Of the Absolute, the Infinite, the
All-embracing, we can at our present stage know nothing,
except that It is; we can say nothing that is not a
limitation, and therefore inaccurate.
In It are innumerable universes; in
each universe countless solar systems. Each solar
system is the expression of a mighty Being, whom we
call the logos, the Word of God, the Solar Deity.
He is to it all that men mean by God. He permeates
it; there is nothing in it which is not He; it is the
manifestation of Him in such matter as we can see.
Yet He exists above it and outside it, living a stupendous
life of His own among His Peers. As is said in
an Eastern Scripture: “Having permeated
this whole universe with one fragment of Myself I
remain.”
Of that higher life of His we can
know nothing. But of the fragment of His life
which energises His system we may know something in
the lower levels of its manifestation. We may
not see Him, but we may see His power at work.
No one who is clairvoyant can be atheistic; the evidence
is too tremendous.
Out of Himself He has called this
mighty system into being. We who are in it are
evolving fragments of His life, Sparks of His divine
Fire; from Him we all have come; into Him we shall
all return.
Many have asked why He has done this;
why He has emanated from Himself all this system;
why He has sent us forth to face the storms of life.
We cannot know, nor is the question practical; suffice
it that we are here, and we must do our best.
Yet many philosophers have speculated on this point
and many suggestions have been made. The most
beautiful that I know is that of a Gnostic philosopher:
“God is Love, but Love itself
cannot be perfect unless it has those upon whom it
can be lavished and by whom it can be returned.
Therefore He put forth of Himself into matter, and
He limited His glory, in order that through this natural
and slow process of evolution we might come into being;
and we in turn according to His Will are to develop
until we reach even His own level, and then the very
love of God itself will become more perfect, because
it will then be lavished on those, His own children,
who will fully understand and return it, and so His
great scheme will be realized and His Will, be done.”
At what stupendous elevation His consciousness
abides we know not, nor can we know its true nature
as it shows itself there. But when He puts Himself
down into such conditions as are within our reach,
His manifestation is ever threefold, and so all religions
have imaged Him as a Trinity. Three, yet fundamentally
One; Three Persons (for person means a mask) yet one
God, showing Himself in those Three Aspects.
Three to us, looking at Them from below, because Their
functions are different; one to Him, because He knows
Them to be but facets of Himself.
All Three of these Aspects are concerned
in the evolution of the solar system; all Three are
also concerned in the evolution of man. This
evolution is His Will; the method of it is His plan.
Next below this Solar Deity, yet also
in some mysterious manner part of Him, come His seven
Ministers sometimes called the Planetary Spirits.
Using an analogy drawn from the physiology of our
own body, Their relation to Him is like that of the
ganglia or the nerve centres to the brain. All
evolution which comes forth from Him comes through
one or other of Them.
Under Them in turn come vast hosts
or orders of spiritual beings, whom we call angels
or devas. We do not yet know all the functions
which they fulfil in different parts of this wonderful
scheme, but we find some of them intimately connected
with the building of the system and the unfolding
of life within it.
Here in our world there is a great
Official who represents the Solar Deity and is in
absolute control of all the evolution that takes place
upon this planet. We may image Him as the true
King of this world and under Him are ministers
in charge of different departments. One of these
departments is concerned with the evolution of the
different races of humanity so that for each great
race there is a Head who founds it, differentiates
it from all others, and watches over its development.
Another department is that of religion and education,
and it is from this that all the greatest teachers
of history have come that all religions
have been sent forth. The great Official at the
head of this department either comes Himself or sends
one of His pupils to found a new religion when He
decides that one is needed.
Therefore all religions, at the time
of their first presentation to the world, have contained
a definite statement of the Truth, and in its fundamentals
this Truth has been always the same. The presentations
of it have varied because of differences in the races
to whom it was offered. The conditions of civilization
and the degree of evolution obtained by various races
have made it desirable to present this one Truth in
divers forms. But the inner Truth is always the
same, and the source from which it comes is the same,
even though the external phases may appear to be different
and even contradictory. It is foolish for men
to wrangle over the question of the superiority of
one teacher or one form of teaching to another, for
the teacher is always one sent by the Great Brotherhood
of Adepts, and in all its important points, in its
ethical and moral principles, the teaching has always
been the same.
There is in the world a body or Truth
which lies at the back of all these religions, and
represents the facts of nature as far as they are at
present known to man. In the outer world, because
of their ignorance of this, people are always disputing
and arguing about whether there is a God; whether
man survives death; whether definite progress is possible
for him, and what is his relation to the universe.
These questions are ever present in the mind of man
as soon as intelligence is awakened. They are
not unanswerable, as is frequently supposed; the answers
to them are within the reach of anyone who will make
proper efforts to find them. The truth is obtainable,
and the conditions of its attainment are possible of
achievement by anyone who will make the effort.
In the earlier stages of the development
of humanity the great Officials of the Hierarchy are
provided from outside, from other and more highly evolved
parts of the system, but as soon as men can be trained
to the necessary level of power and wisdom these offices
are held by them. In order to be fit to hold
such an office a man must raise himself to a very high
level, and must become what is called an Adept a
being of goodness, power and wisdom so great that
He towers above the rest of humanity, for He has already
attained the summit of ordinary human evolution; He
has achieved that which the plan of the Deity marked
out for Him to achieve during this age or dispensation.
But His evolution later on continues beyond that level continues
to divinity.
A large number of men have attained
the Adept level men not of one nation,
but of all the leading nations of the world rare
souls who with indomitable courage have stormed the
fortresses of nature, and captured her innermost secrets,
and so have truly earned the right to be called Adepts.
Among Them there are many degrees and many lines of
activity; but always some of Them remain within touch
of our earth as members of this Hierarchy which has
in charge the administration of the affairs of our
world and of the spiritual evolution of our humanity.
This august body is often called the
Great White Brotherhood, but its members are not a
community all living together. Each of Them, to
a large extent, draws Himself apart from the world,
and They are in constant communication with one another
and with Their Head; but Their knowledge of higher
forces is so great that this is achieved without any
necessity for meeting in the physical world.
In many cases They continue to live each in His own
country, and Their power remains unsuspected among
those who live near Them. Any man who will may
attract Their attention, but he can do it only by
showing himself worthy of Their notice. None need
fear that his efforts will pass unnoticed; such oversight
is impossible, for the man who is devoting himself
to service such as this, stands out from the rest of
humanity like a great flame in a dark night. A
few of these great Adepts, who are thus working for
the good of the world, are willing to take as apprentices
those who have resolved to devote themselves utterly
to the service of mankind; such Adepts are called
Masters.
One of these apprentices was Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky a great soul who was
sent out to offer knowledge to the world. With
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott she founded The Theosophical
Society for the spread of this knowledge which she
had to give. Among those who came into contact
with her in those early days was Mr. A.P. Sinnett,
the editor of The Pioneer, and his keen intellect
at once grasped the magnitude and the importance of
the teaching which she put before him. Although
Madame Blavatsky herself had previously written Isis
Unveiled, it had attracted but little attention,
and it was Mr. Sinnett who first made the teaching
really available for western readers in his two books,
The Occult World and Esoteric Buddhism.
It was through these works that I
myself first came to know their author, and afterwards
Madame Blavatsky herself; from both of them I learned
much. When I asked Madame Blavatsky how one could
learn still more, how one could make definite progress
along the Path which she pointed out to us, she told
me of the possibility that other students might be
accepted as apprentices by the great Masters, even
as she herself had been accepted, and that the only
way to gain such acceptance was to show oneself worthy
of it by earnest and altruistic work. She told
me that to reach that goal a man must be absolutely
one-pointed in his determination; that no one who tried
to serve both God and Mammon could ever hope to succeed.
One of these Masters Himself had said: “In
order to succeed, a pupil must leave his own world
and come into ours.”
This means that he must cease to be
one of the majority who live for wealth and power,
and must join the tiny minority who care nothing for
such things, but live only in order to devote themselves
selflessly to the good of the world. She warned
us clearly that the way was difficult to tread, that
we should be misunderstood and reviled by those who
still lived in the world, and that we had nothing
to look forward to but the hardest of hard work; and
though the result was sure, no one could foretell how
long it would take to arrive at it. Some of us
accepted these conditions joyfully, and we have never
for a moment regretted the decision.
After some years of work I had the
privilege of coming into contact with these great
Masters of the Wisdom; from Them I learnt many things among
others, how to verify for myself at first hand most
of the teachings which They had given. So that,
in this matter, I write of what I know, and what I
have seen for myself. Certain points are mentioned
in the teaching, for the verification of which powers
are required far beyond anything which I have gained
so far. Of them, I can say only that they are
consistent with what I do know, and in many cases
are necessary as hypotheses to account for what I
have seen. They came to me, along with the rest
of the Theosophical system, upon the authority of
these mighty Teachers. Since then I have learnt
to examine for myself by far the greater part of what
I was told, and I have found the information given
to me to be correct in every particular; therefore
I am justified in assuming the probability that that
other part, which as yet I cannot verify, will also
prove to be correct when I arrive at its level.
To attain the honour of being accepted
as an apprentice of one of the Masters of the Wisdom
is the object set before himself by every earnest
Theosophical student. But it means a determined
effort. There have always been men who were willing
to make the necessary effort, and therefore there
have always been men who knew. The knowledge is
so transcendent that when a man grasps it fully he
becomes more than man and he passes beyond our ken.
But there are stages in the acquirement
of this knowledge, and we may learn much if we will,
from those who themselves are still in process of
learning; for all human beings stand on one or other
of the rungs of the ladder of evolution. The
primitive stand at its foot; we who are civilized
beings have already climbed part of the way. But
though we can look back and see rungs of the ladder
below us which we have already passed, we may also
look up and see many rungs above us to which we have
not yet attained. Just as men are standing even
now on each of the rungs below us, so that we can
see the stages by which man has mounted, so also are
there men standing on each of the rungs above us,
so that from studying them we may see how man shall
mount in the future. Precisely because we see
men on every step of this ladder, which leads up to
a glory which as yet we have no words to express,
we know that the ascent to that glory is possible for
us. Those who stand high above us, so high that
They seem to us as gods in Their marvellous knowledge
and power, tell us that They stood not long since
where we are standing now, and They indicate to us
clearly the steps which lie between, which we also
must tread if we would be as They.