is.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then, if infinite—<i>i.e.</i>,
-limitless—and especially if absolute, how can he have a form, and be a
-creator of anything? Form implies limitation, and a beginning as well
-as an end; and, in order to create, a Being must think and plan. How
-can the ABSOLUTE be supposed to think—<i>i.e.</i>, to have any relation
-whatever to that which is limited, finite, and conditioned? This is a
-philosophical and a logical absurdity. Even the Hebrew Kabala rejects
-such an idea, and therefore makes of the one and the Absolute Deific
-Principle an infinite Unity called Ain-Soph.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-In order to create, the Creator has to become active; and as this
-is impossible for ABSOLUTENESS, the infinite principle had to be
-shown becoming the cause of evolution (not creation) in an indirect
-way—<i>i.e.</i>, through the emanation from itself (another absurdity, due
-this time to the translators of the Kabala)<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
-of the Sephiroth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How about those Kabalists, who,
-while being such, still believe in Jehovah, or the <i>Tetragrammaton</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are at liberty to believe in
-what they please, as their belief or disbelief can hardly affect a
-self-evident fact. The Jesuits tell us that two and two are not always
-four to a certainty, since it depends on the will of God to make 2 x 2
-= 5. Shall we accept their sophistry for all that?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you are Atheists?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not that we know of, and not unless
-the epithet of “Atheist” is to be applied to those who disbelieve in an
-anthropomorphic God. We believe in a Universal Divine Principle, the
-root of ALL, from which all proceeds, and within which all shall be
-absorbed at the end of the great cycle of Being.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is the old, old claim of
-Pantheism. If you are Pantheists, you cannot be Deists; and if you are
-not Deists, then you have to answer to the name of Atheists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not necessarily so. The term
-“Pantheism” is again one of the many abused terms, whose real and
-primitive meaning has been distorted by blind prejudice and a one-sided
-view of it. If you accept the Christian etymology of this compound
-word, and form it of <b>παν</b>, “all,” and <b>θεος</b>, “god,” and
-then imagine and teach that this means that every stone and every
-tree in Nature is a God or the ONE God, then, of course, you will be
-right, and make of Pantheists fetish-worshippers, in addition to their
-legitimate name. But you will hardly be as successful if you
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-etymologise the word Pantheism esoterically, and as we do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is, then your definition of it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Let me ask you a question in my
-turn. What do you understand by Pan or Nature?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Nature is, I suppose, the sum total
-of things existing around us; the aggregate of causes and effects in
-the world of matter, the creation or universe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Hence the personified sum and
-order of known causes and effects; the total of all finite agencies
-and forces, as utterly disconnected from an intelligent Creator or
-Creators, and perhaps “conceived of as a single and separate force”—as
-in your cyclopædias?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes, I believe so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Well, we neither take into
-consideration this objective and material nature, which we call an
-evanescent illusion, nor do we mean by <b>παν</b> Nature, in the sense
-of its accepted derivation from the Latin <i>Natura</i> (becoming, from
-<i>nasci</i>, to be born). When we speak of the Deity and make it identical,
-hence coeval, with Nature, the eternal and uncreate nature is meant,
-and not your aggregate of flitting shadows and finite unrealities. We
-leave it to the hymn-makers to call the visible sky or heaven, God’s
-Throne, and our earth of mud His footstool. Our DEITY is neither in
-a paradise, nor in a particular tree, building, or mountain; it is
-everywhere, in every atom of the visible as of the invisible Cosmos,
-in, over, and around every invisible atom and divisible molecule;
-for IT is the mysterious power of evolution and involution, the
-omnipresent, omnipotent, and even omniscient creative potentiality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Stop! Omniscience is the prerogative
-of something that thinks, and you deny to your Absoluteness the power
-of thought.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We deny it to the ABSOLUTE, since
-thought is something limited and conditioned. But you evidently
-forget that in philosophy absolute unconsciousness is also absolute
-consciousness, as otherwise it would not be <i>absolute</i>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then your Absolute thinks?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No, IT does not; for the simple
-reason that it is <i>Absolute Thought</i> itself. Nor does it exist, for
-the same reason, as it is absolute existence, and <i>Be-ness</i>, not a
-Being. Read the superb Kabalistic poem by Solomon Ben Jehudah Gabirol,
-in the Kether-Malchut, and you will understand:—“Thou art one, the
-root of all numbers, but not as an element of numeration; for unity
-admits not of multiplication, change, or form. Thou art one, and in the
-secret of Thy unity the wisest of men are lost, because they know it
-not. Thou art one, and Thy unity is never diminished, never extended,
-and cannot be changed. Thou art one, and no thought of mine can fix
-for Thee a limit, or define Thee. Thou ART, but not as one existent,
-for the understanding and vision of mortals cannot attain to Thy
-existence, nor determine for Thee the where, the how and the why,”
-etc., etc. In short, our Deity is the eternal, incessantly <i>evolving</i>,
-not <i>creating</i>, builder of the universe; that <i>universe itself
-unfolding</i> out of its own essence, not being <i>made</i>. It is a sphere,
-without circumference, in its symbolism, which has but one ever-acting
-attribute embracing all other existing or thinkable attributes—ITSELF.
-It is the one law, giving the impulse to manifested, eternal, and
-immutable laws, within that never-manifesting, <i>because</i> absolute LAW,
-which in its manifesting periods is <i>The ever-Becoming</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I once heard one of your members
-remarking that Universal Deity, being everywhere, was in vessels of
-dishonour, as in those of honour, and, therefore, was present in every
-atom of my cigar ash! Is this not rank blasphemy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I do not think so, as simple logic
-can hardly be regarded as blasphemy. Were we to exclude the Omnipresent
-Principle from one single mathematical point of the universe, or from
-a particle of matter occupying any conceivable space, could we still
-regard it as infinite?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_5_2" id="SECTION_5_2"></a>IS IT NECESSARY TO PRAY?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq</span>. Do you believe in prayer, and do you
-ever pray?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo</span>. We do not. We <i>act</i>, instead of
-<i>talking</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You do not offer prayers even to the
-Absolute Principle?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Why should we? Being well-occupied
-people, we can hardly afford to lose time in addressing verbal
-prayers to a pure abstraction. The Unknowable is capable of relations
-only in its parts to each other, but is non-existent as regards any
-finite relations. The visible universe depends for its existence and
-phenomena on its mutually acting forms and their laws, not on prayer or
-prayers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you not believe at all in the
-efficacy of prayer?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not in prayer taught in so many
-words and repeated externally, if by prayer you mean the outward
-petition to an unknown God as the addressee, which was inaugurated by
-the Jews and popularised by the Pharisees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is there any other kind of
-prayer?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most decidedly; we call it
-WILL-PRAYER, and it is rather an internal command than a petition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> To whom, then, do you pray when you
-do so?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To “our Father in heaven”—in its
-esoteric meaning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq</span>. Is that different from the one given
-to it in theology?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Entirely so. An Occultist or a
-Theosophist addresses his prayer to <i>his Father which is in secret</i>
-(read, and try to understand, ch. vi. v. 6, Matthew), not to an
-extra-cosmic and therefore finite God; and that “Father” is in man
-himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you make of man a God?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Please say “God” and not <i>a</i> God.
-In our sense, the inner man is the only God we can have cognizance
-of. And how can this be otherwise? Grant us our postulate that God
-is a universally diffused, infinite principle, and how can man alone
-escape from being soaked through <i>by</i>, and <i>in</i>, the Deity? We call our
-“Father in heaven” that deific essence of which we are cognizant within
-us, in our heart and spiritual consciousness, and which has nothing
-to do with the anthropomorphic conception we may form of it in our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-physical brain or its fancy: “Know ye not that ye are the temple of
-God, and that the great spirit of that the spirit of (the absolute) God
-dwelleth in you?”<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
-Yet, let no man anthropomorphise that essence in us. Let no
-Theosophist, if he would hold to divine, not human truth, say that
-this “God in secret” listens to, or is distinct from, either finite
-man or the infinite essence—for all are one. Nor, as just remarked,
-that a prayer is a petition. It is a mystery rather; an occult
-process by which finite and conditioned thoughts and desires, unable
-to be assimilated by the absolute spirit which is unconditioned, are
-translated into spiritual wills and the will; such process being called
-“spiritual transmutation.” The intensity of our ardent aspirations
-changes prayer into the “philosopher’s stone,” or that which transmutes
-lead into pure gold. The only homogeneous essence, our “will-power”
-becomes the active or creative force, producing effects according to
-our desire.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean to say that prayer is an
-occult process bringing about physical results?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I do. <i>Will-Power</i> becomes a living
-power. But woe unto those Occultists and Theosophists, who, instead
-of crushing out the desires of the lower personal <i>ego</i> or physical
-man, and saying, addressing their <i>Higher</i> Spiritual Ego immersed
-in Atma-Buddhic light, “Thy will be done, not mine,” etc., send up
-waves of will-power for selfish or unholy purposes! For this is black
-magic, abomination, and spiritual sorcery. Unfortunately, all this
-is the favorite occupation of our Christian statesmen and generals,
-especially when the latter are sending two armies to murder each other.
-Both indulge before action in a bit of such sorcery, by offering
-respectively prayers to the same God of Hosts, each entreating his help
-to cut its enemies’ throats.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> David prayed to the Lord of Hosts to
-help him smite the Philistines and slay the Syrians and the Moabites,
-and “the Lord preserved David whithersoever he went.” In that we only
-follow what we find in the Bible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of course you do. But since you
-delight in calling yourselves Christians, not Israelites or Jews, as
-far as we know, why do you not rather follow that which Christ says?
-And he distinctly commands you not to follow “them of old times,” or
-the Mosaic law, but bids you do as he tells you, and warns those who
-would kill by the sword, that they, too, will perish by the sword.
-Christ has given you one prayer of which you have made a lip prayer
-and a boast, and which none but the <i>true</i> Occultist understands. In
-it you say, in your dead-sense meaning: “Forgive us our debts, as we
-forgive our debtors,” which you never do. Again, he told you to <i>love
-your enemies</i> and do <i>good to them that hate you</i>. It is surely not
-the “meek prophet of Nazareth” who taught you to pray to your “Father”
-to slay, and give you victory over your enemies! This is why we reject
-what you call “prayers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how do you explain the universal
-fact that all nations and peoples have prayed to, and worshipped a God
-or Gods? Some have adored and propitiated <i>devils</i> and harmful spirits,
-but this only proves the universality of the belief in the efficacy of
-prayer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is explained by that other fact
-that prayer has several other meanings besides that given it by the
-Christians. It means not only a pleading or <i>petition</i>, but meant, in
-days of old, far more an invocation and incantation. The <i>mantra</i>, or
-the rhythmically chanted prayer of the Hindus, has precisely such a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-meaning, as the Brahmins hold themselves higher than the common <i>devas</i>
-or “Gods.” A prayer may be an appeal or an incantation for malediction,
-and a curse (as in the case of two armies praying simultaneously for
-mutual destruction) as much as for blessing. And as the great majority
-of people are intensely selfish, and pray only for themselves, asking
-to be <i>given</i> their “daily bread” instead of working for it, and
-begging God not to lead them “into temptation” but to deliver them
-(the memoralists only) from evil, the result is, that prayer, as now
-understood, is doubly pernicious: (<i>a</i>) It kills in man self-reliance;
-(<i>b</i>) It develops in him a still more ferocious selfishness and egotism
-than he is already endowed with by nature. I repeat, that we believe
-in “communion” and simultaneous action in unison with our “Father in
-secret”; and in rare moments of ecstatic bliss, in the mingling of our
-higher soul with the universal essence, attracted as it is towards its
-origin and centre, a state, called during life <i>Samadhi</i>, and after
-death, <i>Nirvana</i>. We refuse to pray to <i>created</i> finite beings—<i>i.e.</i>,
-gods, saints, angels, etc., because we regard it as idolatry. We cannot
-pray to the ABSOLUTE for reasons explained before; therefore, we try to
-replace fruitless and useless prayer by meritorious and good-producing actions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Christians would call it pride and
-blasphemy. Are they wrong?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Entirely so. It is they, on the
-contrary, who show Satanic pride in their belief that the Absolute or
-the Infinite, even if there was such a thing as the possibility of any
-relation between the unconditioned and the conditioned—will stoop to
-listen to every foolish or egotistical prayer. And it is they again,
-who virtually blaspheme, in teaching that an Omniscient and Omnipotent
-God needs uttered prayers to know what he has to do! This—understood
-esoterically—is corroborated by both Buddha and Jesus. The one says
-“seek nought from the helpless Gods—pray not! <i>but rather act</i>; for
-darkness will not brighten. Ask nought from silence, for it can neither
-speak nor hear.” And the other—Jesus—recommends: “Whatsoever ye shall
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-ask in my name (that of Christos) that will I do.” Of course,
-this quotation, if taken in its <i>literal</i> sense, goes against our
-argument. But if we accept it esoterically, with the full knowledge
-of the meaning of the term, “Christos,” which to us represents
-<i>Atma-Buddhi-Manas</i>, the “SELF,” it comes to this: the only God we must
-recognise and pray to, or rather act in unison with, is that spirit of
-God of which our body is the temple, and in which it dwelleth.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_5_3" id="SECTION_5_3"></a>PRAYER KILLS SELF RELIANCE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But did not Christ himself pray and
-recommend prayer?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is so recorded, but those
-“prayers” are precisely of that kind of communion just mentioned with
-one’s “Father in secret.” Otherwise, and if we identify Jesus with the
-universal deity, there would be something too absurdly illogical in
-the inevitable conclusion that he, the “very God himself” <i>prayed to
-himself</i>, and separated the will of that God from his own!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> One argument more; an argument,
-moreover, much used by some Christians. They say, “I feel that I am not
-able to conquer any passions and weaknesses in my own strength. But
-when I pray to Jesus Christ I feel that he gives me strength and that
-in his power I am able to conquer.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No wonder. If “Christ Jesus” is
-God, and one independent and separate from him who prays, of course
-everything is, and <i>must</i> be possible to “a mighty God.” But, then,
-where’s the merit, or justice either, of such a conquest? Why should
-the pseudo-conqueror be rewarded for something done which has cost him
-only prayers? Would you, even a simple mortal man, pay your labourer a
-full day’s wage if you did most of his work for him, he sitting under
-an apple tree, and praying to you to do so, all the while? This idea of
-passing one’s whole life in moral idleness, and having one’s hardest
-work and duty done by another—whether God or man—is most revolting to
-us, as it is most degrading to human dignity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Perhaps so, yet it is the idea of
-trusting in a personal Saviour to help and strengthen in the battle of
-life, which is the fundamental idea of modern Christianity. And there
-is no doubt that, subjectively, such belief is efficacious, <i>i.e.</i>,
-that those who believe <i>do</i> feel themselves helped and strengthened.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Nor is there any more doubt, that
-some patients of “Christian” and “Mental Scientists”—the great
-“<i>Deniers</i>”<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
-—are also sometimes cured; nor that hypnotism, and suggestion,
-psychology, and even mediumship, will produce such results, as often,
-if not oftener. You take into consideration, and string on the thread
-of your argument, successes alone. And how about ten times the number
-of failures? Surely you will not presume to say that failure is unknown
-even with a sufficiency of blind faith, among fanatical Christians?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how can you explain those cases
-which are followed by full success? Where does a Theosophist look to
-for power to subdue his passions and selfishness?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To his Higher Self, the divine
-spirit, or the God in him, and to his <i>Karma</i>. How long shall we have
-to repeat over and over again that the tree is known by its fruit, the
-nature of the cause by its effects? You speak of subduing passions,
-and becoming good through and with the help of God or Christ. We ask,
-where do you find more virtuous, guiltless people, abstaining from
-sin and crime, in Christendom or Buddhism—in Christian countries
-or in heathen lands? Statistics are there to give the answer and
-corroborate our claims. According to the last census in Ceylon and
-India, in the comparative table of crimes committed by Christians,
-Mussulmen, Hindoos, Eurasians, Buddhists, etc., etc., on two millions
-of population taken at random from each, and covering the misdemeanours
-of several years, the proportion of crimes committed by the Christian
-stands as 15 to 4 as against those committed by the Buddhist
-population. (Vide <span class="smcap">Lucifer</span> for April, 1888, p. 147, Art.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-Christian Lectures on Buddhism.) No Orientalist, no historian of any
-note, or traveller in Buddhist land, from Bishop Bigandet and Abbé Huc,
-to Sir William Hunter and every fair-minded official, will fail to
-give the palm of virtue to Buddhists before Christians. Yet the former
-(not the true Buddhist Siamese sect, at all events) do not believe in
-either God or a future reward, outside of this earth. They do not pray,
-neither priests nor laymen. “Pray!” they would exclaim in wonder, “to
-whom, or what?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then they are truly Atheists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most undeniably, but they are
-also the most virtue-loving and virtue-keeping men in the whole
-world. Buddhism says: Respect the religions of other men and remain
-true to your own; but Church Christianity, denouncing all the gods of
-other nations as devils, would doom every <i>non</i>-Christian to eternal
-perdition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Does not the Buddhist priesthood do
-the same?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Never. They hold too much to the
-wise precept found in the <span class="smcap">Dhammapada</span> to do
-so, for they know that, “If any man, whether he be learned or not,
-consider himself so great as to despise other men, he is like a blind
-man holding a candle—blind himself, he illumines others.”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_5_4" id="SECTION_5_4"></a>ON THE SOURCE OF THE HUMAN SOUL.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How, then, do you account for man
-being endowed with a Spirit and Soul? Whence these?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> From the Universal Soul. Certainly
-not bestowed by a <i>personal</i> God. Whence the moist element in the
-jelly-fish? From the Ocean which surrounds it, in which it lives and
-breathes and has its being, and whither it returns when dissolved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> So you reject the teaching that Soul
-is given, or breathed into man, by God?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We are obliged to. The “Soul”
-spoken of in ch. ii. of Genesis (v. 7) is, as therein stated, the
-“living Soul” or <i>Nephesh</i> (the <i>vital</i>, animal soul) with which God
-(we say “nature” and <i>immutable law</i>) endows man like every animal, is
-not at all the thinking Soul or mind; least of all is it the <i>immortal Spirit</i>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, let us put it otherwise: is it
-God who endows man with a human <i>rational</i> Soul and immortal Spirit?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Again, in the way you put the
-question, we must object to it. Since we believe in no <i>personal</i> God,
-how can we believe that he endows man with anything? But granting,
-for the sake of argument, a God who takes upon himself the risk of
-creating a new Soul for every new-born baby, all that can be said is
-that such a God can hardly be regarded as himself endowed with any
-wisdom or prevision. Certain other difficulties and the impossibility
-of reconciling this with the claims made for the mercy, justice, equity
-and omniscience of that God, are so many deadly reefs on which this
-theological dogma is daily and hourly broken.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean? What
-difficulties?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I am thinking of an unanswerable
-argument offered once in my presence by a Cingalese Buddhist priest,
-a famous preacher, to a Christian missionary—one in no way ignorant
-or unprepared for the public discussion during which it was advanced.
-It was near Colombo, and the Missionary had challenged the priest
-Megattivati to give his reasons why the Christian God should not be
-accepted by the “heathen.” Well, the Missionary came out of that for
-ever memorable discussion second best, as usual.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I should be glad to learn in what way.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply this: the Buddhist priest
-premised by asking the <i>padri</i> whether his God had given commandments
-to Moses only for men to keep, but to be broken by God himself. The
-missionary denied the supposition indignantly. Well, said his opponent,
-“you tell us that God makes no exceptions to this rule, and that no
-Soul can be born without his will. Now God forbids adultery, among
-other things, and yet you say in the same breath that it is he who
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-creates every baby born, and he who endows it with a Soul. Are we then
-to understand that the millions of children born in crime and adultery
-are your God’s work? That your God forbids and punishes the breaking of
-his laws; and that, nevertheless, <i>he creates daily and hourly souls
-for just such children</i>? According to the simplest logic, your God is
-an accomplice in the crime; since, but for his help and interference,
-no such children of lust could be born. Where is the justice of
-punishing not only the guilty parents but even the innocent babe for
-that which is done by that very God, whom yet you exonerate from any
-guilt himself?” The missionary looked at his watch and suddenly found
-it was getting too late for further discussion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You forget that all such
-inexplicable cases are mysteries, and that we are forbidden by our
-religion to pry into the mysteries of God.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No, we do not forget, but simply
-reject such impossibilities. Nor do we want you to believe as we do. We
-only answer the questions you ask. We have, however, another name for
-your “mysteries.”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_5_5" id="SECTION_5_5"></a>THE BUDDHIST TEACHINGS ON THE ABOVE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What does Buddhism teach with regard
-to the Soul?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It depends whether you mean
-exoteric, popular Buddhism, or its esoteric teachings. The former
-explains itself in the <i>Buddhist Catechism</i> in this wise: “Soul it
-considers a word used by the ignorant to express a false idea. If
-everything is subject to change, then man is included, and every
-material part of him must change. That which is subject to change is
-not permanent, so there can be no immortal survival of a changeful
-thing.” This seems plain and definite. But when we come to the question
-that the new personality in each succeeding re-birth is the aggregate
-of “<i>Skandhas</i>,” or the attributes, of the <i>old</i> personality, and ask
-whether this new aggregation of <i>Skandhas</i> is a <i>new</i> being likewise,
-in which nothing has remained of the last, we read that: “In one sense
-it is a new being, in another it is not. During this life the Skandhas
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-are continually changing, while the man A. B. of forty is identical
-as regards personality with the youth A. B. of eighteen, yet by the
-continual waste and reparation of his body and change of mind and
-character, he is a different being. Nevertheless, the man in his old
-age justly reaps the reward or suffering consequent upon his thoughts
-and actions at every previous stage of his life. So the new being of
-the re-birth, being the <i>same individuality as before</i> (but not the
-same personality), with but a changed form, or new aggregation of
-<i>Skandhas</i>, justly reaps the consequences of his actions and thoughts
-in the previous existence.” This is abstruse metaphysics, and plainly
-does not express <i>disbelief</i> in Soul by any means.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is not something like this spoken
-of in <i>Esoteric Buddhism</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is, for this teaching belongs
-both to Esoteric <i>Budhism</i> or Secret Wisdom, and to the exoteric
-Buddhism, or the religious philosophy of Gautama Buddha.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But we are distinctly told that most
-of the Buddhists do not believe in the Soul’s immortality?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No more do we, if you mean by
-Soul the <i>personal Ego</i>, or life-Soul—<i>Nephesh</i>. But every learned
-Buddhist believes in the individual or <i>divine Ego</i>. Those who do not,
-err in their judgment. They are as mistaken on this point, as those
-Christians who mistake the theological interpolations of the later
-editors of the Gospels about damnation and hell-fire, for <i>verbatim</i>
-utterances of Jesus. Neither Buddha nor “Christ” ever wrote anything
-themselves, but both spoke in allegories and used “dark sayings,” as
-all true Initiates did, and will do for a long time yet to come. Both
-Scriptures treat of all such metaphysical questions very cautiously,
-and both, Buddhist and Christian records, sin by that excess of
-exotericism; the dead letter meaning far overshooting the mark in both cases.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean to suggest that
-neither the teachings of Buddha nor those of Christ have been
-heretofore rightly understood?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What I mean is just as you say.
-Both Gospels, the Buddhist and the Christian, were preached with the
-same object in view. Both reformers were ardent philanthropists and
-practical <i>altruists—preaching most unmistakably Socialism</i> of the
-noblest and highest type, self-sacrifice to the bitter end. “Let the
-sins of the whole world fall upon me that I may relieve man’s misery
-and suffering!” cries Buddha; ... “I would not let one cry whom I
-could save!” exclaims the Prince-beggar, clad in the refuse rags of
-the burial-grounds. “Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy
-laden and I will give you rest,” is the appeal to the poor and the
-disinherited made by the “Man of Sorrows,” who hath not where to lay
-his head. The teachings of both are boundless love for humanity,
-charity, forgiveness of injury, forgetfulness of self, and pity for
-the deluded masses; both show the same contempt for riches, and make
-no difference between <i>meum</i> and <i>tuum</i>. Their desire was, without
-revealing to <i>all</i> the sacred mysteries of initiation, to give the
-ignorant and the misled, whose burden in life was too heavy for them,
-hope enough and an inkling into the truth sufficient to support them in
-their heaviest hours. But the object of both Reformers was frustrated,
-owing to excess of zeal of their later followers. The words of the
-Masters having been misunderstood and misinterpreted, behold the
-consequences!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely Buddha must have
-repudiated the soul’s immortality, if all the Orientalists and his own
-Priests say so!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Arhats began by following the
-policy of their Master and the majority of the subsequent priests were
-not initiated, just as in Christianity; and so, little by little, the
-great esoteric truths became almost lost. A proof in point is, that,
-out of the two existing sects in Ceylon, the Siamese believes death to
-be the absolute annihilation of individuality and personality, and the
-other explains Nirvana, as we theosophists do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why, in that case, do Buddhism
-and Christianity represent the two opposite poles of such belief?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because the conditions under which
-they were preached were not the same. In India the Brahmins, jealous of
-their superior knowledge, and excluding from it every caste save their
-own, had driven millions of men into idolatry and almost fetishism.
-Buddha had to give the death-blow to an exuberance of unhealthy fancy
-and fanatical superstition resulting from ignorance, such as has rarely
-been known before or after. Better a philosophical atheism than such
-ignorant worship for those—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Who cry upon their gods and are not heard,</span>
-<span class="i0">Or are not heeded—”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> and who live and die in mental despair. He had
-to arrest first of all this muddy torrent of superstition, to uproot
-<i>errors</i> before he gave out the truth. And as he could not give out
-<i>all</i>, for the same good reason as Jesus, who reminds <i>his</i> disciples
-that the Mysteries of Heaven are not for the unintelligent masses,
-but for the elect alone, and therefore “spake he to them in parables”
-(Matt. xiii. 11)—so his caution led Buddha <i>to conceal too much</i>. He
-even refused to say to the monk Vacchagotta whether there was, or was
-not an Ego in man. When pressed to answer, “the Exalted one maintained
-silence.”<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This refers to Gautama, but in what
-way does it touch the Gospels?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Read history and think over it.
-At the time the events narrated in the Gospels are alleged to have
-happened, there was a similar intellectual fermentation taking place
-in the whole civilized world, only with opposite results in the East
-and the West. The old gods were dying out. While the civilized classes
-drifted in the train of the unbelieving Sadducees into materialistic
-negations and mere dead-letter Mosaic form in Palestine, and into moral
-dissolution in Rome, the lowest and poorer classes ran after sorcery
-and strange gods, or became hypocrites and pharisees. Once more the
-time for a spiritual reform had arrived. The cruel, anthropomorphic and
-jealous God of the Jews, with his sanguinary laws of “an eye for eye
-and tooth for tooth,” of the shedding of blood and animal sacrifice,
-had to be relegated to a secondary place and replaced by the merciful
-“Father in Secret.” The latter had to be shown, not as an extra-Cosmic
-God, but as a divine Saviour of the man of flesh, enshrined in his
-own heart and soul, in the poor as in the rich. No more here than in
-India, could the secrets of initiation be divulged, lest by giving that
-which is holy to the dogs, and casting pearls before swine, both the
-<i>Revealer</i> and the things revealed should be trodden under foot. Thus,
-the reticence of both Buddha and Jesus—whether the latter lived out
-the historic period allotted to him or not, and who equally abstained
-from revealing plainly the Mysteries of Life and Death—led in the one
-case to the blank negations of Southern Buddhism, and in the other, to
-the three clashing forms of the Christian Church and the 300 sects in
-Protestant England alone.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_6_1" id="SECTION_6_1"></a>
-<h2>VI. <br />THEOSOPHICAL TEACHINGS AS TO NATURE AND MAN.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>THE UNITY OF ALL IN ALL.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Having told me what God, the Soul
-and Man are <i>not</i>, in your views, can you inform me what they <i>are</i>,
-according to your teachings?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In their origin and in eternity the
-three, like the universe and all therein, are one with the absolute
-Unity, the unknowable deific essence I spoke about sometime back.
-We believe in no <i>creation</i>, but in the periodical and consecutive
-appearances of the universe from the subjective on to the objective
-plane of being, at regular intervals of time, covering periods of
-immense duration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you elaborate the subject?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Take as a first comparison and
-a help towards a more correct conception, the solar year, and as a
-second, the two halves of that year, producing each a day and a night
-of six months’ duration at the North Pole. Now imagine, if you can,
-instead of a Solar year of 365 days, ETERNITY. Let the sun represent
-the universe, and the polar days and nights of 6 months each—<i>days and
-nights lasting each 182 trillions and quadrillions of years</i>, instead
-of 182 days each. As the sun arises every morning on our <i>objective</i>
-horizon out of its (to us) <i>subjective</i> and antipodal space, so does
-the Universe emerge periodically on the plane of objectivity, issuing
-from that of subjectivity—the antipodes of the former. This is the
-“Cycle of Life.” And as the sun disappears from our horizon, so
-does the Universe disappear at regular periods, when the “Universal
-night” sets in. The Hindoos call such alternations the “Days and
-Nights of Brahma,” or the time of <i>Manvantara</i> and that of <i>Pralaya</i>
-(dissolution). The Westerns may call them Universal Days and Nights if
-they prefer. During the latter (the nights) <i>All is in All</i>; every atom
-is resolved into one Homogeneity.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_6_2" id="SECTION_6_2"></a>EVOLUTION AND ILLUSION.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But who is it that creates each time
-the Universe?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No one creates it. Science would
-call the process evolution; the pre-Christian philosophers and the
-Orientalists called it emanation: we, Occultists and Theosophists, see
-in it the only universal and eternal <i>reality</i> casting a periodical
-reflection of <i>itself</i> on the infinite Spatial depths. This reflection,
-which you regard as the objective <i>material</i> universe, we consider as a
-temporary <i>illusion</i> and nothing else. That alone which is eternal is
-<i>real</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> At that rate, you and I are also
-illusions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As flitting personalities, to-day
-one person, to-morrow another—we are. Would you call the sudden flashes
-of the <i>Aurora borealis</i>, the Northern lights, a “reality,” though it
-is as real as can be while you look at it? Certainly not; it is the
-cause that produces it, if permanent and eternal, which is the only
-reality, while the other is but a passing illusion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> All this does not explain to me how
-this illusion called the universe originates; how the conscious <i>to
-be</i>, proceeds to manifest itself from the unconsciousness that <i>is</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is <i>unconsciousness</i> only to
-our finite consciousness. Verily may we paraphrase verse v, in the
-1st chapter of St. John, and say “and (Absolute) light (which is
-darkness) shineth in darkness (which is illusionary material light);
-and the darkness comprehendeth it not.” This absolute light is also
-absolute and immutable law. Whether by radiation or emanation—we need
-not quarrel over terms—the universe passes out of its homogeneous
-subjectivity on to the first plane of manifestation, of which planes
-there are seven, we are taught. With each plane it becomes more dense
-and material until it reaches this, our plane, on which the only world
-approximately known and understood in its physical composition by
-Science, is the planetary or Solar system—one <i>sui generis</i>, we are told.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean by <i>sui generis</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I mean that, though the fundamental
-law and the universal working of laws of Nature are uniform, still our
-Solar system (like every other such system in the millions of others
-in Cosmos) and even our Earth, has its own programme of manifestations
-differing from the respective programmes of all others. We speak of
-the inhabitants of other planets and imagine that if they are <i>men</i>,
-<i>i.e.</i>, thinking entities, they must be as we are. The fancy of poets
-and painters and sculptors never fails to represent even the angels as
-a beautiful copy of man—<i>plus</i> wings. We say that all this is an error
-and a delusion; because, if on this little earth alone one finds such
-a diversity in its flora, fauna and mankind—from the seaweed to the
-cedar of Lebanon, from the jelly-fish to the elephant, from the Bushman
-and negro to the Apollo Belvedere—alter the conditions cosmic and
-planetary, and there must be as a result quite a different flora, fauna
-and mankind. The same laws will fashion quite a different set of things
-and beings even on this our plane, including in it all our planets.
-How much more different then must be <i>external</i> nature in other Solar
-systems, and how foolish is it to judge of other <i>stars</i> and worlds and
-human beings by our own, as physical science does!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what are your data for this
-assertion?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What science in general will never
-accept as proof—the cumulative testimony of an endless series of
-Seers who have testified to this fact. Their spiritual visions, real
-explorations by, and through, physical and spiritual senses untrammeled
-by blind flesh, were systematically checked and compared one with
-the other, and their nature sifted. All that was not corroborated by
-unanimous and collective experience was rejected, while that only was
-recorded as established truth which, in various ages, under different
-climes, and throughout an untold series of incessant observations,
-was found to agree and receive constantly further corroboration. The
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-methods used by our scholars and students of the psycho-spiritual
-sciences do not differ from those of students of the natural and
-physical sciences, as you may see. Only our fields of research are
-on two different planes, and our instruments are made by no human
-hands, for which reason perchance they are only the more reliable. The
-retorts, accumulators, and microscopes of the chemist and naturalist
-may get out of order; the telescope and the astronomer’s horological
-instruments may get spoiled; our recording instruments are beyond the
-influence of weather or the elements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And therefore you have implicit
-faith in them?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Faith is a word not to be found
-in theosophical dictionaries: we say <i>knowledge based on observation
-and experience</i>. There is this difference, however, that while the
-observation and experience of physical science lead the Scientists to
-about as many “working” hypotheses as there are minds to evolve them,
-our <i>knowledge</i> consents to add to its lore only those facts which have
-become undeniable, and which are fully and absolutely demonstrated. We
-have no two beliefs or hypotheses on the same subject.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is it on such data that you came to
-accept the strange theories we find in <i>Esoteric Buddhism</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so. These theories may be
-slightly incorrect in their minor details, and even faulty in their
-exposition by lay students; they are <i>facts</i> in nature, nevertheless,
-and come nearer the truth than any scientific hypothesis.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_6_3" id="SECTION_6_3"></a>ON THE SEPTENARY CONSTITUTION OF OUR PLANET.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I understand that you describe our
-earth as forming part of a chain of earths?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We do. But the other six “earths”
-or globes, are not on the same plane of objectivity as our earth is;
-therefore we cannot see them.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is that on account of the great
-distance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all, for we see with our
-naked eye planets and even stars at immeasurably greater distances;
-but it is owing to those six globes being outside our physical means
-of perception, or plane of being. It is not only that their material
-density, weight, or fabric are entirely different from those of our
-earth and the other known planets; but they are (to us) on an entirely
-different <i>layer</i> of space, so to speak; a layer not to be perceived
-or felt by our physical senses. And when I say “layer,” please do
-not allow your fancy to suggest to you layers like strata or beds
-laid one over the other, for this would only lead to another absurd
-misconception. What I mean by “layer” is that plane of infinite
-space which by its nature cannot fall under our ordinary waking
-perceptions, whether mental or physical; but which exists in nature
-outside of our normal mentality or consciousness, outside of our three
-dimensional space, and outside of our division of time. Each of the
-seven fundamental planes (or layers) in space—of course as a whole,
-as the pure space of Locke’s definition, not as our finite space—has
-its own objectivity and subjectivity, its own space and time, its
-own consciousness and set of senses. But all this will be hardly
-comprehensible to one trained in the modern ways of thought.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean by a different set
-of senses? Is there anything on our human plane that you could bring
-as an illustration of what you say, just to give a clearer idea of
-what you may mean by this variety of senses, spaces, and respective
-perceptions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> None; except, perhaps, that
-which for Science would be rather a handy peg on which to hang a
-counter-argument. We have a different set of senses in dream-life,
-have we not? We feel, talk, hear, see, taste and function in general
-on a different plane; the change of state of our consciousness being
-evidenced by the fact that a series of acts and events embracing years,
-as we think, pass ideally through our mind in one instant. Well, that
-extreme rapidity of our mental operations in dreams, and the perfect
-naturalness, for the time being, of all the other functions, show us
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-that we are on quite another plane. Our philosophy teaches us that,
-as there are seven fundamental forces in nature, and seven planes of
-being, so there are seven states of consciousness in which man can
-live, think, remember and have his being. To enumerate these here
-is impossible, and for this one has to turn to the study of Eastern
-metaphysics. But in these two states—the waking and the dreaming—every
-ordinary mortal, from a learned philosopher down to a poor untutored
-savage, has a good proof that such states differ.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You do not accept, then, the
-well-known explanations of biology and physiology to account for the
-dream state?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We do not. We reject even the
-hypotheses of your psychologists, preferring the teachings of Eastern
-Wisdom. Believing in seven planes of Kosmic being and states of
-Consciousness, with regard to the Universe or the Macrocosm, we stop
-at the fourth plane, finding it impossible to go with any degree
-of certainty beyond. But with respect to the Microcosm, or man, we
-speculate freely on his seven states and principles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How do you explain these?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We find, first of all, two distinct
-beings in man; the spiritual and the physical, the man who thinks,
-and the man who records as much of these thoughts as he is able to
-assimilate. Therefore we divide him into two distinct natures; the
-upper or the spiritual being, composed of three “principles” or
-<i>aspects</i>; and the lower or the physical quaternary, composed of
-<i>four</i>—in all <i>seven</i>.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_6_4" id="SECTION_6_4"></a>THE SEPTENARY NATURE OF MAN.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is it what we call Spirit and Soul,
-and the man of flesh?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is not. That is the old Platonic
-division. Plato was an Initiate, and therefore could not go into
-forbidden details; but he who is acquainted with the archaic doctrine
-finds the seven in Plato’s various combinations of Soul and Spirit. He
-regarded man as constituted of two parts—one eternal, formed of the
-same essence as the Absoluteness, the other mortal and corruptible,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-deriving its constituent parts from the <i>minor</i> “created” Gods.
-Man is composed, he shows, of (1) A mortal body, (2) An immortal
-principle, and (3) A “separate mortal kind of Soul.” It is that which
-we respectively call the physical man, the Spiritual Soul or Spirit,
-and the animal Soul (the <i>Nous</i> and <i>psuche</i>). This is the division
-adopted by Paul, another Initiate, who maintains that there is a
-psychical body which is sown in the corruptible (astral soul or body),
-and a <i>spiritual</i> body that is raised in incorruptible substance. Even
-James (iii. 15) corroborates the same by saying that the “wisdom” (of
-our lower soul) descendeth not from the above, but is terrestrial
-(“psychical,” “demoniacal,” <i>vide</i> Greek text); while the other is
-heavenly wisdom. Now so plain is it that Plato and even Pythagoras,
-while speaking but of three “principles,” give them seven separate
-functions, in their various combinations, that if we contrast our
-teachings this will become quite plain. Let us take a cursory view of
-these seven aspects by drawing two tables.</p>
-
-<p class="f120 space-above1">THEOSOPHICAL DIVISION.</p>
-
-<table class="space-below2 bb bt" border="0" cellspacing="1" summary="_" cellpadding="1" rules="cols">
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;&emsp;<span class="smcap">Sanscrit Terms.</span>&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;&emsp;<span class="smcap">Exoteric Meaning.</span>&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb"><span class="smcap">Explanatory.</span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>a</i>) Rupa, or </td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>a</i>) Physical body.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>a</i>) Is the vehicle of</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Sthula-Sarira.</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">all the other</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">“principles” during</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2 bb">life.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>b</i>) Pranâ.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>b</i>) Life, or</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>b</i>) Necessary only</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Vital principle.</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">to&nbsp; <i>a</i>, <i>c</i>, <i>d</i>, and</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the functions of the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">lower <i>Manas</i>, which</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><b>A</b></td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">embrace all those</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">limited to the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2 bb">(<i>physical</i>) brain.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>c</i>) Linga Sharira.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>c</i>) Astral Body.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>c</i>) The <i>Double</i>, the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2 bb">phantom body.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>d</i>) Kama rupa.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>d</i>) The seat of</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>d</i>) This is the centre</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">animal desires</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of the animal man,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and passions.</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">where lies the line</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of demarcation which</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">separates the mortal</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">man from the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">immortal entity.</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-<div class="transnote bbox">
-<p class="indent">Transcriber's Note:</p>
-<p class="indent"> The letter <b>A</b> in the left hand column stands for
-“<span class="smcap">Lower Quaternary.</span>” which was written vertically
-in the original table.</p>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-<table class="space-below2 bb bt" border="0" cellspacing="1" summary="_" cellpadding="1" rules="cols">
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;&emsp;<span class="smcap">Sanscrit Terms.</span>&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;&emsp;<span class="smcap">Exoteric Meaning.</span>&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc bb"><span class="smcap">Explanatory.</span></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>e</i>) <i>Manas</i>—a dual</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>e</i>) Mind, Intelligence:</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>e</i>) The future state</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">principle in its</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">which is the higher</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and the Karmic</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">functions.</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">human mind, whose</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">destiny of man</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">light, or radiation,</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">depend on whether</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">links the <span class="smcap">Monad</span>, for</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Manas gravitates</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the lifetime, to the</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">more downward to</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">mortal man.</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Kama rupa, the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">seat of the animal</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">passions, or</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">upwards to <i>Buddhi</i>,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Spiritual <i>Ego</i>. In</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the latter case,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the higher</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;<b>A</b>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">consciousness of</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the individual</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Spiritual</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">aspirations of</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2"><i>mind</i> (Manas),</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">assimilating</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Buddhi, are</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">absorbed by it</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and form the <i>Ego</i>,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">which goes into</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2 bb">Devachanic bliss.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>f</i>) Buddhi.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>f</i>) The Spiritual Soul.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>f</i>) The vehicle of pure</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2 bb">universal spirit.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>g</i>) Atma.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>g</i>) Spirit.</td>
- <td class="tdl">(<i>g</i>) One with the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Absolute, as its</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">radiation.</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<div class="transnote bbox">
-<p class="indent">Transcriber's Note:</p>
-<p class="indent"> The letter <b>A</b> in the left hand column stands for
-“<span class="smcap">The Upper Imperishable Triad.</span>” which was written vertically
-in the original table.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="no-indent">Now what does Plato teach? He speaks of the <i>interior</i>
-man as constituted of two parts—one immutable and always the same, formed of
-the same <i>substance</i> as Deity, and the other mortal and corruptible.
-These “two parts” are found in our upper <i>Triad</i>, and the lower
-<i>Quaternary</i> (<i>vide</i> Table). He explains that when the Soul, <i>psuche</i>,
-“allies herself to the Nous (divine spirit or substance<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>),
-she does everything aright and felicitously”; but the case is otherwise
-when she attaches herself to <i>Anoia</i>, (folly, or the irrational animal
-Soul). Here, then, we have <i>Manas</i> (or the Soul in general) in its
-two aspects: when attaching itself to <i>Anoia</i> (our <i>Kama rupa</i>, or
-the “Animal Soul” in “Esoteric Buddhism,”) it runs towards entire
-annihilation, as far as the personal Ego is concerned; when allying
-itself to the <i>Nous</i> (Atma-Buddhi) it merges into the immortal,
-imperishable Ego, and then its spiritual consciousness of the personal
-that <i>was</i>, becomes immortal.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_6_5" id="SECTION_6_5"></a>THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN SOUL AND SPIRIT.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you really teach, as you are
-accused of doing by some Spiritualists and French Spiritists, the
-annihilation of every personality?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We do not. But as this question
-of the duality—the <i>individuality</i> of the Divine Ego, and the
-<i>personality</i> of the human animal—involves that of the possibility of
-the real immortal Ego appearing in <i>Séance rooms</i> as a “materialised
-spirit,” which we deny as already explained, our opponents have started
-the nonsensical charge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You have just spoken of <i>psuche</i>
-running towards its entire annihilation if it attaches itself to
-<i>Anoia</i>. What did Plato, and do you mean by this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo</span>. The <i>entire</i> annihilation of the
-<i>personal</i> consciousness, as an exceptional and rare case, I think. The
-general and almost invariable rule is the merging of the personal into
-the individual or immortal consciousness of the Ego, a transformation
-or a divine transfiguration, and the entire annihilation only of
-the lower <i>quaternary</i>. Would you expect the man of flesh, or the
-<i>temporary personality</i>, his shadow, the “astral,” his animal instincts
-and even physical life, to survive with the “spiritual Ego” and become
-sempiternal? Naturally all this ceases to exist, either at, or soon
-after corporeal death. It becomes in time entirely disintegrated and
-disappears from view, being annihilated as a whole.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you also reject <i>resurrection
-in the flesh</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most decidedly we do! Why should
-we, who believe in the archaic esoteric philosophy of the Ancients,
-accept the unphilosophical speculations of the later Christian
-theology, borrowed from the Egyptian and Greek exoteric Systems of the
-Gnostics?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The Egyptians revered
-Nature-Spirits, and deified even onions: your Hindus are <i>idolaters</i>,
-to this day; the Zoroastrians worshipped, and do still worship,
-the Sun; and the best Greek philosophers were either dreamers or
-materialists—witness Plato and Democritus. How can you compare?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It may be so in your modern
-Christian and even Scientific catechism; it is not so for unbiased
-minds. The Egyptians revered the “One-Only-One,” as <i>Nout</i>; and it
-is from this word that Anaxagoras got his denomination <i>Nous</i>, or as
-he calls it, <b>Νους αυτοχρατης</b>, “the Mind or Spirit Self-Potent,” the
-<b>αρχητης χινηδεως</b>, the leading motor, or <i>primum-mobile</i> of all. With
-him the <i>Nous</i> was God, and the <i>logos</i> was man, his emanation. The
-<i>Nous</i> is the spirit (whether in Kosmos or in man), and the <i>logos</i>,
-whether Universe or astral body, the emanation of the former, the
-physical body being merely the animal. Our external powers perceive
-<i>phenomena</i>; our <i>Nous</i> alone is able to recognise their <i>noumena</i>.
-It is the logos alone, or the <i>noumenon</i>, that survives, because it
-is immortal in its very nature and essence, and the <i>logos</i> in man is
-the Eternal Ego, that which reincarnates and lasts for ever. But how
-can the evanescent or external shadow, the temporary clothing of that
-divine Emanation which returns to the source whence it proceeded, be
-that <i>which is raised in incorruptibility</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Still you can hardly escape the
-charge of having invented a new division of man’s spiritual and psychic constituents;
-for no philosopher speaks of them, though you believe that Plato does.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And I support the view. Besides
-Plato, there is Pythagoras, who also followed the same idea.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>
-He described the <i>Soul</i> as a self-moving Unit (<i>monad</i>) composed of
-three elements, the <i>Nous</i> (Spirit), the <i>phren</i> (mind), and the
-<i>thumos</i> (life, breath or the <i>Nephesh</i> of the Kabalists) which three
-correspond to our “Atma-Buddhi,” (higher Spirit-Soul), to <i>Manas</i> (The
-<span class="smcap">Ego</span>), and to <i>Kama-rupa</i> in conjunction
-with the <i>lower</i> reflection of Manas. That which the Ancient Greek
-philosophers termed <i>Soul</i>, in general, we call Spirit, or Spiritual
-<i>Soul</i>, <i>Buddhi</i>, as the vehicle of <i>Atma</i> (the <i>Agathon</i>, or Plato’s
-Supreme Deity). The fact that Pythagoras and others state that <i>phren</i>
-and <i>thumos</i> are shared by us with the brutes, proves that in this
-case the <i>lower</i> Manasic reflection (instinct) and <i>Kama-rupa</i> (animal
-living passions) are meant. And as Socrates and Plato accepted the
-clue and followed it, if to these five, namely, <i>Agathon</i> (Deity or
-Atma), <i>Psuche</i> (Soul in its collective sense), <i>Nous</i> (Spirit or
-Mind), <i>Phren</i> (physical mind), and <i>Thumos</i> (Kama-rupa or passions)
-we add the <i>eidolon</i> of the Mysteries, the shadowy <i>form</i> or the human
-double, and the <i>physical body</i>, it will be easy to demonstrate that
-the ideas of both Pythagoras and Plato were identical with ours. Even
-the Egyptians held to the Septenary division. In its exit, they taught,
-the Soul (<span class="smcap">Ego</span>) had to pass through its seven
-chambers, or principles, those it left behind, and those it took along
-with itself. The only difference is that, ever bearing in mind the
-penalty of revealing Mystery-doctrines, which was <i>death</i>, they gave
-out the teaching in a broad outline, while we elaborate it and explain
-it in its details. But though we do give out to the world as much as
-is lawful, even in our doctrine more than one important detail is
-withheld, which those who study the esoteric philosophy and are pledged
-to silence, <i>are alone entitled to know</i>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_6_6" id="SECTION_6_6"></a>THE GREEK TEACHINGS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> We have magnificent Greek and Latin,
-Sanskrit and Hebrew scholars. How is it that we find nothing in their
-translations that would afford us a clue to what you say?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because your translators, their
-great learning notwithstanding, have made of the philosophers, the
-Greeks especially, <i>misty</i> instead of mystic writers. Take as an
-instance Plutarch, and read what he says of “the principles” of
-man. That which he describes was accepted literally and attributed
-to metaphysical superstition and ignorance. Let me give you an
-illustration in point: “Man,” says Plutarch, “is compound; and they
-are <i>mistaken who think him to be compounded of two parts only</i>. For
-they imagine that the understanding (brain intellect) is a part of
-the soul (the upper Triad), but they err in this no less than those
-who make the soul to be a part of the body, <i>i.e.</i>, those who make
-of the <i>Triad</i> part of the corruptible mortal <i>quaternary</i>. For the
-understanding (nous) as far exceeds the soul, as the soul is better and
-diviner than the body. Now this composition of the soul (<b>ψυχη</b>)
-with the understanding (<b>νοῦς</b>) makes reason; and with the body
-(or thumos, the animal soul) passion; of which the one is the beginning
-or principle of pleasure and pain, and the other of virtue and vice.
-Of these three parts conjoined and compacted together, the earth has
-given the body, the moon the soul, and the sun the understanding to the
-generation of man.”</p>
-
-<p>This last sentence is purely allegorical, and will be comprehended
-only by those who are versed in the esoteric science of correspondences
-and know which planet is <i>related to every principle</i>. Plutarch
-divides the latter into three groups, and makes of the body a compound
-of physical frame, astral shadow, and breath, or the triple lower
-part, which “from earth was taken and to earth returns”; of the middle
-principle and the instinctual soul, the second part, derived <i>from</i> and
-<i>through</i> and ever influenced by the moon<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>;
-and only of the higher part or the <i>Spiritual Soul</i>, with the Atmic and
-Manasic elements in it does he make a direct emanation of the Sun, who
-stands here for <i>Agathon</i> the Supreme Deity. This is proven by what he
-says further as follows:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Now of the deaths we die, the one makes man two
-of three and the other one of (out of) two. The former is in the region
-and jurisdiction of Demeter, whence the name given to the Mysteries,
-<b>τελειν</b>, resembled that given to death, <b>τελευταν</b>. The
-Athenians also heretofore called the deceased sacred to Demeter. As for
-the other death, it is in the moon or region of Persephone.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">Here you have our doctrine, which shows man a
-<i>septenary</i> during life; a <i>quintile</i> just after death, in Kama-loka;
-and a threefold <i>Ego</i>, Spirit-Soul, and consciousness in <i>Devachan</i>.
-This separation, first in “the Meadows of Hades,” as Plutarch calls the
-<i>Kama-loka</i>, then in Devachan, was part and parcel of the performances
-during the sacred Mysteries, when the candidates for initiation enacted
-the whole drama of death, and the resurrection as a glorified spirit,
-by which name we mean <i>Consciousness</i>. This is what Plutarch means when
-he says:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“And as with the one, the terrestrial, so with
-the other celestial Hermes doth dwell. This suddenly and with violence
-plucks the soul from the body; but Proserpina mildly and in a long time
-disjoins the understanding from the soul.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
-For this reason she is called <i>Monogenes, only begotten</i>, or rather
-<i>begetting one alone</i>; for <i>the better part of man becomes alone when
-it is separated by her</i>. Now both the one and the other happens thus
-according to nature. It is ordained by Fate (Fatum or Karma) that every
-soul, whether with or without understanding (mind), when gone out of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-body, should wander for a time, though not all for the same, in the
-region lying between the earth and moon (<i>Kama-loka</i>).<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>
-For those that have been unjust and dissolute suffer then the
-punishment due to their offences; but the good and virtuous are there
-detained till they are purified, and have, by expiation, purged out of
-them all the infections they might have contracted from the contagion
-of the body, as if from foul health, living in the mildest part of the
-air, called the Meadows of Hades, where they must remain for a certain
-prefixed and appointed time. And then, as if they were returning from
-a wandering pilgrimage or long exile into their country, they have a
-taste of joy, such as they principally receive who are initiated into
-Sacred Mysteries, mixed with trouble, admiration, and each one’s proper
-and peculiar hope.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> This is Nirvanic bliss, and no Theosophist
-could describe in plainer though esoteric language the mental joys
-of Devachan, where every man has his paradise around him, erected
-by his consciousness. But you must beware of the general error into
-which too many even of our Theosophists fall. Do not imagine that
-because man is called septenary, then <i>quintuple</i> and a triad, he is
-a compound of seven, five, or three <i>entities</i>; or, as well expressed
-by a Theosophical writer, of skins to be peeled off like the skins of
-an onion. The “principles,” as already said, save the body, the life,
-and the astral <i>eidolon</i>, all of which disperse at death, are simply
-<i>aspects</i> and <i>states of consciousness</i>. There is but one <i>real</i> man,
-enduring through the cycle of life and immortal in essence, if not in
-form, and this is <i>Manas</i>, the Mind-man or embodied Consciousness. The
-objection made by the materialists, who deny the possibility of mind
-and consciousness acting without matter is worthless in our case. We
-do not deny the soundness of their argument; but we simply ask our
-opponents, “Are you acquainted <i>with all the states of matter</i>, you
-who knew hitherto but of three? And how do you know whether that which
-we refer to as ABSOLUTE CONSCIOUSNESS or Deity for ever invisible and
-unknowable, be not that which, though it eludes for ever our human
-<i>finite</i> conception, is still universal Spirit-matter or matter-Spirit
-<i>in its absolute infinitude</i>?” It is then one of the lowest, and in its
-manvantaric manifestations <i>fractioned</i>-aspects of this Spirit-matter,
-which is the conscious <i>Ego</i> that creates its own paradise, a fool’s
-paradise, it may be, still a state of bliss.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what is <i>Devachan</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The “land of gods” literally; a
-condition, a state of mental bliss. Philosophically a mental condition
-analogous to, but far more vivid and real than, the most vivid dream.
-It is the state after death of most mortals.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_7_1" id="SECTION_7_1"></a>
-<h2>VII. <br />ON THE VARIOUS POST MORTEM STATES.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>THE PHYSICAL AND THE SPIRITUAL MAN.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I am glad to hear you believe in the
-immortality of the Soul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not of “the Soul,” but of the
-divine Spirit; or rather in the immortality of the reincarnating
-Ego.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is the difference?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> A very great one in our
-philosophy, but this is too abstruse and difficult a question to touch
-lightly upon. We shall have to analyse them separately, and then in
-conjunction. We may begin with Spirit.</p>
-
-<p>We say that the Spirit (the “Father in secret” of Jesus), or
-<i>Atman</i>, is no individual property of any man, but is the Divine
-essence which has no body, no form, which is imponderable, invisible
-and indivisible, that which does not <i>exist</i> and yet <i>is</i>, as the
-Buddhists say of Nirvana. It only overshadows the mortal; that which
-enters into him and pervades the whole body being only its omnipresent
-rays, or light, radiated through <i>Buddhi</i>, its vehicle and direct
-emanation. This is the secret meaning of the assertions of almost all
-the ancient philosophers, when they said that “the <i>rational</i> part of
-man’s soul”<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a>
-never entered wholly into the man, but only overshadowed him more or
-less through the <i>irrational</i> spiritual Soul or Buddhi.<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I laboured under the impression
-that the “Animal Soul” alone was irrational, not the Divine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You have to learn the difference
-between that which is negatively, or <i>passively</i> “irrational,” because
-undifferentiated, and that which is irrational because too <i>active</i>
-and positive. Man is a correlation of spiritual powers, as well as a
-correlation of chemical and physical forces, brought into function by
-what we call “principles.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have read a good deal upon the
-subject, and it seems to me that the notions of the older philosophers
-differed a great deal from those of the mediæval Kabalists, though they
-do agree in some particulars.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The most substantial difference
-between them and us is this. While we believe with the Neo-Platonists
-and the Eastern teachings that the spirit (Atma) never descends
-hypostatically into the living man, but only showers more or less its
-radiance on the <i>inner</i> man (the psychic and spiritual compound of the
-<i>astral</i> principles), the Kabalists maintain that the human Spirit,
-detaching itself from the ocean of light and Universal Spirit, enters
-man’s Soul, where it remains throughout life imprisoned in the astral
-capsule. All Christian Kabalists still maintain the same, as they are
-unable to break quite loose from their anthropomorphic and Biblical
-doctrines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what do you say?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We say that we only allow the
-presence of the radiation of Spirit (or Atma) in the astral capsule,
-and so far only as that spiritual radiancy is concerned. We say that
-man and Soul have to conquer their immortality by ascending towards the
-unity with which, if successful, they will be finally linked and into
-which they are finally, so to speak, absorbed. The individualization
-of man after death depends on the spirit, not on his soul and body.
-Although the word “personality,” in the sense in which it is usually
-understood, is an absurdity if applied literally to our immortal
-essence, still the latter is, as our individual Ego, a distinct entity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-immortal and eternal, <i>per se</i>. <i>It is only in the case of black
-magicians or of criminals beyond redemption, criminals who have been
-such during a long series of lives</i>—that the shining thread, which
-links the spirit to the <i>personal</i> soul from the moment of the birth
-of the child, is violently snapped, and the disembodied entity becomes
-divorced from the personal soul, the latter being annihilated without
-leaving the smallest impression of itself on the former. If that union
-between the lower, or personal Manas, and the individual reincarnating
-Ego, has not been effected during life, then the former is left to
-share the fate of the lower animals, to gradually dissolve into ether,
-and have its personality annihilated. But even then the Ego remains
-a distinct being. It (the spiritual Ego) only loses one Devachanic
-state—after that special, and in that case indeed useless, life—as
-that idealized <i>Personality</i>, and is reincarnated, after enjoying for a
-short time its freedom as a planetary spirit, almost immediately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> It is stated in <i>Isis Unveiled</i>
-that such planetary Spirits or Angels, “the gods of the Pagans or the
-Archangels of the Christians,” will never be men on our planet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Quite right. Not “<i>such</i>,” but
-<i>some</i> classes of higher Planetary Spirits. They will never be men
-on this planet, because they are liberated Spirits from a previous,
-earlier world, and as such they cannot re-become men on this one. Yet
-all these will live again in the next and far higher Mahamanvantara,
-after this “great Age,” and “Brahma <i>pralaya</i>,” (a little period of
-16 figures or so) is over. For you must have heard, of course, that
-Eastern philosophy teaches us that mankind consists of such “Spirits”
-imprisoned in human bodies? The difference between animals and men is
-this: the former are ensouled by the “principles” <i>potentially</i>, the
-latter <i>actually</i>.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
-Do you understand now the difference?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes; but this specialisation has
-been in all ages the stumbling-block of metaphysicians.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It was. The whole esotericism
-of the Buddhistic philosophy is based on this mysterious teaching,
-understood by so few persons, and so totally misrepresented by many of
-the most learned modern scholars. Even metaphysicians are too inclined
-to confound the effect with the cause. An Ego who has won his immortal
-life as spirit will remain the same inner self throughout all his
-rebirths on earth; but this does not imply necessarily that he must
-either remain the Mr. Smith or Mr. Brown he was on earth, or lose his
-individuality. Therefore, the astral soul and the terrestrial body of
-man may, in the dark hereafter, be absorbed into the cosmical ocean
-of sublimated elements, and cease to feel his last <i>personal</i> Ego (if
-it did not deserve to soar higher), and the <i>divine</i> Ego still remain
-the same unchanged entity, though this terrestrial experience of his
-emanation may be totally obliterated at the instant of separation from
-the unworthy vehicle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If the “Spirit,” or the divine
-portion of the soul, is pre-existent as a distinct being from
-all eternity, as Origen, Synesius, and other semi-Christians and
-semi-Platonic philosophers taught, and if it is the same, and nothing
-more than the metaphysically-objective soul, how can it be otherwise
-than eternal? And what matters it in such a case, whether man leads
-a pure life or an animal, if, do what he may, he can never lose his
-individuality?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This doctrine, as you have stated
-it, is just as pernicious in its consequences as that of vicarious
-atonement. Had the latter dogma, in company with the false idea that
-we are all immortal, been demonstrated to the world in its true light,
-humanity would have been bettered by its propagation.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Let me repeat to you again. Pythagoras, Plato,
-Timaeus of Locris, and the old Alexandrian School, derived the
-<i>Soul</i> of man (or his higher “principles” and attributes) from the
-Universal World Soul, the latter being, according to their teachings,
-<i>Aether</i> (Pater-Zeus). Therefore, neither of these “principles” can be
-<i>unalloyed</i> essence of the Pythagorean Monas, or our <i>Atma-Buddhi</i>,
-because the <i>Anima Mundi</i> is but the effect, the subjective emanation
-or rather radiation of the former. Both the <i>human</i> Spirit (or the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-individuality), the reincarnating Spiritual Ego, and Buddhi, the
-Spiritual soul, are pre-existent. But, while the former exists
-as a distinct entity, an individualization, the soul exists as
-pre-existing breath, an unscient portion of an intelligent whole. Both
-were originally formed from the Eternal Ocean of light; but as the
-Fire-Philosophers, the mediæval Theosophists, expressed it, there is
-a visible as well as invisible spirit in fire. They made a difference
-between the <i>anima bruta</i> and the <i>anima divina</i>. Empedocles firmly
-believed all men and animals to possess two souls; and in Aristotle
-we find that he calls one the reasoning soul, νους and the other, the
-animal soul, ψυχη. According to these philosophers, the reasoning
-soul comes from <i>within</i> the universal soul, and the other from <i>without</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Would you call the Soul, <i>i.e.</i>, the
-human thinking Soul, or what you call the Ego—matter?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not matter, but substance
-assuredly; nor would the word “matter,” if prefixed with the adjective,
-<i>primordial</i>, be a word to avoid. That matter, we say, is co-eternal
-with Spirit, and is not our visible, tangible, and divisible matter,
-but its extreme sublimation. Pure Spirit is but one remove from
-the <i>no</i>-Spirit, or the absolute <i>all</i>. Unless you admit that man
-was evolved out of this primordial Spirit-matter, and represents a
-regular progressive scale of “principles” from <i>meta</i>-Spirit down to
-the grossest matter, how can we ever come to regard the <i>inner</i> man
-as immortal, and at the same time as a spiritual Entity and a mortal
-man?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then why should you not believe in
-God as such an Entity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because that which is infinite
-and unconditioned can have no form, and cannot be a being, not in any
-Eastern philosophy worthy of the name, at any rate. An “entity” is
-immortal, but is so only in its ultimate essence, not in its individual
-form. When at the last point of its cycle, it is absorbed into its
-primordial nature; and it becomes spirit, when it loses its name of Entity.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Its immortality as a form is limited only to its
-life-cycle or the <i>Mahamanvantara</i>; after which it is one and identical
-with the Universal Spirit, and no longer a separate Entity. As to
-the <i>personal</i> Soul—by which we mean the spark of consciousness that
-preserves in the Spiritual Ego the idea of the personal “I” of the
-last incarnation—this lasts, as a separate distinct recollection,
-only throughout the Devachanic period; after which time it is added
-to the series of other innumerable incarnations of the Ego, like the
-remembrance in our memory of one of a series of days, at the end of a
-year. Will you bind the infinitude you claim for your God to finite
-conditions? That alone which is indissolubly cemented by <i>Atma</i>
-(<i>i.e.</i>, Buddhi-Manas) is immortal. The Soul of man (<i>i.e.</i>, of the
-personality) <i>per se</i> is neither immortal, eternal nor divine. Says the
-<i>Zohar</i> (vol. iii., p. 616), “the soul, when sent to this earth, puts
-on an earthly garment, to preserve herself here, so she receives above
-a shining garment, in order to be able to look without injury into the
-mirror, whose light proceeds from the Lord of Light.” Moreover, the
-<i>Zohar</i> teaches that the soul cannot reach the abode of bliss, unless
-she has received the “holy kiss,” or the reunion of the soul <i>with the
-substance from which she emanated</i>—spirit. All souls are dual, and,
-while the latter is a feminine principle, the spirit is masculine.
-While imprisoned in body, man is a trinity, unless his pollution is
-such as to have caused his divorce from the spirit. “Woe to the soul
-which prefers to her divine husband (spirit) the earthly wedlock with
-her terrestrial body,” records a text of the <i>Book of the Keys</i>, a
-Hermetic work. Woe indeed, for nothing will remain of that personality
-to be recorded on the imperishable tablets of the Ego’s memory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How can that which, if not breathed
-by God into man, yet is on your own confession of an identical
-substance with the divine, fail to be immortal?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Every atom and speck of matter,
-not of substance only, is <i>imperishable</i> in its essence, but not in
-its <i>individual consciousness</i>. Immortality is but one’s unbroken
-consciousness; and the <i>personal</i> consciousness can hardly last longer
-than the personality itself, can it? And such consciousness, as I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-already told you, survives only throughout Devachan, after which it is
-reabsorbed, first, in the <i>individual</i>, and then in the <i>universal</i>
-consciousness. Better enquire of your theologians how it is that they
-have so sorely jumbled up the Jewish Scriptures. Read the Bible, if
-you would have a good proof that the writers of the <i>Pentateuch</i>,
-and <i>Genesis</i> especially, never regarded <i>nephesh</i>, that which God
-breathes into Adam (Gen. ch. ii.), as the <i>immortal</i> soul. Here are
-some instances:—“And God created ... every <i>nephesh</i> (life) that
-moveth” (Gen i. 21), meaning animals; and (Gen. ii. 7) it is said:
-“And man became a <i>nephesh</i>” (living soul), which shows that the word
-<i>nephesh</i> was indifferently applied to <i>immortal</i> man and to <i>mortal</i>
-beast. “And surely your blood of your <i>nepheshim</i> (lives) will I
-require; at the hand of every beast will I require it, and at the hand
-of man” (Gen. ix. 5), “Escape for <i>nephesh</i>” (escape for thy <i>life</i>,
-it is translated), (Gen. xix. 17). “Let us not kill him,” reads the
-English version (Gen. xxxvii. 21). “Let us not kill his <i>nephesh</i>” is
-the Hebrew text. “<i>Nephesh</i> for <i>nephesh</i>,” says Leviticus (xvii. 8).
-“He that killeth any man shall surely be put to death,” literally “He
-that smiteth the <i>nephesh</i> of a man” (Lev. xxiv. 17); and from verse
-18 and following it reads: “And he that killeth a beast (<i>nephesh</i>)
-shall make it good ... Beast for beast,” whereas the original text has
-it “nephesh for nephesh.” How could man <i>kill</i> that which is immortal?
-And this explains also why the Sadducees denied the immortality of the
-soul, as it also affords another proof that very probably the Mosaic
-Jews—the uninitiated at any rate—never believed in the soul’s survival at all.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_7_2" id="SECTION_7_2"></a>ON ETERNAL REWARD AND PUNISHMENT;<br />AND ON NIRVANA.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> It is hardly necessary, I suppose,
-to ask you whether you believe in the Christian dogmas of Paradise and
-Hell, or in future rewards and punishments as taught by the Orthodox churches?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As described in your catechisms, we
-reject them absolutely; least of all would we accept their eternity.
-But we believe firmly in what we call the <i>Law of Retribution</i>, and in
-the absolute justice and wisdom guiding this Law, or Karma. Hence we
-positively refuse to accept the cruel and unphilosophical belief in
-eternal reward or eternal punishment. We say with Horace:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Let rules be fixed that may our rage contain,</span>
-<span class="i0">And punish faults <i>with a proportion’d pain</i>;</span>
-<span class="i0">But do not flay him who deserves alone</span>
-<span class="i0">A whipping for the fault that he has done.”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> This is a rule for all men, and a just one. Have
-we to believe that God, of whom you make the embodiment of wisdom, love
-and mercy, is less entitled to these attributes than mortal man?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Have you any other reasons for
-rejecting this dogma?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Our chief reason for it lies in
-the fact of re-incarnation. As already stated, we reject the idea of
-a new soul created for every newly-born babe. We believe that every
-human being is the bearer, or <i>Vehicle</i>, of an <i>Ego</i> coeval with every
-other Ego; because all <i>Egos</i> are <i>of the same essence</i> and belong to
-the primeval emanation from one universal infinite <i>Ego</i>. Plato calls
-the latter the <i>logos</i> (or the second manifested God); and we, the
-manifested divine principle, which is one with the universal mind or
-soul, not the anthropomorphic, extra-cosmic and <i>personal</i> God in which
-so many Theists believe. Pray do not confuse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But where is the difficulty, once
-you accept a manifested principle, in believing that the soul of every
-new mortal is <i>created</i> by that Principle, as all the Souls before it
-have been so created?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because that which is <i>impersonal</i>
-can hardly create, plan and think, at its own sweet will and pleasure.
-Being a universal <i>Law</i>, immutable in its periodical manifestations,
-those of radiating and manifesting its own essence at the beginning of
-every new cycle of life, <span class="smcap">IT</span> is not supposed
-to create men, only to repent a few years later of having created them.
-If we have to believe in a divine principle at all, it must be in one
-which is as absolute harmony, logic, and justice, as it is absolute
-love, wisdom, and impartiality; and a God who would <i>create</i> every soul
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-for the space of <i>one brief span of life</i>, regardless of the fact
-whether it has to animate the body of a wealthy, happy man, or that of
-a poor suffering wretch, hapless from birth to death though he has done
-nothing to deserve his cruel fate—would be rather a senseless <i>fiend</i>
-than a God. (<i>Vide infra</i>, “On the Punishment of the Ego.”) Why, even
-the Jewish philosophers, believers in the Mosaic Bible (esoterically,
-of course), have never entertained such an idea; and, moreover, they
-believed in re-incarnation, as we do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you give me some instances as a proof of this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most decidedly I can. Philo Judæus
-says (in “De Somniis,” p. 455): “The air is full of them (of souls);
-those which are nearest the earth, descending to be tied to mortal
-bodies, <b>παλινδρομοῦσιν αὖθις</b> <i>return to other bodies, being
-desirous to live in them</i>.” In the <i>Zohar</i>, the soul is made to plead
-her freedom before God: “Lord of the Universe! I am happy in this
-world, and do not wish to go into another world, where I shall be a
-handmaid, and be exposed to all kinds of pollutions.”<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
-The doctrine of fatal necessity, the everlasting immutable law, is
-asserted in the answer of the Deity: “Against thy will thou becomest an
-embryo, and against thy will thou art born.”<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
-Light would be incomprehensible without darkness to make it manifest
-by contrast; good would be no longer good without evil to show the
-priceless nature of the boon; and so personal virtue could claim no
-merit, unless it had passed through the furnace of temptation. Nothing
-is eternal and unchangeable, save the concealed Deity. Nothing that
-is finite—whether because it had a beginning, or must have an end—can
-remain stationary. It must either progress or recede; and a soul which
-thirsts after a reunion with its spirit, which alone confers upon it
-immortality, must purify itself through cyclic transmigrations onward
-toward the only land of bliss and eternal rest, called in the <i>Zohar</i>,
-“The Palace of Love,” <b>היבל אחכה</b>; in the Hindu religion, “Moksha”; among
-the Gnostics, “The Pleroma of Eternal Light”; and by the Buddhists,
-“Nirvana.” And all these states are temporary, not eternal.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet there is no re-incarnation
-spoken of in all this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> A soul which pleads to be allowed
-to remain where she is, <i>must be pre-existent</i>, and not have been
-created for the occasion. In the <i>Zohar</i> (vol. iii., p. 61), however,
-there is a still better proof. Speaking of the reincarnating <i>Egos</i>
-(the <i>rational</i> souls), those whose last personality has to fade out
-<i>entirely</i>, it is said: “All souls which have alienated themselves in
-heaven from the Holy One—blessed be His name—have thrown themselves
-into an abyss at their very existence, and have anticipated the time
-when they are to descend once more on earth.” “The Holy One” means
-here, esoterically, the Atman, or <i>Atma-Buddhi</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Moreover, it is very strange to find
-<i>Nirvana</i> spoken of as something synonymous with the Kingdom of Heaven,
-or the Paradise, since according to every Orientalist of note Nirvana
-is a synonym of annihilation!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Taken literally, with regard to
-the personality and differentiated matter, not otherwise. These ideas
-on re-incarnation and the trinity of man were held by many of the
-early Christian Fathers. It is the jumble made by the translators of
-the New Testament and ancient philosophical treatises between soul
-and spirit, that has occasioned the many misunderstandings. It is
-also one of the many reasons why Buddha, Plotinus, and so many other
-Initiates are now accused of having longed for the total extinction
-of their souls: “absorption unto the Deity,” or “reunion with the
-universal soul,” meaning, according to modern ideas, annihilation. The
-personal soul must, of course, be disintegrated into its particles,
-before it is able to link its purer essence for ever with the immortal
-spirit. But the translators of both the <i>Acts</i> and the <i>Epistles</i>,
-who laid the foundation of the <i>Kingdom of Heaven</i>, and the modern
-commentators on the Buddhist <i>Sutra of the Foundation of the Kingdom of Righteousness</i>,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-have muddled the sense of the great apostle of Christianity as of the
-great reformer of India. The former have smothered the word ψυχικος
-so that no reader imagines it to have any relation with <i>soul</i>;
-and with this confusion of <i>soul</i> and <i>spirit</i> together, <i>Bible</i>
-readers get only a perverted sense of anything on the subject. On
-the other hand, the interpreters of Buddha have failed to understand
-the meaning and object of the Buddhist four degrees of Dhyâna. Ask
-the Pythagoreans, “Can that spirit, which gives life and motion and
-partakes of the nature of light, be reduced to nonentity?” “Can even
-that sensitive spirit in brutes which exercises memory, one of the
-rational faculties, die and become nothing?” observe the Occultists. In
-Buddhistic philosophy <i>annihilation</i> means only a dispersion of matter,
-in whatever form or <i>semblance</i> of form it may be, for everything that
-has form is temporary, and is, therefore, really an illusion. For in
-eternity the longest periods of time are as a wink of the eye. So with
-form. Before we have time to realize that we have seen it, it is gone
-like an instantaneous flash of lightning, and passed for ever. When the
-Spiritual <i>entity</i> breaks loose for ever from every particle of matter,
-substance, or form, and re-becomes a Spiritual breath: then only does
-it enter upon the eternal and unchangeable <i>Nirvana</i>, lasting as long
-as the cycle of life has lasted—an eternity, truly. And then that
-Breath, existing <i>in Spirit</i>, is <i>nothing</i> because it is <i>all</i>; as a
-form, a semblance, a shape, it is completely annihilated; as absolute
-Spirit it still is, for it has become <i>Be-ness</i> itself. The very word
-used, “absorbed in the universal essence,” when spoken of the “Soul” as
-Spirit, means “<i>union with</i>.” It can never mean annihilation, as that
-would mean eternal separation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you not lay yourself open to the
-accusation of preaching annihilation by the language you yourself use?
-You have just spoken of the Soul of man returning to its primordial
-elements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> But you forget that I have given
-you the differences between the various meanings of the word “Soul,”
-and shown the loose way in which the term “Spirit” has been hitherto
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-translated. We speak of an <i>animal</i>, a <i>human</i>, and a <i>spiritual</i>,
-Soul, and distinguish between them. Plato, for instance, calls
-“rational <span class="smcap">Soul</span>” that which we call <i>Buddhi</i>,
-adding to it the adjective of “spiritual,” however; but that which we
-call the reincarnating Ego, <i>Manas</i>, he calls Spirit, <i>Nous</i>, etc.,
-whereas we apply the term <i>Spirit</i>, when standing alone and without any
-qualification, to Atma alone. Pythagoras repeats our archaic doctrine
-when stating that the <i>Ego</i> (<i>Nous</i>) is eternal with Deity; that the
-soul only passed through various stages to arrive at divine excellence;
-while <i>thumos</i> returned to the earth, and even the <i>phren</i>, the lower
-<i>Manas</i>, was eliminated. Again, Plato defines <i>Soul</i> (Buddhi) as “the
-motion that is able to move itself.” “Soul,” he adds (Laws X.), “is
-the most ancient of all things, and the commencement of motion,” thus
-calling Atma-Buddhi “Soul,” and <i>Manas</i> “Spirit,” which we do not.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot"> “Soul was generated prior to body, and body is
-posterior and secondary, as being according to nature, ruled over by
-the ruling soul.” “The soul which administers all things that are moved
-in every way, administers likewise the heavens.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Soul then leads everything in heaven, and on
-earth, and in the sea, by its movements—the names of which are, to
-will, to consider, to take care of, to consult, to form opinions
-true and false, to be in a state of joy, sorrow, confidence, fear,
-hate, love, together with all such primary movements as are allied to
-these.... Being a goddess herself, she ever takes as an ally <i>Nous</i>, a
-god, and disciplines all things correctly and happily; but when with
-<i>Annoia</i>—not <i>nous</i>—it works out everything the contrary.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">In this language, as in the Buddhist texts, the
-negative is treated as essential existence. <i>Annihilation</i> comes under
-a similar exegesis. The positive state is essential being, but no
-manifestation as such. When the spirit, in Buddhistic parlance, enters
-<i>Nirvana</i>, it loses objective existence, but retains subjective being.
-To objective minds this is becoming absolute “nothing”; to subjective,
-<span class="smcap">No-thing</span>, nothing to be displayed to sense.
-Thus, their Nirvana means the certitude of individual immortality <i>in
-Spirit</i>, not in Soul, which, though “the most ancient of all things,”
-is still—along with all the other <i>Gods</i>—a finite emanation, in <i>forms</i>
-and individuality, if not in substance.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I do not quite seize the idea
-yet, and would be thankful to have you explain this to me by some
-illustrations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No doubt it is very difficult to
-understand, especially to one brought up in the regular orthodox ideas
-of the Christian Church. Moreover, I must tell you one thing; and this
-is that unless you have studied thoroughly well the separate functions
-assigned to all the human “principles” and the state of all these
-<i>after death</i>, you will hardly realize our Eastern philosophy.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_7_3" id="SECTION_7_3"></a>ON THE VARIOUS “PRINCIPLES” IN MAN.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard a good deal about this
-constitution of the “inner man” as you call it, but could never make
-“head or tail on’t” as Gabalis expresses it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of course, it is most difficult,
-and, as you say, “puzzling” to understand correctly and distinguish
-between the various <i>aspects</i>, called by us, the “principles” of the
-real <span class="smcap">Ego</span>. It is the more so as there exists
-a notable difference in the numbering of those principles by various
-Eastern schools, though at the bottom there is the same identical
-substratum of teaching.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean the Vedantins, as an
-instance? Don’t they divide your seven “principles” into five only?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They do; but though I would not
-presume to dispute the point with a learned Vedantin, I may yet state
-as my private opinion that they have an obvious reason for it. With
-them it is only that compound spiritual aggregate which consists of
-various mental aspects that is called <i>Man</i> at all, the physical
-body being in their view something beneath contempt, and merely an
-<i>illusion</i>. Nor is the Vedanta the only philosophy to reckon in this
-manner. Lao-Tze, in his <i>Tao-te-King</i>, mentions only five principles,
-because he, like the Vedantins, omits to include two principles,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-namely, the spirit (Atma) and the physical body, the latter of
-which, moreover, he calls “the cadaver.” Then there is the <i>Taraka
-Rajà Yogà</i> School. Its teaching recognises only three “principles”
-in fact; but then, in reality, their <i>Sthulopadi</i>, or the physical
-body, in its waking conscious state, their <i>Sukshmopadhi</i>, the same
-body in <i>Svapna</i>, or the dreaming state, and their <i>Karanopadhi</i> or
-“causal body,” or that which passes from one incarnation to another,
-are all dual in their aspects, and thus make six. Add to this Atma,
-the impersonal divine principle or the immortal element in Man,
-undistinguished from the Universal Spirit, and you have the same seven
-again.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a>
-They are welcome to hold to their division; we hold to ours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then it seems almost the same as the
-division made by the mystic Christians: body, soul and spirit?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just the same. We could easily
-make of the body the vehicle of the “vital Double”; of the latter
-the vehicle of Life or <i>Pranâ</i>; of <i>Kama-rupa</i>, or (animal) soul,
-the vehicle of the <i>higher</i> and the <i>lower</i> mind, and make of this
-six principles, crowning the whole with the one immortal spirit. In
-Occultism every qualificative change in the state of our consciousness
-gives to man a new aspect, and if it prevails and becomes part of the
-living and acting Ego, it must be (and is) given a special name, to
-distinguish the man in that particular state from the man he is when he
-places himself in another state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> It is just that which it is so
-difficult to understand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It seems to me very easy, on the
-contrary, once that you have seized the main idea, <i>i.e.</i>, that man
-acts on this or another plane of consciousness, in strict accordance
-with his mental and spiritual condition. But such is the materialism
-of the age that the more we explain the less people seem capable of
-understanding what we say. Divide the terrestrial being called man into
-three chief aspects, if you like, and unless you make of him a pure
-animal you cannot do less. Take his objective <i>body</i>; the thinking
-principle in him—which is only a little higher than the <i>instinctual</i>
-element in the animal—or the vital conscious soul; and that which
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-places him so immeasurably beyond and higher than the animal—<i>i.e.</i>,
-his <i>reasoning</i> soul or “spirit.” Well, if we take these three groups
-or representative entities, and subdivide them, according to the occult
-teaching, what do we get?</p>
-
-<p class="indent">First of all, Spirit (in the sense of the Absolute,
-and therefore, indivisible <span class="smcap">All</span>), or Atma.
-As this can neither be located nor limited in philosophy, being simply
-that which <span class="smcap">IS</span> in Eternity, and which cannot
-be absent from even the tiniest geometrical or mathematical point
-of the universe of matter or substance, it ought not to be called,
-in truth, a “human” principle at all. Rather, and at best, it is in
-Metaphysics, that point in space which the human Monad and its vehicle
-man occupy for the period of every life. Now that point is as imaginary
-as man himself, and in reality is an illusion, a <i>maya</i>; but then for
-ourselves, as for other personal Egos, we are a reality during that fit
-of illusion called life, and we have to take ourselves into account,
-in our own fancy at any rate, if no one else does. To make it more
-conceivable to the human intellect, when first attempting the study
-of Occultism, and to solve the A B C of the mystery of man, Occultism
-calls this <i>seventh</i> principle the synthesis of the sixth, and gives
-it for vehicle the <i>Spiritual</i> Soul, <i>Buddhi</i>. Now the latter conceals
-a mystery, which is never given to any one, with the exception of
-irrevocably pledged <i>chelas</i>, or those, at any rate, who can be safely
-trusted. Of course, there would be less confusion, could it only be
-told; but, as this is directly concerned with the power of projecting
-one’s double consciously and at will, and as this gift, like the
-“ring of Gyges,” would prove very fatal to man at large and to the
-possessor of that faculty in particular, it is carefully guarded. But
-let us proceed with the “principles.” This divine soul, or Buddhi,
-then, is the vehicle of the Spirit. In conjunction, these two are one,
-impersonal and without any attributes (on this plane, of course), and
-make two spiritual “principles.” If we pass on to the <i>Human</i> Soul,
-<i>Manas</i> or <i>mens</i>, every one will agree that the intelligence of man is
-<i>dual</i> to say the least: <i>e.g.</i>, the high-minded man can hardly become
-low-minded; the very intellectual and spiritual-minded man is separated
-by an abyss from the obtuse, dull, and material, if not animal-minded man.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why should not man be
-represented by two “principles” or two aspects, rather?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Every man has these two principles
-in him, one more active than the other, and in rare cases, one of
-these is entirely stunted in its growth, so to say, or paralysed by
-the strength and predominance of the other <i>aspect</i>, in whatever
-direction. These, then, are what we call the two principles or aspects
-of <i>Manas</i>, the higher and the lower; the former, the higher Manas,
-or the thinking, conscious <span class="smcap">Ego</span> gravitating
-toward the spiritual Soul (Buddhi); and the latter, or its instinctual
-principle, attracted to <i>Kama</i>, the seat of animal desires and passions
-in man. Thus, we have <i>four</i> “principles” justified; the last three
-being (1) the “Double,” which we have agreed to call Protean, or
-Plastic Soul; the vehicle of (2) the life <i>principle</i>; and (3) the
-physical body. Of course no physiologist or biologist will accept these
-principles, nor can he make head or tail of them. And this is why,
-perhaps, none of them understand to this day either the functions of
-the spleen, the physical vehicle of the Protean Double, or those of a
-certain organ on the right side of man, the seat of the above-mentioned
-desires, nor yet does he know anything of the pineal gland, which he
-describes as a horny gland with a little sand in it, which gland is
-in truth the very seat of the highest and divinest consciousness in
-man, his omniscient, spiritual and all-embracing mind. And this shows
-to you still more plainly that we have neither invented these seven
-principles, nor are they new in the world of philosophy, as we can
-easily prove.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what is it that reincarnates, in
-your belief?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Spiritual thinking Ego, the
-permanent principle in man, or that which is the seat of <i>Manas</i>. It is
-not Atma, or even Atma-Buddhi, regarded as the dual <i>Monad</i>, which is
-the <i>individual</i>, or <i>divine</i> man, but Manas; for Atman is the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-Universal <span class="smcap">All</span>, and becomes the <span
-class="smcap">Higher-Self</span> of man only in conjunction with
-<i>Buddhi</i>, its vehicle, which links <span class="smcap">IT</span> to
-the individuality (or divine man). For it is the Buddhi-Manas which
-is called the <i>Causal body</i>, (the United 5th and 6th Principles) and
-which is <i>Consciousness</i>, that connects it with every personality it
-inhabits on earth. Therefore, Soul being a generic term, there are
-in men three <i>aspects</i> of soul—the terrestrial, or animal; the Human
-Soul; and the Spiritual Soul; these, strictly speaking, are one Soul
-in its three aspects. Now of the first aspect, nothing remains after
-death; of the second (<i>nous</i> or Manas) only its divine essence <i>if
-left unsoiled</i> survives, while the third in addition to being immortal
-becomes <i>consciously</i> divine, by the assimilation of the higher Manas.
-But to make it clear, we have to say a few words first of all about
-Re-incarnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You will do well, as it is against
-this doctrine that your enemies fight the most ferociously.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You mean the Spiritualists? I know;
-and many are the absurd objections laboriously spun by them over the
-pages of <i>Light</i>. So obtuse and malicious are some of them, that they
-will stop at nothing. One of them found recently a contradiction, which
-he gravely discusses in a letter to that journal, in two statements
-picked out of Mr. Sinnett’s lectures. He discovers that grave
-contradiction in these two sentences: “Premature returns to earth-life
-in the cases when they occur may be due to Karmic complication
-...”; and “there is no <i>accident</i> in the supreme act of divine
-justice guiding evolution.” So profound a thinker would surely see a
-contradiction of the law of gravitation if a man stretched out his hand
-to stop a falling stone from crushing the head of a child!
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_8_1" id="SECTION_8_1"></a>
-<h2>VIII. <br />ON RE-INCARNATION OR REBIRTH.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>WHAT IS MEMORY ACCORDING TO THEOSOPHICAL TEACHING?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The most difficult thing for you to
-do, will be to explain and give reasonable grounds for such a belief.
-No Theosophist has ever yet succeeded in bringing forward a single
-valid proof to shake my scepticism. First of all, you have against this
-theory of re-incarnation, the fact that no single man has yet been
-found to remember that he has lived, least of all who he was, during
-his previous life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Your argument, I see, tends to the
-same old objection; the loss of memory in each of us of our previous
-incarnation. You think it invalidates our doctrine? My answer is that
-it does not, and that at any rate such an objection cannot be final.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I would like to hear your
-arguments.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are short and few. Yet when
-you take into consideration (<i>a</i>) the utter inability of the best
-modern psychologists to explain to the world the nature of <i>mind</i>;
-and (<i>b</i>) their complete ignorance of its potentialities, and higher
-states, you have to admit that this objection is based on an <i>a
-priori</i> conclusion drawn from <i>primâ facie</i> and circumstantial
-evidence more than anything else. Now what is “memory” in your
-conception, pray?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> That which is generally accepted:
-the faculty in our mind of remembering and of retaining the knowledge
-of previous thoughts, deeds and events.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Please add to it that there
-is a great difference between the three accepted forms of memory.
-Besides memory in general you have <i>Remembrance</i>, <i>Recollection</i>
-and <i>Reminiscence</i>, have you not? Have you ever thought over the
-difference? Memory, remember, is a generic name.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet, all these are only synonyms.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Indeed, they are not—not in
-philosophy, at all events. Memory is simply an innate power in thinking
-beings, and even in animals, of reproducing past impressions by an
-association of ideas principally suggested by objective things or
-by some action on our external sensory organs. Memory is a faculty
-depending entirely on the more or less healthy and normal functioning
-of our <i>physical</i> brain; and <i>remembrance</i> and <i>recollection</i> are
-the attributes and handmaidens of that memory. But <i>reminiscence</i> is
-an entirely different thing. “Reminiscence” is defined by the modern
-psychologist as something intermediate between <i>remembrance</i> and
-<i>recollection</i>, or “a conscious process of recalling past occurrences,
-but <i>without that full and varied reference</i> to particular things which
-characterises <i>recollection</i>.” Locke, speaking of recollection and
-remembrance, says: “When an <i>idea again</i> recurs without the operation
-of the like object on the external sensory, it is <i>remembrance</i>; if
-it be sought after by the mind, and with pain and endeavour found and
-brought again into view, it is <i>recollection</i>.” But even Locke leaves
-<i>reminiscence</i> without any clear definition, because it is no faculty
-or attribute of our <i>physical</i> memory, but an intuitional perception
-apart from and outside our physical brain; a perception which, covering
-as it does (being called into action by the ever-present knowledge
-of our spiritual Ego) all those visions in man which are regarded as
-<i>abnormal</i>—from the pictures suggested by genius to the <i>ravings</i> of
-fever and even madness—are classed by science as having no <i>existence</i>
-outside of our fancy. Occultism and Theosophy, however, regard
-<i>reminiscence</i> in an entirely different light. For us, while <i>memory</i>
-is physical and evanescent and depends on the physiological conditions
-of the brain—a fundamental proposition with all teachers of mnemonics,
-who have the researches of modern scientific psychologists to back
-them—we call <i>reminiscence</i> the <i>memory of the soul</i>. And it is <i>this</i>
-memory which gives the assurance to almost every human being, whether
-he understands it or not, of his having lived before and having to live
-again. Indeed, as Wordsworth has it:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting,</span>
-<span class="i2">The soul that rises with us, our life’s star,</span>
-<span class="i0">Hath elsewhere had its setting,</span>
-<span class="i2">And cometh from afar.”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If it is on this kind of
-memory—poetry and abnormal fancies, on your own confession—that you
-base your doctrine, then you will convince very few, I am afraid.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I did not “confess” it was a fancy.
-I simply said that physiologists and scientists in general regard
-such reminiscences as hallucinations and fancy, to which <i>learned</i>
-conclusion they are welcome. We do not deny that such visions of the
-past and glimpses far back into the corridors of time, are abnormal, as
-contrasted with our normal daily life experience and physical memory.
-But we do maintain with Professor W. Knight, that “the absence of
-memory of any action done in a previous state cannot be a conclusive
-argument against our having lived through it.” And every fair-minded
-opponent must agree with what is said in Butler’s <i>Lectures on
-Platonic Philosophy</i>—“that the feeling of extravagance with which
-it (pre-existence) affects us has its secret source in materialistic
-or semi-materialistic prejudices.” Besides which we maintain that
-memory, as Olympiodorus called it, is simply <i>phantasy</i>, and the most
-unreliable thing in us.<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
-Ammonius Saccas asserted that the only faculty in man directly opposed
-to prognostication, or looking into futurity, is <i>memory</i>. Furthermore,
-remember that memory is one thing and mind or <i>thought</i> is another; one
-is a recording machine, a register which very easily gets out of order;
-the other (thoughts) are eternal and imperishable. Would you refuse to
-believe in the existence of certain things or men only because your
-physical eyes have not seen them? Would not the collective testimony
-of past generations who have seen him be a sufficient guarantee that
-Julius Cæsar once lived? Why should not the same testimony of the
-psychic senses of the masses be taken into consideration?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But don’t you think that these are too fine
-distinctions to be accepted by the majority of mortals?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Say rather by the majority of materialists. And
-to them we say, behold: even in the short span of ordinary
-existence, memory is too weak to register all the events of
-a lifetime. How frequently do even most important events lie
-dormant in our memory until awakened by some association of
-ideas, or aroused to function and activity by some other link.
-This is especially the case with people of advanced age, who are
-always found suffering from feebleness of recollection. When,
-therefore, we remember that which we know about the physical and
-the spiritual principles in man, it is not the fact that our
-memory has failed to record our precedent life and lives that
-ought to surprise us, but the contrary, were it to happen.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_8_2" id="SECTION_8_2"></a>WHY DO WE NOT REMEMBER OUR PAST LIVES?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You have given me a bird’s eye view
-of the seven principles; now how do they account for our complete loss
-of any recollection of having lived before?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Very easily. Since those
-“principles” which we call physical, and none of which is denied by
-science, though it calls them by other names,<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>
-are disintegrated after death with their constituent elements,
-<i>memory</i> along with its brain, this vanished memory of a vanished
-personality, can neither remember nor record anything in the subsequent
-re-incarnation of the <span class="smcap">Ego</span>. Re-incarnation
-means that this Ego will be furnished with a <i>new</i> body, a <i>new</i> brain,
-and a <i>new</i> memory. Therefore it would be as absurd to expect this
-<i>memory</i> to remember that which it has never recorded as it would be
-idle to examine under a microscope a shirt never worn by a murderer,
-and seek on it for the stains of blood which are to be found only
-on the clothes he wore. It is not the clean shirt that we have to
-question, but the clothes worn during the perpetration of the crime;
-and if these are burnt and destroyed, how can you get at them?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Aye! how can you get at the
-certainty that the crime was ever committed at all, or that the “man in
-the clean shirt” ever lived before?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not by physical processes, most
-assuredly; nor by relying on the testimony of that which exists no
-longer. But there is such a thing as circumstantial evidence, since
-our wise laws accept it, more, perhaps, even than they should. To
-get convinced of the fact of re-incarnation and past lives, one must
-put oneself in <i>rapport</i> with one’s real permanent Ego, not one’s
-evanescent memory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how can people believe in that
-which they <i>do not know</i>, nor have ever seen, far less put themselves
-in <i>rapport</i> with it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If people, and the most learned,
-will believe in the Gravity, Ether, Force, and what not of Science,
-abstractions “and working hypotheses,” which they have neither seen,
-touched, smelt, heard, nor tasted—why should not other people believe,
-on the same principle, in one’s permanent Ego, a far more logical and
-important “working hypothesis” than any other?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is, finally, this mysterious
-eternal principle? Can you explain its nature so as to make it
-comprehensible to all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The <span class="smcap">Ego</span>
-which reincarnates, the <i>individual</i> and immortal —not
-personal—“I”; the vehicle, in short, of the Atma-Buddhic <span
-class="smcap">Monad</span>, that which is rewarded in Devachan and
-punished on earth, and that, finally, to which the reflection only of
-the <i>Skandhas</i>, or attributes, of every incarnation attaches
-itself.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean by <i>Skandhas</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just what I said: “attributes,”
-among which is <i>memory</i>, all of which perish like a flower, leaving
-behind them only a feeble perfume. Here is another paragraph from H. S.
-Olcott’s “Buddhist Catechism”<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>
-which bears directly upon the subject. It deals with the question as
-follows:—“The aged man remembers the incidents of his youth, despite
-his being physically and mentally changed. Why, then, is not the
-recollection of past lives brought over by us from our last birth into
-the present birth? Because memory is included within the Skandhas,
-and the Skandhas having changed with the new existence, a memory,
-the record of that particular existence, develops. Yet the record
-or reflection of all the past lives must survive, for when Prince
-Siddhartha became Buddha, the full sequence of His previous births
-were seen by Him ... and any one who attains to the state of <i>Jhana</i>
-can thus retrospectively trace the line of his lives.” This proves
-to you that while the undying qualities of the personality—such as
-love, goodness, charity, etc.—attach themselves to the immortal Ego,
-photographing on it, so to speak, a permanent image of the divine
-aspect of the man who was, his material Skandhas (those which generate
-the most marked Karmic effects) are as evanescent as a flash of
-lightning, and cannot impress the new brain of the new personality;
-yet their failing to do so impairs in no way the identity of the
-reincarnating Ego.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean to infer that that which
-survives is only the Soul-memory, as you call it, that Soul or Ego
-being one and the same, while nothing of the personality remains?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not quite; something of each
-personality, unless the latter was an <i>absolute</i> materialist with not
-even a chink in his nature for a spiritual ray to pass through, must
-survive, as it leaves its eternal impress on the incarnating permanent
-Self or Spiritual Ego.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
-(See On <i>post mortem</i> and <i>post natal</i> Consciousness.)
-The personality with its Skandhas is ever changing with every new
-birth. It is, as said before, only the part played by the actor (the
-true Ego) for one night. This is why we preserve no memory on the
-physical plane of our past lives, though the <i>real</i> “Ego” has lived
-them over and knows them all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then how does it happen that the
-real or Spiritual man does not impress his new personal “I” with this
-knowledge?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> How is it that the servant-girls
-in a poor farm-house could speak Hebrew and play the violin in their
-trance or somnambulic state, and knew neither when in their normal
-condition? Because, as every genuine psychologist of the old, not your
-modern, school, will tell you, the Spiritual Ego can act only when
-the personal Ego is paralysed. The Spiritual “I” in man is omniscient
-and has every knowledge innate in it; while the personal self is the
-creature of its environment and the slave of the physical memory. Could
-the former manifest itself uninterruptedly, and without impediment,
-there would be no longer men on earth, but we should all be gods.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Still there ought to be exceptions,
-and some ought to remember.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And so there are. But who
-believes in their report? Such sensitives are generally regarded as
-hallucinated hysteriacs, as crack-brained enthusiasts, or humbugs, by
-modern materialism. Let them read, however, works on this subject,
-pre-eminently “Re-incarnation, a Study of Forgotten Truth” by E. D.
-Walker, F.T.S., and see in it the mass of proofs which the able author
-brings to bear on this vexed question. One speaks to people of soul,
-and some ask “What is Soul?” “Have you ever proved its existence?” Of
-course it is useless to argue with those who are materialists. But even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-to them I would put the question: “Can you remember what you were or
-did when a baby? Have you preserved the smallest recollection of your
-life, thoughts, or deeds, or that you lived at all during the first
-eighteen months or two years of your existence? Then why not deny that
-you have ever lived as a babe, on the same principle?” When to all this
-we add that the reincarnating Ego, or <i>individuality</i>, retains during
-the Devachanic period merely the essence of the experience of its past
-earth-life or personality, the whole physical experience involving into
-a state of <i>in potentia</i>, or being, so to speak, translated into
-spiritual formulæ; when we remember further that the term between two
-rebirths is said to extend from ten to fifteen centuries, during which
-time the physical consciousness is totally and absolutely inactive,
-having no organs to act through and therefore <i>no existence</i>, the
-reason for the absence of all remembrance in the purely physical memory
-is apparent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You just said that the
-<span class="smcap">Spiritual Ego</span> was omniscient. Where, then, is
-that vaunted omniscience during his Devachanic life, as you call it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> During that time it is latent
-and potential, because first of all, the Spiritual Ego (the compound
-of Buddhi-Manas) is <i>not</i> the Higher <span class="smcap">Self</span>,
-which being one with the Universal Soul or Mind is alone omniscient;
-and, secondly, because Devachan is the idealized continuation of the
-terrestrial life just left behind, a period of retributive adjustment,
-and a reward for unmerited wrongs and sufferings undergone in that
-special life. It is omniscient only <i>potentially</i> in Devachan, and <i>de
-facto</i> exclusively in Nirvana, when the Ego is merged in the Universal
-Mind-Soul. Yet it re-becomes <i>quasi</i> omniscient during those hours on
-earth when certain abnormal conditions and physiological changes in
-the body make the <i>Ego</i> free from the trammels of matter. Thus the
-examples cited above of somnambulists, a poor servant speaking Hebrew,
-and another playing the violin, give you an illustration of the case
-in point. This does not mean that the explanations of these two facts
-offered us by medical science have no truth in them, for one girl had,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-years before, heard her master, a clergyman, read Hebrew works aloud,
-and the other had heard an artist playing a violin at their farm.
-But neither could have done so as perfectly as they did had they not
-been ensouled by <span class="smcap">THAT</span> which, owing to the
-sameness of its nature with the Universal Mind, is omniscient. Here the
-higher principle acted on the Skandhas and moved them; in the other,
-the personality being paralysed, the individuality manifested itself.
-Pray do not confuse the two.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_8_3" id="SECTION_8_3"></a>ON INDIVIDUALITY AND
-PERSONALITY.<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what is the difference between
-the two? I confess that I am still in the dark. Indeed it is just that
-difference, then, that you cannot impress too much on our minds.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I try to; but alas, it is
-harder with some than to make them feel a reverence for childish
-impossibilities, only because they are <i>orthodox</i>, and because
-orthodoxy is respectable. To understand the idea well, you have to
-first study the dual sets of “principles”; the <i>spiritual</i>, or those
-which belong to the imperishable Ego; and the <i>material</i>, or those
-principles which make up the ever-changing bodies or the series of
-personalities of that Ego. Let us fix permanent names to these, and say
-that:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">I. Atma, the “Higher Self,” is neither your
-Spirit nor mine, but like sunlight shines on all. It is the universally
-diffused “<i>divine principle</i>,” and is inseparable from its one and
-absolute <i>Meta</i>-Spirit, as the sunbeam is inseparable from sunlight.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">II. <i>Buddhi</i> (the spiritual soul) is only its
-vehicle. Neither each separately, nor the two collectively, are of
-any more use to the body of man, then sunlight and its beams are for
-a mass of granite buried in the earth, <i>unless the divine Duad is
-assimilated by, and reflected in</i>, some <i>consciousness</i>. Neither Atma
-nor Buddhi are ever reached by Karma, because the former is the highest
-aspect of Karma, <i>its working agent</i> of ITSELF in one aspect, and the
-other is unconscious <i>on this plane</i>. This consciousness or mind is,</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">III. <i>Manas</i>,<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
-the derivation or product in a reflected form of <i>Ahamkara</i>, “the
-conception of I,” or <span class="smcap">Ego-ship</span>. It is,
-therefore, when inseparably united to the first two, called the <span
-class="smcap">Spiritual Ego</span>, and <i>Taijasi</i> (the radiant).
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">This is the real Individuality, or the divine man.
-It is this Ego which—having originally incarnated in the <i>senseless</i>
-human form animated by, but unconscious (since it had no consciousness)
-of, the presence in itself of the dual monad—made of that human-like
-form <i>a real man</i>. It is that Ego, that “Causal Body,” which
-overshadows every personality Karma forces it to incarnate into; and
-this Ego which is held responsible for all the sins committed through,
-and in, every new body or personality—the evanescent masks which hide
-the true Individual through the long series of rebirths.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is this just? Why should this
-<span class="smcap">Ego</span> receive punishment as the result of
-deeds which it has forgotten?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It has not forgotten them; it
-knows and remembers its misdeeds as well as you remember what you have
-done yesterday. Is it because the memory of that bundle of physical
-compounds called “body” does not recollect what its predecessor (the
-personality <i>that was</i>) did, that you imagine that the real Ego has
-forgotten them? As well say it is unjust that the new boots on the feet
-of a boy, who is flogged for stealing apples, should be punished for
-that which they know nothing of.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But are there no modes of
-communication between the Spiritual and human consciousness or
-memory?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of course there are; but they
-have never been recognised by your scientific modern psychologists.
-To what do you attribute intuition, the “voice of the conscience,”
-premonitions, vague undefined reminiscences, etc., etc., if not to such
-communications? Would that the majority of educated men, at least, had
-the fine spiritual perceptions of Coleridge, who shows how intuitional
-he is in some of his comments. Hear what he says with respect to the
-probability that “all thoughts are in themselves imperishable.” “If the
-intelligent faculty (sudden ‘revivals’ of memory) should be rendered
-more comprehensive, it would require only a different and appropriate
-organization, the <i>body celestial</i> instead of the <i>body terrestrial</i>,
-to bring before every human soul <i>the collective experience of its
-whole past existence</i> (<i>existences</i>, rather).” And this <i>body
-celestial</i> is our Manasic <span class="smcap">Ego</span>.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_8_4" id="SECTION_8_4"></a>ON THE REWARD AND PUNISHMENT OF THE EGO.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard you say that the <i>Ego</i>,
-whatever the life of the person he incarnated in may have been on
-Earth, is never visited with <i>post-mortem</i> punishment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Never, save in very exceptional
-and rare cases of which we will not speak here, as the nature of the
-“punishment” in no way approaches any of your theological conceptions
-of damnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if it is punished in this life
-for the misdeeds committed in a previous one, then it is this Ego that
-ought to be rewarded also, whether here, or when disincarnated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And so it is. If we do not admit of
-any punishment outside of this earth, it is because the only state the
-Spiritual Self knows of, hereafter, is that of unalloyed bliss.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply this: <i>crimes and sins
-committed on a plane of objectivity and in a world of matter, cannot
-receive punishment in a world of pure subjectivity</i>. We believe in no
-hell or paradise as localities; in no objective hell-fires and worms
-that never die, nor in any Jerusalems with streets paved with sapphires
-and diamonds. What we believe in is a <i>post-mortem state</i> or mental
-condition, such as we are in during a vivid dream. We believe in an
-immutable law of absolute Love, Justice, and Mercy. And believing in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-it, we say: “Whatever the sin and dire results of the original Karmic
-transgression of the now incarnated Egos<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
-no man (or the outer material and periodical form of the Spiritual
-Entity) can be held, with any degree of justice, responsible for the
-consequences of his birth. He does not ask to be born, nor can he
-choose the parents that will give him life. In every respect he is a
-victim to his environment, the child of circumstances over which he
-has no control; and if each of his transgressions were impartially
-investigated, there would be found nine out of every ten cases when he
-was the one sinned against, rather than the sinner. Life is at best a
-heartless play, a stormy sea to cross, and a heavy burden often too
-difficult to bear. The greatest philosophers have tried in vain to
-fathom and find out its <i>raison d’être</i>, and have all failed except
-those who had the key to it, namely, the Eastern sages. Life is, as
-Shakespeare describes it:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i1">... but a walking shadow—a poor player,</span>
-<span class="i0">That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,</span>
-<span class="i0">And then is heard no more. It is a tale</span>
-<span class="i0">Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,</span>
-<span class="i0">Signifying nothing....”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> Nothing in its separate parts, yet of the
-greatest importance in its collectivity or series of lives. At any
-rate, almost every individual life is, in its full development, a
-sorrow. And are we to believe that poor, helpless men, after being
-tossed about like a piece of rotten timber on the angry billows of
-life, is, if he proves too weak to resist them, to be punished by a
-<i>sempiternity</i> of damnation, or even a temporary punishment? Never!
-Whether a great or an average sinner, good or bad, guilty or innocent,
-once delivered of the burden of physical life, the tired and worn-out
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-<i>Manu</i> (“thinking Ego”) has won the right to a period of absolute rest
-and bliss. The same unerringly wise and just rather than merciful
-Law, which inflicts upon the incarnated Ego the Karmic punishment
-for every sin committed during the preceding life on Earth, provided
-for the now disembodied Entity a long lease of mental rest, <i>i.e.</i>,
-the entire oblivion of every sad event, aye, to the smallest painful
-thought, that took place in its last life as a personality, leaving in
-the soul-memory but the reminiscence of that which was bliss, or led
-to happiness. Plotinus, who said that our body was the true river of
-Lethe, for “souls plunged into it forget all,” meant more than he said.
-For, as our terrestrial body is like Lethe, so is our <i>celestial body</i>
-in Devachan, and much more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then am I to understand that the
-murderer, the transgressor of law divine and human in every shape, is
-allowed to go unpunished?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Who ever said that? Our philosophy
-has a doctrine of punishment as stern as that of the most rigid
-Calvinist, only far more philosophical and consistent with absolute
-justice. No deed, not even a sinful thought, will go unpunished; the
-latter more severely even than the former, as a thought is far more
-potential in creating evil results than even a
-deed.<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-We believe in an unerring law of Retribution, called <span
-class="smcap">Karma</span>, which asserts itself in a natural
-concatenation of causes and their unavoidable results.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And how, or where, does it act?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Every labourer is worthy of his
-hire, saith Wisdom in the Gospel; every action, good or bad, is a
-prolific parent, saith the Wisdom of the Ages. Put the two together,
-and you will find the “why.” After allowing the Soul, escaped from the
-pangs of personal life, a sufficient, aye, a hundredfold compensation,
-Karma, with its army of Skandhas, waits at the threshold of Devachan,
-whence the <i>Ego</i> re-emerges to assume a new incarnation. It is at this
-moment that the future destiny of the now-rested Ego trembles in the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-scales of just Retribution, as <i>it</i> now falls once again under the
-sway of active Karmic law. It is in this re-birth which is ready for
-<i>it</i>, a re-birth selected and prepared by this mysterious, inexorable,
-but in the equity and wisdom of its decrees infallible LAW, that the
-sins of the previous life of the Ego are punished. Only it is into
-no imaginary Hell, with theatrical flames and ridiculous tailed and
-horned devils, that the Ego is cast, but verily on to this earth, the
-plane and region of his sins, where he will have to atone for every
-bad thought and deed. As he has sown, so will he reap. Re-incarnation
-will gather around him all those other Egos who have suffered, whether
-directly or indirectly, at the hands, or even through the unconscious
-instrumentality, of the past <i>personality</i>. They will be thrown by
-Nemesis in the way of the <i>new</i> man, concealing the <i>old</i>, the eternal
-<span class="smcap">Ego</span>, and ...</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But where is the equity you speak
-of, since these <i>new</i> “personalities” are not aware of having sinned or
-been sinned against?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Has the coat torn to shreds from
-the back of the man who stole it, by another man who was robbed of
-it and recognises his property, to be regarded as fairly dealt with?
-The new “personality” is no better than a fresh suit of clothes with
-its specific characteristics, colour, form and qualities; but the
-<i>real</i> man who wears it is the same culprit as of old. It is the
-<i>individuality</i> who suffers through his “personality.” And it is
-this, and this alone, that can account for the terrible, still only
-<i>apparent</i>, injustice in the distribution of lots in life to man. When
-your modern philosophers will have succeeded in showing to us a good
-reason, why so many apparently innocent and good men are born only
-to suffer during a whole lifetime; why so many are born poor unto
-starvation in the slums of great cities, abandoned by fate and men;
-why, while these are born in the gutter, others open their eyes to
-light in palaces; while a noble birth and fortune seem often given to
-the worst of men and only rarely to the worthy; while there are beggars
-whose <i>inner</i> selves are peers to the highest and noblest of men;
-when this, and much more, is satisfactorily explained by either your
-philosophers or theologians, then only, but not till then, you will
-have the right to reject the theory of re-incarnation. The highest and
-grandest of poets have dimly perceived this truth of truths. Shelley
-believed in it, Shakespeare must have thought of it when writing on the
-worthlessness of Birth. Remember his words:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Why should my birth keep down my mounting spirit?</span>
-<span class="i0">Are not all creatures subject unto time?</span>
-<span class="i0">There’s legions now of beggars on the earth,</span>
-<span class="i0">That their original did spring from Kings,</span>
-<span class="i0">And many monarchs now, whose fathers were</span>
-<span class="i0">The riff-raff of their age....”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent">Alter the word “fathers” into “Egos”—and you will have the truth.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_9_1" id="SECTION_9_1"></a>
-<h2>IX. <br />ON THE KAMA-LOKA AND DEVACHAN.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>ON THE FATE OF THE LOWER “PRINCIPLES.”</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You spoke of <i>Kama-loka</i>, what is
-it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> When the man dies, his lower three
-principles leave him for ever; <i>i.e.</i>, body, life, and the vehicle of
-the latter, the astral body or the double of the <i>living</i> man. And
-then, his four principles—the central or middle principle, the animal
-soul or <i>Kama-rupa</i>, with what it has assimilated from the lower Manas,
-and the higher triad find themselves in <i>Kama-loka</i>. The latter is an
-astral locality, the <i>limbus</i> of scholastic theology, the <i>Hades</i> of
-the ancients, and, strictly speaking, a <i>locality</i> only in a relative
-sense. It has neither a definite area nor boundary, but exists <i>within</i>
-subjective space; <i>i.e.</i>, is beyond our sensuous perceptions. Still it
-exists, and it is there that the astral <i>eidolons</i> of all the beings
-that have lived, animals included, await their <i>second death</i>. For
-the animals it comes with the disintegration and the entire fading out
-of their <i>astral</i> particles to the last. For the human <i>eidolon</i> it
-begins when the Atma-Buddhi-Manasic triad is said to “separate” itself
-from its lower principles, or the reflection of the <i>ex-personality</i>,
-by falling into the Devachanic state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what happens after this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then the <i>Kama-rupic</i> phantom,
-remaining bereft of its informing thinking principle, the higher
-<i>Manas</i>, and the lower aspect of the latter, the animal intelligence,
-no longer receiving light from the higher mind, and no longer having a
-physical brain to work through, collapses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> In what way?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Well, 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.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And is it <i>this</i> nonentity which we
-find materializing in Séance rooms with Mediums?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is this nonentity. A true
-nonentity, however, only as to reasoning or cogitating powers, still an
-<i>Entity</i>, 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 <i>proxy</i>, so to speak. This
-“spook,” or the Kama-rupa, may be compared with the <i>jelly-fish</i>,
-which has an ethereal gelatinous appearance so long as it is in its
-own element, or water (the <i>medium’s specific AURA</i>), 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. But this would lead us too far, and
-upon other people’s grounds, whereon I have no desire to trespass. Let
-us keep to the subject of re-incarnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What of the latter? How long does
-the incarnating <i>Ego</i> remain in the Devachanic state?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This, we are taught, depends
-on the degree of spirituality and the merit or demerit of the last
-incarnation. The average time is from ten to fifteen centuries, as I
-already told you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why could not this Ego manifest
-and communicate with mortals as Spiritualists will have it? What is
-there to prevent a mother from communicating with the children she left
-on earth, a husband with his wife, and so on? It is a most consoling
-belief, I must confess; nor do I wonder that those who believe in it
-are so averse to give it up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Nor are they forced to, unless
-they happen to prefer truth to fiction, however “consoling.”
-Uncongenial our doctrines may be to Spiritualists; yet, nothing of
-what we believe in and teach is half as selfish and cruel as what they preach.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I do not understand you. What is selfish?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Their doctrine of the return of
-Spirits, the real “personalities” as they say; and I will tell you
-why. If <i>Devachan</i>—call it “paradise” if you like, a “place of bliss
-and of supreme felicity,” if it is anything—is such a place (or say
-<i>state</i>), logic tells us that no sorrow or even a shade of pain can be
-experienced therein. “God shall wipe away all the tears from the eyes”
-of those in paradise, we read in the book of many promises. And if the
-“Spirits of the dead” are enabled to return and see all that is going
-on on earth, and especially <i>in their homes</i>, what kind of bliss can be
-in store for them?</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_9_2" id="SECTION_9_2"></a>WHY THEOSOPHISTS DO NOT
-BELIEVE IN THE<br /> RETURN OF PURE “SPIRITS.”</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean? Why should this
-interfere with their bliss?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply this; and here is
-an instance. A mother dies, leaving behind her little helpless
-children—orphans whom she adores—perhaps a beloved husband also. We
-say that her “<i>Spirit</i>” or <i>Ego</i>—that individuality which is now
-all impregnated, for the entire Devachanic period, with the noblest
-feelings held by its late <i>personality</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, love for her children,
-pity for those who suffer, and so on—we say that it is now entirely
-separated from the “vale of tears,” that its future bliss consists in
-that blessed ignorance of all the woes it left behind. Spiritualists
-say, on the contrary, that it is as vividly aware of them, <i>and more
-so than before</i>, for “Spirits see more than mortals in the flesh do.”
-We say that the bliss of the <i>Devachanee</i> consists in its complete
-conviction that it has never left the earth, and that there is no such
-thing as death at all; that the <i>post-mortem</i> spiritual <i>consciousness</i>
-of the mother will represent to her that she lives surrounded by her
-children and all those whom she loved; that no gap, no link, will be
-missing to make her disembodied state the most perfect and absolute
-happiness. The Spiritualists deny this point blank. According to their
-doctrine, unfortunate man is not liberated even by death from the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-sorrows of this life. Not a drop from the life-cup of pain and
-suffering will miss his lips; and <i>nolens volens</i>, since he sees
-everything now, shall he drink it to the bitter dregs. Thus, the loving
-wife, who during her lifetime was ready to save her husband sorrow
-at the price of her heart’s blood, is now doomed to see, in utter
-helplessness, his despair, and to register every hot tear he sheds
-for her loss. Worse than that, she may see the tears dry too soon,
-and another beloved face shine on him, the father of her children;
-find another woman replacing her in his affections; doomed to hear
-her orphans giving the holy name of “mother” to one indifferent to
-them, and to see those little children neglected, if not ill-treated.
-According to this doctrine the “gentle wafting to immortal life”
-becomes without any transition the way into a new path of mental
-suffering! And yet, the columns of the “Banner of Light,” the veteran
-journal of the American Spiritualists, are filled with messages from
-the dead, the “dear departed ones,” who all write to say how very
-<i>happy</i> they are! Is such a state of knowledge consistent with bliss?
-Then “bliss” stands in such a case for the greatest curse, and orthodox
-damnation must be a relief in comparison to it!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how does your theory avoid
-this? How can you reconcile the theory of Soul’s omniscience with its
-blindness to that which is taking place on earth?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because such is the law of love
-and mercy. During every Devachanic period the Ego, omniscient as it
-is <i>per se</i>, clothes itself, so to say, with the <i>reflection</i> of
-the “personality” that was. I have just told you that the <i>ideal</i>
-efflorescence of all the abstract, therefore undying and eternal
-qualities or attributes, such as love and mercy, the love of the good,
-the true and the beautiful, that ever spoke in the heart of the living
-“personality,” clung after death to the Ego, and therefore followed
-it to Devachan. For the time being, then, the Ego becomes the ideal
-reflection of the human being it was when last on earth, and <i>that</i> is
-not omniscient. Were it that, it would never be in the state we call
-Devachan at all.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are your reasons for it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If you want an answer on the strict
-lines of our philosophy, then I will say that it is because everything
-is <i>illusion</i> (<i>Maya</i>) outside of eternal truth, which has neither
-form, colour, nor limitation. He who has placed himself beyond the
-veil of maya—and such are the highest Adepts and Initiates—can have no
-Devachan. As to the ordinary mortal, his bliss in it is complete. It is
-an <i>absolute</i> oblivion of all that gave it pain or sorrow in the past
-incarnation, and even oblivion of the fact that such things as pain
-or sorrow exist at all. The <i>Devachanee</i> 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 fulfilment of all its soul-yearnings. And thus it lives
-throughout long centuries an existence of <i>unalloyed</i> happiness, which
-is the reward for its sufferings in earth-life. In short, it bathes in
-a sea of uninterrupted felicity spanned only by events of still greater
-felicity in degree.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this is more than simple
-delusion, it is an existence of insane hallucinations!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> From your standpoint it may be, not
-so from that of philosophy. Besides which, is not our whole terrestrial
-life filled with such delusions? Have you never met men and women
-living for years in a fool’s paradise? And because you should happen to
-learn that the husband of a wife, whom she adores and believes herself
-as beloved by him, is untrue to her, would you go and break her heart
-and beautiful dream by rudely awakening her to the reality? I think
-not. I say it again, such oblivion and <i>hallucination</i>—if you call it
-so—are only a merciful law of nature and strict justice. At any rate,
-it is a far more fascinating prospect than the orthodox golden harp
-with a pair of wings. The assurance that “the soul that lives ascends
-frequently and runs familiarly through the streets of the heavenly
-Jerusalem, visiting the patriarchs and prophets, saluting the apostles,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-and admiring the army of martyrs” may seem of a more pious character
-to some. Nevertheless, it is a hallucination of a far more delusive
-character, since mothers love their children with an immortal love, we
-all know, while the personages mentioned in the “heavenly Jerusalem”
-are still of a rather doubtful nature. But I would, still, rather
-accept the “new Jerusalem,” with its streets paved like the show
-windows of a jeweller’s shop, than find consolation in the heartless
-doctrine of the Spiritualists. The idea alone that the <i>intellectual
-conscious souls</i> of one’s father, mother, daughter or brother find
-their bliss in a “Summer land”—only a little more natural, but just as
-ridiculous as the “New Jerusalem” in its description—would be enough
-to make one lose every respect for one’s “departed ones.” To believe
-that a pure spirit can feel happy while doomed to witness the sins,
-mistakes, treachery, and, above all, the sufferings of those from whom
-it is severed by death and whom it loves best, without being able to
-help them, would be a maddening thought.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> There is something in your argument.
-I confess to having never seen it in this light.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so, and one must be selfish
-to the core and utterly devoid of the sense of retributive justice, to
-have ever imagined such a thing. We are with those whom we have lost
-in material form, and far, far nearer to them now, than when they were
-alive. And it is not only in the fancy of the <i>Devachanee</i>, as some may
-imagine, but in reality. For pure divine love is not merely the blossom
-of a human heart, but has its roots in eternity. Spiritual holy love
-is immortal, and Karma brings sooner or later all those who loved each
-other with such a spiritual affection to incarnate once more in the
-same family group. Again we say that love beyond the grave, illusion
-though you may call it, has a magic and divine potency which reacts
-on the living. A mother’s <i>Ego</i> filled with love for the imaginary
-children it sees near itself, living a life of happiness, as real to
-<i>it</i> as when on earth—that love will always be felt by the children in
-flesh. It will manifest in their dreams, and often in various events—in
-<i>providential</i> protections and escapes, for love is a strong shield,
-and is not limited by space or time. As with this Devachanic “mother,”
-so with the rest of human relationships and attachments, save the
-purely selfish or material. Analogy will suggest to you the rest.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> In no case, then, do you admit the
-possibility of the communication of the living with the <i>disembodied</i>
-spirit?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Yes, there is a case, and even two
-exceptions to the rule. The first exception is during the few days
-that follow immediately the death of a person and before the <i>Ego</i>
-passes into the Devachanic state. Whether any living mortal, save a
-few exceptional cases—(when the intensity of the desire in the dying
-person to return for some purpose forced the higher consciousness <i>to
-remain awake</i>, and therefore it was really the <i>individuality</i>, the
-“Spirit” that communicated)—has derived much benefit from the return
-of the spirit into the <i>objective</i> plane is another question. The
-spirit is dazed after death and falls very soon into what we call
-“<i>pre-devachanic</i> unconsciousness.” The second exception is found in
-the <i>Nirmanakayas</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What about them? And what does the
-name mean for you?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is the name given to those
-who, though they have won the right to Nirvana and cyclic rest—(<i>not</i>
-“Devachan,” as the latter is an illusion of our consciousness, a happy
-dream, and as those who are fit for Nirvana must have lost entirely
-every desire or possibility of the world’s illusions)—have out of pity
-for mankind and those they left on earth renounced the Nirvanic state.
-Such an adept, or Saint, or whatever you may call him, believing it
-a selfish act to rest in bliss while mankind groans under the burden
-of misery produced by ignorance, renounces Nirvana, and determines
-to remain invisible <i>in spirit</i> on this earth. They have no material
-body, as they have left it behind; but otherwise they remain with all
-their principles even <i>in astral life</i> in our sphere. And such can and
-do communicate with a few elect ones, only surely not with <i>ordinary</i> mediums.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have put you the question about
-<i>Nirmanakayas</i> because I read in some German and other works that it
-was the name given to the terrestrial appearances or bodies assumed by
-Buddhas in the Northern Buddhistic teachings.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> So they are, only the Orientalists
-have confused this terrestrial body by understanding it to be
-<i>objective</i> and <i>physical</i> instead of purely astral and subjective.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what good can they do on
-earth?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not much, as regards individuals,
-as they have no right to interfere with Karma, and can only advise
-and inspire mortals for the general good. Yet they do more beneficent
-actions than you imagine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> To this Science would never
-subscribe, not even modern psychology. For them, no portion of
-intelligence can survive the physical brain. What would you answer
-them?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I would not even go to the trouble
-of answering, but would simply say, in the words given to “M.A. Oxon,”
-“Intelligence is perpetuated after the body is dead. Though it is not
-a question of the brain only.... It is reasonable to propound the
-indestructibility of the human spirit from what we know” (<i>Spirit
-Identity</i>, p. 69).</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But “M.A. Oxon” is a
-Spiritualist?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Quite so, and the only <i>true</i>
-Spiritualist I know of, though we may still disagree with him on many
-a minor question. Apart from this, no Spiritualist comes nearer to the
-occult truths than he does. Like any one of us he speaks incessantly
-“of the surface dangers that beset the ill-equipped, feather-headed
-muddler with the occult, who crosses the threshold without counting the
-cost.”<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>
-Our only disagreement rests in the question of “Spirit Identity.”
-Otherwise, I, for one, coincide almost entirely with him, and accept
-the three propositions he embodied in his address of July, 1884. It is
-this eminent Spiritualist, rather, who disagrees with us, not we with him.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are these propositions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">“1. That there is a life coincident
-with, and independent of the physical life of the body.”</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">“2. That, as a necessary corollary, this life
-extends beyond the life of the body” (we say it extends throughout
-Devachan).</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot3">“3. That there is communication between the
-denizens of that state of existence and those of the world in which we
-now live.”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">All depend, you see, on the minor and secondary aspects of these
-fundamental propositions. Everything depends on the views we take of
-Spirit and Soul, or <i>Individuality</i> and <i>Personality</i>. Spiritualists
-confuse the two “into one”; we separate them, and say that, with the
-exceptions above enumerated, no <i>Spirit</i> will revisit the earth, though
-the animal Soul may. But let us return once more to our direct subject,
-the Skandhas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I begin to understand better now.
-It is the Spirit, so to say, of those Skandhas which are the most
-ennobling, which, attaching themselves to the incarnating Ego, survive,
-and are added to the stock of its angelic experiences. And it is the
-attributes connected with the material Skandhas, with selfish and
-personal motives, which, disappearing from the field of action between
-two incarnations, reappear at the subsequent incarnation as Karmic
-results to be atoned for; and therefore the Spirit will not leave
-Devachan. Is it so?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Very nearly so. If you add to this
-that the law of retribution, or Karma, rewarding the highest and most
-spiritual in Devachan, never fails to reward them again on earth by
-giving them a further development, and furnishing the Ego with a body
-fitted for it, then you will be quite correct.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_9_3" id="SECTION_9_3"></a>A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE SKANDHAS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What becomes of the other, the lower
-Skandhas of the personality, after the death of the body? Are they
-quite destroyed?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are and yet they are not—a
-fresh metaphysical and occult mystery for you. They are destroyed as
-the working stock in hand of the personality; they remain as <i>Karmic
-effects</i>, as germs, hanging in the atmosphere of the terrestrial
-plane, ready to come to life, as so many avenging fiends, to attach
-themselves to the new personality of the Ego when it reincarnates.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This really passes my comprehension,
-and is very difficult to understand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not once that you have assimilated
-all the details. For then you will see that for logic, consistency,
-profound philosophy, divine mercy and equity, this doctrine of
-Re-incarnation has not its equal on earth. It is a belief in a
-perpetual progress for each incarnating Ego, or divine soul, in an
-evolution from the outward into the inward, from the material to the
-Spiritual, arriving at the end of each stage at absolute unity with the
-divine Principle. From strength to strength, from beauty and perfection
-of one plane to the greater beauty and perfection of another, with
-accessions of new glory, of fresh knowledge and power in each cycle,
-such is the destiny of every Ego, which thus becomes its own Saviour in
-each world and incarnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But Christianity teaches the same.
-It also preaches progression.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Yes, only with the addition of
-something else. It tells us of the <i>impossibility</i> of attaining
-Salvation without the aid of a miraculous Saviour, and therefore dooms
-to perdition all those who will not accept the dogma. This is just
-the difference between Christian theology and Theosophy. The former
-enforces belief in the Descent of the Spiritual Ego into the <i>Lower
-Self</i> the latter inculcates the necessity of endeavouring to elevate
-oneself to the Christos, or Buddhi state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> By teaching the annihilation of
-consciousness in case of failure, however, don’t you think that
-it amounts to the annihilation of <i>Self</i>, in the opinion of the
-non-metaphysical?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> From the standpoint of those who
-believe in the resurrection of the body <i>literally</i>, and insist that
-every bone, every artery and atom of flesh will be raised bodily on
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-the Judgment Day—of course it does. If you still insist that it is the
-perishable form and finite qualities that make up <i>immortal</i> man, then
-we shall hardly understand each other. And if you do not understand
-that, by limiting the existence of every Ego to one life on earth, you
-make of Deity an ever-drunken Indra of the Puranic dead letter, a cruel
-Moloch, a god who makes an inextricable mess on Earth, and yet claims
-thanks for it, then the sooner we drop the conversation the better.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But let us return, now that the
-subject of the Skandhas is disposed of, to the question of the
-consciousness which survives death. This is the point which interests
-most people. Do we possess more knowledge in Devachan than we do in
-Earth life?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In one sense, we can acquire more
-knowledge; that is, we can develop further any faculty which we loved
-and strove after during life, provided it is concerned with abstract
-and ideal things, such as music, painting, poetry, etc., since Devachan
-is merely an idealized and subjective continuation of earth-life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if in Devachan the Spirit is
-free from matter, why should it not possess all knowledge?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because, as I told you, the Ego is,
-so to say, wedded to the memory of its last incarnation. Thus, if you
-think over what I have said, and string all the facts together, you
-will realize that the Devachanic state is not one of omniscience, but a
-transcendental continuation of the personal life just terminated. It is
-the rest of the soul from the toils of life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But the scientific materialists
-assert that after the death of man nothing remains; that the human body
-simply disintegrates into its component elements; and that what we call
-soul is merely a temporary self-consciousness produced as a bye-product
-of organic action, which will evaporate like steam. Is not theirs a
-strange state of mind?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not strange at all, that I see.
-If they say that self-consciousness ceases with the body, then in
-their case they simply utter an unconscious prophecy, for once they
-are firmly convinced of what they assert, no conscious after-life is
-possible for them. For there <i>are</i> exceptions to every rule.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_9_4" id="SECTION_9_4"></a>ON POST-MORTEM AND POST-NATAL
-CONSCIOUSNESS.<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if human self-consciousness
-survives death as a rule, why should there be exceptions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In the fundamental principles of
-the spiritual world no exception is possible. But there are rules for
-those who see, and rules for those who prefer to remain blind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Quite so, I understand. This is but
-an aberration of the blind man, who denies the existence of the sun
-because he does not see it. But after death his spiritual eyes will
-certainly compel him to see. Is this what you mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> He will not be compelled, nor will
-he see anything. Having persistently denied during life the continuance
-of existence after death, he will be unable to see it, because his
-spiritual capacity having been stunted in life, it cannot develop after
-death, and he will remain blind. By insisting that he <i>must</i> see it,
-you evidently mean one thing and I another. You speak of the spirit
-from the spirit, or the flame from the flame—of Atma, in short—and you
-confuse it with the human soul—Manas.... You do not understand me; let
-me try to make it clear. The whole gist of your question is to know
-whether, in the case of a downright materialist, the complete loss of
-self-consciousness and self-perception after death is possible? Isn’t
-it so? I answer, It is possible. Because, believing firmly in our
-Esoteric Doctrine, which refers to the <i>post-mortem</i> period, or the
-interval between two lives or births as merely a transitory state, I
-say, whether that interval between two acts of the illusionary drama of
-life lasts one year or a million, that <i>post-mortem</i> state may, without
-any breach of the fundamental law, prove to be just the same state as
-that of a man who is in a dead faint.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But since you have just said that
-the fundamental laws of the after death state admit of no exceptions,
-how can this be?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Nor do I say that it does admit
-of an exception. But the spiritual law of continuity applies only
-to things which are truly real. To one who has read and understood
-Mundakya Upanishad and Vedanta-Sara all this becomes very clear. I will
-say more: it is sufficient to understand what we mean by Buddhi and
-the duality of Manas to gain a clear perception why the materialist
-may fail to have a self-conscious survival after death. Since Manas,
-in its lower aspect, is the seat of the terrestrial mind, it can,
-therefore, give only that perception of the Universe which is based on
-the evidence of that mind; it cannot give spiritual vision. It is said
-in the Eastern school, that between Buddhi and Manas (the <i>Ego</i>), or
-Iswara and Pragna<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>
-there is in reality no more difference than <i>between a
-forest and its trees, a lake and its waters</i>, as the Mundakya
-teaches. One or hundreds of trees dead from loss of vitality, or
-uprooted, are yet incapable of preventing the forest from being
-still a forest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But, as I understand it, Buddhi
-represents in this simile the forest, and
-Manas-taijasi<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
-the trees. And if Buddhi is immortal, how can that which is similar to
-it, <i>i.e.</i>, Manas-taijasi, entirely lose its consciousness till the day
-of its new incarnation? I cannot understand it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You cannot, because you will mix
-up an abstract representation of the whole with its casual changes
-of form. Remember that if it can be said of Buddhi-Manas that it is
-unconditionally immortal, the same cannot be said of the lower Manas,
-still less of Taijasi, which is merely an attribute. Neither of these,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-neither Manas nor Taijasi, can exist apart from Buddhi, the divine
-soul, because the first (<i>Manas</i>) is, in its lower aspect, a
-qualificative attribute of the terrestrial personality, and the second
-(<i>Taijasi</i>) is identical with the first, because it is the same Manas
-only with the light of Buddhi reflected on it. In its turn, Buddhi
-would remain only an impersonal spirit without this element which it
-borrows from the human soul, which conditions and makes of it, in this
-illusive Universe, <i>as it were something separate</i> from the universal
-soul for the whole period of the cycle of incarnation. Say rather that
-<i>Buddhi-Manas</i> can neither die nor lose its compound self-consciousness
-in Eternity, nor the recollection of its previous incarnations in which
-the two—<i>i.e</i>, the spiritual and the human soul—had been closely linked
-together. But it is not so in the case of a materialist, whose human
-soul not only receives nothing from the divine soul, but even refuses
-to recognise its existence. You can hardly apply this axiom to the
-attributes and qualifications of the human soul, for it would be like
-saying that because your divine soul is immortal, therefore the bloom
-on your cheek must also be immortal; whereas this bloom, like Taijasi,
-is simply a transitory phenomenon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do I understand you to say that we
-must not mix in our minds the noumenon with the phenomenon, the cause
-with its effect?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I do say so, and repeat that,
-limited to Manas or the human soul alone, the radiance of Taijasi
-itself becomes a mere question of time; because both immortality and
-consciousness after death become, for the terrestrial personality
-of man, simply conditioned attributes, as they depend entirely on
-conditions and beliefs created by the human soul itself during the life
-of its body. Karma acts incessantly; we reap <i>in our after-life</i> only
-the fruit of that which we have ourselves sown in this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if my Ego can, after the
-destruction of my body, become plunged in a state of entire
-unconsciousness, then where can be the punishment for the sins of my
-past life?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Our philosophy teaches that Karmic punishment
-reaches Ego only in its next incarnation. After death it receives only
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-the reward for the unmerited sufferings endured during its past
-incarnation.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>
-The whole punishment after death, even for the materialist, consists,
-therefore, in the absence of any reward, and the utter loss of the
-consciousness of one’s bliss and rest. Karma is the child of the
-terrestrial Ego, the fruit of the actions of the tree which is the
-objective personality visible to all, as much as the fruit of all the
-thoughts and even motives of the spiritual “I”; but Karma is also
-the tender mother, who heals the wounds inflicted by her during the
-preceding life, before she will begin to torture this Ego by inflicting
-upon him new ones. If it may be said that there is not a mental or
-physical suffering in the life of a mortal which is not the direct
-fruit and consequence of some sin in a preceding existence; on the
-other hand, since he does not preserve the slightest recollection of it
-in his actual life, and feels himself not deserving of such punishment,
-and therefore thinks he suffers for no guilt of his own, this alone
-is sufficient to entitle the human soul to the fullest consolation,
-rest, and bliss in his <i>post-mortem</i> existence. Death comes to our
-spiritual selves ever as a deliverer and friend. For the materialist,
-who, notwithstanding his materialism, was not a bad man, the interval
-between the two lives will be like the unbroken and placid sleep of
-a child, either entirely dreamless, or filled with pictures of which
-he will have no definite perception; while for the average mortal it
-will be a dream as vivid as life, and full of realistic bliss and visions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then the personal man must always go on suffering
-<i>blindly</i> the Karmic penalties which the Ego has incurred?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not quite so. At the solemn
-moment of death every man, even when death is sudden, sees the whole
-of his past life marshalled before him, in its minutest details. For
-one short instant the <i>personal</i> becomes one with the <i>individual</i>
-and all-knowing <i>Ego</i>. But this instant is enough to show to him the
-whole claim of causes which have been at work during his life. He
-sees and now understands himself as he is, unadorned by flattery or
-self-deception. He reads his life, remaining as a spectator looking
-down into the arena he is quitting; he feels and knows the justice of
-all the suffering that has overtaken him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Does this happen to everyone?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Without any exception. Very good
-and holy men see, we are taught, not only the life they are leaving,
-but even several preceding lives in which were produced the causes that
-made them what they were in the life just closing. They recognise the
-law of Karma in all its majesty and justice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is there anything corresponding to
-this before re-birth?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> There is. As the man at the moment
-of death has a retrospective insight into the life he has led, so, at
-the moment he is reborn on to earth, the <i>Ego</i>, awaking from the state
-of Devachan, has a prospective vision of the life which awaits him, and
-realizes all the causes that have led to it. He realizes them and sees
-futurity, because it is between Devachan and re-birth that the <i>Ego</i>
-regains his full <i>manasic</i> consciousness, and re-becomes for a short
-time the god he was, before, in compliance with Karmic law, he first
-descended into matter and incarnated in the first man of flesh. The
-“golden thread” sees all its “pearls” and misses not one of them.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_9_5" id="SECTION_9_5"></a>WHAT IS REALLY MEANT BY ANNIHILATION.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard some Theosophists speak
-of a golden thread on which their lives were strung. What do they mean
-by this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In the Hindu Sacred books it
-is said that that which undergoes periodical incarnation is the
-<i>Sutratma</i>, which means literally the “Thread Soul.” It is a synonym of
-the reincarnating Ego—Manas conjoined with <i>Buddhi</i>—which absorbs
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-the Manasic recollections of all our preceding lives. It is so called,
-because, like the pearls on a thread, so is the long series of human
-lives strung together on that one thread. In some Upanishad these
-recurrent rebirths are likened to the life of a mortal which oscillates
-periodically between sleep and waking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This, I must say, does not seem very
-clear, and I will tell you why. For the man who awakes, another day
-commences, but that man is the same in soul and body as he was the day
-before; whereas at every incarnation a full change takes place not only
-of the external envelope, sex, and personality, but even of the mental
-and psychic capacities. The simile does not seem to me quite correct.
-The man who arises from sleep remembers quite clearly what he has done
-yesterday, the day before, and even months and years ago. But none of
-us has the slightest recollection of a preceding life or of any fact or
-event concerning it.... I may forget in the morning what I have dreamt
-during the night, still I know that I have slept and have the certainty
-that I lived during sleep; but what recollection can I have of my past
-incarnation until the moment of death? How do you reconcile this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Some people do recollect their past
-incarnations during life; but these are Buddhas and Initiates. This
-is what the Yogis call Samma-Sambuddha, or the knowledge of the whole
-series of one’s past incarnations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But we ordinary mortals who have not
-reached Samma-Sambuddha, how are we to understand this simile?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By studying it and trying to
-understand more correctly the characteristics and the three kinds of
-sleep. Sleep is a general and immutable law for man as for beast, but
-there are different kinds of sleep and still more different dreams and visions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this takes us to another
-subject. Let us return to the materialist who, while not denying
-dreams, which he could hardly do, yet denies immortality in general and
-the survival of his own individuality.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And the materialist, without
-knowing it, is right. One who has no inner perception of, and faith
-in, the immortality of his soul, in that man the soul can never become
-Buddhi-taijasi, but will remain simply Manas, and for Manas alone there
-is no immortality possible. In order to live in the world to come a
-conscious life, one has to believe first of all in that life during the
-terrestrial existence. On these two aphorisms of the Secret Science
-all the philosophy about the <i>post-mortem</i> consciousness and the
-immortality of the soul is built. The Ego receives always according to
-its deserts. After the dissolution of the body, there commences for it
-a period of full awakened consciousness, or a state of chaotic dreams,
-or an utterly dreamless sleep undistinguishable from annihilation, and
-these are the three kinds of sleep. If our physiologists find the cause
-of dreams and visions in an unconscious preparation for them during the
-waking hours, why cannot the same be admitted for the <i>post-mortem</i>
-dreams? I repeat it: <i>death is sleep</i>. After death, before the
-spiritual eyes of the soul, begins a performance according to a
-programme learnt and very often unconsciously composed by ourselves:
-the practical carrying out of <i>correct</i> beliefs or of illusions which
-have been created by ourselves. The Methodist will be Methodist, the
-Mussulman a Mussulman, at least for some time—in a perfect fool’s
-paradise of each man’s creation and making. These are the <i>post-mortem</i>
-fruits of the tree of life. Naturally, our belief or unbelief in the
-fact of conscious immortality is unable to influence the unconditioned
-reality of the fact itself, once that it exists; but the belief or
-unbelief in that immortality as the property of independent or separate
-entities, cannot fail to give colour to that fact in its application to
-each of these entities. Now do you begin to understand it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I think I do. The materialist,
-disbelieving in everything that cannot be proven to him by his five
-senses, or by scientific reasoning, based exclusively on the data
-furnished by these senses in spite of their inadequacy, and rejecting
-every spiritual manifestation, accepts life as the only conscious
-existence. Therefore according to their beliefs so will it be unto
-them. They will lose their personal Ego, and will plunge into a
-dreamless sleep until a new awakening. Is it so?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Almost so. Remember the practically
-universal teaching of the two kinds of conscious existence: the
-terrestrial and the spiritual. The latter must be considered real from
-the very fact that it is inhabited by the eternal, changeless and
-immortal Monad; whereas the incarnating Ego dresses itself up in new
-garments entirely different from those of its previous incarnations,
-and in which all except its spiritual prototype is doomed to a change
-so radical as to leave no trace behind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How so? Can my conscious terrestrial
-“I” perish not only for a time, like the consciousness of the
-materialist, but so entirely as to leave no trace behind?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> According to the teaching, it must
-so perish and in its fullness, all except the principle which, having
-united itself with the Monad, has thereby become a purely spiritual
-and indestructible essence, one with it in the Eternity. But in the
-case of an out-and-out materialist, in whose personal “I” no Buddhi has
-ever reflected itself, how can the latter carry away into the Eternity
-one particle of that terrestrial personality? Your spiritual “I” is
-immortal; but from your present self it can carry away into Eternity
-that only which has become worthy of immortality, namely, the aroma
-alone of the flower that has been mown by death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, and the flower, the terrestrial “I”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The flower, as all past and future
-flowers which have blossomed and will have to blossom on the mother
-bough, the <i>Sutratma</i>, all children of one root or Buddhi—will return
-to dust. Your present “I,” as you yourself know, is not the body now
-sitting before me, nor yet is it what I would call Manas-Sutratma, but
-Sutratma-Buddhi.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this does not explain to me, at
-all, why you call life after death immortal, infinite and real, and
-the terrestrial life a simple phantom or illusion; since even that
-<i>post-mortem</i> life has limits, however much wider they may be
-than those of terrestrial life.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No doubt. The spiritual Ego of
-man moves in eternity like a pendulum between the hours of birth and
-death. But if these hours, marking the periods of life terrestrial
-and life spiritual, are limited in their duration, and if the very
-number of such stages in Eternity between sleep and awakening,
-illusion and reality, has its beginning and its end, on the other
-hand, the spiritual pilgrim is eternal. Therefore are the hours of his
-<i>post-mortem</i> life, when, disembodied, he stands face to face with
-truth and not the mirages of his transitory earthly existences, during
-the period of that pilgrimage which we call “the cycle of rebirths”—the
-only reality in our conception. Such intervals, their limitation
-notwithstanding, do not prevent the Ego, while ever perfecting itself,
-from following undeviatingly, though gradually and slowly, the path
-to its last transformation, when that Ego, having reached its goal,
-becomes a divine being. These intervals and stages help towards
-this final result instead of hindering it; and without such limited
-intervals the divine Ego could never reach its ultimate goal. I have
-given you once already a familiar illustration by comparing the <i>Ego</i>,
-or the <i>individuality</i>, to an actor, and its numerous and various
-incarnations to the parts it plays. Will you call these parts or their
-costumes the individuality of the actor himself? Like that actor, the
-Ego is forced to play during the cycle of necessity, up to the very
-threshold of <i>Paranirvana</i>, many parts such as may be unpleasant to it.
-But as the bee collects its honey from every flower, leaving the rest
-as food for the earthly worms, so does our spiritual individuality,
-whether we call it Sutratma or Ego. Collecting from every terrestrial
-personality, into which Karma forces it to incarnate, the nectar alone
-of the spiritual qualities and self-consciousness, it unites all these
-into one whole and emerges from its chrysalis as the glorified Dhyan
-Chohan. So much the worse for those terrestrial personalities from
-which it could collect nothing. Such personalities cannot assuredly
-outlive consciously their terrestrial existence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Thus, then, it seems that, for the
-terrestrial personality, immortality is still conditional. Is, then,
-immortality itself <i>not</i> unconditional?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all. But immortality
-cannot touch the <i>non-existent</i>: for all that which exists
-as <span class="smcap">Sat</span>, or emanates from <span
-class="smcap">Sat</span>, immortality and Eternity are absolute. Matter
-is the opposite pole of spirit, and yet the two are one. The essence of
-all this, <i>i.e.</i>, Spirit, Force and Matter, or the three in one, is as
-endless as it is beginningless; but the form acquired by this triple
-unity during its incarnations, its externality, is certainly only the
-illusion of our personal conceptions. Therefore do we call Nirvana and
-the Universal life alone a reality, while relegating the terrestrial
-life, its terrestrial personality included, and even its Devachanic
-existence, to the phantom realm of illusion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why in such a case call sleep
-the reality, and waking the illusion?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is simply a comparison made to
-facilitate the grasping of the subject, and from the standpoint of
-terrestrial conceptions it is a very correct one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And still I cannot understand, if
-the life to come is based on justice and the merited retribution for
-all our terrestrial suffering, how in the case of materialists, many of
-whom are really honest and charitable men, there should remain of their
-personality nothing but the refuse of a faded flower.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No one ever said such a thing. No
-materialist, however unbelieving, can die for ever in the fulness of
-his spiritual individuality. What was said is that consciousness can
-disappear either fully or partially in the case of a materialist, so
-that no conscious remains of his personality survive.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely this is annihilation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly not. One can sleep a dead
-sleep and miss several stations during a long railway journey, without
-the slightest recollection or consciousness, and awake at another
-station and continue the journey past innumerable other halting-places
-till the end of the journey or the goal is reached. Three kinds of
-sleep were mentioned to you: the dreamless, the chaotic, and the one
-which is so real, that to the sleeping man his dreams become full
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-realities. If you believe in the latter why can’t you believe in
-the former; according to the after life a man has believed in and
-expected, such is the life he will have. He who expected no life to
-come will have an absolute blank, amounting to annihilation, in the
-interval between the two rebirths. This is just the carrying out of
-the programme we spoke of, a programme created by the materialists
-themselves. But there are various kinds of materialists, as you say.
-A selfish, wicked Egoist, one who never shed a tear for anyone but
-himself, thus adding entire indifference to the whole world to his
-unbelief, must, at the threshold of death, drop his personality for
-ever. This personality having no tendrils of sympathy for the world
-around and hence nothing to hook on to Sutratma, it follows that with
-the last breath every connection between the two is broken. There being
-no Devachan for such a materialist, the Sutratma will reincarnate
-almost immediately. But those materialists who erred in nothing but
-their disbelief will oversleep but one station. And the time will come
-when that ex-materialist will perceive himself in the Eternity and
-perhaps repent that he lost even one day, one station, from the life eternal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Still, would it not be more correct
-to say that death is birth into a new life, or a return once more into
-eternity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You may if you like. Only remember
-that births differ, and that there are births of “still-born” beings,
-which are <i>failures</i> of nature. Moreover, with your Western fixed
-ideas about material life, the words “living” and “being” are quite
-inapplicable to the pure subjective state of <i>post-mortem</i> existence.
-It is just because, save in a few philosophers who are not read by the
-many, and who themselves are too confused to present a distinct picture
-of it, it is just because your Western ideas of life and death have
-finally become so narrow, that on the one hand they have led to crass
-materialism, and on the other, to the still more material conception
-of the other life, which the spiritualists have formulated in their
-Summer-land. There the souls of men eat, drink, marry, and live in a
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-paradise quite as sensual as that of Mohammed, but even less
-philosophical. Nor are the average conceptions of the uneducated
-Christians any better, being if possible still more material. What
-between truncated angels, brass trumpets, golden harps, and material
-hell-fires, the Christian heaven seems like a fairy scene at a
-Christmas pantomime.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It is because of these narrow conceptions that you
-find such difficulty in understanding. It is just because the life of
-the disembodied soul, while possessing all the vividness of reality,
-as in certain dreams, is devoid of every grossly objective form of
-terrestrial life, that the Eastern philosophers have compared it with
-visions during sleep.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_9_6" id="SECTION_9_6"></a>DEFINITE WORDS FOR DEFINITE THINGS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Don’t you think it is because there
-are no definite and fixed terms to indicate each “Principle” in man,
-that such a confusion of ideas arises in our minds with respect to the
-respective functions of these “Principles”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I have thought of it myself. The
-whole trouble has arisen from this: we have started our expositions
-of, and discussion about, the “Principles” using their Sanskrit names
-instead of coining immediately, for the use of Theosophists, their
-equivalents in English. We must try and remedy this now.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You will do well, as it may avoid
-further confusion; no two theosophical writers, it seems to me, have
-hitherto agreed to call the same “Principle” by the same name.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The confusion is more apparent than
-real, however. I have heard some of our Theosophists express surprise
-at, and criticize several essays speaking of these “principles”; but,
-when examined, there was no worse mistake in them than that of using
-the word “Soul” to cover the three principles without specifying
-the distinctions. The first, as positively the clearest of our
-Theosophical writers, Mr. A. P. Sinnett, has some comprehensive and
-admirably-written passages on the “Higher Self.”<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>
-His real idea has also been misconceived by
-some, owing to his using the word “Soul” in a general sense. Yet here
-are a few passages which will show to you how clear and comprehensive
-is all that he writes on the subject:—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">
-... “The human soul, once launched on the streams of evolution as a human
-individuality,<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
-passes through alternate periods of physical and relatively spiritual
-existence. It passes from the one plane, or stratum, or condition of
-nature to the other under the guidance of its Karmic affinities; living
-in incarnations the life which its Karma has pre-ordained; modifying
-its progress within the limitations of circumstances, and,—developing
-fresh Karma by its use or abuse of opportunities,—it returns to
-spiritual existence (Devachan) after each physical life,—through the
-intervening region of Kamaloca—for rest and refreshment and for the
-gradual absorption into its essence, as so much cosmic progress, of
-the life’s experience gained ‘on earth’ or during physical existence.
-This view of the matter will, moreover, have suggested many collateral
-inferences to anyone thinking over the subject; for instance, that the
-transfer of consciousness from the Kamaloca to the Devachanic stage of
-this progression would necessarily be gradual<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>;
-that in truth, no hard-and-fast line separates the varieties of
-spiritual conditions; that even the spiritual and physical planes, as
-psychic faculties in living people show, are not so hopelessly walled
-off from one another as materialistic theories would suggest; that
-all states of nature are all around us simultaneously, and appeal to
-different perceptive faculties; and so on.... It is clear that during
-physical existence people who possess psychic faculties remain in
-connection with the planes of superphysical consciousness; and although
-most people may not be endowed with such faculties, we all, as the
-phenomena of sleep, even, and especially ... those of somnambulism
-or mesmerism, show, are capable of entering into conditions of
-consciousness that the five physical senses have nothing to do with.
-We—the souls within us—are not as it were altogether adrift in the
-ocean of matter. We clearly retain some surviving interest or rights
-in the shore from which, for a time, we have floated off. The process
-of incarnation, therefore, is not fully described when we speak of
-an <i>alternate</i> existence on the physical and spiritual planes, and
-thus picture the soul as a complete entity slipping entirely from the
-one state of existence to the other. The more correct definitions
-of the process would probably represent incarnation as taking place
-on this physical plane of nature by reason of an efflux emanating
-from the soul. The Spiritual realm would all the while be the proper
-habitat of the Soul, which would never entirely quit it; <i>and that
-non-materializable portion of the Soul which abides permanently on
-the spiritual plane may fitly</i>, perhaps, be spoken of as the <span
-class="smcap">Higher Self</span>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">This “Higher Self” is <span
-class="smcap">Atma</span>, and of course it is “non-materializable,”
-as Mr. Sinnett says. Even more, it can never be “objective” under
-any circumstances, even to the highest spiritual perception.
-For <i>Atman</i> or the “Higher Self” is really Brahma, the <span
-class="smcap">Absolute</span>, and indistinguishable from it. In hours
-of <i>Samadhi</i>, the higher spiritual consciousness of the Initiate is
-entirely absorbed in the <span class="smcap">ONE</span> essence,
-which is Atman, and therefore, being one with the whole, there can
-be nothing objective for it. Now some of our Theosophists have got
-into the habit of using the words “Self” and “Ego” as synonymous, of
-associating the term “Self” with only man’s higher individual or even
-personal “Self” or <i>Ego</i>, whereas this term ought never to be applied
-except <i>to the One universal Self</i>. Hence the confusion. Speaking
-of Manas, the “causal body,” we may call it—when connecting it with
-the Buddhic radiance—the “<span class="smcap">Higher Ego</span>,”
-never the “Higher Self.” For even Buddhi, the “Spiritual Soul,” is
-not the <span class="smcap">Self</span>, but the vehicle only of
-<span class="smcap">Self</span>. All the other “<i>Selves</i>”—such as the
-“Individual” self and “personal” self—ought never to be spoken or
-written of without their qualifying and characteristic adjectives.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Thus in this most excellent essay on the “Higher
-Self,” this term is applied to the <i>sixth principle</i> or <i>Buddhi</i> (of
-course in conjunction with Manas, as without such union there would be
-no <i>thinking</i> principle or element in the spiritual soul); and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-has in consequence given rise to just such misunderstandings. The
-statement that “a child does not acquire its <i>sixth</i> principle—or
-become a morally responsible being capable of generating Karma—until
-seven years old,” proves what is meant therein by the <span
-class="smcap">Higher Self</span>. Therefore, the able author is
-quite justified in explaining that after the “Higher Self” has
-passed into the human being and saturated the personality—in some
-of the finer organizations only—with its consciousness “people with
-psychic faculties may indeed perceive this Higher Self through their
-finer senses from time to time.” But so are those, who limit the
-term “Higher Self” to the Universal Divine Principle, “justified” in
-misunderstanding him. For, when we read, without being prepared for
-this shifting of metaphysical terms,<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
-that while “fully manifesting on the physical plane ... the Higher Self
-still remains a conscious spiritual Ego on the corresponding plane
-of Nature”—we are apt to see in the “Higher Self” of this sentence,
-“Atma,” and in the spiritual Ego, “Manas,” or rather Buddhi-Manas, and
-forthwith to criticise the whole thing as incorrect.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">To avoid henceforth such misrepresentations, I
-propose to translate literally from the Occult Eastern terms their
-equivalents in English, and offer these for future use.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="space-below2 space-above2 bb bt" border="0" cellspacing="1" summary="_" cellpadding="1" rules="cols">
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">Atma, the inseparable ray of the Universal</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Higher</span>&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">and <span class="smcap">One Self</span>. It is the God <i>above</i>, more</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Self</span> is</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">than within, us. Happy the man who succeeds</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1 bb">in saturating his <i>inner Ego</i> with it!</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">the Spiritual soul or <i>Buddhi</i>, in close union</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Spiritual</span></td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">with <i>Manas</i>, the mind-principle, without</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><i>divine</i> <span class="smcap">Ego</span> is</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">which it is no <span class="smcap">Ego</span> at all, but only the Atmic</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1 bb"><i>Vehicle</i>.</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1"><i>Manas</i>, the “Fifth” Principle, so called,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">independently of Buddhi. The Mind-Principle</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Inner,</span></td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">is only the Spiritual Ego when merged</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">or <span class="smcap">Higher</span></td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1"><i>into one</i> with Buddhi,—no materialist being</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">“Ego” is</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">supposed to have in him <i>such</i> an Ego, however</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">great his intellectual capacities. It is the</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1 bb">permanent <i>Individuality</i> or the “Reincarnating Ego.”</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">the physical man in conjunction with his</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1"><i>lower</i> Self, <i>i.e.</i>, animal instincts, passions,</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Lower</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">desires, etc. It is called the “false personality,”</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">or <span class="smcap">Personal</span></td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">and consists of the <i>lower Manas</i> combined</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">“Ego” is</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">with Kama-rupa, and operating through</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdc">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl_ind1">the Physical body and its phantom or “double.”</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> The remaining “Principle” “<i>Pranâ</i>,” or “Life,”
-is, strictly speaking, the radiating force or Energy of Atma—as the
-Universal Life and the <span class="smcap">One Self</span>,—<span
-class="smcap">Its</span> lower or rather (in its effects) more
-physical, because manifesting, aspect. Pranâ or Life permeates the
-whole being of the objective Universe; and is called a “principle” only
-because it is an indispensable factor and the <i>deus ex machinâ</i> of the
-living man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This division being so much
-simplified in its combinations will answer better, I believe. The other
-is much too metaphysical.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If outsiders as well as Theosophists would
-agree to it, it would certainly make matters much more comprehensible.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_10_1" id="SECTION_10_1"></a>
-<h2>X. <br />ON THE NATURE OF OUR THINKING PRINCIPLE.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>THE MYSTERY OF THE EGO.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I perceive in the quotation you
-brought forward a little while ago from the <i>Buddhist Catechism</i> a
-discrepancy that I would like to hear explained. It is there stated
-that the Skandhas—memory included—change with every new incarnation.
-And yet, it is asserted that the reflection of the past lives, which,
-we are told, are entirely made up of Skandhas, “must survive.” At
-the present moment I am not quite clear in my mind as to what it is
-precisely that survives, and I would like to have it explained. What
-is it? Is it only that “reflection,” or those Skandhas, or always that
-same Ego, the Manas?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I have just explained that the
-reincarnating Principle, or that which we call the <i>divine</i> man, is
-indestructible throughout the life cycle: indestructible as a thinking
-<i>Entity</i>, and even as an ethereal form. The “reflection” is only the
-spiritualised <i>remembrance</i>, during the Devachanic period, of the
-<i>ex-personality</i>, Mr. A. or Mrs. B.—with which the <i>Ego</i> identifies
-itself during that period. Since the latter is but the continuation
-of the earth-life, so to say, the very acme and pitch, in an unbroken
-series, of the few happy moments in that now past existence, the <i>Ego</i>
-has to identify itself with the <i>personal</i> consciousness of that life,
-if anything shall remain of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This means that the <i>Ego</i>,
-notwithstanding its divine nature, passes every such period between
-two incarnations in a state of mental obscuration, or temporary insanity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You may regard it as you like.
-Believing that, outside the <span class="smcap">One</span> Reality,
-nothing is better than a passing illusion—the whole Universe
-included—we do not view it as insanity, but as a very natural sequence
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-or development of the terrestrial life. What is life? A bundle of
-the most varied experiences, of daily changing ideas, emotions, and
-opinions. In our youth we are often enthusiastically devoted to an
-ideal, to some hero or heroine whom we try to follow and revive; a
-few years later, when the freshness of our youthful feelings has
-faded out and sobered down, we are the first to laugh at our fancies.
-And yet there was a day when we had so thoroughly identified our own
-personality with that of the ideal in our mind—especially if it was
-that of a living being—that the former was entirely merged and lost in
-the latter. Can it be said of a man of fifty that he is the same being
-that he was at twenty? The <i>inner</i> man is the same; the outward living
-personality is completely transformed and changed. Would you also call
-these changes in the human mental states insanity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How would <i>you</i> name them, and
-especially how would you explain the permanence of one and the
-evanescence of the other?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We have our own doctrine ready,
-and to us it offers no difficulty. The clue lies in the double
-consciousness of our mind, and also, in the dual nature of the mental
-“principle.” There is a spiritual consciousness, the Manasic mind
-illumined by the light of Buddhi, that which subjectively perceives
-abstractions; and the sentient consciousness (the lower <i>Manasic</i>
-light), inseparable from our physical brain and senses. This latter
-consciousness is held in subjection by the brain and physical senses,
-and, being in its turn equally dependent on them, must of course fade
-out and finally die with the disappearance of the brain and physical
-senses. It is only the former kind of consciousness, whose root lies
-in eternity, which survives and lives for ever, and may, therefore, be
-regarded as immortal. Everything else belongs to passing illusions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you really understand by
-illusion in this case?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is very well described in the
-just-mentioned essay on “The Higher Self.” Says its author:
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The theory we are considering (the interchange of
-ideas between the <i>Higher Ego</i> and the lower self) harmonizes very well
-with the treatment of this world in which we live as a phenomenal world
-of illusion, the spiritual plans of nature being on the other hand the
-noumenal world or plane of reality. That region of nature in which, so
-to speak, the permanent soul is rooted is more real than that in which
-its transitory blossoms appear for a brief space to wither and fall
-to pieces, while the plant recovers energy for sending forth a fresh
-flower. Supposing flowers only were perceptible to ordinary senses,
-and their roots existed in a state of Nature intangible and invisible
-to us, philosophers in such a world who divined that there were such
-things as roots in another plane of existence would be apt to say of
-the flowers, These are not the real plants; they are of no relative
-importance, merely illusive phenomena of the moment.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This is what I mean. The world in which blossom
-the transitory and evanescent flowers of personal lives is not the
-real permanent world; but that one in which we find the root of
-consciousness, that root which is beyond illusion and dwells in the eternity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean by the root
-dwelling in eternity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I mean by this root the thinking
-entity, the Ego which incarnates, whether we regard it as an “Angel,”
-“Spirit,” or a Force. Of that which falls under our sensuous
-perceptions only what grows directly from, or is attached to this
-invisible root above, can partake of its immortal life. Hence every
-noble thought, idea and aspiration of the personality it informs,
-proceeding from and fed by this root, must become permanent. As to
-the physical consciousness, as it is a quality of the sentient but
-lower “principle,” (Kama-rupa or animal instinct, illuminated by the
-lower <i>manasic</i> reflection), or the human Soul—it must disappear.
-That which displays activity, while the body is asleep or paralysed,
-is the higher consciousness, our memory registering but feebly and
-inaccurately—because automatically—such experiences, and often failing
-to be even slightly impressed by them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how is it that <span class="smcap">Manas</span>,
-although you call it <i>Nous</i>, a “God,” is so weak during its
-incarnations, as to be actually conquered and fettered by its body?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I might retort with the same
-question and ask: “How is it that he, whom you regard as ‘the God of
-Gods’ and the One living God, <i>is so weak</i> as to allow evil (or the
-Devil) to have the best of <i>him</i> as much as of all his creatures,
-whether while he remains in Heaven, or during the time he was
-incarnated on this earth?” You are sure to reply again: “This is a
-Mystery; and we are forbidden to pry into the mysteries of God.”
-Not being forbidden to do so by our religious philosophy, I answer
-your question that, unless a God descends as an <i>Avatar</i>, no divine
-principle can be otherwise than cramped and paralysed by turbulent,
-animal matter. Heterogeneity will always have the upper hand over
-homogeneity, on this plane of illusions, and the nearer an essence
-is to its root-principle, Primordial Homogeneity, the more difficult
-it is for the latter to assert itself on earth. Spiritual and divine
-powers lie dormant in every human Being; and the wider the sweep of his
-spiritual vision the mightier will be the God within him. But as few
-men can feel that God, and since, as an average rule, deity is always
-bound and limited in our thought by earlier conceptions, those ideas
-that are inculcated in us from childhood, therefore, it is so difficult
-for you to understand our philosophy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And is it this Ego of ours which is
-our God?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all; “<i>A</i> God” is not the
-universal deity, but only a spark from the one ocean of Divine Fire.
-Our God <i>within</i> us, or “our Father in Secret” is what we call the
-“<span class="smcap">Higher Self</span>,” <i>Atma</i>. Our incarnating Ego
-was a God in its origin, as were all the primeval emanations of the
-One Unknown Principle. But since its “fall into Matter,” having to
-incarnate throughout the cycle, in succession, from first to last,
-it is no longer a free and happy god, but a poor pilgrim on his way
-to regain that which he has lost. I can answer your more fully by
-repeating what is said of the <span class="smcap">Inner Man</span> in
-<span class="smcap">Isis Unveiled</span> (Vol. II. 593):—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“From the remotest antiquity <i>mankind</i> as a
-whole <i>have always been convinced of the existence of a personal
-spiritual entity within the personal physical man</i>. This inner
-entity was more or less divine, according to its proximity to the
-<i>crown</i>. The closer the union the more serene man’s destiny, the less
-dangerous the external conditions. This belief is neither bigotry
-nor superstition, only an ever-present, instinctive feeling of the
-proximity of another spiritual and invisible world, which, though it
-be subjective to the senses of the outward man, is perfectly objective
-to the inner ego. Furthermore, they believed that <i>there are external
-and internal conditions which affect the determination of our will upon
-our actions</i>. They rejected fatalism, for fatalism implies a blind
-course of some still blinder power. But they believed in <i>destiny</i>
-or <i>Karma</i>, which from birth to death every man is weaving thread by
-thread around himself, as a spider does his cobweb; and this destiny
-is guided by that presence termed by some the guardian angel, or our
-more intimate astral inner man, who is but too often the evil genius
-of the man of flesh or the <i>personality</i>. Both these lead on <span
-class="smcap">Man</span>, but one of them must prevail; and from the
-very beginning of the invisible affray the stern and implacable <i>law
-of compensation and retribution</i> steps in and takes its course,
-following faithfully the fluctuations of the conflict. When the last
-strand is woven, and man is seemingly enwrapped in the network of his
-own doing, then he finds himself completely under the empire of this
-<i>self-made</i> destiny. It then either fixes him like the inert shell
-against the immovable rock, or like a feather carries him away in a
-whirlwind raised by his own actions.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Such is the destiny of the <span
-class="smcap">Man</span>—the true Ego, not the Automaton, the <i>shell</i>
-that goes by that name. It is for him to become the conqueror over matter.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_10_2" id="SECTION_10_2"></a>THE COMPLEX NATURE OF MANAS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But you wanted to tell me something
-of the essential nature of Manas, and of the relation in which the
-Skandhas of physical man stand to it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is this nature, mysterious,
-Protean, beyond any grasp, and almost shadowy in its correlations with
-the other principles, that is most difficult to realise, and still more
-so to explain. Manas is a “principle,” and yet it is an “Entity” and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-individuality or Ego. He is a “God,” and yet he is doomed to an endless
-cycle of incarnations, for each of which he is made responsible, and
-for each of which he has to suffer. All this seems as contradictory as
-it is puzzling; nevertheless, there are hundreds of people, even in
-Europe, who realise all this perfectly, for they comprehend the Ego not
-only in its integrity but in its many aspects. Finally, if I would make
-myself comprehensible, I must begin by the beginning and give you the
-genealogy of this Ego in a few lines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Say on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Try to imagine a “Spirit,” a
-celestial Being, whether we call it by one name or another, divine in
-its essential nature, yet not pure enough to be <i>one with the</i> <span
-class="smcap">All</span>, and having, in order to achieve this, to
-so purify its nature as to finally gain that goal. It can do so only
-by passing <i>individually</i> and <i>personally</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, spiritually and
-physically, through every experience and feeling that exists in the
-manifold or differentiated Universe. It has, therefore, after having
-gained such experience in the lower kingdoms, and having ascended
-higher and still higher with every rung on the ladder of being, to
-pass through every experience on the human planes. In its very essence
-it is THOUGHT, and is, therefore, called in its plurality <i>Manasa
-putra</i>, “the Sons of the (Universal) mind.” This <i>individualised</i>
-“Thought” is what we Theosophists call the <i>real</i> human <span
-class="smcap">Ego</span>, the thinking Entity imprisoned in a case of
-flesh and bones. This is surely a Spiritual Entity, not <i>Matter</i>, and
-such Entities are the incarnating <span class="smcap">Egos</span> that
-inform the bundle of animal matter called mankind, and whose names are
-<i>Manasa</i> or “Minds.” But once imprisoned, or incarnate, their essence
-becomes dual: that is to say, the <i>rays</i> of the eternal divine Mind,
-considered as individual entities, assume a two-fold attribute which is
-(<i>a</i>) their <i>essential</i> inherent characteristic, heaven-aspiring mind
-(higher <i>Manas</i>) and (<i>b</i>) the human quality of thinking, or animal
-cogitation, rationalised owing to the superiority of the human brain,
-the Kama-tending or lower Manas. One gravitates toward Buddhi, the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-other, tending downward, to the seat of passions and animal desires.
-The latter have no room in Devachan, nor can they associate with the
-divine triad which ascends as ONE into mental bliss. Yet it is the Ego,
-the Manasic Entity, which is held responsible for all the sins of the
-lower attributes, just as a parent is answerable for the transgressions
-of his child, so long as the latter remains irresponsible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is this “child” the
-“personality”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is. When, therefore, it
-is stated that the “personality” dies with the body it does not
-state all. The body, which was only the objective symbol of Mr. A.
-or Mrs. B., fades away with all its material Skandhas, which are
-the visible expressions thereof. But all that which constituted
-during life the <i>spiritual</i> bundle of experiences, the noblest
-aspirations, undying affections, and <i>unselfish</i> nature of Mr. A. or
-Mrs. B. clings for the time of the Devachanic period to the <span
-class="smcap">Ego</span>, which is identified with the spiritual
-portion of that terrestrial Entity, now passed away out of sight. The
-<span class="smcap">Actor</span> is so imbued with the <i>rôle</i> just
-played by him that he dreams of it during the whole Devachanic night,
-which <i>vision</i> continues till the hour strikes for him to return to the
-stage of life to enact another part.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how is it that this doctrine,
-which you say is as old as thinking men, has found no room, say, in
-Christian theology?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You are mistaken, it has; only
-theology has disfigured it out of all recognition, as it has many
-other doctrines. Theology calls the <span class="smcap">Ego</span>
-the Angel that God gives us at the moment of our birth, <i>to take care
-of our Soul</i>. Instead of holding that “Angel” responsible for the
-transgressions of the poor helpless “Soul,” it is the latter which,
-according to theological logic, is punished for all the sins of both
-flesh and mind! It is the Soul, the immaterial <i>breath</i> of God and his
-<i>alleged creation</i>, which, by some most amazing intellectual jugglery,
-is doomed to burn in a material hell without ever being
-consumed,<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>
-while the “Angel” escapes scot free after folding his white pinions
-and wetting them with a few tears. Aye, these are our “ministering
-Spirits,” the “messengers of mercy” who are sent, Bishop Mant tells us—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“.... to fulfil</span>
-<span class="i0">Good for Salvation’s heirs, for us they still</span>
-<span class="i0">Grieve when we sin, rejoice when we repent;”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> Yet it becomes evident that if all the Bishops
-the world over were asked to define once for all what they mean by
-<i>Soul</i> and its functions, they would be as unable to do so as to show
-us any shadow of logic in the orthodox belief!</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_10_3" id="SECTION_10_3"></a>THE DOCTRINE IS TAUGHT IN ST. JOHN’S GOSPEL.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> To this the adherents to this
-belief might answer, that if even the orthodox dogma does promise the
-impenitent sinner and materialist a bad time of it in a rather too
-realistic Inferno, it gives them, on the other hand, a chance for
-repentance to the last minute. Nor do they teach annihilation, or loss
-of personality, which is all the same.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If the Church teaches nothing of
-the kind, on the other hand, Jesus does; and that is something to
-those, at least, who place Christ higher than Christianity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Does Christ teach anything of the
-sort?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> He does; and every well-informed
-Occultist and even Kabalist will tell you so. Christ, or the fourth
-Gospel at any rate, teaches re-incarnation as also the annihilation
-of the personality, if you but forget the dead letter and hold to the
-esoteric Spirit. Remember verses 1 and 2 in chapter xv. of St. John.
-What does the parable speak about if not of the <i>upper triad</i> in
-man? <i>Atma</i> is the Husbandman—the Spiritual Ego or <i>Buddhi</i> (Christos)
-the Vine, while the animal and vital Soul, the <i>personality</i>, is the
-“branch.” “I am the <i>true</i> vine, and my Father is the Husbandman. Every
-branch in me that beareth not fruit he taketh away.... As the branch
-cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the vine; no more can
-ye, except ye abide in me. I am the Vine—ye are the branches. If a man
-abide not in me he is cast forth as a branch, and is <i>withered</i> and
-cast into the fire and burned.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="indent">Now we explain it in this way. Disbelieving in the
-hell-fires which theology discovers as underlying the threat to the
-<i>branches</i>, we say that the “Husbandman” means Atma, the Symbol for the
-infinite, impersonal Principle,<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
-while the Vine stands for the Spiritual Soul, <i>Christos</i>, and each
-“branch” represents a new incarnation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what proofs have you to support
-such an arbitrary interpretation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Universal symbology is a warrant
-for its correctness and that it is not arbitrary. Hermas says of “God”
-that he “planted the Vineyard,” <i>i.e.</i>, he created mankind. In the
-<i>Kabala</i>, it is shown that the Aged of the Aged, or the “Long Face,”
-plants a vineyard, the latter typifying mankind; and a vine, meaning
-Life. The Spirit of “<i>King</i> Messiah” is, therefore, shown as washing
-his garments in <i>the wine</i> from above, from the creation of the
-world.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
-And King <i>Messiah</i> is the <span class="smcap">Ego</span> purified
-<i>by washing his garments</i> (<i>i.e.</i>, his personalities in re-birth),
-in the <i>wine from</i> above, or <span class="smcap">Buddhi</span>.
-Adam, or A-Dam, is “blood.” The Life of the flesh is in the blood
-(nephesh—soul), <i>Leviticus</i> xvii. And Adam-Kadmon is the Only-Begotten.
-Noah also plants a vineyard—the allegorical hot-bed of future humanity.
-As a consequence of the adoption of the same allegory, we find it
-reproduced in the Nazarene <i>Codex</i>. Seven vines are procreated—which
-seven vines are our Seven Races with their seven Saviours or
-<i>Buddhas</i>—which spring from Iukabar Zivo, and Ferho (or Parcha) Raba
-waters them.<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a>
-When the blessed will ascend among the creatures of Light, they shall
-see Iavar-Xivo, <i>Lord of</i> <span class="smcap">Life</span>, and the
-<span class="smcap">First Vine</span>.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>
-These kabalistic metaphors are thus naturally repeated in the <i>Gospel
-according to St. John</i> (xv., 1).
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="indent"> Let us not forget that in the human system—even
-according to those philosophies which ignore our septenary division—the
-<span class="smcap">Ego</span> or <i>thinking man</i> is called the <i>Logos</i>,
-or the Son of Soul and Spirit. “Manas is the adopted Son of King ——
-and Queen ——” (esoteric equivalents for Atma and Buddhi), says an
-occult work. He is the “man-god” of Plato, who crucifies himself in
-<i>Space</i> (or the duration of the life cycle) for the redemption of
-<span class="smcap">Matter</span>. This he does by incarnating over
-and over again, thus leading mankind onward to perfection, and making
-thereby room for lower forms to develop into higher. Not for one life
-does he cease progressing himself and helping all physical nature to
-progress; even the occasional, very rare event of his losing one of his
-personalities, in the case of the latter being entirely devoid of even
-a spark of spirituality, helps toward his individual progress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely, if the <i>Ego</i> is held
-responsible for the transgressions of its personalities, it has to
-answer also for the loss, or rather the complete annihilation, of one
-of such.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all, unless it has
-done nothing to avert this dire fate. But if, all its efforts
-notwithstanding, its voice, <i>that of our conscience</i>, was unable to
-penetrate through the wall of matter, then the obtuseness of the
-latter proceeding from the imperfect nature of the material is classed
-with other failures of nature. The Ego is sufficiently punished by
-the loss of Devachan, and especially by having to incarnate almost
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This doctrine of the possibility of
-losing one’s soul—or personality, do you call it?—militates against the
-ideal theories of both Christians and Spiritualists, though Swedenborg
-adopts it to a certain extent, in what he calls <i>Spiritual death</i>. They
-will never accept it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This can in no way alter a fact in
-nature, if it be a fact, or prevent such a thing occasionally taking
-place. The universe and everything in it, moral, mental, physical,
-psychic, or Spiritual, is built on a perfect law of equilibrium and
-harmony. As said before (<i>vide Isis Unveiled</i>), the centripetal
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-force could not manifest itself without the centrifugal in the
-harmonious revolutions of the spheres, and all forms and their
-progress are the products of this dual force in nature. Now the
-Spirit (or <i>Buddhi</i>) is the centrifugal and the soul (<i>Manas</i>) the
-centripetal spiritual energy; and to produce one result they have
-to be in perfect union and harmony. Break or damage the centripetal
-motion of the earthly soul tending toward the centre which attracts
-it; arrest its progress by clogging it with a heavier weight of matter
-than it can bear, or than is fit for the Devachanic state, and the
-harmony of the whole will be destroyed. Personal life, or perhaps
-rather its ideal reflection, can only be continued if sustained
-by the two-fold force, that is by the close union of <i>Buddhi</i> and
-<i>Manas</i> in every re-birth or personal life. The least deviation from
-harmony damages it; and when it is destroyed beyond redemption the two
-forces separate at the moment of death. During a brief interval the
-<i>personal</i> form (called indifferently <i>Kama rupa</i> and <i>Mayavi rupa</i>),
-the spiritual efflorescence of which, attaching itself to the Ego,
-follows it into Devachan and gives to the permanent <i>individuality</i>
-its <i>personal</i> colouring (<i>pro tem.</i>, so to speak), is carried
-off to remain in <i>Kama-loka</i> and to be gradually annihilated. For
-it is after the death of the utterly depraved, the unspiritual and
-the wicked beyond redemption, that arrives the critical and supreme
-moment. If during life the ultimate and desperate effort of the <span
-class="smcap">Inner Self</span> (<i>Manas</i>), to unite something of the
-personality with itself and the high glimmering ray of the divine
-Buddhi is thwarted; if this ray is allowed to be more and more shut out
-from the ever-thickening crust of physical brain, the Spiritual <span
-class="smcap">Ego</span> or Manas, once freed from the body, remains
-severed entirely from the ethereal relic of the personality; and the
-latter, or <i>Kama rupa</i>, following its earthly attractions, is drawn
-into and remains in Hades, which we call the <i>Kama-loka</i>. These are
-“the withered branches” mentioned by Jesus as being cut off from the
-<i>Vine</i>. Annihilation, however, is never instantaneous, and may require
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-centuries sometimes for its accomplishment. But there the personality
-remains along with the <i>remnants</i> of other more fortunate personal
-Egos, and becomes with them a <i>shell</i> and an <i>Elementary</i>. As said
-in <i>Isis</i>, it is these two classes of “Spirits,” the <i>shells</i> and
-the <i>Elementaries</i>, which are the leading “Stars” on the great
-spiritual stage of “materialisations.” And you may be sure of it,
-it is not they who incarnate; and, therefore, so few of these “dear
-departed ones” know anything of re-incarnation, misleading thereby the Spiritualists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But does not the author of “<i>Isis
-Unveiled</i>” stand accused of having preached against re-incarnation?
-<span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By those who have misunderstood what
-was said, yes. At the time that work was written, re-incarnation was
-not believed in by any Spiritualists, either English or American,
-and what is said there of <i>re-incarnation</i> was directed against the
-French Spiritists, whose theory is as unphilosophical and absurd as
-the Eastern teaching is logical and self-evident in its truth. The
-Re-incarnationists of the Allan Kardec School believe in an arbitrary
-and immediate re-incarnation. With them, the dead father can incarnate
-in his own unborn daughter, and so on. They have neither Devachan,
-Karma, nor any philosophy that would warrant or prove the necessity of
-consecutive rebirths. But how can the author of “Isis” argue against
-<i>Karmic</i> re-incarnation, at long intervals varying between 1,000 and
-1,500 years, when it is the fundamental belief of both Buddhists and
-Hindus?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you reject the theories of both
-the Spiritists and the Spiritualists, in their entirety?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not in their entirety, but only
-with regard to their respective fundamental beliefs. Both rely on what
-their “Spirits” tell them; and both disagree as much with each other as
-we Theosophists disagree with both. Truth is one; and when we hear the
-French spooks preaching re-incarnation, and the English spooks denying
-and denouncing the doctrine, we say that either the French or the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-English “Spirits” do not know what they are talking about. We
-believe with the Spiritualists and the Spiritists in the existence
-of “Spirits,” or invisible Beings endowed with more or less
-intelligence. But, while in our teachings their kinds and <i>genera</i>
-are legion, our opponents admit of no other than human disembodied
-“Spirits,” which, to our knowledge, are mostly Kamalokic <span
-class="smcap">Shells</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You seem very bitter against
-Spirits. As you have given me your views and your reasons for
-disbelieving in the materialization of, and direct communication
-in <i>séances</i>, with the disembodied spirits—or the “spirits of the
-dead”—would you mind enlightening me as to one more fact? Why are some
-Theosophists never tired of saying how dangerous is intercourse with
-spirits, and mediumship? Have they any particular reason for this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We must suppose so. I know I have.
-Owing to my familiarity for over half a century with these invisible,
-yet but too tangible and undeniable “influences,” from the conscious
-Elementals, semi-conscious <i>shells</i>, down to the utterly senseless
-and nondescript spooks of all kinds, I claim a certain right to my
-views.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you give an instance or
-instances to show why these practices should be regarded as dangerous?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This would require more time than I
-can give you. Every cause must be judged by the effects it produces. Go
-over the history of Spiritualism for the last fifty years, ever since
-its reappearance in this century in America—and judge for yourself
-whether it has done its votaries more good or harm. Pray understand
-me. I do not speak against real Spiritualism, but against the modern
-movement which goes under that name, and the so-called philosophy
-invented to explain its phenomena.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Don’t you believe in their phenomena
-at all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is because I believe in them
-with too good reason, and (save some cases of deliberate fraud) know
-them to be as true as that you and I live, that all my being revolts
-against them. Once more I speak only of physical, not mental or even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-psychic phenomena. Like attracts like. There are several high-minded,
-pure, good men and women, known to me personally, who have passed years
-of their lives under the direct guidance and even protection of high
-“Spirits,” whether disembodied or planetary. But <i>these</i> Intelligences
-are not of the type of the John Kings and the Ernests who figure in
-<i>séance</i> rooms. These Intelligences guide and control mortals only in
-rare and exceptional cases to which they are attracted and magnetically
-drawn by the Karmic past of the individual. It is not enough to sit
-“for development” in order to attract them. That only opens the door
-to a swarm of “spooks,” good, bad and indifferent, to which the medium
-becomes a slave for life. It is against such promiscuous mediumship and
-intercourse with goblins that I raise my voice, not against spiritual
-mysticism. The latter is ennobling and holy; the former is of just
-the same nature as the phenomena of two centuries ago, for which so
-many witches and wizards have been made to suffer. Read Glanvil and
-other authors on the subject of witchcraft, and you will find recorded
-there the parallels of most, if not all, of the physical phenomena of
-nineteenth century “Spiritualism.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean to suggest that it is
-all witchcraft and nothing more?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What I mean is that, whether
-conscious or unconscious, all this dealing with the dead is
-<i>necromancy</i>, and a most dangerous practice. For ages before Moses
-such raising of the dead was regarded by all the intelligent nations
-as sinful and cruel, inasmuch as it disturbs the rest of the souls and
-interferes with their evolutionary development into higher states.
-The collective wisdom of all past centuries has ever been loud in
-denouncing such practices. Finally, I say, what I have never ceased
-repeating orally and in print for fifteen years: While some of the
-so-called “spirits” do not know what they are talking about, repeating
-merely—like poll-parrots—what they find in the mediums’ and other
-people’s brains, others are most dangerous, and can only lead one to
-evil. These are two self-evident facts. Go into spiritualistic
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-circles of the Allan Kardec school, and you find “spirits” asserting
-re-incarnation and speaking like Roman Catholics born. Turn to the
-“dear departed ones” in England and America, and you will hear them
-denying re-incarnation through thick and thin, denouncing those who
-teach it, and holding to Protestant views. Your best, your most
-powerful mediums, have all suffered in health of body and mind. Think
-of the sad end of Charles Foster, who died in an asylum, a raving
-lunatic; of Slade, an epileptic; of Eglinton—the best medium now in
-England—subject to the same. Look back over the life of D. D. Home, a
-man whose mind was steeped in gall and bitterness, who never had a good
-word to say of anyone whom he suspected of possessing psychic powers,
-and who slandered every other medium to the bitter end. This Calvin of
-Spiritualism suffered for years from a terrible spinal disease, brought
-on by his intercourse with the “spirits,” and died a perfect wreck.
-Think again of the sad fate of poor Washington Irving Bishop. I knew
-him in New York, when he was fourteen, and he was undeniably a medium.
-It is true that the poor man stole a march on his “spirits,” and
-baptized them “unconscious muscular action,” to the great <i>gaudium</i> of
-all the corporations of highly learned and scientific fools, and to the
-replenishment of his own pocket. But <i>de mortuis nil nisi bonum</i>; his
-end was a sad one. He had strenuously concealed his epileptic fits—the
-first and strongest symptom of genuine mediumship—and who knows whether
-he was dead or in a trance when the <i>post-mortem</i> examination was
-performed? His relatives insist that he was alive, if we are to believe
-Reuter’s telegrams. Finally, behold the veteran mediums, the founders
-and prime movers of modern spiritualism—the Fox sisters. After more
-than forty years of intercourse with the “Angels,” the latter have
-led them to become incurable sots, who are now denouncing, in public
-lectures, their own life-long work and philosophy as a fraud. What kind
-of spirits must they be who prompted them, I ask you?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is your inference a correct one?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What would you infer if the best
-pupils of a particular school of singing broke down from overstrained
-sore throats? That the method followed was a bad one. So I think the
-inference is equally fair with regard to Spiritualism when we see their
-best mediums fall a prey to such a fate. We can only say:—Let those
-who are interested in the question judge the tree of Spiritualism by
-its fruits, and ponder over the lesson. We Theosophists have always
-regarded the Spiritualists as brothers having the same mystic tendency
-as ourselves, but they have always regarded us as enemies. We, being in
-possession of an older philosophy, have tried to help and warn them;
-but they have repaid us by reviling and traducing us and our motives
-in every possible way. Nevertheless, the best English Spiritualists
-say just as we do, wherever they treat of their belief seriously.
-Hear “M.A. Oxon.” confessing this truth: “Spiritualists are too much
-inclined to dwell exclusively on the intervention of external spirits
-in this world of ours, <i>and to ignore the powers of the incarnate</i>
-Spirit.”<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
-Why vilify and abuse us, then, for saying precisely the same?
-Henceforward, we will have nothing more to do with Spiritualism.
-And now let us return to Re-incarnation.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_11_1" id="SECTION_11_1"></a>
-<h2>XI. <br />ON THE MYSTERIES OF RE-INCARNATION.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>PERIODICAL REBIRTHS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You mean, then, that we have all
-lived on earth before, in many past incarnations, and shall go on so
-living?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I do. The life-cycle, or rather
-the cycle of conscious life, begins with the separation of the mortal
-animal-man into sexes, and will end with the close of the last
-generation of men, in the seventh round and seventh race of mankind.
-Considering we are only in the fourth round and fifth race, its
-duration is more easily imagined than expressed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And we keep on incarnating in new
-<i>personalities</i> all the time?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Most assuredly so; because this
-life-cycle or period of incarnation may be best compared to human life.
-As each such life is composed of days of activity separated by nights
-of sleep or of inaction, so, in the incarnation-cycle, an active life
-is followed by a Devachanic rest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And it is this succession of births
-that is generally defined as re-incarnation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so. It is only through these
-births that the perpetual progress of the countless millions of Egos
-toward final perfection and final rest (as long as was the period of
-activity) can be achieved.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what is it that regulates the
-duration, or special qualities of these incarnations?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Karma, the universal law of
-retributive justice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is it an intelligent law?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> For the Materialist, who calls
-the law of periodicity which regulates the marshalling of the several
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-bodies, and all the other laws in nature, blind forces and mechanical
-laws, no doubt Karma would be a law of chance and no more. For us, no
-adjective or qualification could describe that which is impersonal and
-no entity, but a universal operative law. If you question me about
-the causative intelligence in it, I must answer you I do not know.
-But if you ask me to define its effects and tell you what these are
-in our belief, I may say that the experience of thousands of ages has
-shown us that they are absolute and unerring <i>equity</i>, <i>wisdom</i>, and
-<i>intelligence</i>. For Karma in its effects, is an unfailing redresser of
-human injustice, and of all the failures of nature; a stern adjuster
-of wrongs; a retributive law which rewards and punishes with equal
-impartiality. It is, in the strictest sense, “no respecter of persons,”
-though, on the other hand, it can neither be propitiated, nor turned
-aside by prayer. This is a belief common to Hindus and Buddhists, who
-both believe in Karma.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> In this Christian dogmas contradict
-both, and I doubt whether any Christian will accept the teaching.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No; and Inman gave the reason for
-it many years ago. As he puts it, while “the Christians will accept
-any nonsense, if promulgated by the Church as a matter of faith ...
-the Buddhists hold that nothing which is contradicted by sound reason
-can be a true doctrine of Buddha.” They do not believe in any pardon
-for their sins, except after an adequate and just punishment for each
-evil deed or thought in a future incarnation, and a proportionate
-compensation to the parties injured.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Where is it so stated?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In most of their sacred works.
-In the “<i>Wheel of the Law</i>” (p. 57) you may find the following
-Theosophical tenet:—“Buddhists believe that every act, word or thought
-has its consequence, which will appear sooner or later in the present
-or in the future state. Evil acts will produce evil consequences, good
-acts will produce good consequences: prosperity in this world, or birth
-in heaven (Devachan)... in the future state.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Christians believe the same thing,
-don’t they?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Oh, no; they believe in the pardon
-and the remission of all sins. They are promised that if they only
-believe in the blood of Christ (an <i>innocent</i> victim!), in the blood
-offered by Him for the expiation of the sins of the whole of mankind,
-it will atone for every mortal sin. And we believe neither in vicarious
-atonement, nor in the possibility of the remission of the smallest sin
-by any god, not even by a “<i>personal</i> Absolute” or “Infinite,” if such
-a thing could have any existence. What we believe in, is strict and
-impartial justice. Our idea of the unknown Universal Deity, represented
-by Karma, is that it is a Power which cannot fail, and can, therefore,
-have neither wrath nor mercy, only absolute Equity, which leaves
-every cause, great or small, to work out its inevitable effects. The
-saying of Jesus: “With what measure you mete it shall be measured to
-you again” (Matth. vii., 2), neither by expression nor implication
-points to any hope of future mercy or salvation by proxy. This is why,
-recognising as we do in our philosophy the justice of this statement,
-we cannot recommend too strongly mercy, charity, and forgiveness of
-mutual offences. <i>Resist not evil</i>, and <i>render good for evil</i>, are
-Buddhist precepts, and were first preached in view of the implacability
-of Karmic law. For man to take the law into his own hands is anyhow a
-sacrilegious presumption. Human Law may use restrictive not punitive
-measures; but a man who, believing in Karma, still revenges himself and
-refuses to forgive every injury, thereby rendering good for evil, is
-a criminal and only hurts himself. As Karma is sure to punish the man
-who wronged him, by seeking to inflict an additional punishment on his
-enemy, he, who instead of leaving that punishment to the great Law adds
-to it his own mite, only begets thereby a cause for the future reward
-of his own enemy and a future punishment for himself. The unfailing
-Regulator affects in each incarnation the quality of its successor; and
-the sum of the merit or demerit in preceding ones determines it.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Are we then to infer a man’s past
-from his present?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Only so far as to believe that his
-present life is what it justly should be, to atone for the sins of
-the past life. Of course—seers and great adepts excepted—we cannot as
-average mortals know what those sins were. From our paucity of data,
-it is impossible for us even to determine what an old man’s youth must
-have been; neither can we, for like reasons, draw final conclusions
-merely from what we see in the life of some man, as to what his past
-life may have been.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_11_2" id="SECTION_11_2"></a>WHAT IS KARMA?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what is Karma?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As I have said, we consider it as
-the <i>Ultimate Law</i> of the Universe, the source, origin and fount of all
-other laws which exist throughout Nature. Karma is the unerring law
-which adjusts effect to cause, on the physical, mental and spiritual
-planes of being. As no cause remains without its due effect from
-greatest to least, from a cosmic disturbance down to the movement
-of your hand, and as like produces like, <i>Karma</i> is that unseen and
-unknown law <i>which adjusts wisely, intelligently and equitably</i> each
-effect to its cause, tracing the latter back to its producer. Though
-itself <i>unknowable</i>, its action is perceivable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then it is the “Absolute,” the
-“Unknowable” again, and is not of much value as an explanation of the
-problems of life?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> On the contrary. For, though we
-do not know what Karma is <i>per se</i>, and in its essence, we <i>do</i> know
-<i>how</i> it works, and we can define and describe its mode of action with
-accuracy. We only do <i>not</i> know its ultimate <i>Cause</i>, just as modern
-philosophy universally admits that the <i>ultimate</i> Cause of anything is “unknowable.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what has Theosophy to say in
-regard to the solution of the more practical needs of humanity? What is
-the explanation which it offers in reference to the awful suffering and
-dire necessity prevalent among the so-called “lower classes.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To be pointed, according to our
-teaching all these great social evils, the distinction of classes
-in Society, and of the sexes in the affairs of life, the unequal
-distribution of capital and of labour—all are due to what we tersely
-but truly denominate <span class="smcap">Karma</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But, surely, all these evils which
-seem to fall upon the masses somewhat indiscriminately are not actual
-merited and <span class="smcap">INDIVIDUAL</span> Karma?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No, they cannot be so strictly
-defined in their effects as to show that each individual environment,
-and the particular conditions of life in which each person finds
-himself, are nothing more than the retributive Karma which the
-individual generated in a previous life. We must not lose sight of the
-fact that every atom is subject to the general law governing the whole
-body to which it belongs, and here we come upon the wider track of
-the Karmic law. Do you not perceive that the aggregate of individual
-Karma becomes that of the nation to which those individuals belong, and
-further, that the sum total of National Karma is that of the World!
-The evils that you speak of are not peculiar to the individual or even
-to the Nation, they are more or less universal; and it is upon this
-broad line of Human interdependence that the law of Karma finds its
-legitimate and equable issue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do I, then, understand that the law
-of Karma is not necessarily an individual law?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That is just what I mean. It
-is impossible that Karma could readjust the balance of power in
-the world’s life and progress, unless it had a broad and general
-line of action. It is held as a truth among Theosophists that the
-interdependence of Humanity is the cause of what is called Distributive
-Karma, and it is this law which affords the solution to the great
-question of collective suffering and its relief. It is an occult law,
-moreover, that no man can rise superior to his individual failings,
-without lifting, be it ever so little, the whole body of which he is an
-integral part. In the same way, no one can sin, nor suffer the effects
-of sin, alone. In reality, there is no such thing as “Separateness”;
-and the nearest approach to that selfish state, which the laws of life
-permit, is in the intent or motive.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And are there no means by which the
-distributive or national Karma might be concentred or collected, so to
-speak, and brought to its natural and legitimate fulfilment without all
-this protracted suffering?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As a general rule, and within
-certain limits which define the age to which we belong, the law of
-Karma cannot be hastened or retarded in its fulfilment. But of this I
-am certain, the point of possibility in either of these directions has
-never yet been touched. Listen to the following recital of one phase
-of national suffering, and then ask yourself whether, admitting the
-working power of individual, relative, and distributive Karma, these
-evils are not capable of extensive modification and general relief.
-What I am about to read to you is from the pen of a National Saviour,
-one who, having overcome Self, and being free to choose, has elected to
-serve Humanity, in bearing at least as much as a woman’s shoulders can
-possibly bear of National Karma. This is what she says:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Yes, Nature always does speak, don’t you think?
-only sometimes we make so much noise that we drown her voice. That is
-why it is so restful to go out of the town and nestle awhile in the
-Mother’s arms. I am thinking of the evening on Hampstead Heath when we
-watched the sun go down; but oh! upon what suffering and misery that
-sun had set! A lady brought me yesterday a big hamper of wild flowers.
-I thought some of my East-end family had a better right to it than
-I, and so I took it down to a very poor school in Whitechapel this
-morning. You should have seen the pallid little faces brighten! Thence
-I went to pay for some dinners at a little cookshop for some children.
-It was in a back street, narrow, full of jostling people; stench
-indescribable, from fish, meat, and other comestibles, all reeking in
-a sun that, in Whitechapel, festers instead of purifying. The cookshop
-was the quintessence of all the smells. Indescribable meat-pies at
-1d., loathsome lumps of ‘food’ and swarms of flies, a very altar of
-Beelzebub! All about, babies on the prowl for scraps, one, with the
-face of an angel, gathering up cherrystones as a light and nutritious
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-form of diet. I came westward with every nerve shuddering and jarred,
-wondering whether anything can be done with some parts of London save
-swallowing them up in an earthquake and starting their inhabitants
-afresh, after a plunge into some purifying Lethe, out of which
-not a memory might emerge! And then I thought of Hampstead Heath,
-and—pondered. If by any sacrifice one could win the power to save these
-people, the cost would not be worth counting; but, you see, THEY must
-be changed—and how can that be wrought? In the condition they now are,
-they would not profit by any environment in which they might be placed;
-and yet, in their present surroundings they must continue to putrefy.
-It breaks my heart, this endless, hopeless misery, and the brutish
-degradation that is at once its outgrowth and its root. It is like the
-banyan tree; every branch roots itself and sends out new shoots. What a
-difference between these feelings and the peaceful scene at Hampstead!
-and yet we, who are the brothers and sisters of these poor creatures,
-have only a right to use Hampstead Heaths to gain strength to save
-Whitechapels.” (<i>Signed by a name too respected and too well known to
-be given to scoffers.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> That is a sad but beautiful letter,
-and I think it presents with painful conspicuity the terrible workings
-of what you have called “Relative and Distributive Karma.” But alas!
-there seems no immediate hope of any relief short of an earthquake, or
-some such general ingulfment!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What right have we to think so
-while one-half of humanity is in a position to effect an immediate
-relief of the privations which are suffered by their fellows? When
-every individual has contributed to the general good what he can of
-money, of labour, and of ennobling thought, then, and only then, will
-the balance of National Karma be struck, and until then we have no
-right nor any reasons for saying that there is more life on the earth
-than Nature can support. It is reserved for the heroic souls, the
-Saviours of our Race and Nation, to find out the cause of this unequal
-pressure of retributive Karma, and by a supreme effort to readjust
-the balance of power, and save the people from a moral ingulfment a
-thousand times more disastrous and more permanently evil than the like
-physical catastrophe, in which you seem to see the only possible outlet
-for this accumulated misery.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, then, tell me generally how
-you describe this law of Karma?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We describe Karma as that Law
-of readjustment which ever tends to restore disturbed equilibrium
-in the physical, and broken harmony in the moral world. We say that
-Karma does not act in this or that particular way always; but that it
-always <i>does</i> act so as to restore Harmony and preserve the balance of
-equilibrium, in virtue of which the Universe exists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Give me an illustration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Later on I will give you a full
-illustration. Think now of a pond. A stone falls into the water and
-creates disturbing waves. These waves oscillate backwards and forwards
-till at last, owning to the operation of what physicists call the
-law of the dissipation of energy, they are brought to rest, and the
-water returns to its condition of calm tranquillity. Similarly <i>all</i>
-action, on every plane, produces disturbance in the balanced harmony
-of the Universe, and the vibrations so produced will continue to roll
-backwards and forwards, if its area is limited, till equilibrium is
-restored. But since each such disturbance starts from some particular
-point, it is clear that equilibrium and harmony can only be restored
-by the reconverging <i>to that same point</i> of all the forces which were
-set in motion from it. And here you have proof that the consequences of
-a man’s deeds, thoughts, etc., must all react upon <i>himself</i> with the
-same force with which they were set in motion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But I see nothing of a moral
-character about this law. It looks to me like the simple physical law
-that action and reaction are equal and opposite.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I am not surprised to hear you
-say that. Europeans have got so much into the ingrained habit of
-considering right and wrong, good and evil, as matters of an arbitrary
-code of law laid down either by men, or imposed upon them by a Personal
-God. We Theosophists, however, say that “Good” and “Harmony,” and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-“Evil” and “Dis-harmony,” are synonymous. Further we maintain that all
-pain and suffering are results of want of Harmony, and that the one
-terrible and only cause of the disturbance of Harmony is selfishness in
-some form or another. Hence Karma gives back to every man the <i>actual
-consequences</i> of his own actions, without any regard to their moral
-character; but since he receives his due for <i>all</i>, it is obvious that
-he will be made to atone for all sufferings which he has caused, just
-as he will reap in joy and gladness the fruits of all the happiness and
-harmony he had helped to produce. I can do no better than quote for
-your benefit certain passages from books and articles written by our
-Theosophists—those who have a correct idea of Karma.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I wish you would, as your literature
-seems to be very sparing on this subject?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because it is <i>the</i> most difficult
-of all our tenets. Some short time ago there appeared the following
-objection from a Christian pen:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Granting that the teaching in regard to Theosophy
-is correct, and that ‘man must be his own saviour, must overcome
-self and conquer the evil that is in his dual nature, to obtain the
-emancipation of his soul,’ what is man to do after he has been awakened
-and converted to a certain extent from evil or wickedness? How is he
-to get emancipation, or pardon, or the blotting out of the evil or
-wickedness he has already done?”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">To this Mr. J. H. Connelly replies very
-pertinently that no one can hope to “make the theosophical engine run
-on the theological track.” As he has it:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The possibility of shirking individual
-responsibility is not among the concepts of Theosophy. In this faith
-there is no such thing as pardoning, or ‘blotting out of evil or
-wickedness already done,’ otherwise than by the adequate punishment
-therefor of the wrong-doer and the restoration of the harmony in the
-universe that had been disturbed by his wrongful act. The evil has been
-his own, and while others must suffer its consequences, atonement can
-be made by nobody but himself.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The condition contemplated ... in which a man
-shall have been ‘awakened and converted to a certain extent from evil
-or wickedness,’ is that in which a man shall have realized that his
-deeds are evil and deserving of punishment. In that realization a sense
-of personal responsibility is inevitable, and just in proportion to the
-extent of his awakening or ‘converting’ must be the sense of that awful
-responsibility. While it is strong upon him is the time when he is
-urged to accept the doctrine of vicarious atonement.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“He is told that he must also repent, but nothing
-is easier than that. It is an amiable weakness of human nature that we
-are quite prone to regret the evil we have done when our attention is
-called, and we have either suffered from it ourselves or enjoyed its
-fruits. Possibly, close analysis of the feeling would show us that that
-which we regret is rather the necessity that seemed to require the evil
-as a means of attainment of our selfish ends than the evil itself.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Attractive as this prospect of casting our burden
-of sins ‘at the foot of the cross’ may be to the ordinary mind, it does
-not commend itself to the Theosophic student. He does not apprehend
-why the sinner by attaining knowledge of his evil can thereby merit
-any pardon for or the blotting out of his past wickedness; or why
-repentance and future right living entitle him to a suspension in his
-favour of the universal law of relation between cause and effect. The
-results of his evil deeds continue to exist; the suffering caused to
-others by his wickedness is not blotted out. The Theosophical student
-takes the result of wickedness upon the innocent into his problem. He
-considers not only the guilty person, but his victims.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Evil is an infraction of the laws of harmony
-governing the universe, and the penalty thereof must fall upon the
-violator of that law himself. Christ uttered the warning, ‘Sin no
-more, lest a worse thing come upon thee,’ and St. Paul said, ‘Work out
-your own salvation. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.’
-That, by the way, is a fine metaphoric rendering of the sentence of the
-Puranas far antedating him—that ‘every man reaps the consequences of
-his own acts.’</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“This is the principle of the law of Karma which
-is taught by Theosophy. Sinnett, in his ‘Esoteric Buddhism,’ rendered
-Karma as ‘the law of ethical causation.’ ‘The law of retribution,’ as
-Mdme. Blavatsky translates its meaning, is better. It is the power which</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Just though mysterious, leads us on unerring</span>
-<span class="i0">Through ways unmarked from guilt to punishment.</span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“But it is more. It rewards merit as unerringly
-and amply as it punishes demerit. It is the outcome of every act, of
-thought, word and deed, and by it men mould themselves, their lives
-and happenings. Eastern philosophy rejects the idea of a newly created
-soul for every baby born. It believes in a limited number of monads,
-evolving and growing more and more perfect through their assimilation
-of many successive personalities. Those personalities are the product
-of Karma and it is by Karma and re-incarnation that the human monad in
-time returns to its source—absolute deity.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">E. D. Walker, in his “Re-incarnation,” offers the
-following explanation:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Briefly, the doctrine of Karma is that we have
-made ourselves what we are by former actions, and are building our
-future eternity by present actions. There is no destiny but what we
-ourselves determine. There is no salvation or condemnation except what
-we ourselves bring about.... Because it offers no shelter for culpable
-actions and necessitates a sterling manliness, it is less welcome to
-weak natures than the easy religious tenets of vicarious atonement,
-intercession, forgiveness and death-bed conversions.... In the domain
-of eternal justice the offence and the punishment are inseparably
-connected as the same event, because there is no real distinction
-between the action and its outcome.... It is Karma, or our old acts,
-that draws us back into earthly life. The spirit’s abode changes
-according to its Karma, and this Karma forbids any long continuance in
-one condition, because <i>it</i> is always changing. So long as action is
-governed by material and selfish motives, just so long must the effect
-of that action be manifested in physical rebirths. Only the perfectly
-selfless man can elude the gravitation of material life. Few have
-attained this, but it is the goal of mankind.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">And then the writer quotes from the <i>Secret Doctrine</i>:</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Those who believe in Karma have to believe in
-destiny, which, from birth to death, every man is weaving, thread by
-thread, around himself, as a spider does his cobweb, and this destiny
-is guided either by the heavenly voice of the invisible prototype
-outside of us, or by our more intimate astral or inner man, who is but
-too often the evil genius of the embodied entity called man. Both these
-lead on the outward man, but one of them must prevail; and from the
-very beginning of the invisible affray the stern and implacable law of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-compensation steps in and takes its course, faithfully following the
-fluctuations. When the last strand is woven, and man is seemingly
-enwrapped in the network of his own doing, then he finds himself
-completely under the empire of this self-made destiny.... An Occultist
-or a philosopher will not speak of the goodness or cruelty of
-Providence; but, identifying it with Karma-Nemesis, he will teach
-that, nevertheless, it guards the good and watches over them in this
-as in future lives; and that it punishes the evil-doer—aye, even to
-his seventh re-birth—so long, in short, as the effect of his having
-thrown into perturbation even the smallest atom in the infinite world
-of harmony has not been finally readjusted. For the only decree of
-Karma—an eternal and immutable decree—is absolute harmony in the world
-of matter as it is in the world of spirit. It is not, therefore, Karma
-that rewards or punishes, but it is we who reward or punish ourselves
-according to whether we work with, through and along with nature,
-abiding by the laws on which that harmony depends, or—break them. Nor
-would the ways of Karma be inscrutable were men to work in union and
-harmony, instead of disunion and strife. For our ignorance of those
-ways—which one portion of mankind calls the ways of Providence, dark
-and intricate; while another sees in them the action of blind fatalism;
-and a third simple chance, with neither gods nor devils to guide
-them—would surely disappear if we would but attribute all these to
-their correct cause.... We stand bewildered before the mystery of our
-own making and the riddles of life that we will not solve, and then
-accuse the great Sphinx of devouring us. But verily there is not an
-accident of our lives, not a misshapen day, or a misfortune, that could
-not be traced back to our own doings in this or in another life.... The
-law of Karma is inextricably interwoven with that of re-incarnation....
-It is only this doctrine that can explain to us the mysterious problem
-of good and evil, and reconcile man to the terrible and apparent
-injustice of life. Nothing but such certainty can quiet our revolted
-sense of justice. For, when one unacquainted with the noble doctrine
-looks around him and observes the inequalities of birth and fortune,
-of intellect and capacities; when one sees honour paid to fools and
-profligates, on whom fortune has heaped her favours by mere privilege
-of birth, and their nearest neighbour, with all his intellect and noble
-virtues—far more deserving in every way—perishing for want and for lack
-of sympathy—when one sees all this and has to turn away, helpless to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-relieve the undeserved suffering, one’s ears ringing and heart aching
-with the cries of pain around him—that blessed knowledge of Karma
-alone prevents him from cursing life and men as well as their supposed
-Creator.... This law, whether conscious or unconscious, predestines
-nothing and no one. It exists from and in eternity truly, for it
-is eternity itself; and as such, since no act can be coequal with
-eternity, it cannot be said to act, for it is action itself. It is not
-the wave which drowns the man, but the personal action of the wretch
-who goes deliberately and places himself under the impersonal action
-of the laws that govern the ocean’s motion. Karma creates nothing, nor
-does it design. It is man who plants and creates causes, and Karmic
-law adjusts the effects, which adjustment is not an act but universal
-harmony, tending ever to resume its original position, like a bough,
-which, bent down too forcibly, rebounds with corresponding vigour.
-If it happen to dislocate the arm that tried to bend it out of its
-natural position, shall we say it is the bough which broke our arm or
-that our own folly has brought us to grief? Karma has never sought to
-destroy intellectual and individual liberty, like the god invented by
-the Monotheists. It has not involved its decrees in darkness purposely
-to perplex man, nor shall it punish him who dares to scrutinize its
-mysteries. On the contrary, he who unveils through study and meditation
-its intricate paths, and throws light on those dark ways, in the
-windings of which so many men perish owing to their ignorance of the
-labyrinth of life, is working for the good of his fellow-men. Karma is
-an absolute and eternal law in the world of manifestation; and as there
-can only be one Absolute, as one Eternal, ever-present Cause, believers
-in Karma cannot be regarded as atheists or materialists, still less
-as fatalists, for Karma is one with the Unknowable, of which it is an
-aspect, in its effects in the phenomenal world.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Another able Theosophic writer says (<i>Purpose of
-Theosophy</i>, by Mrs. P. Sinnett):—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“Every individual is making Karma either good
-or bad in each action and thought of his daily round, and is at the
-same time working out in this life the Karma brought about by the acts
-and desires of the last. When we see people afflicted by congenital
-ailments it may be safely assumed that these ailments are the
-inevitable results of causes started by themselves in a previous birth.
-It may be argued that, as these afflictions are hereditary, they can
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-have nothing to do with a past incarnation; but it must be remembered
-that the Ego, the real man, the individuality, has no spiritual origin
-in the parentage by which it is re-embodied, but it is drawn by the
-affinities which its previous mode of life attracted round it into the
-current that carries it, when the time comes for re-birth, to the home
-best fitted for the development of those tendencies.... This doctrine
-of Karma, when properly understood, is well calculated to guide and
-assist those who realize its truth to a higher and better mode of life,
-for it must not be forgotten that not only our actions but our thoughts
-also are most assuredly followed by a crowd of circumstances that will
-influence for good or for evil our own future, and, what is still more
-important, the future of many of our fellow-creatures. If sins of
-omission and commission could in any case be only self-regarding, the
-effect on the sinner’s Karma would be a matter of minor consequence.
-The fact that every thought and act through life carries with it for
-good or evil a corresponding influence on other members of the human
-family renders a strict sense of justice, morality, and unselfishness
-so necessary to future happiness or progress. A crime once committed,
-an evil thought sent out from the mind, are past recall—no amount of
-repentance can wipe out their results in the future. Repentance, if
-sincere, will deter a man from repeating errors; it cannot save him
-or others from the effects of those already produced, which will most
-unerringly overtake him either in this life or in the next re-birth.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Mr. J. H. Connelly proceeds—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The believers in a religion based upon such
-doctrine are willing it should be compared with one in which man’s
-destiny for eternity is determined by the accidents of a single, brief
-earthly existence, during which he is cheered by the promise that ‘as
-the tree falls so shall it lie’; in which his brightest hope, when he
-wakes up to a knowledge of his wickedness, is the doctrine of vicarious
-atonement, and in which even that is handicapped, according to the
-Presbyterian Confession of Faith.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“By the decree of God, for the manifestation of
-his glory, some men and angels are predestinated unto everlasting life
-and others foreordained to everlasting death.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“These angels and men thus predestinated and
-foreordained are particularly and unchangeably designed; and their
-number is so certain and definite that it cannot be either increased
-or diminished. ... As God hath appointed the elect unto glory....
-Neither are any other redeemed by Christ effectually called, justified,
-adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The rest of mankind God was pleased, according
-to the unsearchable counsel of his own will, whereby he extendeth or
-withholdeth mercy as he pleaseth, for the glory of his sovereign power
-over his creatures, to pass by and to ordain them to dishonour and
-wrath for their sin to the praise of his glorious justice.”</p>
-
-<p class="indent">This is what the able defender says. Nor can we do
-any better than wind up the subject as he does, by a quotation from a
-magnificent poem. As he says:—</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“The exquisite beauty of Edwin Arnold’s exposition
-of Karma in ‘The Light of Asia’ tempts to its reproduction here, but it
-is too long for quotation in full. Here is a portion of it:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Karma—all that total of a soul</span>
-<span class="i2">Which is the things it did, the thoughts it had,</span>
-<span class="i0">The “self” it wove with woof of viewless time</span>
-<span class="i2">Crossed on the warp invisible of acts.</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Before beginning and without an end,</span>
-<span class="i2">As space eternal and as surety sure,</span>
-<span class="i0">Is fixed a Power divine which moves to good,</span>
-<span class="i2">Only its laws endure.</span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">It will not be contemned of anyone;</span>
-<span class="i2">Who thwarts it loses, and who serves it gains:</span>
-<span class="i0">The hidden good it pays with peace and bliss,</span>
-<span class="i2">The hidden ill with pains.</span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">It seeth everywhere and marketh all;</span>
-<span class="i2">Do right—it recompenseth! Do one wrong—</span>
-<span class="i0">The equal retribution must be made,</span>
-<span class="i2">Though Dharma tarry long.</span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter-true,</span>
-<span class="i2">Its measures mete, its faultless balance weighs;</span>
-<span class="i0">Times are as naught, to-morrow it will judge</span>
-<span class="i2">Or after many days.</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Such is the law which moves to righteousness,</span>
-<span class="i2">Which none at last can turn aside or stay;</span>
-<span class="i0">The heart of it is love, the end of it</span>
-<span class="i2">Is peace and consummation sweet. Obey.</span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent"> And now I advise you to compare our Theosophic
-views upon Karma, the law of Retribution, and say whether they are
-not both more philosophical and just than this cruel and idiotic
-dogma which makes of “God” a senseless fiend; the tenet, namely,
-that the “elect only” will be saved, and the rest doomed to eternal
-perdition!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes, I see what you mean generally;
-but I wish you could give some concrete example of the action of
-Karma?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That I cannot do. We can only feel
-sure, as I said before, that our present lives and circumstances are
-the direct results of our own deeds and thoughts in lives that are
-past. But we, who are not Seers or Initiates, cannot know anything
-about the details of the working of the law of Karma.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can anyone, even an Adept or Seer,
-follow out this Karmic process of readjustment in detail?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly: “Those who <i>know</i>” can
-do so by the exercise of powers which are latent even in all men.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_11_3" id="SECTION_11_3"></a>WHO ARE THOSE WHO KNOW?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Does this hold equally of ourselves
-as of others?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Equally. As just said, the same
-limited vision exists for all, save those who have reached in the
-present incarnation the acme of spiritual vision and clairvoyance. We
-can only perceive that, if things with us ought to have been different,
-they would have been different; that we are what we have made
-ourselves, and have only what we have earned for ourselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I am afraid such a conception would
-only embitter us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I believe it is precisely the
-reverse. It is disbelief in the just law of retribution that is more
-likely to awaken every combative feeling in man. A child, as much
-as a man, resents a punishment, or even a reproof he believes to be
-unmerited, far more than he does a severer punishment, if he feels that
-it is merited. Belief in Karma is the highest reason for reconcilement
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-to one’s lot in this life, and the very strongest incentive towards
-effort to better the succeeding re-birth. Both of these, indeed, would
-be destroyed if we supposed that our lot was the result of anything but
-strict <i>Law</i>, or that destiny was in any other hands than our own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You have just asserted that this
-system of Re-incarnation under Karmic law commended itself to reason,
-justice, and the moral sense. But, if so, is it not at some sacrifice
-of the gentler qualities of sympathy and pity, and thus a hardening of
-the finer instincts of human nature?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Only apparently, not really. No
-man can receive more or less than his deserts without a corresponding
-injustice or partiality to others; and a law which could be averted
-through compassion would bring about more misery than it saved,
-more irritation and curses than thanks. Remember also, that we do
-not administer the law, if we do create causes for its effects; it
-administers itself; and again, that the most copious provision for the
-manifestation of <i>just</i> compassion and mercy is shown in the state of Devachan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You speak of Adepts as being an
-exception to the rule of our general ignorance. Do they really know
-more than we do of Re-incarnation and after states?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They do, indeed. By the training
-of faculties we all possess, but which they alone have developed to
-perfection, they have entered in spirit these various planes and states
-we have been discussing. For long ages, one generation of Adepts
-after another has studied the mysteries of being, of life, death,
-and re-birth, and all have taught in their turn some of the facts so learned.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And is the production of Adepts the
-aim of Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Theosophy considers humanity as
-an emanation from divinity on its return path thereto. At an advanced
-point upon the path, Adeptship is reached by those who have devoted
-several incarnations to its achievement. For, remember well, no man has
-ever reached Adeptship in the Secret Sciences in one life; but many
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-incarnations are necessary for it after the formation of a conscious
-purpose and the beginning of the needful training. Many may be the men
-and women in the very midst of our Society who have begun this uphill
-work toward illumination several incarnations ago, and who yet, owing
-to the personal illusions of the present life, are either ignorant
-of the fact, or on the road to losing every chance in this existence
-of progressing any farther. They feel an irresistible attraction
-toward occultism and the <i>Higher Life</i>, and yet are too personal and
-self-opinionated, too much in love with the deceptive allurements of
-mundane life and the world’s ephemeral pleasures, to give them up;
-and so lose their chance in their present birth. But, for ordinary
-men, for the practical duties of daily life, such a far-off result is
-inappropriate as an aim and quite ineffective as a motive.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What, then, may be their object or
-distinct purpose in joining the Theosophical Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Many are interested in our
-doctrines and feel instinctively that they are truer than those of any
-dogmatic religion. Others have formed a fixed resolve to attain the
-highest ideal of man’s duty.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_11_4" id="SECTION_11_4"></a>THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
-FAITH AND KNOWLEDGE; <br />OR,&nbsp;&nbsp;BLIND AND REASONED FAITH.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> You say that they accept and believe
-in the doctrines of Theosophy. But, as they do not belong to those
-Adepts you have just mentioned, then they must accept your teachings
-on <i>blind faith</i>. In what does this differ from that of conventional
-religions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As it differs on almost all the
-other points, so it differs on this one. What you call “faith,” and
-that which is <i>blind faith</i>, in reality, and with regard to the dogmas
-of the Christian religions, becomes with us “<i>knowledge</i>,” the logical
-sequence of things <i>we know</i>, about <i>facts</i> in nature. Your Doctrines
-are based upon interpretation, therefore, upon the <i>second-hand</i>
-testimony of Seers; ours upon the invariable and unvarying testimony of
-Seers. The ordinary Christian theology for instance, holds that man is
-a creature of God, of three component parts—body, soul, and spirit—all
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-essential to his integrity, and all, either in the gross form
-of physical earthly existence or in the etherealized form of
-post-resurrection experience, needed to so constitute him for ever,
-each man having thus a permanent existence separate from other men,
-and from the Divine. Theosophy, on the other hand, holds that man,
-being an emanation from the Unknown, yet ever present and infinite
-Divine Essence, his body and everything else is impermanent, hence
-an illusion; Spirit alone in him being the one enduring substance,
-and even that losing its separated individuality at the moment of its
-complete reunion with the <i>Universal Spirit</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If we lose even our individuality,
-then it becomes simply annihilation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I say it <i>does not</i>, since I speak
-of <i>separate</i>, not of universal individuality. The latter becomes as a
-part transformed into the whole; the <i>dewdrop</i> is not evaporated, but
-becomes the sea. Is physical man <i>annihilated</i>, when from a fœtus he
-becomes an old man? What kind of Satanic pride must be ours if we place
-our infinitesimally small consciousness and individuality higher than
-the universal and infinite consciousness!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> It follows, then, that there is, <i>de
-facto</i>, no man, but all is Spirit?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You are mistaken. It thus follows
-that the union of Spirit with matter is but temporary; or, to put it
-more clearly, since Spirit and matter are one, being the two opposite
-poles of the <i>universal</i> manifested substance—that Spirit loses
-its right to the name so long as the smallest particle and atom of
-its manifesting substance still clings to any form, the result of
-differentiation. To believe otherwise is <i>blind faith</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Thus it is on <i>knowledge</i>, not on
-<i>faith</i>, that you assert that the permanent principle, the Spirit,
-simply makes a transit through matter?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I would put it otherwise and say—we
-assert that the appearance of the permanent and one principle, Spirit,
-<i>as matter</i> is transient, and, therefore, no better than an illusion.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Very well; and this, given out on
-knowledge not faith?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so. But as I see very well
-what you are driving at, I may just as well tell you that we hold
-<i>faith</i>, such as you advocate, to be a mental disease, and real faith,
-<i>i.e.</i>, the <i>pistis</i> of the Greeks, as “<i>belief based on knowledge</i>,”
-whether supplied by the evidence of physical or <i>spiritual</i> senses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I mean, if it is the difference
-between the two that you want to know, then I can tell you that between
-<i>faith on authority</i> and <i>faith on one’s spiritual intuition</i>, there is
-a very great difference.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What is it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> One is human credulity and
-<i>superstition</i>, the other human belief and <i>intuition</i>. As Professor
-Alexander Wilder says in his “Introduction to the <i>Eleusinian
-Mysteries</i>,” “It is ignorance which leads to profanation. Men ridicule
-what they do not properly understand.... The undercurrent of this world
-is set towards one goal; and inside of human credulity ... is a power
-almost infinite, a holy faith capable of apprehending the supremest
-truths of all existence.” Those who limit that “credulity” to human
-authoritative dogmas alone, will never fathom that power nor even
-perceive it in their natures. It is stuck fast to the external plane
-and is unable to bring forth into play the essence that rules it; for
-to do this they have to claim their right of private judgment, and this
-they never <i>dare</i> to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And is it that “intuition” which
-forces you to reject God as a personal Father, Ruler and Governor of
-the Universe?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Precisely. We believe in an ever
-unknowable Principle, because blind aberration alone can make one
-maintain that the Universe, thinking man, and all the marvels contained
-even in the world of matter, could have grown without some <i>intelligent
-powers</i> to bring about the extraordinarily wise arrangement of all its
-parts. Nature may err, and often does, in its details and the external
-manifestations of its materials, never in its inner causes and results.
-Ancient pagans held on this question far more philosophical views than
-modern philosophers, whether Agnostics, Materialists or Christians; and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-no pagan writer has ever yet advanced the proposition that cruelty
-and mercy are not finite feelings, and can therefore be made the
-attributes of an <i>infinite</i> god. Their gods, therefore, were all
-finite. The Siamese author of the <i>Wheel of the Law</i>, expresses
-the same idea about your personal god as we do; he says (p. 25):</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“A Buddhist might believe in the existence of a
-god; sublime above all human qualities and attributes—a perfect god,
-above love, and hatred, and jealousy, calmly resting in a quietude
-that nothing could disturb, and of such a god he would speak no
-disparagement, not from a desire to please him or fear to offend him,
-but from natural veneration; but he cannot understand a god with the
-attributes and qualities of men, a god who loves and hates, and shows
-anger; a Deity who, whether described as by Christian Missionaries or
-by Mahometans or Brahmins,<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>
-or Jews, falls below his standard of even an ordinary good man.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Faith for faith, is not the faith
-of the Christian who believes, in his human helplessness and humility,
-that there is a merciful Father in Heaven who will protect him from
-temptation, help him in life, and forgive him his transgressions,
-better than the cold and proud, almost fatalistic faith of the
-Buddhists, Vedantins, and Theosophists?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Persist in calling our belief
-“faith” if you will. But once we are again on this ever-recurring
-question, I ask in my turn: faith for faith, is not the one based on
-strict logic and reason better than the one which is based simply on
-human authority or—hero-worship? <i>Our</i> “faith” has all the logical
-force of the arithmetical truism that 2 and 2 will produce 4. Your
-faith is like the logic of some emotional woman, of whom Tourgenyeff
-said that for them 2 and 2 were generally 5, and a tallow candle into
-the bargain. Yours is a faith, moreover, which clashes not only with
-every conceivable view of justice and logic, but which, if analysed,
-leads man to his moral perdition, checks the progress of mankind, and
-positively making of might, right—transforms every second man into a
-Cain to his brother Abel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you allude to?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_11_5" id="SECTION_11_5"></a>HAS GOD THE RIGHT TO FORGIVE?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To the Doctrine of Atonement; I
-allude to that dangerous dogma in which you believe, and which teaches
-us that no matter how enormous our crimes against the laws of God and
-of man, we have but to believe in the self-sacrifice of Jesus for
-the salvation of mankind, and his blood will wash out every stain.
-It is twenty years that I preach against it, and I may now draw your
-attention to a paragraph from <i>Isis Unveiled</i>, written in 1875. This is
-what Christianity teaches, and what we combat:—</p>
-
-<p>“God’s mercy is boundless and unfathomable. It is impossible to
-conceive of a human sin so damnable that the price paid in advance for
-the redemption of the sinner would not wipe it out if a thousandfold
-worse. And furthermore, it is never too late to repent. Though the
-offender wait until the last minute of the last hour of the last day
-of his mortal life, before his blanched lips utter the confession of
-faith, he may go to Paradise; the dying thief did it, and so may all
-others as vile. These are the assumptions of the Church, and of the
-Clergy; assumptions banged at the heads of your countrymen by England’s
-favourite preachers, right in the ‘light of the XIXth century,’” this
-most paradoxical age of all. Now to what does it lead?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Does it not make the Christian
-happier than the Buddhist or Brahmin?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No; not the educated man, at any
-rate, since the majority of these have long since virtually lost all
-belief in this cruel dogma. But it leads those who still believe in it
-more <i>easily to the threshold of every conceivable crime</i>, than any
-other I know of. Let me quote to you from <i>Isis</i> once more (<i>vide</i> Vol.
-II., pp. 542 and 543)—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“If we step outside the little circle of creed and
-consider the universe as a whole balanced by the exquisite adjustment
-of parts, how all sound logic, how the faintest glimmering sense of
-Justice, revolts against this Vicarious Atonement! If the criminal
-sinned only against himself, and wronged no one but himself; if by
-sincere repentance he could cause the obliteration of past events,
-not only from the memory of man, but also from that imperishable
-record, which no deity—not even the Supremes, of the Supreme—can
-cause to disappear, then this dogma might not be incomprehensible.
-But to maintain that one may wrong his fellow-man, kill, disturb
-the equilibrium of society and the natural order of things, and
-then—through cowardice, hope, or compulsion, it matters not—be forgiven
-by believing that the spilling of one blood washes out the other blood
-spilt—this is preposterous! Can the <i>results</i> of a crime be obliterated
-even though the crime itself should be pardoned? The effects of a cause
-are never limited to the boundaries of the cause, nor can the results
-of crime be confined to the offender and his victim. Every good as well
-as evil action has its effects, as palpably as the stone flung into
-calm water. The simile is trite, but it is the best ever conceived,
-so let us use it. The eddying circles are greater and swifter as the
-disturbing object is greater or smaller, but the smallest pebble, nay,
-the tiniest speck, makes its ripples. And this disturbance is not alone
-visible and on the surface. Below, unseen, in every direction—outward
-and downward—drop pushes drop until the sides and bottom are touched
-by the force. More, the air above the water is agitated, and this
-disturbance passes, as the physicists tell us, from stratum to stratum
-out into space forever and ever; an impulse has been given to matter,
-and that is never lost, can never be recalled!...</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">“So with crime, and so with its opposite. The
-action may be instantaneous, the effects are eternal. When, after
-the stone is once flung into the pond, we can recall it to the hand,
-roll back the ripples, obliterate the force expended, restore the
-etheric waves to their previous state of non-being, and wipe out every
-trace of the act of throwing the missile, so that Time’s record shall
-not show that it ever happened, then, <i>then</i> we may patiently hear
-Christians argue for the efficacy of this Atonement,”</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">and—cease to believe in Karmic Law. As it now stands,
-we call upon the whole world to decide, which of our two doctrines is
-the most appreciative of deific justice, and which is more reasonable,
-even on simple human evidence and logic.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet millions believe in the
-Christian dogma and are happy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Pure sentimentalism overpowering
-their thinking faculties, which no true philanthropist or Altruist will
-ever accept. It is not even a dream of selfishness, but a nightmare
-of the human intellect. Look where it leads to, and tell me the name
-of that pagan country where crimes are more easily committed or
-more numerous than in Christian lands. Look at the long and ghastly
-annual records of crimes committed in European countries; and behold
-Protestant and Biblical America. There, <i>conversions</i> effected in
-prisons are more numerous than those made by public <i>revivals</i> and
-preaching. See how the ledger-balance of Christian justice (!) stands;
-Red-handed murderers, urged on by the demons of lust, revenge,
-cupidity, fanaticism, or mere brutal thirst for blood, who kill their
-victims, in most cases, without giving them time to repent or call on
-Jesus. These, perhaps, died sinful, and, of course—consistently with
-theological logic—met the reward of their greater or lesser offences.
-But the murderer, overtaken by human justice, is imprisoned, wept over
-by sentimentalists, prayed with and at, pronounces the charmed words of
-conversion, and goes to the scaffold a redeemed child of Jesus! Except
-for the murder, he would not have been prayed with, redeemed, pardoned.
-Clearly this man did well to murder, for thus he gained eternal
-happiness! And how about the victim and his, or her family, relatives,
-dependents, social relations; has justice no recompense for them? Must
-they suffer in this world and the next, while he who wronged them sits
-beside the “holy thief” of Calvary, and is for ever blessed? On this
-question the clergy keep a prudent silence. (<i>Isis Unveiled.</i>) And now
-you know why Theosophists—whose fundamental belief and hope is justice
-for all, in Heaven as on earth, and in Karma—reject this dogma.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The ultimate destiny of man, then,
-is not a Heaven presided over by God, but the gradual transformation of
-matter into its primordial element, Spirit?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is to that final goal to which
-all tends in nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do not some of you regard this association
-or “fall of spirit into matter” as evil, and re-birth as a sorrow?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Some do, and therefore strive
-to shorten their period of probation on earth. It is not an unmixed
-evil, however, since it ensures the experience upon which we mount to
-knowledge and wisdom. I mean that experience which <i>teaches</i> that the
-needs of our spiritual nature can never be met by other than spiritual
-happiness. As long as we are in the body, we are subjected to pain,
-suffering and all the disappointing incidents occurring during life.
-Therefore, and to palliate this, we finally acquire knowledge which
-alone can afford us relief and hope of a better future.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_12_1" id="SECTION_12_1"></a>
-<h2>XII. <br />WHAT IS PRACTICAL THEOSOPHY?</h2></div>
-
-<h3>DUTY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Why, then, the need for rebirths,
-since all alike fail to secure a permanent peace?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because the final goal cannot be
-reached in any way but through life experiences and because the bulk of
-these consist in pain and suffering. It is only through the latter that
-we can learn. Joys and pleasures teach us nothing; they are evanescent,
-and can only bring in the long run satiety. Moreover, our constant
-failure to find any permanent satisfaction in life which would meet the
-wants of our higher nature, shows us plainly that those wants can be
-met only on their own plane, to-wit—the spiritual.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is the natural result of this a
-desire to quit life by one means or another?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If you mean by such desire
-“suicide,” then I say, most decidedly not. Such a result can never be
-a “natural” one, but is ever due to a morbid brain disease, or to most
-decided and strong materialistic views. It is the worst of crimes and
-dire in its results. But if by desire, you mean simply aspiration to
-reach spiritual existence, not a wish to quit the earth, then I would
-call it a very natural desire indeed. Otherwise voluntary death would
-be an abandonment of our present post and of the duties incumbent on
-us, as well as an attempt to shirk Karmic responsibilities, and thus
-involve the creation of new Karma.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if actions on the material plane
-are unsatisfying, why should duties, which are such actions, be imperative?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First of all, because our
-philosophy teaches us that the object of doing our duties to all men
-and to ourselves the last, is not the attainment of personal happiness,
-but of the happiness of others; the fulfilment of right for the sake of
-right, not for what it may bring us. Happiness, or rather contentment,
-may indeed follow the performance of duty, but is not and must not be
-the motive for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you understand precisely
-by “duty” in Theosophy? It cannot be the Christian duties preached by
-Jesus and his Apostles, since you recognize neither?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You are once more mistaken. What
-you call “Christian duties” were inculcated by every great moral and
-religious Reformer ages before the Christian era. All that was great,
-generous, heroic, was, in days of old, not only talked about and
-preached from pulpits as in our own time, but <i>acted upon</i> sometimes
-by whole nations. The history of the Buddhist reform is full of the
-most noble and most heroically unselfish acts. “Be ye all of one mind,
-having compassion one of another; love as brethren, be pitiful, be
-courteous; not rendering evil for evil, or railing for railing; but
-contrariwise, blessing” was practically carried out by the followers
-of Buddha, several centuries before Peter. The Ethics of Christianity
-are grand, no doubt; but as undeniably they are not new, and have
-originated as “Pagan” duties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And how would you define these
-duties, or “duty,” in general, as you understand the term?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Duty is that which is <i>due</i> to
-Humanity, to our fellow-men, neighbours, family, and especially that
-which we owe to all those who are poorer and more helpless than we are
-ourselves. This is a debt which, if left unpaid during life, leaves
-us spiritually insolvent and moral bankrupts in our next incarnation.
-Theosophy is the quintessence of <i>duty</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> So is Christianity when rightly
-understood and carried out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No doubt it is; but then, were it
-not a <i>lip-religion</i> in practice, Theosophy would have little to do
-amidst Christians. Unfortunately it is but such lip-ethics. Those who
-practise their duty towards all, and for duty’s own sake, are few; and
-fewer still are those who perform that duty, remaining content with the
-satisfaction of their own secret consciousness. It is—
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“ ... the public voice</span>
-<span class="i0">Of praise that honours virtue and rewards it,”</span>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="no-indent">which is ever uppermost in the minds of the
-“world renowned” philanthropists. Modern ethics are beautiful to read
-about and hear discussed; but what are words unless converted into
-actions? Finally: if you ask me how we understand Theosophical duty
-practically and in view of Karma, I may answer you that our duty is to
-drink without a murmur to the last drop, whatever contents the cup of
-life may have in store for us, to pluck the roses of life only for the
-fragrance they may shed on <i>others</i>, and to be ourselves content but
-with the thorns, if that fragrance cannot be enjoyed without depriving
-some one else of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> All this is very vague. What do you
-do more than Christians do?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is not what we members of the
-Theosophical Society do—though some of us try our best—but how much
-farther Theosophy leads to good than modern Christianity does. I
-say—<i>action</i>, enforced action, instead of mere intention and talk. A
-man may be what he likes, the most worldly, selfish and hard-hearted
-of men, even a deep-dyed rascal, and it will not prevent him from
-calling himself a Christian, or others from so regarding him. But
-no Theosophist has the right to this name, unless he is thoroughly
-imbued with the correctness of Carlyle’s truism: “The end of man is an
-<i>action</i> and not a <i>thought</i>, though it were the noblest”—and unless
-he sets and models his daily life upon this truth. The profession of a
-truth is not yet the enactment of it; and the more beautiful and grand
-it sounds, the more loudly virtue or duty is talked about instead of
-being acted upon, the more forcibly it will always remind one of the
-Dead Sea fruit. <i>Cant</i> is the most loathsome of all vices; and <i>cant</i>
-is the most prominent feature of the greatest Protestant country of
-this century—England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you consider as due to humanity at large?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Full recognition of equal rights
-and privileges for all, and without distinction of race, colour, social
-position, or birth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> When would you consider such due not
-given?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> When there is the slightest
-invasion of another’s right—be that other a man or a nation; when there
-is any failure to show him the same justice, kindness, consideration
-or mercy which we desire for ourselves. The whole present system of
-politics is built on the oblivion of such rights, and the most fierce
-assertion of national selfishness. The French say: “Like master, like
-man”; they ought to add, “Like national policy, like citizen.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you take any part in politics?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As a Society, we carefully avoid
-them, for the reasons given below. To seek to achieve political reforms
-before we have affected a reform in <i>human nature, is like putting new
-wine into old bottles</i>. Make men feel and recognise in their innermost
-hearts what is their real, true duty to all men, and every old abuse
-of power, every iniquitous law in the national policy, based on human,
-social or political selfishness, will disappear of itself. Foolish is
-the gardener who seeks to weed his flower-bed of poisonous plants by
-cutting them off from the surface of the soil, instead of tearing them
-out by the roots. No lasting political reform can be ever achieved with
-the same selfish men at the head of affairs as of old.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_2" id="SECTION_12_2"></a>THE RELATIONS OF THE T.S. TO POLITICAL REFORMS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The Theosophical Society is not,
-then, a political organization?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly not. It is international
-in the highest sense in that its members comprise men and women of all
-races, creeds, and forms of thought, who work together for one object,
-the improvement of humanity; but as a society it takes absolutely no
-part in any national or party politics.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Why is this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just for the reasons I have
-mentioned. Moreover, political action must necessarily vary with the
-circumstances of the time and with the idiosyncracies of individuals.
-While from the very nature of their position as Theosophists the
-members of the T.S. are agreed on the principles of Theosophy, or they
-would not belong to the society at all, it does not thereby follow
-that they agree on every other subject. As a society they can only
-act together in matters which are common to all—that is, in Theosophy
-itself; as individuals, each is left perfectly free to follow out
-his or her particular line of political thought and action, so long
-as this does not conflict with Theosophical principles, or hurt the
-Theosophical Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely the T.S. does not stand
-altogether aloof from the social questions which are now so fast coming
-to the front?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The very principles of the T.S.
-are a proof that it does not—or, rather, that most of its members do
-not—so stand aloof. If humanity can only be developed mentally and
-spiritually by the enforcement, first of all, of the soundest and most
-scientific physiological laws, it is the bounden duty of all who strive
-for this development to do their utmost to see that those laws shall
-be generally carried out. All Theosophists are only too sadly aware
-that, in Occidental countries especially, the social condition of large
-masses of the people renders it impossible for either their bodies or
-their spirits to be properly trained, so that the development of both
-is thereby arrested. As this training and development is one of the
-express objects of Theosophy, the T.S. is in thorough sympathy and
-harmony with all true efforts in this direction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what do you mean by “true
-efforts”? Each social reformer has his own panacea, and each believes
-his to be the one and only thing which can improve and save humanity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Perfectly true, and this is the
-real reason why so little satisfactory social work is accomplished. In
-most of these panaceas there is no really guiding principle, and there
-is certainly no one principle which connects them all. Valuable time
-and energy are thus wasted; for men, instead of co-operating, strive
-one against the other, often, it is to be feared, for the sake of fame
-and reward rather than for the great cause which they profess to have
-at heart, and which should be supreme in their lives.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How, then, should Theosophical
-principles be applied so that social co-operation may be promoted and
-true efforts for social amelioration be carried on?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Let me briefly remind you what
-these principles are—universal Unity and Causation; Human Solidarity;
-the Law of Karma; Re-incarnation. These are the four links of the
-golden chain which should bind humanity into one family, one universal
-Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In the present state of society,
-especially in so-called civilized countries, we are continually brought
-face to face with the fact that large numbers of people are suffering
-from misery, poverty and disease. Their physical condition is wretched,
-and their mental and spiritual faculties are often almost dormant.
-On the other hand, many persons at the opposite end of the social
-scale are leading lives of careless indifference, material luxury,
-and selfish indulgence. Neither of these forms of existence is mere
-chance. Both are the effects of the conditions which surround those who
-are subject to them, and the neglect of social duty on the one side
-is most closely connected with the stunted and arrested development
-on the other. In sociology, as in all branches of true science, the
-law of universal causation holds good. But this causation necessarily
-implies, as its logical outcome, that human solidarity on which
-Theosophy so strongly insists. If the action of one reacts on the lives
-of all, and this is the true scientific idea, then it is only by all
-men becoming brothers and all women sisters, and by all practising in
-their daily lives true brotherhood and true sisterhood, that the real
-human solidarity, which lies at the root of the elevation of the race,
-can ever be attained. It is this action and interaction, this true
-brotherhood and sisterhood, in which each shall live for all and all
-for each, which is one of the fundamental Theosophical principles that
-every Theosophist should be bound, not only to teach, but to carry out
-in his or her individual life.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> All this is very well as a general
-principle, but how would you apply it in a concrete way?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Look for a moment at what you
-would call the concrete facts of human society. Contrast the lives
-not only of the masses of the people, but of many of those who are
-called the middle and upper classes, with what they might be under
-healthier and nobler conditions, where justice, kindness, and love were
-paramount, instead of the selfishness, indifference, and brutality
-which now too often seem to reign supreme. All good and evil things in
-humanity have their roots in human character, and this character is,
-and has been, conditioned by the endless chain of cause and effect.
-But this conditioning applies to the future as well as to the present
-and the past. Selfishness, indifference, and brutality can never be
-the normal state of the race—to believe so would be to despair of
-humanity—and that no Theosophist can do. Progress can be attained, and
-only attained, by the development of the nobler qualities. Now, true
-evolution teaches us that by altering the surroundings of the organism
-we can alter and improve the organism; and in the strictest sense this
-is true with regard to man. Every Theosophist, therefore, is bound to
-do his utmost to help on, by all the means in his power, every wise and
-well-considered social effort which has for its object the amelioration
-of the condition of the poor. Such efforts should be made with a view
-to their ultimate social emancipation, or the development of the sense of duty
-in those who now so often neglect it in nearly every relation of life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Agreed. But who is to decide whether
-social efforts are wise or unwise?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No one person and no society can
-lay down a hard-and-fast rule in this respect. Much must necessarily
-be left to the individual judgment. One general test may, however, be
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-given. Will the proposed action tend to promote that true brotherhood
-which it is the aim of Theosophy to bring about? No real Theosophist
-will have much difficulty in applying such a test; once he is satisfied
-of this, his duty will lie in the direction of forming public opinion.
-And this can be attained only by inculcating those higher and nobler
-conceptions of public and private duties which lie at the root of
-all spiritual and material improvement. In every conceivable case he
-himself must be a center of spiritual action, and from him and his own
-daily individual life must radiate those higher spiritual forces which
-alone can regenerate his fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why should he do this? Are not
-he and all, as you teach, conditioned by their Karma, and must not
-Karma necessarily work itself out on certain lines?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is this very law of Karma which
-gives strength to all that I have said. The individual cannot separate
-himself from the race, nor the race from the individual. The law of
-Karma applies equally to all, although all are not equally developed.
-In helping on the development of others, the Theosophist believes that
-he is not only helping them to fulfil their Karma, but that he is also,
-in the strictest sense, fulfilling his own. It is the development of
-humanity, of which both he and they are integral parts, that he has
-always in view, and he knows that any failure on his part to respond
-to the highest within him retards not only himself but all, in their
-progressive march. By his actions, he can make it either more difficult
-or more easy for humanity to attain the next higher plane of being.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How does this bear on the fourth of
-the principles you mentioned, viz., Re-incarnation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The connection is most intimate.
-If our present lives depend upon the development of certain principles
-which are a growth from the germs left by a previous existence, the law
-holds good as regards the future. Once grasp the idea that universal
-causation is not merely present, but past, present and future, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-every action on our present plane falls naturally and easily into
-its true place, and is seen in its true relation to ourselves and
-to others. Every mean and selfish action sends us backward and not
-forward, while every noble thought and every unselfish deed are
-stepping-stones to the higher and more glorious planes of being. If
-this life were all, then in many respects it would indeed be poor and
-mean; but regarded as a preparation for the next sphere of existence,
-it may be used as the golden gate through which we may pass, not
-selfishly and alone, but in company with our fellows, to the palaces
-which lie beyond.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_3" id="SECTION_12_3"></a>ON SELF-SACRIFICE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is equal justice to all and love to
-every creature the highest standard of Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No; there is an even far higher
-one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What can it be?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The giving to others <i>more</i> than to
-oneself—<i>self-sacrifice</i>. Such was the standard and abounding measure
-which marked so pre-eminently the greatest Teachers and Masters of
-Humanity—<i>e.g.</i>, Gautama Buddha in History, and Jesus of Nazareth as
-in the Gospels. This trait alone was enough to secure to them the
-perpetual reverence and gratitude of the generations of men that come
-after them. We say, however, that self-sacrifice has to be performed
-with discrimination; and such a self-abandonment, if made without
-justice, or blindly, regardless of subsequent results, may often prove
-not only made in vain, but harmful. One of the fundamental rules
-of Theosophy is, justice to oneself—viewed as a unit of collective
-humanity, not as a personal self-justice, not more but not less than
-to others; unless, indeed, by the sacrifice of the <i>one</i> self we can
-benefit the many.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Could you make your idea clearer by
-giving an instance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> There are many instances to
-illustrate it in history. Self-sacrifice for practical good to
-save many, or several people, Theosophy holds as far higher than
-self-abnegation for a sectarian idea, such as that of “saving the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-heathen from <i>damnation</i>,” for instance. In our opinion, Father Damien, the
-young man of thirty who offered his whole life in sacrifice
-for the benefit and alleviation of the sufferings of the
-lepers at Molokai, and who went to live for eighteen years
-alone with them, to finally catch the loathsome disease and
-die, <i>has not died in vain</i>. He has given relief and relative
-happiness to thousands of miserable wretches. He has brought
-to them consolation, mental and physical. He threw a streak
-of light into the black and dreary night of an existence, the
-hopelessness of which is unparalleled in the records of human
-suffering. He was a <i>true Theosophist</i>, and his memory will live
-for ever in our annals. In our sight this poor Belgian priest
-stands immeasurably higher than—for instance—all those sincere
-but vain-glorious fools, the Missionaries who have sacrificed
-their lives in the South Sea Islands or China. What good have
-they done? They went in one case to those who are not yet ripe
-for any truth; and in the other to a nation whose systems of
-religious philosophy are as grand as any, if only the men who
-have them would live up to the standard of Confucius and their
-other sages. And they died victims of irresponsible cannibals
-and savages, and of popular fanaticism and hatred. Whereas, by
-going to the slums of Whitechapel or some other such locality
-of those that stagnate right under the blazing sun of our
-civilization, full of Christian savages and mental leprosy,
-they might have done real good, and preserved their lives for a
-better and worthier cause.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But the Christians do not think so?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of course not, because they act
-on an erroneous belief. They think that by baptising the body of an
-irresponsible savage they save his soul from damnation. One church
-forgets her martyrs, the other beatifies and raises statues to such
-men as Labro, who sacrificed his body for forty years only to benefit
-the vermin which it bred. Had we the means to do so, we would raise a
-statue to Father Damien, the true, practical saint, and perpetuate his
-memory for ever as a living exemplar of Theosophical heroism and of
-Buddha- and Christ-like mercy and self-sacrifice.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you regard self-sacrifice as a duty?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We do; and explain it by showing
-that altruism is an integral part of self-development. But we have to
-discriminate. A man has no right to starve himself <i>to death</i> that
-another man may have food, unless the life of that man is obviously
-more useful to the many than is his own life. But it is his duty to
-sacrifice his own comfort, and to work for others if they are unable to
-work for themselves. It is his duty to give all that which is wholly
-his own and can benefit no one but himself if he selfishly keeps it
-from others. Theosophy teaches self-abnegation, but does not teach rash
-and useless self-sacrifice, nor does it justify fanaticism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how are we to reach such an
-elevated status?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> By the enlightened application of
-our precepts to practice. By the use of our higher reason, spiritual
-intuition and moral sense, and by following the dictates of what we
-call “the still small voice” of our conscience, which is that of our
-<span class="smcap">Ego</span>, and which speaks louder in us than the
-earthquakes and the thunders of Jehovah, wherein “the Lord is not.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If such are our duties to humanity
-at large, what do you understand by our duties to our immediate
-surroundings?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just the same, plus those that
-arise from special obligations with regard to family ties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then it is not true, as it is said,
-that no sooner does a man enter into the Theosophical Society than he
-begins to be gradually severed from his wife, children, and family duties?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is a groundless calumny, like
-so many others. The first of the Theosophical duties is to do one’s
-duty by <i>all</i> men, and especially by those to whom one’s <i>specific</i>
-responsibilities are due, because one has either voluntarily undertaken
-them, such as marriage ties, or because one’s destiny has allied one to
-them; I mean those we owe to parents or next of kin.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what may be the duty of a
-Theosophist to himself?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To control and conquer, <i>through
-the Higher, the lower self</i>. To purify himself inwardly and morally;
-to fear no one, and nought, save the tribunal of his own conscience.
-Never to do a thing by halves; <i>i.e.</i>, if he thinks it the right thing
-to do, let him do it openly and boldly, and if wrong, never touch it at
-all. It is the duty of a Theosophist to lighten his burden by thinking
-of the wise aphorism of Epictetus, who says: “Be not diverted from your
-duty <i>by any idle reflection the silly world may make upon you</i>, for
-their censures are not in your power, and consequently should not be
-any part of your concern.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But suppose a member of your Society
-should plead inability to practice altruism by other people, on the
-ground that “charity begins at home”; urging that he is too busy, or
-too poor, to benefit mankind or even any of its units—what are your
-rules in such a case?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No man has a right to say that
-he can do nothing for others, on any pretext whatever. “By doing the
-proper duty in the proper place, a man may make the world his debtor,”
-says an English writer. A cup of cold water given in time to a thirsty
-wayfarer is a nobler duty and more worth, than a dozen of dinners given
-away, out of season, to men who can afford to pay for them. No man who
-has not got it in him will ever become a <i>Theosophist</i>; but he may
-remain a member of our Society all the same. We have no rules by which
-we could force any man to become a practical Theosophist, if he does
-not desire to be one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then why does he enter the Society
-at all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That is best known to him who does
-so. For, here again, we have no right to pre-judge a person, not even
-if the voice of a whole community should be against him, and I may
-tell you why. In our day, <i>vox populi</i> (so far as regards the voice of
-the educated, at any rate) is no longer <i>vox dei</i>, but ever that of
-prejudice, of selfish motives, and often simply that of unpopularity.
-Our duty is to sow seeds broadcast for the future, and see they are
-good; not to stop to enquire <i>why</i> we should do so, and how and
-wherefore we are obliged to lose our time, since those who will reap
-the harvest in days to come will never be ourselves.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_4" id="SECTION_12_4"></a>ON CHARITY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How do you Theosophists regard the
-Christian duty of charity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What charity do you mean? Charity
-of mind, or practical charity in the physical plane?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I mean practical charity, as your
-idea of Universal brotherhood would include, of course, charity of
-mind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then you have in your mind the
-practical carrying out of the commandments given by Jesus in the Sermon
-on the Mount?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Precisely so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then why call them “Christian”?
-Because, although your Saviour preached and practised them, the last
-thing the Christians of to-day think of is to carry them out in their
-lives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And yet many are those who pass
-their lives in dispensing charity?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Yes, out of the surplus of their
-great fortunes. But point out to me that Christian, among the most
-philanthropic, who would give to the shivering and starving thief, who
-would steal his coat, his cloak also; or offer his right cheek to him
-who smote him on the left, and never think of resenting it!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Ah, but you must remember that these
-precepts have not to be taken literally. Times and circumstances have
-changed since Christ’s day. Moreover, He spoke in Parables.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then why don’t your Churches teach
-that the doctrine of damnation and hell-fire is to be understood as
-a <i>parable</i> too? Why do some of your most popular preachers, while
-virtually allowing these “parables” to be understood as you take them,
-insist on the literal meaning of the fires of Hell and the <i>physical</i>
-tortures of an “Asbestos-like” soul? If one is a “parable,” then the
-other is. If Hell-fire is a literal truth, then Christ’s commandments
-in the Sermon on the Mount have to be obeyed to the very letter. And I
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-tell you that many who do not
-believe in the Divinity of Christ—like Count Leo Tolstoi and
-more than one Theosophist—do carry out these noble, because
-universal, precepts literally; and many more good men and women
-would do so, were they not more than certain that such a walk
-in life would very probably land them in a lunatic asylum—so
-<i>Christian are your laws</i>!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely every one knows that
-millions and millions are spent annually on private and public
-charities?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Oh, yes; half of which sticks to
-the hands it passes through before getting to the needy; while a good
-portion or remainder gets into the hands of professional beggars, those
-who are too lazy to work, thus doing no good whatever to those who are
-really in misery and suffering. Haven’t you heard that the first result
-of the great outflow of charity towards the East-end of London was to
-raise the rents in <i>Whitechapel</i> by some 20 per cent.?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What would you do, then?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Act individually and not
-collectively; follow the Northern Buddhist precepts: “Never put food
-into the mouth of the hungry by the hand of another”; “Never let the
-shadow of thy neighbour (<i>a third person</i>) come between thyself and the
-object of thy bounty”; “Never give to the Sun time to dry a tear before
-thou hast wiped it.” Again “Never give money to the needy, or food to
-the priest, who begs at thy door, <i>through thy servants</i>, lest thy
-money should diminish gratitude, and thy food turn to gall.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how can this be applied practically?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Theosophical ideas of charity
-mean <i>personal</i> exertion for others; <i>personal</i> mercy and kindness;
-<i>personal</i> interest in the welfare of those who suffer; <i>personal</i>
-sympathy, forethought and assistance in their troubles or needs. We
-Theosophists do not believe in giving money (N.B., if we had it)
-through other people’s hands or organizations. We believe in giving
-to the money a thousandfold greater power and effectiveness by our
-personal contact and sympathy with those who need it. We believe in
-relieving the starvation of the soul, as much if not more than the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-emptiness of the stomach; for gratitude does more good to the man
-who feels it, than to him for whom it is felt. Where’s the gratitude
-which your “millions of pounds” should have called forth, or the
-good feelings provoked by them? Is it shown in the hatred of the
-East-End poor for the rich? in the growth of the party of anarchy and
-disorder? or by those thousands of unfortunate working girls, victims
-to the “sweating” system, driven daily to eke out a living by going
-on the streets? Do your helpless old men and women thank you for the
-workhouses; or your poor for the poisonously unhealthy dwellings
-in which they are allowed to breed new generations of diseased,
-scrofulous and rickety children, only to put money into the pockets
-of the insatiable Shylocks who own houses? Therefore it is that every
-sovereign of all those “millions,” contributed by good and would-be
-charitable people, falls like a burning curse instead of a blessing
-on the poor whom it should relieve. We call this <i>generating national
-Karma</i>, and terrible will be its results on the day of reckoning.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_5" id="SECTION_12_5"></a>THEOSOPHY FOR THE MASSES.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And you think that Theosophy would,
-by stepping in, help to remove these evils, under the practical and
-adverse conditions of our modern life?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Had we more money, and had not most
-of the Theosophists to work for their daily bread, I firmly believe we
-could.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How? Do you expect that your
-doctrines could ever take hold of the uneducated masses, when they
-are so abstruse and difficult that well-educated people can hardly
-understand them?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You forget one thing, which is
-that your much-boasted modern education is precisely that which makes
-it difficult for you to understand Theosophy. Your mind is so full of
-intellectual subtleties and preconceptions that your natural intuition
-and perception of the truth cannot act. It does not require metaphysics
-or education to make a man understand the broad truths of Karma and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-Re-incarnation. Look at the millions of poor and uneducated Buddhists
-and Hindoos, to whom Karma and re-incarnation are solid realities,
-simply because their minds have never been cramped and distorted by
-being forced into an unnatural groove. They have never had the innate
-human sense of justice perverted in them by being told to believe
-that their sins would be forgiven because another man had been put to
-death for their sakes. And the Buddhists, note well, live up to their
-beliefs without a murmur against Karma, or what they regard as a just
-punishment, whereas, the Christian populace neither lives up it to
-its moral ideal, nor accepts its lot contentedly. Hence murmuring and
-dissatisfaction, and the intensity of the struggle for existence in
-Western lands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this contentedness, which you
-praise so much, would do away with all motive for exertion and bring
-progress to a stand-still.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And we, Theosophists, say that
-your vaunted progress and civilization are no better than a host of
-will-o’-the-wisps, flickering over a marsh which exhales a poisonous
-and deadly miasma. This, because we see selfishness, crime, immorality,
-and all the evils imaginable, pouncing upon unfortunate mankind from
-this Pandora’s box which you call an age of progress, and increasing
-<i>pari passu</i> with the growth of your material civilization. At such a
-price, better the inertia and inactivity of Buddhist countries, which
-have arisen only as a consequence of ages of political slavery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then is all this metaphysics and
-mysticism with which you occupy yourself so much, of no importance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To the masses, who need only
-practical guidance and support, they are not of much consequence;
-but for the educated, the natural leaders of the masses, those whose
-modes of thought and action will sooner or later be adopted by those
-masses, they are of the greatest importance. It is only by means of
-the philosophy that an intelligent and educated man can avoid the
-intellectual suicide of believing on blind faith; and it is only
-by assimilating the strict continuity and logical coherence of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-Eastern, if not esoteric, doctrines, that he can realize their truth.
-Conviction breeds enthusiasm, and “Enthusiasm,” says Bulwer Lytton, “is
-the genius of sincerity, and truth accomplishes no victories without
-it”; while Emerson most truly remarks that “every great and commanding
-movement in the annals of the world is the triumph of enthusiasm.” And
-what is more calculated to produce such a feeling than a philosophy so
-grand, so consistent, so logical, and so all-embracing as our Eastern Doctrines?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And yet its enemies are very
-numerous, and every day Theosophy acquires new opponents.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And this is precisely that which
-proves its intrinsic excellence and value. People hate only the things
-they fear, and no one goes out of his way to overthrow that which
-neither threatens nor rises beyond mediocrity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you hope to impart this
-enthusiasm, one day, to the masses?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Why not? since history tells us
-that the masses adopted Buddhism with enthusiasm, while, as said
-before, the practical effect upon them of this philosophy of ethics
-is still shown by the smallness of the percentage of crime amongst
-Buddhist populations as compared with every other religion. The
-chief point is, to uproot that most fertile source of all crime and
-immorality—the belief that it is possible for them to escape the
-consequences of their own actions. Once teach them that greatest of all
-laws, <i>Karma</i> and <i>Re-incarnation</i>, and besides feeling in themselves
-the true dignity of human nature, they will turn from evil and eschew
-it as they would a physical danger.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_6" id="SECTION_12_6"></a>HOW MEMBERS CAN HELP THE SOCIETY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How do you expect the Fellows of
-your Society to help in the work?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First by studying and comprehending
-the theosophical doctrines, so that they may teach others, especially
-the young people. Secondly, by taking every opportunity of talking to
-others and explaining to them what Theosophy is, and what it is not; by
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-removing misconceptions and spreading an interest in the subject.
-Thirdly, by assisting in circulating our literature, by buying books
-when they have the means, by lending and giving them and by inducing
-their friends to do so. Fourthly, by defending the Society from the
-unjust aspersions cast upon it, by every legitimate device in their
-power. Fifth, and most important of all, by the example of their own
-lives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But all this literature, to the
-spread of which you attach so much importance, does not seem to me
-of much practical use in helping mankind. This is not practical
-charity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We think otherwise. We hold that a
-good book which gives people food for thought, which strengthens and
-clears their minds, and enables them to grasp truths which they have
-dimly felt but could not formulate—we hold that such a book does a
-real, substantial good. As to what you call practical deeds of charity,
-to benefit the bodies of our fellow-men, we do what little we can; but,
-as I have already told you, most of us are poor, whilst the Society
-itself has not even the money to pay a staff of workers. All of us who
-toil for it, give our labour gratis, and in most cases money as well.
-The few who have the means of doing what are usually called charitable
-actions, follow the Buddhist precepts and do their work themselves,
-not by proxy or by subscribing publicly to charitable funds. What the
-Theosophist has to do above all is to forget his personality.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_12_7" id="SECTION_12_7"></a>WHAT A THEOSOPHIST OUGHT NOT TO DO.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Have you any prohibitory laws or
-clauses for Theosophists in your Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Many, but, alas! none of them are
-enforced. They express the ideal of our organization,—but the practical
-application of such things we are compelled to leave to the discretion
-of the Fellows themselves. Unfortunately, the state of men’s minds
-in the present century is such that, unless we allow these clauses
-to remain, so to speak, obsolete, no man or woman would dare to risk
-joining the Theosophical Society. This is precisely why I feel forced
-to lay such a stress on the difference between true Theosophy and its
-hard-struggling and well-intentioned, but still unworthy vehicle, the
-Theosophical Society.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> May I be told what are these
-perilous reefs in the open sea of Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Well may you call them reefs,
-as more than one otherwise sincere and well-meaning F.T.S. has had
-his Theosophical canoe shattered into splinters on them! And yet to
-avoid certain things seems the easiest thing in the world to do. For
-instance, here is a series of such negatives, screening positive
-Theosophical duties:—</p>
-
-<p class="indent">No Theosophist should be silent when he hears evil
-reports or slanders spread about the Society, or innocent persons,
-whether they be his colleagues or outsiders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But suppose what one hears is the
-truth, or may be true without one knowing it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then you must demand good proofs of
-the assertion, and hear both sides impartially before you permit the
-accusation to go uncontradicted. You have no right to believe in evil,
-until you get undeniable proof of the correctness of the statement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what should you do then?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Pity and forbearance, charity and
-long-suffering, ought to be always there to prompt us to excuse our
-sinning brethren, and to pass the gentlest sentence possible upon
-those who err. A Theosophist ought never to forget what is due to the
-shortcomings and infirmities of human nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Ought he to forgive entirely in such
-cases?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In every case, especially he who is
-sinned against.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if by so doing, he risks to
-injure, or allow others to be injured? What ought he to do then?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> His duty; that which his conscience
-and higher nature suggests to him; but only after mature deliberation.
-Justice consists in doing no injury to any living being; but justice
-commands us also never to allow injury to be done to the many, or even
-to one innocent person, by allowing the guilty one to go unchecked.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are the other negative clauses?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No Theosophist ought to be
-contented with an idle or frivolous life, doing no real good to himself
-and still less to others. He should work for the benefit of the few who
-need his help if he is unable to toil for Humanity, and thus work for
-the advancement of the Theosophical cause.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This demands an exceptional nature,
-and would come rather hard upon some persons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then they had better remain outside
-the T. S. instead of sailing under false colours. No one is asked
-to give more than he can afford, whether in devotion, time, work or
-money.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What comes next?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No working member should set too
-great value on his personal progress or proficiency in Theosophic
-studies; but must be prepared rather to do as much altruistic work as
-lies in his power. He should not leave the whole of the heavy burden
-and responsibility of the Theosophical movement on the shoulders of
-the few devoted workers. Each member ought to feel it his duty to take
-what share he can in the common work, and help it by every means in his
-power.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is but just. What comes next?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No Theosophist should place his
-personal vanity, or feelings, above those of his Society as a body.
-He who sacrifices the latter, or other people’s reputations on the
-altar of his personal vanity, worldly benefit, or pride, ought not to
-be allowed to remain a member. One cancerous limb diseases the whole
-body.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is it the duty of every member to
-teach others and preach Theosophy?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is indeed. No fellow has a right
-to remain idle, on the excuse that he knows too little to teach. For he
-may always be sure that he will find others who know still less than
-himself. And also it is not until a man begins to try to teach others, that he
-discovers his own ignorance and tries to remove it. But this is a minor clause.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What do you consider, then, to be
-the chief of these negative Theosophical duties?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> To be ever prepared to recognize
-and confess one’s faults. To rather sin through exaggerated praise than
-through too little appreciation of one’s neighbour’s efforts. Never to
-back-bite or slander another person. Always to say openly and direct to
-his face anything you have against him. Never to make yourself the echo
-of anything you may hear against another, nor harbour revenge against
-those who happen to injure you.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But it is often dangerous to tell
-people the truth to their faces. Don’t you think so? I know of one of
-your members who was bitterly offended, left the Society, and became
-its greatest enemy, only because he was told some unpleasant truths to
-his face, and was blamed for them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of such we have had many. No
-member, whether prominent or insignificant, has ever left us without
-becoming our bitter enemy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> How do you account for it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is simply this. Having been,
-in most cases, intensely devoted to the Society at first, and having
-lavished upon it the most exaggerated praises, the only possible excuse
-such a backslider can make for his subsequent behaviour and past
-short-sightedness, is <i>to pose as an innocent and deceived victim</i>,
-thus casting the blame from his own shoulders on to those of the
-Society in general, and its leaders especially. Such persons remind
-one of the old fable about the man with a distorted face, who broke
-his looking-glass on the ground that it reflected his countenance crookedly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what makes these people turn
-against the Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Wounded vanity in some form or
-other, almost in every case. Generally, because their dicta and advice
-are not taken as final and authoritative; or else, because they are of
-those who would rather reign in Hell than serve in Heaven. Because, in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-short, they cannot bear to stand second to anybody in anything. So, for
-instance, one member—a true “Sir Oracle”—criticized, and almost defamed
-every member in the T.S. to outsiders as much as to Theosophists, under
-the pretext that they were <i>all untheosophical</i>, blaming them precisely
-for what he was himself doing all the time. Finally, he left the
-Society, giving as his reason a profound conviction that we were all
-(the Founders especially)—<span class="smcap">Frauds!</span> Another
-one, after intriguing in every possible way to be placed at the head
-of a large Section of the Society, finding that the members would not
-have him, turned against the Founders of the T. S., and became their
-bitterest enemy, denouncing one of them whenever he could, simply
-because the latter could not, and would not, <i>force him</i> upon the
-Members. This was simply a case of an outrageous wounded vanity. Still
-another wanted to, and virtually did, practise <i>black-magic</i>—<i>i.e.</i>,
-undue personal psychological influence on certain Fellows, while
-pretending devotion and every Theosophical virtue. When this was put
-a stop to, the Member broke with Theosophy, and now slanders and
-lies against the same hapless leaders in the most virulent manner,
-endeavouring to break up the society by blackening the reputation of
-those whom that worthy “Fellow” was unable to deceive.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What would you do with such
-characters?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Leave them to their Karma. Because
-one person does evil that is no reason for others to do so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But, to return to slander, where is
-the line of demarcation between backbiting and just criticism to be
-drawn? Is it not one’s duty to warn one’s friends and neighbors against
-those whom one knows to be dangerous associates?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If by allowing them to go on
-unchecked other persons may be thereby injured, it is certainly our
-duty to obviate the danger by warning them privately. But true or
-false, no accusation against another person should ever be spread
-abroad. If true, and the fault hurts no one but the sinner, then leave
-him to his Karma. If false, then you will have avoided adding to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-the injustice of the world. Therefore, keep silent about such things
-with every one not directly concerned. But if your discretion and
-silence are likely to hurt or endanger others, then I add: <i>Speak the
-truth at all costs</i>, and say, with Annesly, “Consult duty, not events.”
-There are cases when one is forced to exclaim, “Perish discretion,
-rather than allow it to interfere with duty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Methinks, if you carry out these
-maxims, you are likely to reap a nice crop of troubles!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And so we do. We have to admit that
-we are now open to the same taunt as the early Christians were. “See,
-how these Theosophists love one another!” may now be said of us without
-a shadow of injustice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Admitting yourself that there is at
-least as much, if not more, backbiting, slandering, and quarrelling
-in the T.S. as in the Christian Churches, let alone Scientific
-Societies—What kind of Brotherhood is this? I may ask.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> A very poor specimen, indeed, as
-at present, and, until carefully sifted and reorganized, <i>no</i> better
-than all others. Remember, however, that human nature is the same <i>in</i>
-the Theosophical Society as <i>out</i> of it. Its members are no saints:
-they are at best sinners trying to do better, and liable to fall back
-owing to personal weakness. Add to this that our “Brotherhood” is no
-“recognised” or established body, and stands, so to speak, outside of
-the pale of jurisdiction. Besides which, it is in a chaotic condition,
-and as unjustly <i>unpopular as is no other body</i>. What wonder, then,
-that those members who fail to carry out its ideal should turn, after
-leaving the Society, for sympathetic protection to our enemies, and
-pour all their gall and bitterness into their too willing ears! Knowing
-that they will find support, sympathy, and ready credence for every
-accusation, however absurd, that it may please them to launch against
-the Theosophical Society, they hasten to do so, and vent their wrath
-on the innocent looking-glass, which reflected too faithfully their
-faces. <i>People never forgive those whom they have wronged.</i> The sense
-of kindness received, and repaid by them with ingratitude, drives them
-into a madness of self-justification before the world and their own
-consciences. The former is but too ready to believe in anything said
-against a society it hates. The latter—but I will say no more, fearing
-I have already said too much.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Your position does not seem to me a
-very enviable one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is not. But don’t you think that
-there must be something very noble, very exalted, very true, behind the
-Society and its philosophy, when the leaders and the founders of the
-movement still continue to work for it with all their strength? They
-sacrifice to it all comfort, all worldly prosperity, and success, even
-to their good name and reputation—aye, even to their honour—to receive
-in return incessant and ceaseless obloquy, relentless persecution,
-untiring slander, constant ingratitude, and misunderstanding of their
-best efforts, blows, and buffets from all sides—when by simply dropping
-their work they would find themselves immediately released from every
-responsibility, shielded from every further attack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I confess, such a perseverance seems
-to me very astounding, and I wondered why you did all this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Believe me for no
-self-gratification; only in the hope of training a few individuals
-to carry on our work for humanity by its original programme when the
-Founders are dead and gone. They have already found a few such noble
-and devoted souls to replace them. The coming generations, thanks to
-these few, will find the path to peace a little less thorny, and the
-way a little widened, and thus all this suffering will have produced
-good results, and their self-sacrifice will not have been in vain. At
-present, the main, fundamental object of the Society is to sow germs in
-the hearts of men, which may in time sprout, and under more propitious
-circumstances lead to a healthy reform, conducive of more happiness <i>to
-the masses</i> than they have hitherto enjoyed.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_13_1" id="SECTION_13_1"></a>
-<h2>XIII. <br />ON THE MISCONCEPTIONS
-ABOUT<br /> THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>THEOSOPHY AND ASCETICISM.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard people say that your
-rules require all members to be vegetarians, celibates, and rigid
-ascetics; but you have not told me anything of the sort yet. Can you
-tell the truth once for all about this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The truth is that our rules require
-nothing of the kind. The Theosophical Society does not even expect, far
-less require of <i>any</i> of its members that they should be ascetics in
-any way, except—if you call <i>that</i> asceticism—that they should try and
-benefit other people and be unselfish in their own lives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But still many of your members
-are strict vegetarians, and openly avow their intention of remaining
-unmarried. This, too, is most often the case with those who take a
-prominent part in connection with the work of your Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> That is only natural, because most
-of our really earnest workers are members of the Inner Section of the
-Society, which I told you about before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Oh! then you do require ascetic
-practices in that Inner Section?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No; we do not <i>require</i> or <i>enjoin</i>
-them even there; but I see that I had better give you an explanation of
-our views on the subject of asceticism in general, and then you will
-understand about vegetarianism and so on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Please proceed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As I have already told you, most
-people who become really earnest students of Theosophy, and active
-workers in our Society, wish to do more than study theoretically the
-truths we teach. They wish to <i>know</i> the truth by their own direct
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-personal experience, and to study Occultism with the object of
-acquiring the wisdom and power, which they feel that they need in order
-to help others, effectually and judiciously, instead of blindly and at
-haphazard. Therefore, sooner or later, they join the Inner Section.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But you said that “ascetic
-practices” are not obligatory even in that Inner Section?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No more they are; but the first
-thing which the members learn there is a true conception of the
-relation of the body, or physical sheath, to the inner, the true man.
-The relation and mutual interaction between these two aspects of human
-nature are explained and demonstrated to them, so that they soon become
-imbued with the supreme importance of the inner man over the outer case
-or body. They are taught that blind unintelligent asceticism is mere
-folly; that such conduct as that of St. Labro which I spoke of before,
-or that of the Indian Fakirs and jungle ascetics, who cut, burn and
-macerate their bodies in the most cruel and horrible manner, is simply
-self-torture for selfish ends, <i>i.e.</i>, to develop will-power, but is
-perfectly useless for the purpose of assisting true spiritual, or
-Theosophic, development.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I see, you regard only <i>moral</i>
-asceticism as necessary. It is as a means to an end, that end being the
-perfect equilibrium of the <i>inner</i> nature of man, and the attainment of
-complete mastery over the body with all its passions and desires?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just so. But these means must be
-used intelligently and wisely, not blindly and foolishly; like an
-athlete who is training and preparing for a great contest, not like the
-miser who starves himself into illness that he may gratify his passion
-for gold.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I understand now your general idea;
-but let us see how you apply it in practice. How about vegetarianism,
-for instance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> One of the great German scientists
-has shown that every kind of animal tissue, however you may cook it,
-still retains certain marked characteristics of the animal which it
-belonged to, which characteristics can be recognised. And apart
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-from that, every one knows by the taste what meat he is eating. We go a
-step farther, and prove that when the flesh of animals is assimilated
-by man as food, it imparts to him, physiologically, some of the
-characteristics of the animal it came from. Moreover, occult science
-teaches and proves this to its students by ocular demonstration,
-showing also that this “coarsening” or “animalizing” effect on man is
-greatest from the flesh of the larger animals, less for birds, still
-less for fish and other cold-blooded animals, and least of all when he
-eats only vegetables.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then he had better not eat at all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If he could live without eating, of
-course it would. But as the matter stands, he must eat to live, and so
-we advise really earnest students to eat such food as will least clog
-and weight their brains and bodies, and will have the smallest effect
-in hampering and retarding the development of their intuition, their
-inner faculties and powers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then you do not adopt all the
-arguments which vegetarians in general are in the habit of using?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly not. Some of their
-arguments are very weak, and often based on assumptions which are quite
-false. But, on the other hand, many of the things they say are quite
-true. For instance, we believe that much disease, and especially the
-great predisposition to disease which is becoming so marked a feature
-in our time, is very largely due to the eating of meat, and especially
-of tinned meats. But it would take too long to go thoroughly into this
-question of vegetarianism on its merits; so please pass on to something
-else.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> One question more. What are your members
-of the Inner Section to do with regard to their food when they are ill?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Follow the best practical advice
-they can get, of course. Don’t you grasp yet that we never impose any
-hard-and-fast obligations in this respect? Remember once for all that
-in all such questions we take a rational, and never a fanatical, view
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-of things. If from illness or long habit a man cannot go without meat,
-why, by all means let him eat it. It is no crime; it will only retard
-his progress a little; for after all is said and done, the purely
-bodily actions and functions are of far less importance than what a
-man <i>thinks</i> and <i>feels</i>, what desires he encourages in his mind, and
-allows to take root and grow there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then with regard to the use of wine
-and spirits, I suppose you do not advise people to drink them?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are worse for his moral and
-spiritual growth than meat, for alcohol in all its forms has a direct,
-marked, and very deleterious influence on man’s psychic condition. Wine
-and spirit drinking is only less destructive to the development of the
-inner powers, than the habitual use of hashish, opium, and similar drugs.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_13_2" id="SECTION_13_2"></a>THEOSOPHY AND MARRIAGE.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Now to another question; must a man
-marry or remain a celibate?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It depends on the kind of man you
-mean. If you refer to one who intends to live <i>in</i> the world, one who,
-even though a good, earnest Theosophist, and an ardent worker for our
-cause, still has ties and wishes which bind him to the world, who, in
-short, does not feel that he has done for ever with what men call life,
-and that he desires one thing and one thing only—to know the truth,
-and to be able to help others—then for such a one I say there is no
-reason why he should not marry, if he likes to take the risks of that
-lottery where there are so many more blanks than prizes. Surely you
-cannot believe us so absurd and fanatical as to preach against marriage
-altogether? On the contrary, save in a few exceptional cases of
-practical Occultism, marriage is the only remedy against immorality.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why cannot one acquire this
-knowledge and power when living a married life?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> My dear sir, I cannot go into
-physiological questions with you; but I can give you an obvious and, I
-think, a sufficient answer, which will explain to you the moral
-reasons we give for it. Can a man serve two masters? No! Then it is
-equally impossible for him to divide his attention between the pursuit
-of Occultism and a wife. If he tries to, he will assuredly fail in
-doing either properly; and, let me remind you, practical Occultism is
-far too serious and dangerous a study for a man to take up, unless he
-is in the most deadly earnest, and ready to sacrifice <i>all, himself
-first of all</i>, to gain his end. But this does not apply to the members
-of our Inner Section. I am only referring to those who are determined
-to tread that path of discipleship which leads to the highest goal.
-Most, if not all of those who join our Inner Section, are only
-beginners, preparing themselves in this life to enter in reality upon
-that path in lives to come.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_13_3" id="SECTION_13_3"></a>THEOSOPHY AND EDUCATION.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> One of your strongest arguments for
-the inadequacy of the existing forms of religion in the West, as also
-to some extent the materialistic philosophy which is now so popular,
-but which you seem to consider as an abomination of desolation, is
-the large amount of misery and wretchedness which undeniably exists,
-especially in our great cities. But surely you must recognize how much
-has been, and is being done to remedy this state of things by the
-spread of education and the diffusion of intelligence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The future generations will hardly
-thank you for such a “diffusion of intelligence,” nor will your present
-education do much good to the poor starving masses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Ah! but you must give us time. It is
-only a few years since we began to educate the people.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And what, pray, has your
-Christian religion been doing ever since the fifteenth century,
-once you acknowledge that the education of the masses has not been
-attempted till now—the very work, if ever there could be one, which a
-<i>Christian</i>, <i>i.e.</i>, a Christ-following church and people,
-ought to perform?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, you may be right; but now—</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Just let us consider this question
-of education from a broad standpoint, and I will prove to you that you
-are doing harm not good, with many of your boasted improvements. The
-schools for the poorer children, though far less useful than they ought
-to be, are good in contrast with the vile surroundings to which they
-are doomed by your modern Society. The <i>infusion</i> of a little practical
-Theosophy would help a hundred times more in life the poor suffering
-masses than all this infusion of (useless) intelligence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But, really——</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Let me finish, please. You have
-opened a subject on which we Theosophists feel deeply, and I must
-have my say. I quite agree that there is a great advantage to a small
-child bred in the slums, having the gutter for playground, and living
-amid continued coarseness of gesture and word, in being placed daily
-in a bright, clean school-room hung with pictures, and often gay with
-flowers. There it is taught to be clean, gentle, orderly; there it
-learns to sing and to play; has toys that awaken its intelligence;
-learns to use its fingers deftly; is spoken to with a smile instead
-of a frown; is gently rebuked or coaxed instead of cursed. All this
-humanises the children, arouses their brains, and renders them
-susceptible to intellectual and moral influences. The schools are not
-all they might be and ought to be; but, compared with the homes, they
-are paradises; and they slowly are reacting on the homes. But while
-this is true of many of the Board schools, your system deserves the
-worst one can say of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> So be it; go on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What is the <i>real</i> object of
-modern education? Is it to cultivate and develop the mind in the right
-direction; to teach the disinherited and hapless people to carry with
-fortitude the burden of life (allotted them by Karma); to strengthen
-their will; to inculcate in them the love of one’s neighbour and the
-feeling of mutual interdependence and brotherhood; and thus to train
-and form the character for practical life? Not a bit of it. And yet,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-these are undeniably the objects of all true education. No one denies
-it; all your educationalists admit it, and talk very big indeed on the
-subject. But what is the practical result of their action? Every young
-man and boy, nay, every one of the younger generation of schoolmasters
-will answer: “The object of modern education is to pass examinations,”
-a system not to develop right emulation, but to generate and breed
-jealousy, envy, hatred almost, in young people for one another, and
-thus train them for a life of ferocious selfishness and struggle for
-honours and emoluments instead of kindly feeling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I must admit you are right there.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> And what are these examinations—the
-terror of modern boyhood and youth? They are simply a method of
-classification by which the results of your school teaching are
-tabulated. In other words, they form the practical application of
-the modern science methods to the <i>genus homo, qua</i> intellection.
-Now “science” teaches that intellect is a result of the mechanical
-interaction of the brain-stuff; therefore it is only logical that
-modern education should be almost entirely mechanical—a sort of
-automatic machine for the fabrication of intellect by the ton. Very
-little experience of examinations is enough to show that the education
-they produce is simply a training of the physical memory, and, sooner
-or later, all your schools will sink to this level. As to any real,
-sound cultivation of the thinking and reasoning power, it is simply
-impossible while everything has to be judged by the results as tested
-by competitive examinations. Again, school training is of the very
-greatest importance in forming character, especially in its moral
-bearing. Now, from first to last, your modern system is based on the
-so-called scientific revelations: “The struggle for existence” and the
-“survival of the fittest.” All through his early life, every man has
-these driven into him by practical example and experience, as well
-as by direct teaching, till it is impossible to eradicate from his
-mind the idea that “self,” the lower, personal, animal self, is the
-end-all, and be-all, of life. Here you get the great source of all the
-after-misery, crime, and heartless selfishness, which you admit as much
-as I do. Selfishness, as said over and over again, is the curse of
-humanity, and the prolific parent of all the evils and crimes in this
-life; and it is your schools which are the hotbeds of such selfishness.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> That is all very fine as
-generalities, but I should like a few facts, and to learn also how this
-can be remedied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Very well, I will try and satisfy
-you. There are three great divisions of scholastic establishments,
-board, middle-class and public schools, running up the scale from
-the most grossly commercial to the idealistic classical, with many
-permutations and combinations. The practical commercial begets the
-modern side, and the ancient and orthodox classical reflects its
-heavy respectability even as far as the School Board pupil teacher’s
-establishments. Here we plainly see the scientific and material
-commercial supplanting the effete orthodox and classical. Neither is
-the reason very far to seek. The objects of this branch of education
-are, then, pounds, shillings, and pence, the <i>summum bonum</i> of the
-XIXth century. Thus, the energies generated by the brain molecules of
-its adherents are all concentrated on one point, and are, therefore, to
-some extent, an organized army of <i>educated</i> and speculative intellects
-of the minority of men, trained against the hosts of the ignorant,
-simple-minded masses doomed to be vampirised, lived and sat upon by
-their intellectually stronger brethren. Such training is not only
-<i>untheosophical</i>, it is simply UNCHRISTIAN. Result: The direct outcome
-of this branch of education is an overflooding of the market with
-money-making machines, with heartless selfish men—animals—who have been
-most carefully trained to prey on their fellows and take advantage of
-the ignorance of their weaker brethren!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Well, but you cannot assert that of
-our great public schools, at any rate?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not exactly, it is true. But
-though the <i>form</i> is different, the animating spirit is the same:
-<i>untheosophical</i> and <i>unchristian</i>, whether Eton and Harrow turn out
-scientists or divines and theologians.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Surely you don’t mean to call Eton
-and Harrow “commercial”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No. Of course the Classical system
-is above all things <i>respectable</i>, and in the present day is productive
-of some good. It does still remain the favourite at our great public
-schools, where not only an intellectual, but also a social education
-is obtainable. It is, therefore, of prime importance that the dull
-boys of aristocratic and wealthy parents should go to such schools
-to meet the rest of the young life of the “blood” and money classes.
-But unfortunately there is a huge competition even for entrance; for
-the moneyed classes are increasing, and poor but clever boys seek to
-enter the public schools by the rich scholarships, both at the schools
-themselves and from them to the Universities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> According to this view, the
-wealthier “dullards” have to work even harder than their poorer
-fellows?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is so. But, strange to say,
-the faithful of the cult of the “Survival of the fittest” do not
-practice their creed; for their whole exertion is to make the naturally
-unfit supplant the fit. Thus, by bribes of large sums of money, they
-allure the best teachers from their natural pupils to mechanicalise
-their naturally unfit progeny into professions which they uselessly
-overcrowd.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And you attribute all this to
-what?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> All this is owing to the
-perniciousness of a system which turns out goods to order, irrespective
-of the natural proclivities and talents of the youth. The poor little
-candidate for this progressive paradise of learning, comes almost
-straight from the nursery to the treadmill of a preparatory school for
-sons of gentlemen. Here he is immediately seized upon by the workmen
-of the materio-intellectual factory, and crammed with Latin, French
-and Greek Accidence, Dates and Tables, so that if he have any natural
-genius it is rapidly squeezed out of him by the rollers of what Carlyle
-has so well-called “dead vocables.”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely he is taught something
-besides “dead vocables,” and much of that which may lead him direct to
-<i>Theosophy</i>, if not entirely into the Theosophical Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not much. For of history, he will
-attain only sufficient knowledge of his own particular nation to fit
-him with a steel armour of prejudice against all other peoples, and
-be steeped in the foul cess-pools of chronicled national hate and
-blood-thirstiness; and surely, you would not call that—<i>Theosophy</i>?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What are your further objections?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Added to this is a smattering
-of selected, so-called, Biblical facts, from the study of which all
-intellect is eliminated. It is simply a memory lesson, the “Why” of the
-teacher being a “Why” of circumstances and not of reason.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes; but I have heard you
-congratulate yourself at the ever-increasing number of the Agnostics
-and Atheists in our day, so that it appears that even people trained
-in the system you abuse so heartily <i>do</i> learn to think and reason for
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Yes; but it is rather owing
-to a healthy reaction from that system than due to it. We prefer
-immeasurably more in our Society Agnostics, and even rank Atheists, to
-bigots of whatever religion. An Agnostic’s mind is ever opened to the
-truth; whereas the latter blinds the bigot like the sun does an owl.
-The best—<i>i.e.</i>, the most truth-loving, philanthropic, and honest—of
-our Fellows were, and are, Agnostics and Atheists (disbelievers in a
-<i>personal</i> God). But there are no <i>free</i>-thinking boys and girls, and
-generally early training will leave its mark behind in the shape of
-a cramped and distorted mind. A proper and sane system of education
-should produce the most vigorous and liberal mind, strictly trained
-in logical and accurate thought, and not in blind faith. How can you
-ever expect good results, while you pervert the reasoning faculty of
-your children by bidding them believe in the miracles of the Bible on
-Sunday, while for the six other days of the week you teach them that
-such things are scientifically impossible?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> What would you have, then?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If we had money, we would found
-schools which would turn out something else than reading and writing
-candidates for starvation. Children should above all be taught
-self-reliance, love for all men, altruism, mutual charity, and more
-than anything else, to think and reason for themselves. We would reduce
-the purely mechanical work of the memory to an absolute minimum, and
-devote the time to the development and training of the inner senses,
-faculties and latent capacities. We would endeavour to deal with each
-child as a unit, and to educate it so as to produce the most harmonious
-and equal unfoldment of its powers, in order that its special aptitudes
-should find their full natural development. We should aim at creating
-<i>free</i> men and women, free intellectually, free morally, unprejudiced
-in all respects, and above all things, <i>unselfish</i>. And we believe
-that much if not all of this could be obtained by <i>proper and truly
-theosophical</i> education.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_13_4" id="SECTION_13_4"></a>WHY, THEN, IS THERE SO MUCH PREJUDICE AGAINST THE T.S.?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> If Theosophy is even half of what
-you say, why should there exist such a terrible ill-feeling against it?
-This is even more of a problem than anything else.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is; but you must bear in mind
-how many powerful adversaries we have aroused ever since the formation
-of our Society. As I just said, if the Theosophical movement were one
-of those numerous modern crazes, as harmless at the end as they are
-evanescent, it would be simply laughed at—as it is now by those who
-still do not understand its real purport—and left severely alone. But
-it is nothing of the kind. Intrinsically, Theosophy is the most serious
-movement of this age; and one, moreover, which threatens the very life
-of most of the time-honoured humbugs, prejudices, and social evils of
-the day—those evils which fatten and make happy the upper ten and their
-imitators and sycophants, the wealthy dozens of the middle classes,
-while they positively crush and starve out of existence the millions of
-the poor. Think of this, and you will easily understand the reason of
-such a relentless persecution by those others who, more observant and
-perspicacious, do see the true nature of Theosophy, and therefore dread it.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you mean to tell me that it is
-because a few have understood what Theosophy leads to, that they try
-to crush the movement? But if Theosophy leads only to good, surely you
-cannot be prepared to utter such a terrible accusation of perfidious
-heartlessness and treachery even against those few?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I am so prepared, on the contrary.
-I do not call the enemies we have had to battle with during the first
-nine or ten years of the Society’s existence either powerful or
-“dangerous”; but only those who have arisen against us in the last
-three or four years. And these neither speak, write nor preach against
-Theosophy, but work in silence and behind the backs of the foolish
-puppets who act as their visible <i>marionnettes</i>. Yet if <i>invisible</i> to
-most of the members of our Society, they are well known to the true
-“Founders” and the protectors of our Society. But they must remain for
-certain reasons unnamed at present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And are they known to many of you,
-or to yourself alone?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I never said <i>I</i> knew them. I may
-or may not know them—but I know <i>of them</i>, and this is sufficient; and
-<i>I defy them to do their worst</i>. They may achieve great mischief and
-throw confusion into our ranks, especially among the faint-hearted,
-and those who can judge only by appearances. <i>They will not crush
-the Society</i>, do what they may. Apart from these truly dangerous
-enemies—“dangerous,” however, only to those Theosophists who are
-unworthy of the name, and whose place is rather <i>outside</i> than <i>within</i>
-the T.S.—the number of our opponents is more than considerable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Can you name these, at least, if you
-will not speak of the others?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Of course I can. We have to contend
-against (1) the hatred of the Spiritualists, American, English, and
-French; (2) the constant opposition of the clergy of all denominations;
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-(3) especially the relentless hatred and persecution of the
-missionaries in India; (4) this led to the famous and infamous attack
-on our Theosophical Society by the Society for Psychical Research, an
-attack which was stirred up by a regular conspiracy organized by the
-missionaries in India. Lastly, we must count the defection of various
-prominent (?) members, for reasons I have already explained, all of
-whom have contributed their utmost to increase the prejudice against us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Cannot you give me more details
-about these, so that I may know what to answer when asked—a brief
-history of the Society, in short; and why the world believes all
-this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The reason is simple. Most
-outsiders knew absolutely nothing of the Society itself, its motives,
-objects or beliefs. From its very beginning the world has seen in
-Theosophy nothing but certain marvellous phenomena, in which two-thirds
-of the non-spiritualists do not believe. Very soon the Society came
-to be regarded as a body pretending to the possession of “miraculous”
-powers. The world never realised that the Society taught absolute
-disbelief in <i>miracle</i> or even the possibility of such; that in the
-Society there were only a few people who possessed such psychic
-powers and but few who cared for them. Nor did it understand that the
-phenomena were never produced publicly, but only privately for friends,
-and merely given as an accessory, to prove by direct demonstration that
-such things could be produced without dark rooms, spirits, mediums,
-or any of the usual paraphernalia. Unfortunately, this misconception
-was greatly strengthened and exaggerated by the first book on the
-subject which excited much attention in Europe—Mr. Sinnett’s “<i>Occult
-World</i>.” If this work did much to bring the Society into prominence,
-it attracted still more obloquy, derision and misrepresentation upon
-the hapless heroes and heroine thereof. Of this the author was more
-than warned in the <i>Occult World</i>, but did not pay attention to the
-<i>prophecy</i>—for such it was, though half-veiled.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> For what, and since when, do the
-Spiritualists hate you?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> From the first day of the
-Society’s existence. No sooner the fact became known that, as a body,
-the T.S. did not believe in communications with the spirits of the
-dead, but regarded the so-called “spirits” as, for the most part,
-astral reflections of disembodied personalities, shells, etc., than
-the Spiritualists conceived a violent hatred to us and especially to
-the Founders. This hatred found expression in every kind of slander,
-uncharitable personal remarks, and absurd misrepresentations of the
-Theosophical teachings in all the American Spiritualistic organs. For
-years we were persecuted, denounced and abused. This began in 1875 and
-continues to the present day. In 1879, the headquarters of the T.S.
-were transferred from New York to Bombay, India, and then permanently
-to Madras. When the first branch of our Society, the British T.S., was
-founded in London, the English Spiritualists came out in arms against
-us, as the Americans had done; and the French Spiritists followed
-suit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why should the clergy be
-hostile to you, when, after all, the main tendency of the Theosophical
-doctrines is opposed to Materialism, the great enemy of all forms of
-religion in our day? <span class="smcap"> Theo.</span> The Clergy
-opposed us on the general principle that “He who is not with me is
-against me.” Since Theosophy does not agree with any one Sect or Creed,
-it is considered the enemy of all alike, because it teaches that they
-are all, more or less, mistaken. The missionaries in India hated and
-tried to crush us because they saw the flower of the educated Indian
-youth and the Brahmins, who are almost inaccessible to them, joining
-the Society in large numbers. And yet, apart from this general class
-hatred, the T.S. counts in its ranks many clergymen, and even one or
-two bishops.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And what led the S.P.R. to take the
-field against you? You were both pursuing the same line of study, in
-some respects, and several of the Psychic Researchers belonged to your society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> First of all we were very good
-friends with the leaders of the S.P.R.; but when the attack on the
-phenomena appeared in the <i>Christian College Magazine</i>, supported by
-the pretended revelations of a menial, the S.P.R. found that they
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-had compromised themselves by publishing in their “Proceedings” too
-many of the phenomena which had occurred in connection with the
-T.S. Their ambition is to pose as an <i>authoritative</i> and <i>strictly
-scientific</i> body; so that they had to choose between retaining that
-position by throwing overboard the T.S. and even trying to destroy it,
-and seeing themselves merged, in the opinion of the Sadducees of the
-<i>grand monde</i>, with the “credulous” Theosophists and Spiritualists.
-There was no way for them out of it, no two choices, and they chose to
-throw us overboard. It was a matter of dire necessity for them. But so
-hard pressed were they to find any apparently reasonable motive for
-the life of devotion and ceaseless labour led by the two Founders, and
-for the complete absence of any pecuniary profit or other advantage to
-them, that our enemies were obliged to resort to the thrice-absurd,
-eminently ridiculous, and now famous “Russian spy theory,” to explain
-this devotion. But the old saying, “The blood of the martyr is the
-seed of the Church,” proved once more correct. After the first shock
-of this attack, the T.S. doubled and tripled its numbers, but the bad
-impression produced still remains. A French author was right in saying,
-“<i>Calomniez, calomniez toujours et encore, il en restera toujours
-quelque chose.</i>” Therefore it is, that unjust prejudices are current,
-and that everything connected with the T.S., and especially with its
-Founders, is so falsely distorted, because based on malicious hearsay alone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet in the 14 years during which the
-Society has existed, you must have had ample time and opportunity to
-show yourselves and your work in their true light?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> How, or when, have we been given
-such an opportunity? Our most prominent members had an aversion to
-anything that looked like publicly justifying themselves. Their policy
-has ever been: “We must live it down”; and “What does it matter what
-the newspapers say, or people think?” The Society was too poor to send
-out public lecturers, and therefore the expositions of our views and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-doctrines were confined to a few Theosophical works that met with
-success, but which people often misunderstood, or only knew of through
-hearsay. Our journals were, and still are, boycotted; our literary
-works ignored; and to this day no one seems even to feel quite certain
-whether the Theosophists are a kind of Serpent-and-Devil worshippers,
-or simply “Esoteric Buddhists”—whatever that may mean. It was useless
-for us to go on denying, day after day and year after year, every kind
-of inconceivable cock-and-bull stories about us; for, no sooner was
-one disposed of, than another, a still more absurd and malicious one,
-was born out of the ashes of the first. Unfortunately, human nature is
-so constituted that any good said of a person is immediately forgotten
-and never repeated. But one has only to utter a calumny, or to start a
-story—no matter how absurd, false or incredible it may be, if only it
-is connected with some unpopular character—for it to be successful and
-forthwith accepted as a historical fact. Like <i>Don Basilio’s</i>
-“<span class="smcap">Calumnia</span>,” the rumour springs up, at first,
-as a soft gentle breeze hardly stirring the grass under your feet, and
-arising no one knows whence; then, in the shortest space of time, it is
-transformed into a strong wind, begins to blow a gale, and forthwith
-becomes a roaring storm! A calumny among news, is what an octopus is
-among fishes; it sucks into one’s mind, fastens upon our memory, which
-feeds upon it, leaving indelible marks even after the calumny has been
-bodily destroyed. A calumnious lie is the only master-key that will
-open any and every brain. It is sure to receive welcome and hospitality
-in every human mind, the highest as the lowest, if only a little prejudiced,
-and no matter from however base a quarter and motive it has started.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Don’t you think your assertion
-altogether too sweeping? The Englishman has never been over-ready to
-believe in anything said, and our nation is proverbially known for its
-love of fair play. A lie has no legs to stand upon for long, and—</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Englishman is as ready to
-believe evil as a man of any other nation; for it is human nature, and
-not a national feature. As to lies, if they have no legs to stand upon,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-according to the proverb, they have exceedingly rapid wings; and
-they can and do fly farther and wider than any other kind of news,
-in England as elsewhere. Remember lies and calumny are the only
-kind of literature we can always get gratis, and without paying any
-subscription. We can make the experiment if you like. Will you, who are
-so interested in Theosophical matters, and have heard so much about us,
-will you put me questions on as many of these rumours and “hearsays”
-as you can think of? I will answer you the truth, and nothing but the
-truth, subject to the strictest verification.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Before we change the subject, let us
-have the whole truth on this one. Now, some writers have called your
-teachings “immoral and pernicious”; others, on the ground that many
-so-called “authorities” and Orientalists find in the Indian religions
-nothing but sex-worship in its many forms, accuse you of teaching
-nothing better than Phallic worship. They say that since modern
-Theosophy is so closely allied with Eastern, and particularly Indian,
-thought, it cannot be free from this taint. Occasionally, even, they
-go so far as to accuse European Theosophists of reviving the practices
-connected with this cult. How about this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I have heard and read about this
-before, and I answer that no more utterly baseless and lying calumny
-has ever been invented and circulated. “Silly people can see but silly
-dreams,” says a Russian proverb. It makes one’s blood boil to hear such
-vile accusations made without the slightest foundation, and on the
-strength of mere inferences. Ask the hundreds of honourable English men
-and women who have been members of the Theosophical Society for years
-whether an <i>immoral</i> precept or a <i>pernicious</i> doctrine was ever taught
-to them. Open the <i>Secret Doctrine</i>, and you will find page after page
-denouncing the Jews and other nations precisely on account of this
-devotion to Phallic rites, due to the dead letter interpretation of
-nature symbolism, and the grossly materialistic conceptions of her
-dualism in all the <i>exoteric</i> creeds. Such ceaseless and malicious
-misrepresentation of our teachings and beliefs is really disgraceful.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But you cannot deny that the Phallic
-element <i>does</i> exist in the religions of the East?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Nor do I deny it; only I maintain
-that this proves no more than does its presence in Christianity, the
-religion of the West. Read Hargrave Jenning’s <i>Rosicrucians</i>, if you
-would assure yourself of it. In the East, the Phallic symbolism is,
-perhaps, more crude, because more true to nature, or I would rather
-say, more <i>naïve</i> and sincere than in the West. But it is not more
-licentious, nor does it suggest to the Oriental mind the same gross and
-coarse ideas as to the Western, with, perhaps, one or two exceptions,
-such as the shameful sect known as the “Maharajah,” or <i>Vallabhachârya</i>
-sect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> A writer in the <i>Agnostic</i>
-journal—one of your accusers—has just hinted that the followers of
-this disgraceful sect are Theosophists, and “claim true Theosophic
-insight.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> He wrote a falsehood, and
-that’s all. There never was, nor is there at present, one single
-Vallabhachârya in our Society. As to their having, or claiming
-Theosophic insight, that is another fib, based on crass ignorance about
-the Indian Sects. Their “Maharajah” only claims a right to the money,
-wives and daughters of his foolish followers and no more. This sect is
-despised by all the other Hindus.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">But you will find the whole subject dealt with at
-length in the <i>Secret Doctrine</i>, to which I must again refer you for
-detailed explanations. To conclude, the very soul of Theosophy is
-dead against Phallic worship; and its occult or esoteric section more
-so even than the exoteric teachings. There never was a more lying
-statement made than the above. And now ask me some other questions.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_13_5" id="SECTION_13_5"></a>IS THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY A<br /> MONEY-MAKING CONCERN?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Agreed. Well, have either of the
-Founders, Colonel H. S. Olcott or H. P. Blavatsky, ever made any money,
-profit, or derived any worldly benefit from the T.S., as some papers
-say?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not one penny. The papers lie. On
-the contrary, they have both given all they had, and literally beggared
-themselves. As for “worldly benefits,” think of the calumnies and
-vilification they have been subjected to, and then ask the question!
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet I have read in a good many
-missionary organs that the entrance fees and subscriptions much more
-than covered all expenses; and one said that the Founders were making
-twenty thousand pounds a year!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> This is a fib, like many others.
-In the published accounts of January, 1889, you will find an exact
-statement of <i>all</i> the money ever received from any source since
-1879. The total received from all sources (entrance fees, donations,
-etc., etc.) during these ten years is under six thousand pounds, and
-of this a large part was contributed by the Founders themselves from
-the proceeds of their private resources and their literary work. All
-this has been openly and officially admitted, even by our enemies, the
-Psychic Research Society. And now both the Founders are penniless; one,
-too old and ill to work as she did before, unable to spare time for
-outside literary work to help the Society in money, can only write for
-the Theosophical cause; the other keeps labouring for it as before, and
-receives as little thanks for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely they need money to
-live?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not at all. So long as they have
-food and lodging, even though they owe it to the devotion of a few
-friends, they need little more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But could not Madame Blavatsky,
-especially, make more than enough to live upon by her writings?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> When in India she received on the
-average some thousand rupees a year for articles contributed to Russian
-and other papers, but gave it all away to the Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Political articles?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Never. Everything she has written
-throughout the seven years of her stay in India is all there in print.
-It deals only with the religions, ethnology, and customs of India,
-and with Theosophy—never with politics, of which she knows nothing
-and cares less. Again, two years ago she refused several contracts
-amounting together to about 1,200 roubles in gold per month; for she
-could not accept them without abandoning her work for the Society,
-which needed all her time and strength. She has documents to prove it.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But why could not both she and
-Colonel Olcott do as others—notably many Theosophists—do; follow out
-their respective professions and devote the surplus of their time to
-the work of the Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because by serving two masters,
-either the professional or the philanthropic work would have had to
-suffer. Every true Theosophist is morally bound to sacrifice the
-personal to the impersonal, his own <i>present</i> good to the <i>future</i>
-benefit of other people. If the Founders do not set the example, who
-will?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And are there many who follow it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I am bound to answer you the truth.
-In Europe about half-a-dozen in all, out of more than that number of
-Branches.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then it is not true that the
-Theosophical Society has a large capital or endowment of its own?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is false, for it has none at
-all. Now that the entrance fee of £1 and the small annual due have been
-abolished, it is even a doubtful question whether the staff at the
-headquarters in India will not soon be starved to death.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then why not raise subscriptions?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We are not the Salvation Army; we
-<i>cannot</i> and <i>have never</i> begged; nor have we ever followed the example
-of the Churches and sects and “taken up collections.” That which is
-occasionally sent for the support of the Society, the small sums
-contributed by some devoted Fellows, are all voluntary donations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But I have heard of large sums of
-money given to Mdme. Blavatsky. It was said four years ago that she
-got £5,000 from one rich, young “Fellow,” who went out to join them
-in India and £10,000 from another wealthy and well-known American
-gentleman, one of your members who died in Europe four years ago.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Say to those who told you this,
-that they either themselves utter, or repeat, a gross falsehood.
-<i>Never has</i> “Madame Blavatsky” <i>asked or received</i> ONE PENNY from the
-two above-named gentlemen, nor anything like that from anyone else,
-since the Theosophical Society was founded. Let any man living try to
-substantiate this calumny, and it will be easier for him to prove that
-the Bank of England is a bankrupt than that the said “Founder” has ever
-made any money out of Theosophy. These two calumnies have been started
-by two high-born ladies, belonging to the London aristocracy, and have
-been immediately traced and disproved. They are the dead bodies, the
-carcases of two inventions, which, after having been buried in the sea
-of oblivion, are once more raised on the surface of the stagnant waters
-of slander.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then I have been told of several
-large <i>legacies</i> left to the T.S. One—some £8,000—was left to it by
-some eccentric Englishman, who did not even belong to the Society. The
-other—£3,000 or £4,000—were testated by an Australian F.T.S. Is this
-true?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I heard of the first; and I also
-know that, whether legally left or not, the T.S. has never profited by
-it, nor have the Founders ever been officially notified of it. For,
-as our Society was not then a chartered body, and thus had no legal
-existence, the Judge at the Court of Probate, as we were told, paid
-no attention to such legacy and turned over the sum to the heirs. So
-much for the first. As for the second, it is quite true. The testator
-was one of our devoted Fellows, and willed all he had to the T.S. But
-when the President, Colonel Olcott, came to look into the matter, he
-found that the testator had children whom he had disinherited for some
-family reasons. Therefore, he called a council, and it was decided
-that the legacy should be refused, and the moneys passed to the legal
-heirs. The Theosophical Society would be untrue to its name were it to
-profit by money to which others are entitled virtually, at any rate on
-Theosophical principles, if not legally.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Again, and I say this on the
-authority of your own Journal, the <i>Theosophist</i>, there’s a Rajah of
-India who donated to the Society 25,000 rupees. Have you not thanked
-him for his great bounty in the January <i>Theosophist</i> for 1888?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We have, in these words, “That the
-thanks of the Convention be conveyed to H. H. the Maharajah ... for his
-<i>promised munificent gift</i> of Rupees 25,000 to the Society’s Fund.” The
-thanks were duly conveyed, but the money is still a “promise,” and has
-never reached the Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But surely, if the Maharajah
-promised and received thanks for his gift publicly and in print, he
-will be as good as his promise?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> He may, though the promise is 18
-months old. I speak of the present and not of the future.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then how do you propose to go on?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> So long as the T.S. has a few
-devoted members willing to work for it without reward and thanks, so
-long as a few good Theosophists support it with occasional donations,
-so long will it exist, and nothing can crush it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I have heard many Theosophists speak
-of a “power behind the Society” and of certain “Mahatmas,” mentioned
-also in Mr. Sinnett’s works, that are said to have founded the Society,
-to watch over and protect it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> You may laugh, but it is so.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_13_6" id="SECTION_13_6"></a>THE WORKING STAFF OF THE T.S.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> These men, I have heard, are great
-Adepts, Alchemists, and what not. If, then, they can change lead into
-gold and make as much money as they like, besides doing all kinds of
-miracles at will, as related in Mr. Sinnett’s “Occult World,” why do
-not they find you money, and support the Founders and the Society in
-comfort?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because they did not found a
-“miracle club.” Because the Society is intended to help men to develop
-the powers latent in them through their own exertions and merit.
-Because whatever they may or may not produce in the way of phenomena,
-they are not <i>false coiners</i>; nor would they throw an additional
-and very strong temptation on the path of members and candidates:
-<i>Theosophy is not to be bought</i>. Hitherto, for the past 14 years, not a
-single working member has ever received pay or salary from either the
-Masters or the Society.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then are none of your workers paid
-at all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Till now, not one. But as every
-one has to eat, drink, and clothe himself, all those who are without
-any means of their own, and devote their whole time to the work of the
-society, are provided with the necessaries of life at the Headquarters
-at Madras, India, though these “necessaries” are humble enough, in
-truth! (See Rules at the end.) But now that the Society’s work has
-increased so greatly and still goes on in increasing (N.B., <i>owing to
-slanders</i>) in Europe, we need more working hands. We hope to have a
-few members who will henceforth be remunerated—if the word <i>can</i> be
-used in the cases in question. For every one of these Fellows, who are
-preparing to give <i>all</i> their time to the Society, are quitting good
-official situations with excellent prospects, to work for us at <i>less
-than half their former salary</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And who will provide the funds for
-this?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Some of our Fellows who are just a
-little richer than the rest. The man who would speculate or make money
-on Theosophy would be unworthy to remain in our ranks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But you must surely make money by
-your books, magazines, and other publications?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The <i>Theosophist</i> of Madras, alone
-among the magazines, pays a profit, and this has regularly been turned
-over to the Society, year by year, as the published accounts show.
-<i>Lucifer</i> is slowly but steadily ingulfing money, never yet having paid
-expenses—thanks to its being boycotted by the pious booksellers and
-railway stalls. The <i>Lotus</i>, in France—started on the private and not
-very large means of a Theosophist, who has devoted to it his whole time
-and labour—has ceased to exist, owing to the same causes, alas! Nor
-does the New York <i>Path</i> pay its way, while the <i>Revue Théosophique</i>
-of Paris has only just been started, also from the private means of
-a lady-member. Moreover, whenever any of the works issued by the
-Theosophical Publishing Company in London do pay, the proceeds will
-be devoted to the service of the Society.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And now please tell me all you can
-about the Mahatmas. So many absurd and contradictory things are said
-about them, that one does not know what to believe, and all sorts of
-ridiculous stories become current.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Well may you call them “ridiculous!”
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_14_1" id="SECTION_14_1"></a>
-<h2>XIV. <br />THE “THEOSOPHICAL MAHATMAS.”</h2></div>
-
-<h3>ARE THEY “SPIRITS OF LIGHT” OR “GOBLINS DAMN’D”?</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Who are they, finally, those whom
-you call your “Masters”? Some say they are “Spirits,” or some other
-kind of supernatural beings, while others call them “myths.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They are neither. I once heard
-one outsider say to another that they were a sort of <i>male mermaids</i>,
-whatever such a creature may be. But if you listen to what people say,
-you will never have a true conception of them. In the first place they
-are <i>living men</i>, born as we are born, and doomed to die like every
-other mortal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yes, but it is rumoured that some of
-them are a thousand years old. Is this true?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> As true as the miraculous growth of
-hair on the head of Meredith’s Shagpat. Truly, like the “Identical,”
-no Theosophical shaving has hitherto been able to crop it. The more we
-deny them, the more we try to set people right, the more absurd do the
-inventions become. I have heard of Methuselah being 969 years old; but,
-not being forced to believe in it, have laughed at the statement, for
-which I was forthwith regarded by many as a blasphemous heretic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Seriously, though, do they outlive
-the ordinary age of men?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What do you call the ordinary age?
-I remember reading in the <i>Lancet</i> of a Mexican who was almost 190
-years old; but I have never heard of mortal man, layman, or Adept, who
-could live even half the years allotted to Methuselah. Some Adepts do
-exceed, by a good deal, what you would call the ordinary age; yet there
-is nothing miraculous in it, and very few of them care to live very long.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what does the word “Mahatma”
-really mean?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply a “great soul,” great
-through moral elevation and intellectual attainment. If the title of
-great is given to a drunken soldier like Alexander, why should we not
-call those “Great” who have achieved far greater conquests in Nature’s
-secrets, than Alexander ever did on the field of battle? Besides, the
-term is an Indian and a very old word.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And why do you call them
-“Masters”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We call them “Masters” because
-they are our teachers; and because from them we have derived all
-the Theosophical truths, however inadequately some of us may have
-expressed, and others understood, them. They are men of great learning,
-whom we term Initiates, and still greater holiness of life. They are
-not ascetics in the ordinary sense, though they certainly remain apart
-from the turmoil and strife of your western world.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But is it not selfish thus to
-isolate themselves?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Where is the selfishness? Does not
-the fate of the Theosophical Society sufficiently prove that the world
-is neither ready to recognise them nor to profit by their teaching? Of
-what use would Professor Clerk Maxwell have been to instruct a class
-of little boys in their multiplication-table? Besides, they isolate
-themselves only from the West. In their own country they go about as
-publicly as other people do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Don’t you ascribe to them
-supernatural powers?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We believe in nothing supernatural,
-as I have told you already. Had Edison lived and invented his
-phonograph two hundred years ago, he would most probably have been
-burnt along with it, and the whole attributed to the devil. The powers
-which they exercise are simply the development of potencies lying
-latent in every man and woman, and the existence of which even official
-science begins to recognise.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Is it true that these men <i>inspire</i>
-some of your writers, and that many, if not all, of your Theosophical
-works were written under their dictation?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Some have. There are passages
-entirely dictated by them and <i>verbatim</i>, but in most cases they only
-inspire the ideas and leave the literary form to the writers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this in itself is miraculous;
-is, in fact, a <i>miracle</i>. How can they do it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> My dear Sir, you are labouring
-under a great mistake, and it is science itself that will refute
-your arguments at no distant day. Why should it be a “miracle,” as
-you call it? A miracle is supposed to mean some operation which
-is supernatural, whereas there is really nothing above or beyond
-<span class="smcap">Nature</span> and Nature’s laws. Among the many
-forms of the “miracle” which have come under modern scientific
-recognition, there is Hypnotism, and one phase of its power is known
-as “Suggestion,” a form of thought transference, which has been
-successfully used in combating particular physical diseases, etc. The
-time is not far distant when the World of Science will be forced to
-acknowledge that there exists as much interaction between one mind and
-another, no matter at what distance, as between one body and another
-in closest contact. When two minds are sympathetically related, and
-the instruments through which they function are tuned to respond
-magnetically and electrically to one another, there is nothing which
-will prevent the transmission of thoughts from one to the other, at
-will; for since the mind is not of a tangible nature, that distance
-can divide it from the subject of its contemplation, it follows that
-the only difference that can exist between two minds is a difference
-of <span class="smcap">STATE</span>. So if this latter hindrance is
-overcome, where is the “miracle” of <i>thought transference</i>, at whatever
-distance?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But you will admit that Hypnotism
-does nothing so miraculous or wonderful as that?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> On the contrary, it is a
-well-established fact that a Hypnotist can affect the brain of his
-subject so far as to produce an expression of his own thoughts, and
-even his words, through the organism of his subject; and although the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-phenomena attaching to this method of actual thought transference are
-as yet few in number, no one, I presume, will undertake to say how
-far their action may extend in the future, when the laws that govern
-their production are more scientifically established. And so, if such
-results can be produced by the knowledge of the mere rudiments of
-Hypnotism, what can prevent the Adept in Psychic and Spiritual powers
-from producing results which, with your present limited knowledge of
-their laws, you are inclined to call “miraculous”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then why do not our physicians
-experiment and try if they could not do as much?<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Because, first of all, they are
-not Adepts with a thorough understanding of the secrets and laws of
-psychic and spiritual realms, but materialists, afraid to step outside
-the narrow groove of matter; and, secondly, because they <i>must fail</i>
-at present, and indeed until they are brought to acknowledge that such
-powers are attainable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> And could they be taught?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Not unless they were first of all
-prepared, by having the materialistic dross they have accumulated in
-their brains swept away to the very last atom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is very interesting. Tell
-me, have the Adepts thus inspired or dictated to many of your Theosophists?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> No, on the contrary, to very few.
-Such operations require special conditions. An unscrupulous but skilled
-Adept of the Black Brotherhood (“Brothers of the Shadow,” and Dugpas,
-we call them) has far less difficulties to labour under. For, having
-no laws of the Spiritual kind to trammel his actions, such a Dugpa
-“sorcerer” will most unceremoniously obtain control over any mind, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-subject it entirely to his evil powers. But our Masters will never
-do that. They have no right, except by falling into Black Magic, to
-obtain full mastery over anyone’s immortal Ego, and can therefore
-act only on the physical and psychic nature of the subject, leaving
-thereby the free will of the latter wholly undisturbed. Hence, unless
-a person has been brought into psychic relationship with the Masters,
-and is assisted by virtue of his full faith in, and devotion to, his
-Teachers, the latter, whenever transmitting their thoughts to one with
-whom these conditions are not fulfilled, experience great difficulties
-in penetrating into the cloudy chaos of that person’s sphere. But this
-is no place to treat of a subject of this nature. Suffice it to say,
-that if the power exists, then there are Intelligences (embodied or
-disembodied) which guide this power, and living conscious instruments
-through whom it is transmitted and by whom it is received. We have only
-to beware of <i>black</i> magic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But what do you really mean by
-“black magic”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Simply <i>abuse of psychic powers</i>,
-or of any <i>secret of nature</i>; the fact of applying to selfish and
-sinful ends the powers of Occultism. A hypnotiser, who, taking
-advantage of his powers of “suggestion,” forces a subject to steal
-or murder, would be called a <i>black magician</i> by us. The famous
-“rejuvenating system” of Dr. Brown-Sequard, of Paris, through a
-loathsome <i>animal injection</i> into human blood—a discovery all the
-medical papers of Europe are now discussing—if true, is <i>unconscious
-black magic</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But this is mediæval belief in witchcraft
-and sorcery! Even Law itself has ceased to believe in such things?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> So much the worse for law, as it
-has been led, through such a lack of discrimination, into committing
-more than one judiciary mistake and crime. It is the term alone that
-frightens you with its “superstitious” ring in it. Would not law
-punish an abuse of hypnotic powers, as I just mentioned? Nay, it has
-so punished it already in France and Germany; yet it would indignantly
-deny that it applied punishment to a crime of evident <i>sorcery</i>.
-You cannot believe in the efficacy and reality of the <i>powers of suggestion</i>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-by physicians and mesmerisers (or hypnotisers), and then refuse to
-believe in the same powers when used for evil motives. And if you
-do, then you believe in <i>Sorcery</i>. Yon cannot believe in good and
-disbelieve in evil, accept genuine money and refuse to credit such a
-thing as false coin. Nothing can exist without its contrast, and no
-day, no light, no good could have any representation as such in your
-consciousness, were there no night, darkness nor evil to offset and
-contrast them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Indeed, I have known men, who, while
-thoroughly believing in that which you call great psychic, or magic
-powers, laughed at the very mention of Witchcraft and Sorcery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What does it prove? Simply that
-they are illogical. So much the worse for them, again. And we,
-knowing as we do of the existence of good and holy Adepts, believe as
-thoroughly in the existence of bad and unholy Adepts, or—Dugpas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if the Masters exist, why don’t
-they come out before all men and refute once for all the many charges
-which are made against Mdme. Blavatsky and the Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> What charges?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> That <i>they</i> do not exist, and that
-she has invented them. That they are men of straw, “Mahatmas of muslin
-and bladders.” Does not all this injure her reputation?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> In what way can such an accusation
-injure her in reality? Did she ever make money on their presumed
-existence, or derive benefit, or fame, therefrom? I answer that she has
-gained only insults, abuse, and calumnies, which would have been very
-painful had she not learned long ago to remain perfectly indifferent
-to such false charges. For what does it amount to, after all? Why,
-to an <i>implied compliment</i>, which, if the fools, her accusers, were
-not carried away by their blind hatred, they would have thought twice
-before uttering. To say that she has invented the Masters comes to
-this: She must have invented every bit of philosophy that has ever been
-given out in Theosophical literature. She must be the author of the
-letters from which “Esoteric Buddhism” was written; the sole inventor
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-of every tenet found in the “Secret Doctrine,” which, if the world were
-just, would be recognised as supplying many of the missing links of
-science, as will be discovered a hundred years hence. By saying what
-they do, they are also giving her the credit of being far cleverer than
-the hundreds of men, (many <i>very</i> clever and not a few scientific men,)
-who believe in what she says—inasmuch as she must have fooled them all!
-If they speak the truth, then she must be several Mahatmas rolled into
-one like a nest of Chinese boxes; since among the so-called “Mahatma
-letters” are many in totally different and distinct styles, all of
-which her accusers declare that she has written.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> It is just what they say. But is
-it not very painful to her to be publicly denounced as “the most
-accomplished impostor of the age, whose name deserves to pass to
-posterity,” as is done in the Report of the “Society for Psychical Research”?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It might be painful if it were
-true, or came from people less rabidly materialistic and prejudiced. As
-it is, personally she treats the whole matter with contempt, while the
-Mahatmas simply laugh at it. In truth, it is the greatest compliment
-that could be paid to her. I say so, again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But her enemies claim to have proved
-their case.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Aye, it is easy enough to make such
-a claim when you have constituted yourself judge, jury, and prosecuting
-counsel at once, as they did. But who, except their direct followers
-and our enemies, believe in it?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But they sent a representative to
-India to investigate the matter, didn’t they?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> They did, and their final
-conclusion rests entirely on the unchecked statements and unverified
-assertions of this young gentleman. A lawyer who read through his
-report told a friend of mine that in all his experience he had never
-seen “such a <i>ridiculous</i> and self-condemnatory document.” It was found
-to be full of suppositions and “<i>working</i> hypotheses” which mutually
-destroy each other. Is this a serious charge?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Yet it has done the Society great
-harm. Why, then, did she not vindicate her own character, at least,
-before a Court of Law?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Firstly, because as a Theosophist,
-it is her duty to leave unheeded all personal insults. Secondly,
-because neither the Society nor Mdme. Blavatsky had any money to waste
-over such a law-suit. And lastly, because it would have been ridiculous
-for both to be untrue to their principles, because of an attack made on
-them by a flock of stupid old British wethers, who had been led to butt
-at them by an over frolicksome lambkin from Australia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> This is complimentary. But do you
-not think that it would have done real good to the cause of Theosophy,
-if she had authoritatively disproved the whole thing once for all?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Perhaps. But do you believe that
-any English jury or judge would have ever admitted the reality of
-psychic phenomena, even if entirely unprejudiced beforehand? And when
-you remember that they would have been set against us already by the
-“Russian Spy” scare, the charge of <i>Atheism and infidelity</i>, and all
-the other calumnies that have been circulated against us, you cannot
-fail to see that such an attempt to obtain justice in a Court of Law
-would have been worse than fruitless! All this the Psychic Researchers
-knew well, and they took a base and mean advantage of their position to
-raise themselves above our heads and save themselves at our expense.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The S.P.R. now denies completely the
-existence of the Mahatmas. They say that from beginning to end they
-were a romance which Madame Blavatsky has woven from her own brain?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Well, she might have done many
-things less clever than this. At any rate, we have not the slightest
-objection to this theory. As she always says now, she almost prefers
-that people should not believe in the Masters. She declares openly
-that she would rather people should seriously think that the only
-Mahatmaland is the grey matter of her brain, and that, in short, she
-has evolved them out of the depths of her own inner consciousness, than
-that their names and grand ideal should be so infamously desecrated as
-they are at present. At first she used to protest indignantly against
-any doubts as to their existence. Now she never goes out of her way to
-prove or disprove it. Let people think what they like.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But, of course, these Masters <i>do</i>
-exist?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We affirm <i>they do</i>. Nevertheless,
-this does not help much. Many people, even some Theosophists
-and ex-Theosophists, say that they have never had any proof of
-their existence. Very well; then Mme. Blavatsky replies with this
-alternative:—If she has invented them, then she has also invented their
-philosophy and the practical knowledge which some few have acquired;
-and if so, what does it matter whether they do exist or not, since
-she herself is here, and <i>her own existence</i>, at any rate, can hardly
-be denied? If the knowledge supposed to have been imparted by them is
-good intrinsically, and it is accepted as such by many persons of more
-than average intelligence, why should there be such a <i>hullabaloo</i> made
-over that question? The fact of her being an impostor <i>has never been
-proved</i>, and will always remain <i>sub judice</i>; whereas it is a certain
-and undeniable fact that, by whomsoever invented, the philosophy
-preached by the “Masters” is one of the grandest and most beneficent
-philosophies once it is properly understood. Thus the slanderers, while
-moved by the lowest and meanest feelings—those of hatred, revenge,
-malice, wounded vanity, or disappointed ambition,—seem quite unaware
-that they are paying the greatest tribute to her intellectual powers.
-So be it, if the poor fools will have it so. Really, Mme. Blavatsky has
-not the slightest objection to being represented by her enemies as a
-<i>triple</i> Adept, and a “Mahatma” to boot. It is only her unwillingness
-to pose in her own sight as a crow parading in peacock’s feathers that
-compels her to this day to insist upon the truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if you have such wise and good
-men to guide the Society, how is it that so many mistakes have been
-made?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> The Masters do <i>not</i> guide the
-Society, not even the Founders; and no one has ever asserted that they
-did: they only watch over and protect it. This is amply proved by the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-fact that no mistakes have been able to cripple it, and no scandals
-from within, nor the most damaging attacks from without, have been able
-to overthrow it. The Masters look at the future, not at the present,
-and every mistake is so much more accumulated wisdom for days to come.
-That other “Master” who sent the man with the five talents did not
-tell him how to double them, nor did he prevent the foolish servant
-from burying his one talent in the earth. Each must acquire wisdom by
-his own experience and merits. The Christian Churches, who claim a far
-higher “Master,” the very Holy Ghost itself, have ever been and are
-still guilty not only of “mistakes,” but of a series of bloody crimes
-throughout the ages. Yet, no Christian would deny, for all that, his
-belief in <i>that</i> “Master,” I suppose? although his existence is far
-more <i>hypothetical</i> than that of the Mahatmas; as no one has ever seen
-the Holy Ghost, and <i>his</i> guidance of the Church, moreover, their own
-ecclesiastical history distinctly contradicts. <i>Errare humanum est.</i>
-Let us return to our subject.</p>
-
-<h3><a name="SECTION_14_2" id="SECTION_14_2"></a>THE ABUSE OF SACRED NAMES AND TERMS.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Then, what I have heard, namely,
-that many of your Theosophical writers claim to have been inspired by
-these Masters, or to have seen and conversed with them, is not true?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It may or it may not be true.
-How can I tell? The burden of proof rests with them. Some of them, a
-few—very few, indeed—have distinctly either <i>lied</i> or were hallucinated
-when boasting of such inspiration; others were truly inspired by great
-Adepts. The tree is known by its fruits; and as all Theosophists have
-to be judged by their deeds and not by what they write or say, so <i>all</i>
-Theosophical books must be accepted on their merits, and not according
-to any claim to authority which they may put forward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But would Mdme. Blavatsky apply this
-to her own works—the <i>Secret Doctrine</i>, for instance?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Certainly; she says expressly in
-the PREFACE that she gives out the doctrines that she has learnt from
-the Masters, but claims no inspiration whatever for what she has
-lately written. As for our best Theosophists, they would also in this
-case far rather that the names of the Masters had never been mixed up
-with our books in any way. With few exceptions, most of such works are
-not only imperfect, but positively erroneous and misleading. Great
-are the desecrations to which the names of two of the Masters have
-been subjected. There is hardly a medium who has not claimed to have
-seen them. Every bogus swindling Society, for commercial purposes,
-now claims to be guided and directed by “Masters,” often supposed to
-be far higher than ours! Many and heavy are the sins of those who
-advanced these claims, prompted either by desire for lucre, vanity, or
-irresponsible mediumship. Many persons have been plundered of their
-money by such societies, which offer to sell the secrets of power,
-knowledge, and spiritual truth for worthless gold. Worst of all, the
-sacred names of Occultism and the holy keepers thereof have been
-dragged in this filthy mire, polluted by being associated with sordid
-motives and immoral practices, while thousands of men have been held
-back from the path of truth and light through the discredit and evil
-report which such shams, swindles, and frauds have brought upon the
-whole subject. I say again, every earnest Theosophist regrets to-day,
-from the bottom of his heart, that these sacred names and things have
-ever been mentioned before the public, and fervently wishes that they
-had been kept secret within a small circle of trusted and devoted friends.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> The names certainly do occur very
-frequently now-a-days, and I never remember hearing of such persons as
-“Masters” till quite recently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> It is so; and had we acted on
-the wise principle of silence, instead of rushing into notoriety and
-publishing all we knew and heard, such desecration would never have
-occurred. Behold, only fourteen years ago, before the Theosophical
-Society was founded, all the talk was of “Spirits.” They were
-everywhere, in everyone’s mouth; and no one by any chance even
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-dreamt of talking about living “Adepts,” “Mahatmas,” or “Masters.” One
-hardly heard even the name of the Rosicrucians, while the existence
-of such a thing as “Occultism” was suspected even but by very few.
-Now all that is changed. We Theosophists were, unfortunately, the
-first to talk of these things, to make the fact of the existence in
-the East of “Adepts” and “Masters” and Occult knowledge known; and
-now the name has become common property. It is on us, now, that the
-Karma, the consequences of the resulting desecration of holy names and
-things, has fallen. All that you now find about such matters in current
-literature—and there is not a little of it—all is to be traced back to
-the impulse given in this direction by the Theosophical Society and
-its Founders. Our enemies profit to this day by our mistake. The most
-recent book directed against our teachings is alleged to have been
-written <i>by an Adept of twenty years’ standing</i>. Now, it is a <i>palpable
-lie</i>. We know the amanuensis and his <i>inspirers</i> (as he is himself too
-ignorant to have written anything of the sort). These “inspirers” are
-living persons, revengeful and unscrupulous in proportion to their
-intellectual powers; and these <i>bogus</i> Adepts are not one, but several.
-The cycle of “Adepts,” used as sledge-hammers to break the theosophical
-heads with, began twelve years ago, with Mrs. Emma Hardinge Britten’s
-“Louis” of <i>Art Magic</i> and <i>Ghost-Land</i>, and now ends with the “Adept”
-and “Author” of <i>The Light of Egypt</i>, a work written by Spiritualists
-against Theosophy and its teachings. But it is useless to grieve over
-what is done, and we can only suffer in the hope that our indiscretions
-may have made it a little easier for others to find the way to these
-Masters, whose names are now everywhere taken in vain, and under cover
-of which so many iniquities have already been perpetrated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Do you reject “Louis” as an Adept?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> We denounce no one, leaving this
-noble task to our enemies. The spiritualistic author of <i>Art Magic</i>,
-etc., may or may not have been acquainted with such an Adept—and
-saying this, I say far less than what that lady has said and written
-about us and Theosophy for the last several years—that is her own
-business. Only when, in a solemn scene of mystic vision, an alleged
-“Adept” sees “spirits” presumably at Greenwich, England, through
-Lord Rosse’s telescope, which was built in, and never moved from,
-Parsonstown, Ireland,<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-I may well be permitted to wonder at the ignorance of that “Adept” in
-matters of science. This beats all the mistakes and blunders committed
-at times by the <i>chelas</i> of our Teachers! And it is this “Adept” that
-is used now to break the teachings of our Masters!</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I quite understand your feeling in
-this matter, and think it only natural. And now, in view of all that
-you have said and explained to me, there is one subject on which I
-should like to ask you a few questions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If I can answer them I will. What is that?
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter"><a name="SECTION_15_1" id="SECTION_15_1"></a>
-<h2>CONCLUSION.</h2></div>
-
-<h3>THE FUTURE OF THE THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Tell me, what do you expect for
-Theosophy in the future?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If you speak of <span
-class="smcap">Theosophy</span>, I answer that, as it has existed
-eternally throughout the endless cycles upon cycles of the Past, so
-it will ever exist throughout the infinitudes of the Future, because
-Theosophy is synonymous with EVERLASTING TRUTH.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> Pardon me; I meant to ask you rather
-about the prospects of the Theosophical Society.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Its future will depend almost
-entirely upon the degree of selflessness, earnestness, devotion, and
-last, but not least, on the amount of knowledge and wisdom possessed by
-those members on whom it will fall to carry on the work, and to direct
-the Society after the death of the Founders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> I quite see the importance of
-their being selfless and devoted, but I do not quite grasp how their
-<i>knowledge</i> can be as vital a factor in the question as these other
-qualities. Surely the literature which already exists, and to which
-constant additions are still being made, ought to be sufficient?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> I do not refer to technical
-knowledge of the esoteric doctrine, though that is most important; I
-spoke rather of the great need which our successors in the guidance
-of the Society will have of unbiased and clear judgment. Every such
-attempt as the Theosophical Society has hitherto ended in failure,
-because, sooner or later, it has degenerated into a sect, set up
-hard-and-fast dogmas of its own, and so lost by imperceptible degrees
-that vitality which living truth alone can impart. You must remember
-that all our members have been bred and born in some creed or religion,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-that all are more or less of their generation both physically and
-mentally, and consequently that their judgment is but too likely to be
-warped and unconsciously biased by some or all of these influences. If,
-then, they cannot be freed from such inherent bias, or at least taught
-to recognise it instantly and so avoid being led away by it, the result
-can only be that the Society will drift off on to some sandbank of
-thought or another, and there remain a stranded carcass to moulder and die.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But if this danger be averted?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Then the Society will live on
-into and through the twentieth century. It will gradually leaven and
-permeate the great mass of thinking and intelligent people with its
-large-minded and noble ideas of Religion, Duty, and Philanthropy.
-Slowly but surely it will burst asunder the iron fetters of creeds
-and dogmas, of social and caste prejudices; it will break down racial
-and national antipathies and barriers, and will open the way to the
-practical realisation of the Brotherhood of all men. Through its
-teaching, through the philosophy which it has rendered accessible and
-intelligible to the modern mind, the West will learn to understand and
-appreciate the East at its true value. Further, the development of
-the psychic powers and faculties, the premonitory symptoms of which
-are already visible in America, will proceed healthily and normally.
-Mankind will be saved from the terrible dangers, both mental and
-bodily, which are inevitable when that unfolding takes place, as it
-threatens to do, in a hot-bed of selfishness and all evil passions.
-Man’s mental and psychic growth will proceed in harmony with his moral
-improvement, while his material surroundings will reflect the peace and
-fraternal goodwill which will reign in his mind, instead of the discord
-and strife which is everywhere apparent around us to-day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> A truly delightful picture! But
-tell me, do you really expect all this to be accomplished in one short
-century?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> Scarcely. But I must tell you that
-during the last quarter of every hundred years an attempt is made by
-those “Masters,” of whom I have spoken, to help on the spiritual
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-progress of Humanity in a marked and definite way. Towards the close of
-each century you will invariably find that an outpouring or upheaval of
-spirituality—or call it mysticism if you prefer—has taken place. Some
-one or more persons have appeared in the world as their agents, and a
-greater or less amount of occult knowledge and teaching has been given
-out. If you care to do so, you can trace these movements back, century
-by century, as far as our detailed historical records extend.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Enq.</span> But how does this bear on the future
-of the Theosophical Society?</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Theo.</span> If the present attempt, in the
-form of our Society, succeeds better than its predecessors have done,
-then it will be in existence as an organized, living and healthy body
-when the time comes for the effort of the XXth century. The general
-condition of men’s minds and hearts will have been improved and
-purified by the spread of its teachings, and, as I have said, their
-prejudices and dogmatic illusions will have been, to some extent
-at least, removed. Not only so, but besides a large and accessible
-literature ready to men’s hands, the next impulse will find a numerous
-and <i>united</i> body of people ready to welcome the new torch-bearer
-of Truth. He will find the minds of men prepared for his message, a
-language ready for him in which to clothe the new truths he brings,
-an organization awaiting his arrival, which will remove the merely
-mechanical, material obstacles and difficulties from his path. Think
-how much one, to whom such an opportunity is given, could accomplish.
-Measure it by comparison with what the Theosophical Society actually
-<i>has</i> achieved in the last fourteen years, without <i>any</i> of these
-advantages and surrounded by hosts of hindrances which would not hamper
-the new leader. Consider all this, and then tell me whether I am too
-sanguine when I say that if the Theosophical Society survives and lives
-true to its mission, to its original impulses through the next hundred
-years—tell me, I say, if I go too far in asserting that earth will be
-a heaven in the twenty-first century in comparison with what it is now!</p>
-
-<p class="f110 space-above2 space-below2">FINIS.</p>
-<hr class="full space-below2" />
-
-<p class="f150"><b>The United Lodge of Theosophists</b></p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="f120"><b>DECLARATION</b></p>
-
-<p class="indent">The policy of this Lodge is independent devotion
-to the cause of Theosophy, without professing attachment to any
-Theosophical organization. It is loyal to the great Founders of the
-Theosophical Movement, but does not concern itself with dissensions or
-differences of individual opinion.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">The work it has on hand and the end it keeps in view
-are too absorbing and too lofty to leave it the time or inclination to
-take part in side issues. That work and that end is the dissemination
-of the Fundamental Principles of the philosophy of Theosophy, and
-the exemplification in practice of those principles, through a truer
-realization of the <span class="smcap">Self</span>; a profounder
-conviction of Universal Brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It holds that the unassailable <i>Basis for Union</i>
-among Theosophists, wherever and however situated, is “<i>similarity of
-aim, purpose and teaching</i>,” and therefore has neither Constitution,
-By-laws nor Officers, the sole bond between its Associates being that
-<i>basis</i>. And it aims to disseminate this idea among Theosophists in the
-furtherance of Unity.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It regards as Theosophists all who are engaged in
-the true service of Humanity, without distinction of race, creed, sex,
-condition or organization, and</p>
-
-<p class="indent">It welcomes to its association all those who are in
-accord with its declared purposes and who desire to fit themselves, by
-study and otherwise, to be the better able to help and teach others.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">“<i>The true Theosophist belongs to no cult or sect,
-yet belongs to each and all.</i>”</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="blockquot"> Being in sympathy with the purposes of this
-Lodge, as set forth in its “Declaration,” I hereby record my desire to
-be enrolled as an Associate; it being understood that such association
-calls for no obligation on my part other than that which I, myself, determine.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="indent">The foregoing is the Form signed by Associates of the
-United Lodge of Theosophists.</p>
-
-<p class="indent">Inquiries are invited from all persons to whom this
-Movement may appeal. Cards for signature will be sent upon request, and
-every possible assistance furnished Associates in their studies and in
-efforts to form local Lodges. There are no dues of any kind, and no
-formalities to be complied with.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Correspondence should be addressed to</i></p>
-<p class="f120"><b>General Registrar, United Lodge of Theosophists</b></p>
-<p class="f90"><b>LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA</b></p>
-<p class="center space-below2"><b>504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street</b></p>
-<hr class="chap space-below2" />
-
-<p>“<i>To Spread Broadcast the Teachings of Theosophy, as Recorded in the
-Writings of H. P. Blavatsky and Wm. Q. Judge.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class="f150"><b>THEOSOPHY</b></p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><b><i>A Magazine Devoted to the Theosophical
-Movement, the Brotherhood of Humanity, the Study of Occult Science and
-Philosophy, and Aryan Literature.</i></b></p>
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_t.jpg" width="35" height="45" alt="T" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">THEOSOPHY is a Monthly Magazine
-devoted to the promulgation of Theosophy as it was given by those who
-brought it. Established in 1912 by the United Lodge of Theosophists,
-the magazine is now in the front rank of Theosophical publications
-and its circulation extends to every civilized country. The first
-eight volumes of the magazine contain reprints of the numerous
-original articles written by H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge in
-explanation, exemplification and application of the philosophy recorded
-in their published books. These precious articles, replete with Occult
-instruction, were first published in <i>The Theosophist</i>, <i>Lucifer</i>, and
-<i>The Path</i>, now for many years out of print, so that their surpassing
-value was lost and inaccessible to Students of the present generation.
-<span class="smcap">Theosophy</span> has made them once more
-available. In addition to these reprints the magazine contains many
-original articles written by Robert Crosbie and other devoted Pupils
-and Students of the Messengers of the Theosophical Movement of the
-nineteenth century. Not the least of the contents of the magazine are
-the Studies of the Teachings, the historical articles relating to the
-Theosophical Movement, the Parent Theosophical Society, and the many
-allied and related organizations and societies of the present day. The
-entire contents of the magazine are universal in scope and application,
-unbiased in treatment, and free from sectarian or partisan influence.
-In order to preserve at all times the impersonality of its tone, and
-that readers may form their judgment from the inherent value perceived
-in the articles and not from the names signed to them, the Editors and
-Contributors remain anonymous, no living person’s name being mentioned
-in connection with the authorship of any article published.</p>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Back Volumes</span> and Back
-Numbers can be supplied at $5.00 per Volume and 50 cents per Number.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap">Subscriptions</span> can begin
-with any desired Number of the current Volume. Subscription price,
-$2.00 per annum; single copies 25 cents each.</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent">Address all communications and remittances to</p>
-
-<p class="f110 space-below2"><b>Theosophy,&nbsp; &nbsp;Metropolitan
-Bldg.,&nbsp; &nbsp;Los Angeles,Cal.</b></p>
-<hr class="chap space-below2" />
-
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_s.jpg" width="30" height="46" alt="S" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">Students interested in obtaining a clear
-and correct understanding of the actual Teachings of <span class="smcap">Theosophy</span>,
-as recorded in the writings of the Messengers of the Theosophical Movement
-of the nineteenth century or in writings recommended by Them, should have
-the following books.</p>
-
-<table class="space-above1 space-below2" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="_" cellpadding="0" >
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdl">KEY TO THEOSOPHY, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">H. P. Blavatsky</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr">$2.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">An Exposition in the form of question and answer.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">The best Manual for daily study and reference.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A <i>verbatim</i> reprint of the Original Edition. Large</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">type, durably and artistically bound in Buckram.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THE OCEAN OF THEOSOPHY, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">William Q. Judge</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />$1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A succinct presentation of the philosophy free from</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">technical expressions; a perfect condensation of the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Secret Doctrines of Man and Nature.&nbsp;&emsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THE OCCULT WORLD<br />ESOTERIC BUDDHISM
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<i>By</i> <span class="smcap">A. P. Sinnett</span>,&nbsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;<i>Each</i>,</td>
- <td class="tdr_bott">$2.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">The two earliest popular presentations of Theosophical</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Teachings, containing extracts from Letters written by</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the <i>Mahatma</i> K. H. From the Plates of the Original</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">American Editions.&nbsp;&emsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />ISIS UNVEILED, Two Volumes, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">H. P. Blavatsky</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />$10.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Volume i, Science; Volume ii, Theology.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A reprint of the Original Edition of 1877.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">This, the first great work of H. P. B.,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">contains a vast wealth of information and</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">instruction not to be had elsewhere. &nbsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THE SECRET DOCTRINE, Two Volumes, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">H. P. Blavatsky</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />$15.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Volume I, Cosmogenesis; Volume II, Anthropogenesis.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">The Original Edition, published in 1888, is now out of</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">print. This Edition, published in London, contains some</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">unwarrantable changes, but is in the main accurate and is</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the only one available. Written “<i>for the instruction of</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2"><i>students of Occultism</i>,” it is <i>sui generis</i> and absolutely</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">invaluable to the true student of the mysteries of Life</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and Being.&nbsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />ABRIDGMENT OF THE SECRET DOCTRINE, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">Katherine Hillard</span>,&emsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />$3.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A very good condensation of the major teachings of Madame</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Blavatsky’s “Secret Doctrine” in the language of the Author. &nbsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THEOSOPHICAL GLOSSARY, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">H. P. Blavatsky</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><br />$5.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A reprint of the Original Edition, containing an exhaustive</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and scholarly treatment of the Sanskrit and other technical</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">terms employed in Theosophical literature. &nbsp;&nbsp;Cloth.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap space-below2" />
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_t.jpg" width="35" height="45" alt="T" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">THOSE who find the Teachings of Theosophy to
-be comprehensive, self-explanatory, and a complete solution of all
-the problems of Life from a philosophical, logical and scientific
-standpoint, and who may desire to follow the Path shown in order
-to realize in and for themselves the noble Ideal of Brotherhood
-exemplified by the <span class="smcap">Masters of Wisdom</span>, are
-urged to read, ponder and assimilate to the utmost extent possible to
-them, the following Treatises on the <i>Heart Doctrine</i>:</p>
-
-<table class="space-above1 space-below2" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="_" cellpadding="0" >
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE VOICE OF THE SILENCE. Chosen Fragments</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">from The Book of the Golden Precepts. Translated</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and annotated by H. P. Blavatsky.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;$1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE BHAGAVAD-GITA, The Book of Devotion.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Containing the Dialogue between <i>Krishna</i>, the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Supreme Master of Devotion, and <i>Arjuna</i>, his</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Disciple. Rendered into exquisite parallel terms</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">in the English tongue by William Q. Judge.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">NOTES ON THE BHAGAVAD-GITA. Commentaries</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of the greatest service to sincere students of to-day.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">The first Seven Chapters by W. Q. Judge; the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">remainder by his friend and Colleague Robert Crosbie.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />YOGA APHORISMS OF PATANJALI. The <i>Thought</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of this Ancient Master, whose Aphorisms have</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">been the guide of Disciples in the East for untold</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">thousands of years. Done into English terms with</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Notes, by William Q. Judge.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">LIGHT ON THE PATH. A treatise for the personal</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">use of those who are ignorant of the Eastern Wisdom,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and who desire to enter within its Influence. An exact</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">reprint of the Original Edition of 1885, together with</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the Comments originally published in <i>Lucifer</i>.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Written down by M. C.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">LETTERS THAT HAVE HELPED ME. Actual Letters, by</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">William Q. Judge, embodying Lessons and Guidance</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of direct personal value to every Student and Disciple.</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdr">Volume I,&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdr">Volume II,</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.00</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">&nbsp;&emsp;The Two Volumes bound in One,</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;1.50</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THE VOICE OF THE SILENCE, THE BHAGAVAD-GITA,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">And PATANJALI’S YOGA APHORISMS,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Bound in One Volume,</td>
- <td class="tdr">Leather,&emsp;3.00</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap space-below2" />
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_p.jpg" width="30" height="45" alt="P" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">PARENTS and others interested in the
-Spiritual and Moral welfare of Children and averse to the sectarian
-dogmas and false ideas prevalent under the name of religious teachings,
-have long felt the necessity for literature which should impart true
-fundamental conceptions of Nature, of Life and of Duty to the growing
-generation. As a portion of its Fraternal activities the United
-Lodge of Theosophists has long maintained a <i>Children’s School of
-Theosophy</i>. To this School come children of all ages, Theosophists and
-Non-Theosophists as to Parentage. They are taught the primary truths
-common to all religions and philosophies, dealing with Birth, Life,
-Death, Law, Action, and Duty. The Eternal Verities thus inculcated
-make for clean, sturdy, wholesome physical, mental, as well as moral
-and spiritual happiness and well-being. The experience thus gained in
-actual practice has been embodied in two books, wherein the lessons
-and instructions found helpful and formative to the highest character
-are plainly and clearly outlined, with all necessary suggestions and
-directions to enable Parents, Teachers and others to fit themselves to
-be the better able to help and guide the plastic minds of the Children
-to true perceptions of Life and Action.</p>
-
-<table class="space-above1 space-below2" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="_" cellpadding="0" >
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdl">BECAUSE—<span class="smcap">For The Children Who Ask Why</span>.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Interesting, comprehensible and assimilable, in clear</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and reverent fashion this Book presents to Children</td>
- <td class="tdr"></td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">the answers to those questions of Self that Parents</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">find it most difficult to meet, and affords a common</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">basis of understanding to Parent and Child.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;$1.25</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl"><br />THE ETERNAL VERITIES. A Series of Lessons in basic</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">truths and ideas, with complete chart and programme</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">so that its full value may be availed of in the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">instruction of Children of all ages, whether in the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">School or the Home. Original Songs, Chants, Music,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Allegories and Tales of Symbolism, in a manner not</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">only to interest but to carry the Lessons into the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Hearts and Minds of the Learners.</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&emsp;&nbsp;$1.50</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_i.jpg" width="32" height="45" alt="I" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">IN ORDER, further, to afford the maximum
-possible assistance to Parents and others interested in the proper
-education of Children, The United Lodge of Theosophists maintains a
-Bureau of Correspondence to which particular problems connected with
-the bringing-up of Children may be addressed. Replies to enquiries
-are in all cases by Women Associates of the Lodge who are themselves
-Mothers and Teachers and who voluntarily and gladly give their time and
-experience to benefit their perplexed Sisters. There are no fees or
-charges of any description in connection with this labor of love, and
-all Mothers and Teachers are invited to benefit by it.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot no-indent">Address,</p>
-<p class="center space-below2"><b>CHILDREN’S SCHOOL OF THEOSOPHY</b><br />
-LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA<br />
-504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street</p>
-
-<hr class="chap space-below2" />
-<div>
- <img class="drop-cap" src="images/letter_n.jpg" width="34" height="46" alt="N" />
-</div>
-<p class="drop-cap no-indent">NO MORE important work exists for the
-Theosophical Student than to be in a position to direct inquirers to
-channels where they may inform themselves of the leading Principles
-of the teachings of <span class="smcap">Theosophy</span> in their
-philosophical, ethical and scientific bearings. The following are
-recommended for their exact accuracy, their simplicity and clarity in
-the presentation of the Wisdom-Religion.</p>
-
-<table class="space-above1 space-below1" border="0" cellspacing="0" summary="_" cellpadding="0" >
- <tbody><tr>
- <td class="tdl">ECHOES FROM THE ORIENT, <i>By</i> <span class="smcap">William Q. Judge</span>.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">A Series of Chapters written in the most admirable</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">style, giving an outline of Theosophy and the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Theosophical Movement, and treating of the great</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">Subjects of Masters, Karma, Re-incarnation and Evolution.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">Cloth,&nbsp;&emsp;$0.60</td>
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- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl">CONVERSATIONS ON THEOSOPHY. A Pamphlet giving the</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">fundamental teachings of the Secret Doctrine. From</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">the writings of H. P. Blavatsky and William Q. Judge.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdr">Paper, envelope size,</td>
- <td class="tdr">.10</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdr">In quantities for propaganda purposes,&nbsp;&emsp;50 copies for</td>
- <td class="tdr">2.50</td>
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- <td class="tdl"><br />KARMA AND RE-INCARNATION. A large and attractively</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">bound pamphlet, envelope size, containing the famous</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2"><i>Aphorisms on Karma</i>, and a notably clear and</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">comprehensive treatment of the subjects of Karma</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">and Re-incarnation.</td>
- <td class="tdr">.15</td>
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- <td class="tdr">In quantities for propaganda purposes,&nbsp;&emsp;50 copies for</td>
- <td class="tdr">4.00</td>
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- <td class="tdl"><br />CULTURE OF CONCENTRATION,</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">&nbsp;&emsp;And OF OCCULT POWERS.</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">Two related Essays by William Q. Judge on subjects</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">of supreme importance.</td>
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- <td class="tdl"><br />EXTRACTS FROM A LETTER THAT HAS HELPED ME.</td>
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- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2"><i>Responsibility</i>. This Letter has brought consolation</td>
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- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and the comfort of understanding to many</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">regarding the Great Mystery.</td>
- <td class="tdr">.10</td>
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- <td class="tdl"><br />THOUGHTS FOR THINKERS. A Pamphlet designed for</td>
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- <td class="tdl_ind2">These <span class="smcap">Thoughts</span> are undogmatic, non-argumentative</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr><tr>
- <td class="tdl_ind2">and very suggestive.</td>
- <td class="tdr">.10</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p class="blockquot">The foregoing and other Books advertised in the preceding
-pages may all be obtained on order through your local
-Bookseller, or orders may be sent direct to the undersigned.</p>
-
-<p class="blockquot">Inquiries are invited regarding any Theosophical Books
-and Publications not specifically mentioned herein.
-Correspondence and questions are also invited on
-Theosophical problems and subjects from all interested.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Address all orders and inquiries and make all remittances payable to</i></p>
-
-<p class="center space-below2">UNITED LODGE OF THEOSOPHISTS<br />
-LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA<br />
-504 Metropolitan Building, Broadway at Fifth Street</p>
-<hr class="full space-below2" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p class="f150 u"><b>Footnotes:</b></p>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a>
- Also called Analogeticists. As explained by Prof. Alex.
-Wilder, F.T.S., in his “Eclectic Philosophy,” they were called so
-because of their practice of interpreting all sacred legends and
-narratives, myths and mysteries, by a rule or principle of analogy
-and correspondence: so that events which were related as having
-occurred in the external world were regarded as expressing operations
-and experiences of the human soul. They were also denominated
-Neo-Platonists. Though Theosophy, or the Eclectic Theosophical system,
-is generally attributed to the third century, yet, if Diogenes Laertius
-is to be credited, its origin is much earlier, as he attributed the
-system to an Egyptian priest, Pot-Amun, who lived in the early days
-of the Ptolemaic dynasty. The same author tells us that the name is
-Coptic, and signifies one consecrated to Amun, the God of Wisdom.
-Theosophy is the equivalent of Brahma-Vidya, divine knowledge.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a>
-Eclectic Theosophy was divided under three heads: (1)
-Belief in one absolute, incomprehensible and supreme Deity, or infinite
-essence, which is the root of all nature, and of all that is, visible
-and invisible. (2) Belief in man’s eternal immortal nature, because,
-being a radiation of the Universal Soul, it is of an identical essence
-with it. (3) <i>Theurgy</i>, or “divine work,” or <i>producing a work of
-gods</i>; from <i>theoi</i>, “gods,” and <i>ergein</i>, “to work.” The term
-is very old, but, as it belongs to the vocabulary of the MYSTERIES,
-was not in popular use. It was a mystic belief—practically proven
-by initiated adepts and priests—that, by making oneself as pure
-as the incorporeal beings—<i>i.e.</i>, by returning to one’s pristine
-purity of nature—man could move the gods to impart to him Divine
-mysteries, and even cause them to become occasionally visible, either
-subjectively or objectively. It was the transcendental aspect of what
-is now called Spiritualism; but having been abused and misconceived
-by the populace, it had come to be regarded by some as necromancy,
-and was generally forbidden. A travestied practice of the theurgy
-of Iamblichus lingers still in the ceremonial magic of some modern
-Kabalists. Modern Theosophy avoids and rejects both these kinds of
-magic and “necromancy” as being very dangerous. Real <i>divine</i> theurgy
-requires an almost superhuman purity and holiness of life; otherwise
-it degenerates into mediumship or black magic. The immediate disciples
-of Ammonius Saccas, who was called <i>Theodidaktos</i>, “god-taught”—such
-as Plotinus and his follower Porphyry—rejected theurgy at first, but
-were finally reconciled to it through Iamblichus, who wrote a work
-to that effect entitled “De Mysteriis,” under the name of his own
-master, a famous Egyptian priest called Abammon. Ammonius Saccas was
-the son of Christian parents, and, having been repelled by dogmatic
-spiritualistic Christianity from his childhood, became a Neo-Platonist,
-and like J. Boehme and other great seers and mystics, is said to
-have had divine wisdom revealed to him in dreams and visions. Hence
-his name of <i>Theodidaktos</i>. He resolved to reconcile every system of
-religion, and by demonstrating their identical origin to establish
-one universal creed based on ethics. His life was so blameless
-and pure, his learning so profound and vast, that several Church
-Fathers were his secret disciples. Clemens Alexandrinus speaks very
-highly of him. Plotinus, the “St. John” of Ammonius, was also a man
-universally respected and esteemed, and of the most profound learning
-and integrity. When thirty-nine years of age he accompanied the Roman
-Emperor Gordian and his army to the East, to be instructed by the
-sages of Bactria and India. He had a School of Philosophy in Rome.
-Porphyry, his disciple, whose real name was Malek (a Hellenized Jew),
-collected all the writings of his master. Porphyry was himself a great
-author, and gave an allegorical interpretation to some parts of Homer’s
-writings. The system of meditation the Philaletheians resorted to was
-ecstacy, a system akin to Indian Yoga practice. What is known of the
-Eclectic School is due to Origen, Longinus, and Plotinus, the immediate
-disciples of Ammonius.—(<i>Vide Eclectic Philos.</i>, by A. Wilder).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a>
-It was under Philadelphus that Judaism established itself in
-Alexandria, and forthwith the Hellenic teachers became the dangerous
-rivals of the College of Rabbis of Babylon. As the author of “Eclectic
-Philosophy” very pertinently remarks: “The Buddhistic, Vedantic, and
-Magian systems were expounded along with the philosophies of Greece at
-that period. It was not wonderful that thoughtful men supposed that
-the strife of words ought to cease, and considered it possible to
-extract one harmonious system from these various teachings.... Panænus,
-Athenagoras, and Clement were thoroughly instructed in Platonic
-philosophy, and comprehended its essential unity with the Oriental
-systems.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a>
-Says Mosheim of Ammonius: “Conceiving that not only the philosophers
-of Greece, but also all those of the different barbarian nations, were
-perfectly in unison with each other with regard to every essential
-point, he made it his business so to expound the thousand tenets of
-all these various sects as to show they had all originated from one
-and the same source, and tended all to one and the same end.” If the
-writer on Ammonius in the <i>Edinburgh Encyclopædia</i> knows what he
-is talking about, then he describes the modern Theosophists, their
-beliefs, and their work, for he says, speaking of the <i>Theodidaktos</i>:
-“He adopted the doctrines which were received in Egypt (the esoteric
-were those of India) concerning the Universe and the Deity, considered
-as constituting one great whole; concerning the eternity of the world
-... and established a system of moral discipline which allowed the
-people in general to live according to the laws of their country and
-the dictates of nature, but required the wise to exalt their mind by
-contemplation.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a>
-This is what the scholarly author of “The Eclectic Philosophy,” Prof.
-A. Wilder, F.T.S., describes as “<i>spiritual photography</i>”: “The soul
-is the camera in which facts and events, future, past, and present,
-are alike fixed; and the mind becomes conscious of them. Beyond our
-every-day world of limits all is one day or state—the past and future
-comprised in the present.” ... “Death is the last <i>ecstasis</i> on earth.
-Then the soul is freed from the constraint of the body, and its nobler
-part is united to higher nature and becomes partaker in the wisdom
-and foreknowledge of the higher beings.” Real Theosophy is, for the
-mystics, that state which Apollonius of Tyana was made to describe
-thus: “I can see the present and the future as in a clear mirror. The
-sage need not wait for the vapours of the earth and the corruption of
-the air to foresee events.... The <i>theoi</i>, or gods, see the future;
-common men the present; sages that which is about to take place.”
-“The Theosophy of the Sages” he speaks of is well expressed in the
-assertion, “The Kingdom of God is within us.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent"><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6">
-<span class="label">[6]</span></a>
-An “attached member” means one who has joined some
-particular branch of the T.S. An “unattached,” one who belongs to
-the Society at large, has his diploma, from the Headquarters (Adyar,
-Madras), but is connected with no branch or lodge.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a>
-We say that in such cases it is not the <i>spirits</i> of the dead who
-<i>descend</i> on earth, but the spirits of the living that <i>ascend</i> to
-the pure Spiritual Souls. In truth there is neither <i>ascending</i> nor
-<i>descending</i>, but a change of <i>state</i> or <i>condition</i> for the medium.
-The body of the latter becoming paralyzed, or “entranced,” the
-spiritual Ego is free from its trammels, and finds itself on the same
-plane of consciousness with the disembodied spirits. Hence, if there
-is any spiritual attraction between the two <i>they can communicate</i>,
-as often occurs in dreams. The difference between a mediumistic and
-a non-sensitive nature is this: the liberated spirit of a medium has
-the opportunity and facility of influencing the passive organs of its
-entranced physical body, to make them act, speak, and write at its
-will. The Ego can make it repeat, echo-like, and in the human language,
-the thoughts and ideas of the disembodied entity, as well as its own.
-But the <i>non-receptive</i> or non-sensitive organism of one who is very
-positive cannot be so influenced. Hence, although there is hardly a
-human being whose Ego does not hold free intercourse, during the sleep
-of his body, with those whom it loved and lost, yet, on account of the
-positiveness and non-receptivity of its physical envelope and brain,
-no recollection, or a very dim, dream-like remembrance, lingers in the
-memory of the person once awake.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a>
-<i>Vide infra</i>, “On Individuality and Personality.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a>
-It has become “fashionable,” especially of late, to deride the notion
-that there ever was, in the <i>mysteries</i> of great and civilized peoples,
-such as the Egyptians, Greeks, or Romans, anything but priestly
-imposture. Even the Rosicrucians were no better than half lunatics,
-half knaves. Numerous books have been written on them; and tyros, who
-had hardly heard the name a few years before, sallied out as profound
-critics and Gnostics on the subject of alchemy, the fire-philosophers,
-and mysticism in general. Yet a long series of the Hierophants of
-Egypt, India, Chaldea, and Arabia are known, along with the greatest
-philosophers and sages of Greece and the West, to have included
-under the designation of wisdom and divine science all knowledge,
-for they considered the base and origin of every art and science as
-<i>essentially</i> divine. Plato regarded the <i>mysteries</i> as most sacred,
-and Clemens Alexandrinus, who had been himself initiated into the
-Eleusinian mysteries, has declared “that the doctrines taught therein
-contained in them the end of all human knowledge.” Were Plato and
-Clemens two knaves or two fools, we wonder, or—both?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a>
-<i>Vide</i> (at the end) the official rules of the T.S., Appendix A. <i>Nota
-bene</i>, “T.S.” is an abbreviation for “Theosophical Society.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a>
-Publicans—regarded as so many thieves and pickpockets in those
-days. Among the Jews the name and profession of a publican was the
-most odious thing in the world. They were not allowed to enter the
-Temple, and Matthew (xviii. 17) speaks of a heathen and a publican
-as identical. Yet they were only Roman tax-gatherers occupying the
-same position as the British officials in India and other conquered
-countries.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a>
-“At the close of the Middle Ages slavery, under the power of moral
-forces, had mainly disappeared from Europe; but two momentous events
-occurred which overbore the moral power working in European society
-and let loose a swarm of curses upon the earth such as mankind had
-scarcely ever known. One of these events was the first voyaging to
-a populated and barbarous coast where human beings were a familiar
-article of traffic; and the other the discovery of a new world, where
-mines of glittering wealth were open, provided labour could be imported
-to work them. For four hundred years men and women and children were
-torn from all whom they knew and loved, and were sold on the coast of
-Africa to foreign traders; they were chained below decks—the dead often
-with the living—during the horrible ‘middle passage,’ and, according to
-Bancroft, an impartial historian, two hundred and fifty thousand out
-of three and a quarter millions were thrown into the sea on that fatal
-passage, while the remainder were consigned to nameless misery in the
-mines, or under the lash in the cane and rice fields. The guilt of this
-great crime rests on the Christian Church. ‘In the name of the most
-Holy Trinity’ the Spanish Government (Roman Catholic) concluded more
-than ten treaties authorising the sale of five hundred thousand human
-beings; in 1562 Sir John Hawkins sailed on his diabolical errand of
-buying slaves in Africa and selling them in the West Indies in a ship
-which bore the sacred name of Jesus; while Elizabeth, the Protestant
-Queen, rewarded him for his success in this first adventure of
-Englishmen in that inhuman traffic by allowing him to wear as his crest
-‘a demi-Moor in his proper colour, bound with a cord, or, in other
-words, a manacled negro slave.’”—<i>Conquests of the Cross</i> (quoted from
-the <i>Agnostic Journal</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a>
-A “branch,” or lodge, composed solely of co-religionists, or a branch
-<i>in partibus</i>, as they are now somewhat bombastically called.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a>
-Ain-Soph, <b>אין סיף</b> = <b>τὸ πάγ</b> = <b>ἔπειρος</b> Nature, the non-existent which IS, but is not <i>a</i> Being.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a>
-How can the non-active eternal principle emanate or emit?
-The Parabrahm of the Vedantins does nothing of the kind; nor does the
-Ain-Soph of the Chaldean Kabala. It is an eternal and periodical law
-which causes an active and creative force (the logos) to emanate from
-the ever-concealed and incomprehensible one principle at the beginning
-of every maha-manvantara, or new cycle of life.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a>
-One often finds in Theosophical writings
-conflicting statements about the Christos principle in man. Some call
-it the sixth principle (<i>Buddhi</i>), others the seventh (<i>Atman</i>). If
-Christian Theosophists wish to make use of such expressions, let them
-be made philosophically correct by following the analogy of the old
-Wisdom-Religion symbols. We say that Christos is not only one of the
-three higher principles, but all the three regarded as a Trinity.
-This Trinity represents the Holy Ghost, the Father, and the Son, as
-it answers to abstract spirit, differentiated spirit, and embodied
-spirit. Krishna and Christ are philosophically the same principle
-under its triple aspect of manifestation. In the <i>Bhagavatgita</i> we
-find Krishna calling himself indifferently Atman, the abstract Spirit,
-Kshetragna, the Higher or reincarnating Ego, and the Universal <span
-class="smcap">Self</span>, all names which, when transferred from the
-Universe to man, answer to <i>Atma</i>, <i>Buddhi</i> and <i>Manas</i>. The <i>Anugita</i>
-is full of the same doctrine.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a>
-The new sect of healers, who, by disavowing the existence of anything
-but spirit, which spirit can neither suffer nor be ill, claim to cure
-all and every disease, provided the patient has faith that what he
-denies can have no existence. A new form of self-hypnotism.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a>
-Buddha gives to Ananda, his <i>initiated</i> disciple, who enquires for the
-reason of this silence, a plain and unequivocal answer in the dialogue
-translated by Oldenburg from the <i>Samyuttaka Nikaya</i>:—“If I, Ananda,
-when the wandering monk Vacchagotta asked me: ‘Is there the Ego?’ had
-answered ‘The Ego is,’ then that, Ananda, would have confirmed the
-doctrine of the Samanas and Brahmanas, who believed in permanence. If
-I, Ananda, when the wandering monk Vacchagotta asked me, ‘Is there not
-the Ego?’ had answered, ‘The Ego is not,’ then that, Ananda, would
-have confirmed the doctrine of those who believed in annihilation. If
-I, Ananda, when the wandering monk Vacchagotta asked me, ‘Is there
-the Ego?’ had answered, ‘The Ego is,’ would that have served my end,
-Ananda, by producing in him the knowledge: all existences (dhamma)
-are non-ego? But if I, Ananda, had answered, ‘The Ego is not,’ then
-that, Ananda, would only have caused the wandering monk Vacchagotta
-to be thrown from one bewilderment to another: ‘My Ego, did it not
-exist before? But now it exists no longer!’” This shows, better than
-anything, that Gautama Buddha withheld such difficult metaphysical
-doctrines from the masses in order not to perplex them more. What
-he meant was the difference between the personal temporary Ego and
-the Higher Self, which sheds its light on the imperishable Ego, the
-spiritual “I” of man.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a>
-In Mr. Sinnett’s “Esoteric Buddhism” <i>d</i>, <i>e</i>, and <i>f</i>, are
-respectively called the Animal, the Human, and the Spiritual Souls,
-which answers as well. Though the principles in <i>Esoteric Buddhism</i> are
-numbered, this is, strictly speaking, useless. The dual <i>Monad</i> alone
-(<i>Atma-Buddhi</i>) is susceptible of being thought of as the two highest
-numbers (the 6th and 7th). As to all others, since <i>that</i> “principle”
-only which is predominant in man has to be considered as the first and
-foremost, no numeration is possible as a general rule. In some men it
-is the higher Intelligence (Manas or the 5th) which dominates the rest;
-in others the Animal Soul (Kama-rupa) that reigns supreme, exhibiting
-the most bestial instincts, etc.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a>
-Paul calls Plato’s <i>Nous</i> “Spirit”; but as this spirit is “substance,”
-then, of course, <i>Buddhi</i> and not <i>Atma</i> is meant, as the latter
-cannot philosophically be called “substance” under any circumstance.
-We include Atma among the human “principles” in order not to create
-additional confusion. In reality it is no “human” but the universal
-<i>absolute</i> principle of which Buddhi, the Soul-Spirit, is the carrier.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a>
-“Plato and Pythagoras,” says Plutarch, “distribute the
-soul into two parts, the rational (noetic) and irrational (agnoia);
-that that part of the soul of man which is rational is eternal; for
-though it be not God, yet it is the product of an eternal deity, but
-that part of the soul which is divested of reason (agnoia) dies.” The
-modern term <i>Agnostic</i> comes from <i>Agnosis</i>, a cognate word. We wonder
-why Mr. Huxley, the author of the word, should have connected his great
-intellect with “the soul divested of reason” which dies? Is it the
-exaggerated humility of the modern materialist?</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a>
-The Kabalists who know the relation of Jehovah, the life and
-children-giver, to the Moon, and the influence of the latter on
-generation, will again see the point as much as some astrologers
-will.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a>
-Proserpina, or Persephone, stands here for post mortem Karma, which
-is said to regulate the separation of the lower from the higher
-“principles”: the <i>Soul</i>, as <i>Nephesh</i>, the breath of animal life,
-which remains for a time in Kama-loka, from the higher compound <i>Ego</i>,
-which goes into the state of Devachan, or bliss.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a>
-Until the separation of the higher, spiritual “principle” takes
-place from the lower ones, which remain in the Kama-loka until
-disintegrated.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a>
-In its generic sense, the word “rational” meaning something emanating from the Eternal Wisdom.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a>
-<i>Irrational</i> in the sense that as a <i>pure</i> emanation of the Universal
-mind it can have no individual reason of its own on this plane of
-matter, but like the Moon, who borrows her light from the Sun and her
-life from the Earth, so <i>Buddhi</i>, receiving its light of Wisdom from
-Atma, gets its rational qualities from <i>Manas</i>. <i>Per se</i>, as something
-homogeneous, it is devoid of attributes.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a>
-<i>Vide</i> “<i>Secret Doctrine</i>,” Vol. II., stanzas.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a>
-“<i>Zohar</i>,” Vol. II., p. 96.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a>
-“<i>Mishna</i>,” “Aboth,” Vol. IV., p. 29.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="indent">
-<a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a>
-See “Secret Doctrine” for a clearer explanation. Vol. I., p. 157.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a>
-“The phantasy,” says Olympiodorus (in Platonis Phæd.) “is an impediment
-to our intellectual conceptions; and hence, when we are agitated by the
-inspiring influence of the Divinity, if the phantasy intervenes, the
-enthusiastic energy ceases: for enthusiasm and the ecstasy are contrary
-to each other. Should it be asked whether the soul is able to energise
-without the phantasy, we reply, that its perception of universals
-proves that it is able. It has perceptions, therefore, independent of
-the phantasy; at the same time, however, the phantasy attends in its
-energies, just as a storm pursues him who sails on the sea.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a>
-Namely, the body, life, passional and animal instincts,
-and the astral eidolon of every man (whether perceived in thought or
-our mind’s eye, or objectively and separate from the physical body),
-which principles we call <i>Sthula sarira</i>, <i>Pranâ</i>, <i>Kama rupa</i>,
-and <i>Linga sarira</i> (<i>vide supra</i>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a>
-There are five <i>Skandhas</i> or attributes in the Buddhist teachings:
-“<i>Rupa</i> (form or body), material qualities; <i>Vedana</i>, sensation;
-<i>Sanna</i>, abstract ideas; <i>Samkhara</i>, tendencies of mind; <i>Vinnana</i>,
-mental powers. Of these we are formed; by them we are conscious of
-existence; and through them communicate with the world about us.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a>
-By H. S. Olcott, President and Founder of the Theosophical Society.
-The accuracy of the teaching is sanctioned by the Rev. H. Sumangala,
-High Priest of the Sripada and Galle, and Principal of the <i>Widyodaya
-Parivena</i> (College) at Colombo, as being in agreement with the Canon of
-the Southern Buddhist Church.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a>
-Or the <i>Spiritual</i>, in contradistinction to the personal <i>Self</i>. The
-student must not confuse this Spiritual Ego with the “HIGHER SELF”
-which is <i>Atma</i>, the God within us, and inseparable from the Universal
-Spirit.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a>
-Even in his <i>Buddhist Cathechism</i>, Col. Olcott, forced to it by the
-logic of Esoteric philosophy, found himself obliged to correct the
-mistakes of previous Orientalists who made no such distinction, and
-gives the reader his reason for it. Thus he says: “The successive
-appearances upon the earth, or ‘descents into generation,’ of the
-<i>tanhaically</i> coherent parts (Skandhas) of a certain being are a
-succession of personalities. In each birth the PERSONALITY differs
-from that of a previous or next succeeding birth. Karma, the DEUS
-EX MACHINA, masks (or shall we say reflects?) itself now in the
-personality of a sage, again as an artisan, and so on throughout the
-string of births. But though personalities ever shift, the one line of
-life along which they are strung, like beads, runs unbroken; it is ever
-that <i>particular line</i>, never any other. It is therefore individual, an
-individual vital undulation, which began in Nirvana, or the subjective
-side of nature, as the light or heat undulation through æther began
-at its dynamic source; is careering through the objective side of
-nature under the impulse of Karma and the creative direction of <i>Tanha</i>
-(the unsatisfied desire for existence); and leads through many cyclic
-changes back to Nirvana. Mr. Rhys-Davids calls that which passes from
-personality to personality along the individual chain ‘character,’ or
-‘doing.’ Since ‘character’ is not a mere metaphysical abstraction, but
-the sum of one’s mental qualities and moral propensities, would it not
-help to dispel what Mr. Rhys-Davids calls ‘the desperate expedient of
-a mystery’ (<i>Buddhism</i>, p. 101) if we regarded the life-undulation as
-individuality, and each of its series of natal manifestations as a
-separate personality? The perfect individual, Buddhistically speaking,
-is a Buddha, I should say; for Buddha is but the rare flower of
-humanity, without the least supernatural admixture. And as countless
-generations (‘four <i>asankheyyas</i> and a hundred thousand cycles,’
-Fausboll and Rhys-Davids’ BUDDHIST BIRTH STORIES, p. 13) are required
-to develop a <i>man</i> into a Buddha, and <i>the iron will to become one</i>
-runs throughout all the successive births, what shall we call that
-which thus wills and perseveres? Character? One’s individuality:
-an individuality but partly manifested in any one birth, but built
-up of fragments from all the births?” (<i>Bud. Cat., Appendix</i>
-A. 137.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a>
-<span class="smcap">Mahat</span> or the “Universal Mind” is the source
-of Manas. The latter is Mahat, <i>i.e.</i>, mind, in man. Manas is also
-called <i>Kshetrajna</i>, “embodied Spirit,” because it is, according to
-our philosophy, the <i>Manasa-putras</i>, or “Sons of the Universal Mind,”
-who <i>created</i>, or rather produced, the <i>thinking</i> man, “<i>manu</i>,” by
-incarnating in the <i>third Race</i> mankind in our Round. It is Manas,
-therefore, which is the real incarnating and permanent <i>Spiritual Ego</i>,
-the INDIVIDUALITY, and our various and numberless personalities only
-its external masks.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a>
-It is on this transgression that the cruel and illogical
-dogma of the Fallen Angels has been built. It is explained in Vol. II.
-of the <i>Secret Doctrine</i>. All our “Egos” are thinking and rational
-entities (<i>Manasa-putras</i>) who had lived, whether under human or
-other forms, in the precedent <i>life-cycle</i> (Manvantara), and whose
-Karma it was to incarnate in the <i>man</i> of this one. It was taught in
-the <span class="smcap">Mysteries</span> that, having delayed to comply with this law
-(or having “refused to create” as Hinduism says of the <i>Kumaras</i> and
-Christian legend of the Archangel Michael), <i>i.e.</i>, having failed to
-incarnate in due time, the bodies predestined for them got defiled
-(Vide Stanzas VIII. and IX. in the “Slokas of Dzyan,” Vol. II. Secret
-Doctrine, pp. 19 and 20), hence the original sin of the senseless forms
-and the punishment of the <i>Egos</i>. That which is meant by the rebellious
-angels being hurled down into Hell is simply explained by these pure
-Spirits or Egos being imprisoned in bodies of unclean matter, flesh.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a>
-“Verily, I say unto you, that whosoever looketh at a woman to lust
-after her, hath committed adultery with her already in his heart.”
-(Matt. v., 28.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a>
-“Some things that I <i>do</i> know of Spiritualism and some that I do <i>not</i>.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a>
-A few portions of this chapter and of the preceding were published in
-<i>Lucifer</i> in the shape of a “Dialogue on the Mysteries of After Life,”
-in the January number, 1889. The article was unsigned, as if it were
-written by the editor, but it came from the pen of the author of the
-present volume.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a>
-Iswara is the collective consciousness of the manifested deity,
-Brahma,<i> i.e.</i>, the collective consciousness of the Host of Dhyan
-Chohans (<i>vide</i> <span class="smcap">Secret Doctrine</span>); and Pragna
-is their individual wisdom.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a>
-<i>Taijasi</i> means the radiant in consequence of its union with Buddhi;
-<i>i.e.</i>, Manas, the human soul, illuminated by the radiance of the
-divine soul. Therefore, Manas-taijasi may be described as radiant
-mind; the <i>human</i> reason lit by the light of the spirit; and
-Buddhi-Manas is the revelation of the divine <i>plus</i> human intellect and
-self-consciousness.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a>
-Some Theosophists have taken exception to this phrase, but the words
-are those of Master, and the meaning attached to the word “unmerited”
-is that given above. In the T.P.S. pamphlet No. 6, a phrase, criticised
-subsequently in <span class="smcap">Lucifer</span>, was used which was
-intended to convey the same idea. In form, however, it was awkward and
-open to the criticism directed against it; but the essential idea was
-that men often suffer from the effects of the actions done by others,
-effects which thus do not strictly belong to their own Karma—and for
-these sufferings they of course deserve compensation.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a>
-<i>Vide</i> Transactions of the <span
-class="smcap">London Lodge</span> <i>of the Theos. Soc.</i>, No. 7, Oct., 1885.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a>
-The “reincarnating Ego,” or “Human Soul,” as he called it, the <i>Causal Body</i> with the Hindus.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a>
-The length of this “transfer” depends, however, on the degree of
-spirituality in the ex-personality of the disembodied Ego. For those
-whose lives were very spiritual this transfer, though gradual, is
-very rapid. The time becomes longer with the materialistically inclined.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a>
-“Shifting of <i>Metaphysical terms</i>” applies here only to the shifting of
-their translated equivalents from the Eastern expressions; for to this
-day there never existed any such terms in English, every Theosophist
-having to coin his own terms to render his thought. It is nigh time
-then to settle on some definite nomenclature.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a>
-Being of “an <i>asbestos</i>-like nature,” according to the
-eloquent and fiery expression of a modern English Tertullian.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a>
-During the <i>Mysteries</i>, it is the Hierophant, the “Father,” who planted
-the Vine. Every symbol has Seven Keys to it. The discloser of the
-<i>Pleroma</i> was always called “Father.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a>
-<i>Zohar</i> XL., 10.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a>
-<i>Codex Nazarœus</i>, Vol. III., pp. 60, 61.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a>
-Ibid., Vol. II., p. 281.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a>
-<i>Second Sight</i>, “Introduction.”</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a>
-Sectarian Brahmins are here meant. The Parabrahm of the
-Vedantins is the Deity we accept and believe in.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a>
-Such, for instance, as Prof. Bernheim and Dr. C. Lloyd Tuckey of
-England; Professors Beaunis and Liégeois, of Nancy; Delbœuf of Liège;
-Burot and Bourru, of Rochefort; Fontain and Sigard, of Bordeaux; Forel,
-of Zurich; and Drs. Despine, of Marseilles; Van Renterghem and Van
-Eeden, of Amsterdam; Wetterstrand, of Stockholm; Schrenck-Notzing, of
-Leipzig, and many other physicians and writers of eminence.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote"><p class="no-indent">
-<a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a>
-Vide “Ghost Land,” Part I., p. 133, <i>et seq.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="r5" />
-<div class="transnote bbox">
-<p class="f120 space-above1">Transcriber's Notes:</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-<p class="indent">The cover image was created by the transcriber, and is in the public domain.</p>
-<p class="indent">The heading on page 188 was changed from “ON SELF-RELIANCE” to
-“ON SELF-SACRIFICE”, to agree with the Table of Contents, and the subject of the section.</p>
-<p class="indent">Uncertain or antiquated spellings or ancient words were not corrected.</p>
-<p class="indent">Errors in punctuation and inconsistent hyphenation were not corrected
- unless otherwise noted.</p>
-<p class="indent">Typographical errors have been silently corrected but other variations
- in spelling and punctuation remain unaltered.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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