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definitive introductory work on Theosophy by
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The
by William Quan Judge
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THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
A
Definitive Work on Theosophy
By
William
Quan Judge
CHAPTER 1
Theosophy and the Masters
Theosophy is
that ocean of knowledge which spreads from shore to shore of the evolution of sentient
beings; unfathomable in its deepest parts, it gives the greatest minds their
fullest scope, yet, shallow enough at its shores, it will not overwhelm the
understanding of a child. It is wisdom about God for those who believe that he
is all things and in all, and wisdom about nature for the man who accepts the
statement found in the Christian Bible that God cannot be measured or
discovered, and that darkness is around his pavilion. Although it contains by
derivation the name God and thus may seem at first sight toembrace religion
alone, it does not neglect science, for it is the science ofsciences and
therefore has been called the wisdom religion. For no science is complete which
leaves out any department of nature, whether visible or invisible, and that
religion which, depending solely on an assumed revelation, turns away from
things and the laws which govern them is nothing but a delusion, a foe to
progress, an obstacle in the way of man's advancement toward happiness.
Embracing both the scientific and the religious, Theosophy is a scientific
religion and a religious science.
It is not a
belief or dogma formulated or invented by man, but is a knowledge of the laws
which govern the evolution of the physical, astral, psychical, and intellectual
constituents of nature and of man. The religion of the day is but a series of
dogmas man-made and with no scientific foundation for promulgated
ethics; while
our science as yet ignores the unseen, and failing to admit the existence of a
complete set of inner faculties of perception in man, it is cut off from the
immense and real field of experience which lies within the visible and tangible
worlds.
But Theosophy
knows that the whole is constituted of the
visible and
the invisible, and perceiving outer things and objects to be but transitory it
grasps the facts of nature, both without and within. It is therefore complete
in itself and sees no unsolvable mystery anywhere; it throws the word
coincidence out of its vocabulary and hails the reign of law in everything and
every circumstance.
That man
possesses an immortal soul is the common belief of humanity; to this Theosophy
adds that he is a soul; and further that all nature is sentient, that the vast
array of objects and men are not mere collections of atoms fortuitously thrown
together and thus without law evolving law, but down to the smallest atom all
is soul and spirit ever evolving under the rule of law which is inherent in the
whole. And just as the ancients taught, so does Theosophy; that the course of evolution
is the drama of the soul and that nature exists for no other purpose than the
soul's experience. The Theosophist agrees with Prof. Huxley in the assertion
that there must be beings in the universe whose intelligence is as much beyond
ours as ours exceeds that of the black beetle, and who take an active part in
the government of the natural order of things. Pushing further on by the light
of the confidence had in his teachers, the Theosophist adds that such
intelligences were once human and came like all of us from other and previous
worlds, where as varied experience had been gained as is possible on this one.
We are
therefore not appearing for the first time when we come upon this planet, but
have pursued a long, an immeasurable course of activity and intelligent
perception on other systems of globes, some of which were destroyed ages before
the solar system condensed. This immense reach of the evolutionary
system means,
then, that this planet on which we now are is the result of the activity and
the evolution of some other one that died long ago, leaving its energy to be
used in the bringing into existence of the earth, and that the inhabitants of
the latter in their turn came from some older world to proceed here with the
destined work in matter. And the brighter planets, such as Venus, are the
habitation of still more progressed entities, once as low as ourselves, but now
raised up to a pitch of glory incomprehensible for our intellects.
The most
intelligent being in the universe, man, has never, then, been without a friend,
but has a line of elder brothers who continually watch over the progress of the
less progressed, preserve the knowledge gained through aeons of trial and
experience,
and continually seek for opportunities of drawing the developing intelligence
of the race on this or other globes to consider the great truths concerning the
destiny of the soul. These elder brothers also keep theknowledge they have
gained of the laws of nature in all departments, and are ready when cyclic law permits
to use it for the benefit of mankind.
They have
always existed as a body, all knowing each other, no matter in what part of the
world they may be, and all working for the race in many different ways. In some
periods they are well known to the people and move among ordinary men whenever
the social organization, the virtue, and the development of the nations permit
it. For if they were to come out openly and be heard of everywhere, they would
be worshipped as gods by some and hunted as devils by others. In those periods
when they do come out some of their number are rulers of men, some teachers, a
few great philosophers, while others remain still unknown except to the most
advanced of the body.
It would be
subversive of the ends they have in view were they to make themselves public in
the present civilization, which is based almost wholly on money, fame, glory,
and personality. For this age, as one of them has already said, "is an age
of transition," when every system of thought, science, religion, government,
and society is changing, and men's minds are only preparing for an alteration
into that state which will permit the race to advance to the point suitable for
these elder brothers to introduce their actual presence to our sight. They may
be truly called the bearers of the torch of truth across the ages; they
investigate all things and beings; they know what man is in his innermost
nature and what his powers and destiny, his state before birth and the states
into which he goes after the death of his body; they have stood by the cradle
of nations and seen the vast achievements of the ancients, watched sadly the
decay of those who had no power to resist the cyclic law of rise and fall; and
while cataclysms seemed to show a universal destruction of art, architecture,
religion, and philosophy, they have preserved the records of it all in places
secure from the ravages of either men or time; they have made minute
observations, through trained psychics among their own order, into the unseen
realms of nature and of mind, recorded the observations and preserved the
record; they have mastered the mysteries of sound and color through which alone
the elemental beings behind the veil of matter can be communicated with, and
thus can tell why the rain falls and what it falls for, whether the earth is
hollow or not, what makes the wind to blow and light to shine, and greater feat
than all -- one which implies a knowledge of the very foundations of nature --
they know what the ultimate divisions of time are and what are the meaning and
the times of the cycles.
But, asks the
busy man of the nineteenth century who reads the newspapers and believes in
"modern progress," if these elder brothers are all you claim them to
be, why have they left no mark on history nor gathered men around them? Their
own reply,
published some time ago by Mr. A. P. Sinnett, is better than any I could write.
"We will
first discuss, if you please, the one relating to the presumed failure of the 'Fraternity'
to leave any mark upon the history of the world. They ought, you think, to have
been able, with their extraordinary advantages, to have gathered into their
schools a considerable portion of the more enlightened minds
of every
race. How do you know they have made no such mark? Are you acquainted with
their efforts, successes, and failures? Have you any dock upon which to arraign
them? How could your world collect proofs of the doings of men who have
sedulously kept closed every possible door of approach by which the inquisitive
could spy upon them? The precise condition of their success was that they
should never be surprised or obstructed. What they have done they know; all
that those outside their circle could perceive was the results, the causes of
which were masked from view.
To account
for these results, many have in different ages invented theories of the
interposition of gods, special providences, fates, the benign or hostile
influences of the stars. There never was a time within or before the so-called
historical period when our predecessors were not moulding events and 'making
history,' the facts of which were subsequently and invariably distorted by
historians to suit contemporary prejudices. Are you quite sure that the visible
heroic figures in the successive dramas were not often but their puppets? We
never pretended to be able to draw nations in the mass to this or that crisis
in spite of the general drift of the world's cosmic relations.
The cycles
must run their rounds. Periods of mental and moral light and darkness succeed
each other as day does night. The major and minor yugas must be accomplished
according to the established order of things. And we, borne along the mighty
tide, can only modify and direct some of its minor currents."
It is under
cyclic law, during a dark period in the history of mind, that the true
philosophy disappears for a time, but the same law causes it to reappear as
surely as the sun rises and the human mind is present to see it.
But some
works can only be performed by the Master, while other works require the
assistance of the companions. It is the Master's work to preserve the true
philosophy, but the help of the companions is needed to rediscover and
promulgate it. Once more the elder brothers have indicated where the truth --
Theosophy -- could be found, and the companions all over the world are engaged
in bringing it forth for wider currency and propagation.
The Elder
Brothers of Humanity are men who were perfected in former periods of evolution.
These periods of manifestation are unknown to modern evolutionists so far as
their number are concerned, though long ago understood by not only the older
Hindus, but also by those great minds and men who instituted and carried on the
first pure and undebased form of the Mysteries of Greece. The periods, when out
of the Great Unknown there come forth the visible universes, are eternal in
their coming and going, alternating with equal periods of silence and rest
again in the Unknown. The object of these mighty waves is the production of
perfect man, the evolution of soul, and they always witness the increase of the
number of Elder Brothers; the life of the least of men pictures them in day and
night, waking and sleeping, birth and death, "for these two, light and
dark, day and night, are the world's eternal ways."
In every age
and complete national history these men of power and compassion are given
different designations. They have been called Initiates, Adepts, Magi,
Hierophants, Kings of the East, Wise Men, Brothers, and what not. But in the
Sanskrit language there is a word which, being applied to them, at once
thoroughly identifies them with humanity. It is Mahatma. This is composed of
Maha great, and Atma soul; so it means great soul, and as all men are souls the
distinction of the Mahatma lies in greatness.
The term
Mahatma has come into wide use through the Theosophical Society, as Mme. H. P.
Blavatsky constantly
referred to
them as her Masters who gave her the knowledge she possessed.
They were at
first known only as the Brothers, but afterwards, when many Hindus flocked to
the Theosophical movement, the name Mahatma was brought into use, inasmuch as
it has behind it an immense body of Indian tradition and literature.
At different
times unscrupulous enemies of the Theosophical Society have said that even this
name had been invented and that such beings are not known of among the Indians
or in their literature. But these assertions are made only to discredit if
possible a philosophical movement that threatens to completely
upset
prevailing erroneous theological dogmas. For all through Hindu literature
Mahatmas are often spoken of, and in parts of the north of that country the
term is common. In the very old poem the Bhagavad-Gita, revered by all Hindu
sects and admitted by the western critics to be noble as well as beautiful,
there is a verse reading, "Such a Mahatma is difficult to find."
But
irrespective of all disputes as to specific names, there is sufficient argument
and proof to show that a body of men having the wonderfulknowledge described
above has always existed and probably exists today. The older mysteries
continually refer to them. Ancient Egypt had them in her great king-Initiates,
sons of the sun and friends of great gods. There is a habit of belittling the
ideas of the ancients which is in itself belittling to the people of today.
Even the Christian who reverently speaks of Abraham as "the friend of
God," will scornfully laugh at the idea of the claims of Egyptian rulers to
the same friendship being other than childish assumption of dignity and title.
But the truth is, these great Egyptians were Initiates, members of the one
great lodge which includes all others of whatever degree or operation. The
later and declining Egyptians, of course, must have imitated their
predecessors, but that was when the true doctrine was beginning once more to be
obscured upon the rise
of dogma and
priesthood.
The story of
Apollonius of Tyana is about a member of one of the same ancient orders
appearing among men at a descending cycle, and only for the purpose of keeping
a witness upon the scene for future generations.
Abraham and
Moses of the Jews are two other Initiates, Adepts who had their work to do with
a certain people; and in the history of Abraham we meet with Melchizedek, who
was so much beyond Abraham that he had the right to confer upon the latter a
dignity, a privilege, or a blessing. The same chapter of human
history which
contains the names of Moses and Abraham is illuminated also by that of Solomon.
And thus these three make a great Triad of Adepts, the record of whose deeds
can not be brushed aside as folly and devoid of basis.
Moses was
educated by the Egyptians and in Midian, from both of which he gained much
occult knowledge, and any clear-seeing student of the great Universal Masonry
can perceive all through his books the hand, the plan, and the work of a
master. Abraham again knew all the arts and much of the power in psychical
realms that were cultivated in his day, or else he could not have consorted
with kings nor have been "the friend of God"; and the reference to
his conversations with the Almighty in respect to the destruction of cities
alone shows him to have been an Adept who had long ago passed beyond the need
of ceremonial or other adventitious aids. Solomon completes this triad and
stands out in characters of fire. Around him is clustered such a mass of legend
and story about his dealings with the elemental powers and of his magic
possessions that one must condemn the whole ancient world as a collection of
fools who made lies for amusement if a denial is made of his being a great
character, a wonderful example of the incarnation among men of a powerful Adept.
We do not have to accept the name Solomon nor the pretence that he reigned over
the Jews, but we must admit the fact that somewhere in the misty time to which
the Jewish records refer there lived and moved among the people of the earth
one who was an Adept and given that name afterwards. Peripatetic and
microscopic critics may affect to see in the prevalence of universal tradition
naught but evidence of the gullibility of men and their power to imitate, but
the true student of human nature and life knows that the universal tradition is
true and arises from the facts in the history of man.
Turning to
India, so long forgotten and ignored by the lusty and egotistical, the fighting
and the trading West, we find her full of the lore relating to these wonderful
men of whom Noah, Abraham, Moses, and Solomon are only examples.
There the
people are fitted by temperament and climate to be the preservers of the
philosophical, ethical, and psychical jewels that would have been forever lost
to us had they been left to the ravages of such Goths and Vandals as western
nations were in the early days of their struggle for education and
civilization. If the men who wantonly burned up vast masses of historical and
ethnological
treasures found by the minions of the Catholic rulers of Spain, in Central and
South America, could have known of and put their hands upon the books and
palm-leaf records of India before the protecting shield of England was raised
against them, they would have destroyed them all as they did for the Americans,
and as their predecessors attempted to do for the Alexandrian library.
Fortunately events worked otherwise.
All along the
stream of Indian literature we can find the names by scores of great adepts who
were well known to the people and who all taught the same story -- the great
epic of the human soul. Their names are unfamiliar to western ears, but the
records of their thoughts, their work and powers remain. Still more, in
the quiet
unmoveable East there are today by the hundred persons who know of their own
knowledge that the Great Lodge still exists and has its Mahatmas, Adepts,
Initiates, Brothers.
And yet
further, in that land are such a number of experts in the practical application
of minor though still very astonishing
power over
nature and her forces, that we have an irresistible mass of human evidence to
prove the proposition laid down.
And if
Theosophy -- the teaching of this Great Lodge -- is as said, both scientific
and religious, then from the ethical side we have still more proof. A mighty
Triad acting on and through ethics is that composed of Buddha, Confucius, and
Jesus. The first, a Hindu, founds a religion which today embraces many more
people than Christianity, teaching centuries before Jesus the ethics which he
taught and which had been given out even centuries before Buddha. Jesus coming
to reform his people repeats these ancient ethics, and Confucius does the same
thing for ancient and honorable China.
The
Theosophist says that all these great names represent members of the one single
brotherhood, who all have a single doctrine. And the extraordinary characters
who now and again appear in western civilization, such as St. Germain, Jacob
Boehme, Cagliostro, Paracelsus, Mesmer, Count St. Martin, and Madame H. P.
Blavatsky, are agents for the doing of the work of the Great Lodge at the
proper time. It is true they are generally reviled and classed as impostors --
though no one can find out why they are when they generally confer benefits and
lay down propositions or make discoveries of great value to science after they
have died. But Jesus himself would be called an impostor today if he appeared
in some Fifth avenue theatrical church rebuking the professed Christians.
Paracelsus was the originator of valuable methods and treatments in medicine
now universally used. Mesmer taught hypnotism under another name. Madame
Blavatsky brought once more to the attention of the West the most important
system, long known to the Lodge, respecting man, his nature and destiny. But
all are alike called impostors by a people who have no original philosophy of
their own and whose mendicant and criminal classes exceed in misery and in
number those of any civilization on the earth.
It will not
be unusual for nearly all occidental readers to wonder how men could possibly
know so much and have such power over the operations of natural law as I have
ascribed to the Initiates, now so commonly spoken of as the Mahatmas. In India,
China, and other Oriental lands no wonder would arise on these heads, because
there, although everything of a material civilization is just now in a backward
state, they have never lost a belief in the inner nature of man and in the
power he may exercise if he will. Consequently living examples of such powers
and capacities have not been absent from those people. But in the West a
materialistic civilization having arisen through a denial of the soul life and
nature consequent upon a reaction from illogical dogmatism, there has not been
any investigation of these subjects and, until lately, the general public has
not believed
in the possibility of anyone save a supposed God having such power.
A Mahatma
endowed with power over space, time, mind, and matter, is a possibility just
because he is a perfected man. Every human being has the germ of all the powers
attributed to these great Initiates, the difference lying solely in the fact
that we have in general not developed what we possess the germ of, while the
Mahatma has gone through the training and experience which
have caused all
the unseen human powers to develop in him, and conferred gifts that look
god-like to his struggling brother below.
Telepathy,
mind-reading, and hypnotism, all long ago known to Theosophy, show the
existence in the human subject of planes of consciousness, functions, and
faculties hitherto undreamed
of.
Mind-reading and the influencing of the mind of the hypnotized subject at a
distance prove the existence of a mind which is not wholly dependent upon a
brain, and that a medium exists through which the influencing thought may be
sent. It is under this law that the Initiates can communicate with each other
at no matter what distance. Its rationale, not yet admitted by the schools of
the hypnotizers, is, that if the two minds vibrate or change into the same
state they will think alike, or, in other words, the one who is to hear at a
distance receives the impression sent by the other. In the same way with all
other powers, no matter how extraordinary. They are all natural, although
nowunusual, just as great musical ability is natural though not usual or
common.
If an
Initiate can make a solid object move without contact, it is because he
understands the two laws of attraction and repulsion of which
"gravitation" is but the name for one; if he is able to precipitate
out of the viewless air the carbon which we know is in it, forming the carbon
into sentences upon the paper, it is through his knowledge of the occult higher
chemistry, and the use of a trained and powerful image making faculty which
every man possesses; if he reads your thoughts with ease, that results from the
use of the inner and only real powers of sight, which require no retina to see
the fine-pictured web which the
vibrating brain
of man weaves about him. All that the Mahatma may do is natural to the
perfected man; but if those powers are not at once revealed to us it is because
the race is as yet selfish altogether and still living for the present and the
transitory.
I repeat
then, that though the true doctrine disappears for a time from among men it is
bound to reappear, because first, it is impacted in the imperishable center of
man's nature; and secondly, the Lodge forever preserves it, not only in actual
objective records, but also in the intelligent and fully self-conscious men
who, having successfully overpassed the many periods of evolution which
preceded the one we are now involved in, cannot lose the precious possessions
they have acquired. And because the elder brothers are the highest product of
evolution through whom alone, in co-operation with the whole human family, the
further regular and workmanlike prosecution of the plans of the Great Architect
of the Universe could be carried on, I have thought it well to advert to them
and their Universal Lodge before going to other parts of the subject.
______________________
THE
OF
THEOSOPHY
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Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
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Theosophy - What it is How is it Known? The Method of Observation
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