Blavatsky Blogger
Taking Theosophical
ideas
into the 21st
century
A Study In Karma
by
Annie Besant
Published in 1917
Annie
Besant
(1847 - 1933)
KARMA
From The
Light of
It knows not wrath nor pardon; utter true
Its
measures mete, its faultless balance weighs;
Times are
as nought, tomorrow it will judge,
Or after
many days.
By this
the slayer’s knife did stab himself;
The unjust
judge hath lost his own defender;
The false tongue
dooms its lie; the creeping thief
And spoiler rob, to render.
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!
AMONG the
many illuminating gifts to the western world, conveyed to it by the medium of
the Theosophical Society, that of the knowledge of karma comes, perhaps, next
in importance to that of reincarnation. It removes human thought
and desire from the region of arbitrary
happenings to the realm of law, and thus places man’s future under his own
control in proportion to the amount of his knowledge.
The main
conception of karma: "As a man soweth, so shall
he also reap," is easy to grasp. But the application of this to daily life
in detail, the method of its working and its far-reaching consequences – these
are the difficulties which become more bewildering to the student as his
knowledge increases. The principles on which any natural science is based are,
for the most part, readily
intelligible to people of fair intelligence and ordinary
education; but as the student passes from principles to practice, from outline
to details, he
discovers that difficulties press upon him, and if he
would wholly master his subject he finds himself compelled to become a
specialist, and to devote long periods to the unraveling of the tangles which
confront him.
So is it
also with this science of karma; the student cannot remain always in the domain
of generalities; he must study the subdivisions of the primary law, must seek
to apply it in all the circumstances of life, must learn how far it binds and
how freedom becomes possible. He must learn to see in karma a universal law of
nature, and learn also, as in face of nature as a whole, that conquest of and
rule over her can only be gained by obedience.(
"Nature is conquered by
obedience".)
FUNDAMENTAL
PRINCIPLES
In order
to understand karma, the student must begin with a clear view of certain
fundamental principles, from the lack of which many remain constantly
bewildered, asking endless questions which cannot find full solution without
the
solid laying of this basis. Therefore, in this
study, I begin with these, though many of my readers will be already familiar
with them, through previous
statements of others and of myself.
The
fundamental conception, on which all later right thinking on karma rests, is
that it is law – law eternal, changeless, invariable, inviolable, law which can
never be broken, existing in the nature of things, informed Theosophists say:
"You
must not interfere with his karma."
But
whenever a natural law is working, you may interfere with it just so far as you
can. You do not hear a person say solemnly:
"You
must not interfere with the law of gravitation."
It is
understood that gravitation is one of the conditions with which one has to
reckon, and that
one is
perfectly at liberty to counteract any inconvenience it may cause by setting
another force against it, by building a buttress to support that which
otherwise would fall to the ground under the action of gravitation, or in any
other way.
When a
condition in nature incommodes us, we use our intelligence to circumvent it,
and no one ever dreams of telling us that we must not "interfere
with" or change any condition which we dislike. We can only interfere when
we have knowledge, for we cannot annihilate any natural force, nor prevent it
from acting. But we can neutralize, we can turn aside, its action if we have at
command another sufficient force, and while I will never abate for us one jot
of its activity, it can be held up, opposed, circumvented, exactly according to
our
knowledge of its nature and working, and the forces at
our disposal.
Karma is
no more "sacred" than any other natural law; all laws of nature are
expressions of the divine nature, and we live and move within them; but they
are not mandatory; they are forces which set up conditions amid which we live,
and which work in us as well as outside of us; we can manipulate them; we
understand them, and as our intelligence unfolds we become more and more their
masters, until the man becomes superman, and material nature becomes his
servant.
LAWS:
NATURAL AND MAN-MADE
Much
confusion has arisen in this matter, because, in the West, "natural" laws
have been regarded as apart from mental and moral laws, whereas mental and
moral
laws are as much part of natural law as the laws
of electricity, and all laws are part of the order of nature. Natural law has
been, in many minds, confused with human law, and the arbitrariness of human
legislation has been imported into the realm of natural law. Laws affecting
physical phenomena have been rescued from this arbitrariness by science, but
the mental and moral worlds are still in the chaos of lawlessness.
Not a
divine command, but the immanence of
the divine
nature, conditions our existence, and where prophets have laid down moral laws,
these have been declarations of inevitable sequences in the moral world, known
to the prophet, unknown to his ignorant hearers; because of their ignorance,
his hearers have regarded his declarations as arbitrary commands of a divine
lawgiver, sent through him, instead of as mere statements of fact
concerning the succession of moral phenomena in a region
as orderly as the physical.
Law, in
the secondary social sense, is an enactment laid down by an authority regarded
as legitimate. It may be the edict of an autocrat, or the act of a
legislative assembly; in either case the force of the law
depends on the recognition of the authority which makes it. Among the Hindus we
find the ideas both of man-made and natural law. The King, in the conception of
the Manu, is an
autocrat, and the subject must obey; but above the
King is a Law to which he in his turn must be obedient, a Law which acts
automatically and is in the nature of things. In spite of his autocracy, he is
bound by the supreme Law, which will crush him if he disregards it. Weakness
oppressed is said to be the most fatal enemy of Kings; the tears of the weak
sap the foundation of thrones, and the
suffering of the nation destroys the ruler. The
physical and the super-physical worlds interpenetrate each other, and causes
set going in the one bring about results in the other.
The King
and his Council in ancient
different as natural and artificial laws, yet they are
clearly distinguishable by their characteristics. Artificial laws are
changeable; those who make them can alter them or repeal them. Natural laws are
unchanging; they cannot be altered nor repealed, but lie in the nature of
things.
Artificial
laws are local, while natural are universal. The law in any country against
robbery may be enforced by any penalty chosen by the legislator; sometimes the
hand is cut off, sometimes the thief is sent to goal, sometimes he is hanged.
Moreover,
the infliction of the penalty is dependent on the discovery of the crime. A
penalty which is variable and artificial, and which may be escaped, is
obviously not causally related to the crime it punishes. A natural law has no
penalty, but one
condition
follows invariably on another; if a man steals, his nature becomes more
thievish, the tendency to dishonesty is increased, and the difficulty of being
honest becomes greater; this consequence works in every case, in all countries;
and the knowledge or ignorance of others as to theft makes no difference in the
consequence.
A penalty
which is local, variable and escapable
is a sign that the law is artificial, and not
natural. A natural law is a sequence of conditions; such a condition being
present, such another condition
will invariably fellow. If you want to bring about
condition No.2, you must find or make condition No.1, and then condition No.2
will follow as an invariable consequence.
These
sequences never vary when left to
themselves, but if a new condition is introduced the
succeeding condition will be altered. Thus water
runs down
a slanting channel in accordance with the force of gravitation, and if you pour
water in at the top, it will invariably run down the slope; but you can
obstruct the flow by putting an obstacle in the way, and then the resistance
which the obstacle opposes to the force of gravitation balances it, but the
force of gravitation remains active and is found in the pressure on the
obstacle.
The first
condition is called the cause, the resulting condition the effect, and the same
cause always brings about the same effect, provided no
other cause is introduced; in the latter case, the
effect is the resultant of both.
THE LAW OF
LAWS
Karma is
natural law in the full sense of the term; it is Universal Causation, the Law
of Cause and Effect. It may be said to underlie all special laws, all causes
and effects. It is natural law in all its aspects and in all its subdivisions;
it is not a special law, but a universal condition, the one law
whereon all other laws depend, of which all other
laws are partial expressions.
The
Bhagavad-Gita says that none who are embodied can escape it – Shining Ones,
human beings, animals, vegetables, minerals, are all evolving within this
universal law; even the LOGOS Himself, embodied in a universe, comes within a
larger sweep of this law of all manifestation. So long as any one is related to
matter, embodied in matter, so long is he within
karmic law. A being may escape from or transcend one or other of its aspects,
but he cannot, while remaining in manifestation, go outside this law.
THE
ETERNAL NOW
This
universal Law of Causation binds together into one all that happens within a
manifestation, for it is universal interrelation. Interrelation between all
that exists – that is karma. It is therefore coexistent, simultaneous, with the
coming into existence of any special universe.
Therefore karma is eternal as the Universal Self.
The interrelation
of everything always is. It never begins; it never ceases to be. "The
unreal has no being; the real never ceases to be."
Nothing
exists isolated, alone, out of relation, and karma is the interrelation of all
that exists. It is manifest during the manifestation of a universe, as
regards that universe; it becomes latent in its
dissolution.
In the All
everything IS always; all that has been, all that now is manifest, all that
will be, all that can be, all possibilities as well as all actualities, are
ever in being in the All. That which isoutwards,
the forth-going, existence, the unfolded, is the manifested universe.
That which
IS as really, although inwards, the infolded, is the unmanifested
universe. But the Within, the Unmanifested, is as
real as the Without, the Manifested. The interrelation
between beings, in or out of manifestation, is the
eternal karma. As Being never ceases, so karma never
ceases, but always is.
When part
of that which is simultaneous in the All becomes manifested as a universe, the
eternal
interrelation becomes successive, and is seen as cause and
effect. In the one Being, the All, everything is linked to everything else, everything is related to everything else, and in the
phenomenal, the manifested universe, these links
and relations are drawn out into successive
happenings, causally connected in the order of their succession in time, i.e.,
in appearance.
Some
students shrink from a metaphysical view such as this, but unless this idea of
eternal Being, within which all beings ever are, is grasped, the centre cannot
be reached. So long as we think from the circumference, there is always a
question behind every answer, endless beginnings and endings with a
"Why?" behind each beginning. If the student would escape this, he
must patiently seek the centre, and let the concept of All sink into his mind,
until it becomes an ever-present part of his mental equipment, and then the
universes on the circumference become intelligible, and the universal
interrelation between all things, seen from the simultaneity of the centre,
naturally becomes cause and effect in the successions on the circumference. It
has been said that the Eternal (The Hindu name is Brahman, or more strictly, Nirguna Brahman, the Brahman without attributes) is an
ocean, which throws up universes as waves.
The ocean symbolises being without form, ever the same. The wave, by
virtue of being a part, has form and attributes. The waves rise and fall; they
break into foam, and the spray of the waves is as worlds in a universe.
Or we may
think of a huge waterfall, like Niagara, where the mass of its torrent is one
ere it falls, and then it divides into innumerable drops, which
separately reflect the light; and the drops are as
worlds, and the rainbow they make is the many-coloured
life. But the water is one while the drops are many, and life is one though
beings are many.
God
manifest or unmanifest is one and the same, though
different, though showing attributes in manifestation, and attributes in
un-manifestation; the LOGOS and His universe are one, though He is
the unity and the universe the diversity, He is
the life and the universe the forms.
Out of
manifestation karma is latent, for the beings of the manifested are but
concepts in the unmanifested; in manifestation karma
is active, for all the parts of a world, of a system, of a universe, are
inter-related.
Science
declares that no movement of a part can take place without affecting the whole,
and scientifically all are agreed. The inter-relations are universal, and none
can be broken, for the breaking of one would break the unity of the whole.
The
inviolability of natural law rests on its universality, and a breach of law in
any part would mean universal chaos.
SUCCESSION
We have seen
that as the manifestation of a universe implies succession of phenomena, so the
universal inter-relation becomes the sequence of cause and effect. But each
effect becomes in turn a cause, and so on endlessly, the difference between
cause and effect not being one of nature but of relation.
The
inter-relations which exist in the thought of the Eternal become the
inter-relations between phenomena in the manifested universe – the portion of
the thought put forth as a universe.
Before the
manifestation of any special universe, there will be, in the Eternal, the
thought of the universe which is to be, and its inter-relations.
That which
exists simultaneously out of time and
space in the Eternal Now, gradually appears in time
and space as successive phenomena. The moment you conceive a universe as made
up of phenomena, you are obliged to think of these phenomena successively, one
after another; but in the thought of the Eternal they always are, and the
limitation of succession has there no existence.
Even in
the lower worlds, where the measures of time are so different from each other,
we catch a glimpse of the increasing limitations of denser matter. Mozart tells
us of a state of consciousness in which he received a musical composition
as a single impression, although in his waking
consciousness he could only reproduce that single impression in a succession of
notes.
Or again,
we may look at a picture, and receive a single mental impression – a landscape,
a battle;
but an ant, crawling over that picture, would see
no whole, only successive impressions from the parts travelled
over.
By simile,
by analogy, we may gain some idea of the difference of a universe as it appears
to the LOGOS and as it appears to us. To Him, a single impression, a perfect whole;
to us an immense sequence, slowly unfolding. So what is to Him
inter-relation becomes to us succession. Instead of seeing
childhood, youth, old age as a whole, we see them
successively, day by day, year by year. That which is simultaneous and universal
becomes successive and particular to our small minds, crawling over the world
as the ant over the picture.
Go up a
mountain and look down on a town, and you can see how the houses are related to
each other in blocks, streets, and so on. You realise
them as a whole. But when you go down into the town you must pass from street
to street, seeing each separately, successively. So in karma, we see the
relations only one by one, and one after another, not even realising
the successive relations, so limited is our view.
Such
similes may often help us to grasp the invisible things, and may act as
crutches to our halting imagination. And out of all this we lay our foundation
stone for our study of karma. Karma is universal inter-relation, and is seen in
any universe as the Law of Causation, in consequence of the successive
appearance of phenomena in the becoming, or coming forth, of the universe.
CAUSATION
The idea
of causation has been challenged in modern times, Huxley, for instance, contending,
in the Contemporary Review, that we only knew sequence, not causation; he said
that if a ball moved after it was hit by a bat, you should
not say that the blow of the bat caused the
movement, but only that it was followed by the movement.
This
extreme scepticism came out strongly in some of the
great men of the nineteenth century, a reaction from the ready credulity and
many unproved assumptions of the Middle Ages.
The
reaction had its use, but is now gradually passing away, as extremes ever do.
The idea
of causation arises naturally in the human mind, though unprovable
by the senses; when a phenomenon has been invariably followed by another
phenomenon for long periods of time, the two become linked together in our
minds, and when one appears, the mind, by association of ideas, expects the
second; thus the fact that night has been followed by day from time immemorial
gives us a firm conviction that the sun will rise tomorrow as on countless
yesterdays.
Succession
alone, however, does not necessarily imply causation; we do not regard day as
the cause of night, nor night as the cause of day, because they
invariably succeed each other. To assert causation, we
need more than invariable succession; we need that the reason shall see that
which the senses are unable to discern – a relation between the two things
which brings about the appearance of the second when the first appears. The
succession of day and night is not caused by either; both are caused by the
relation of the earth to the sun; that
relation is a true cause, recognised
as such by the reason, and as long as the relation exists unchanged, day and
night will be its effect. In order to see one thing as the cause of another,
the reason must establish a relation between them which is sufficient for the
production of one by the other; then, and then only, can we rightly assert
causation. The links between phenomena that are never broken, and that are recognised by the reason as an active relation, bringing
into manifestation the second phenomenon whenever the first is manifested, we
call causation.
They are
the shadows of inter-relations existing in the Eternal, outside space and time,
and they extend over the life of a universe, wherever
the conditions exist for their manifestation.
Causation
is an expression of the nature of the LOGOS, an Emanation of the eternal
Reality; wherever there is interrelation in the Eternal which demands
succession for its manifestation in
time, there is causation.
THE LAWS
OF NATURE
Our next
step in our study is a consideration of the "Laws of Nature". The
whole universe is included within the ideas of succession and causation, but
when we come to what we call the laws of nature, we are unable to say over what
area they extend.
Scientists
find themselves compelled to speak with greater and greater caution as they
travel beyond the limit of actual observation. Causes and effects which are
continuous within the area of our observation may not exist in other regions,
or workings which are here observed as invariable may be interrupted by the
irruption of some cause outside the "known" of our time, though
probably not outside the knowable.
Between
1850 and 1890 there were many positive statements as to the conservation of
energy and the indestructibility of matter. It was said that there existed in
the universe a certain amount of energy, incapable of diminution or of
increase; that all forces were forms of that energy, that
the amount of any given force, as heat, might vary, but not
the total amount of energy. As 20 may be made up
of 20 units, or of 10 twos, or of 5 fours, or of 12+8, )
and so on, but the total remains as 20, so with the
varying forms and the total amount. With regard to
matter, again, similar statements were made; it was indestructible, and hence
remained ever the same in amount; some, like Ludwig Buchner,
declared that the chemical elements were
indestructible, that "an atom of carbon was ever an
atom of carbon," and so on.
On these two
ideas science was built up, and they formed the basis of materialism. But now
it is realised that chemical elements are dissoluble,
and
that the atom itself may be a swirl in the ether,
or perhaps a mere hole where ether is not.
There may
be atoms through which force pours in, others through which it pours out –
whence? – whither ? May not physical matter become
intangible, resolve itself into ether? May not ether
give birth to new matter?
All is
doubtful where once certainty reigned. Yet has a universe its
"Ring-Pass-Not". Within a given area only can we speak with
certainty of a "law
of nature".
What is a
law of nature? Mr. J.N. Farquhar, in the Contemporary
Review for July, 1910, in an article on Hinduism, declares that if Hindus want
to carry out reforms, they must abandon the idea of karma. As well might he say
that if a man wants to fly he must abandon the idea of an atmosphere.
To understand the law of karma is not to renounce activity, but to know the
conditions under which
activity is best carried on. Mr. Farquhar,
who has evidently studied modern
Hinduism carefully, has not grasped the idea of karma as taught in
ancient scripture and in modern science.
A law of
nature is not a command, but a statement of conditions. This cannot be repeated
too often, nor insisted on too strongly.
Nature
does not order this thing or the other; she says: "Here are certain
conditions; where these exist, such and such a result will invariably
follow." A law of nature is an invariable sequence.
If you do
not like the result, change the preceding conditions. Ignorant, you are
helpless, at the mercy of nature’s hurtling forces; wise, you are master, and
her forces serve you obediently.
Every law
of nature is an enabling, not a
compelling, force, but knowledge is necessary for utilising her powers.
Water
boils at 100 degrees C. under normal pressure. This is the condition. You go up
a mountain; pressure diminishes; water boils at 95 degrees. Now water at 95
degrees will not make good tea. Does Nature then forbid you to have good tea on
a mountain-top? Not at all: under normal pressure water boils at the necessary
temperature for tea-making; you have lost pressure; supply the
deficit; imprison your escaping steam till it adds
the necessary pressure, and you can make your tea with water at 100 degrees.
If you
want to produce water by the union of hydrogen and oxygen, you require a
certain temperature, and can obtain it from the electric spark. If you insist
on keeping the temperature at
zero, or in substituting nitrogen for hydrogen,
you cannot have water.
Nature
lays down the conditions which result in the production of water, and you
cannot change them; she neither supplies nor withholds water; you are free to have
it or to go without it; if you want it, you must bring together the necessary
things and thus make the conditions. Without these, no water.
With
these, inevitably water. Are you bound or free? Free as to making the
conditions; bound
as to the result, when once you have made them.
Knowing
this, the scientific man, face to face with a difficulty, does not sit down
helplessly; he finds out
the conditions under which he can bring about a
result, learns how to make the conditions, sure that he can rely on the result.
A LESSON
OF THE LAW
This is
the great lesson taught by science to the present generation. Religion has
taught it for ages, but dogmatically rather than rationally. Science proves
that knowledge is the condition of freedom, and that
only as man knows can he compel. The scientific man observes sequences; over
and over again he performs his testing experiments; he eliminates all that is
casual, collateral, irrelevant, and slowly, surely, discovers what constitutes
an invariable causative sequence. Once sure of his facts, he acts with
indubitable assurance, and nature, without shadow of turning, rewards his
rational certainty with success.
Out of
this assurance grows "the sublime patience of the investigator".
Luther Burbank, in California, will sow millions of seeds, select some
thousands of plants, pair a few hundreds, and patiently march to his end; he
can trust the
laws of nature, and, if he fails, he knows that
the error lies with him, not with them.
There is a
law of nature that masses of matter tend to move towards the earth. Shall I
then say: "I cannot walk up the stairs; I cannot fly in the air"?
Nay, there are other laws. I pit against the force that holds me on the ground,
another force stored in my muscles, and I raise my body by means of it.
A person
with muscles weak from fever may have to stay on the ground-floor, helpless;
but I break no law when I put forth muscular force, and walk upstairs.
The
inviolability of Law does not bind – it frees. It makes Science possible, and rationalises human effort. In a lawless universe, effort
would be futile,
reasons would be useless. We should be savages,
trembling in the grip of forces, strange, incalculable, terrible.
Imagine a chemist in a laboratory where nitrogen was now inert, now explosive,
where oxygen vivified today and stifled
tomorrow! In a lawless universe we should not dare to
move, not knowing what any action might bring about. We move sagely, surely,
because of the inviolability of Law.
KARMA DOES
NOT CRUSH
Now Karma
is the great law of nature, with all that that implies. As we are able to move
in the physical universe with security, knowing its laws, so may we move in the
mental and moral universes with security also, as we learn their laws.
The
majority of people, with regard to their mental and moral defects, are much in
the position of a man who should decline to walk upstairs because of the law of
gravitation. They sit down helplessly, and say: "That is my nature. I
cannot help it." True, it is the man’s nature, as he has made it in the
past, and it is "his karma". But by a knowledge
of karma he can change his nature, making it
other tomorrow than it is today. He is not in the
grip of an inevitable destiny, imposed upon him from outside; he is in a world
of law, full of natural forces which he can utilise
to bring about the state of things which he desires.
Knowledge
and will – that is what he needs. He must realize that karma is not a power
which crushes, but a statement of conditions out of which invariable results
accrue. So long as he lives carelessly, in a happy-go-lucky way, so long
will he be like a man floating on a stream, stuck
by any passing log, blown aside by any casual breeze, caught in any chance
eddy. This spells failure,
misfortune, unhappiness.
The law
enables him to compass his ends successfully, and places within his reach
forces which he can utilise. He can modify, change,
remake on other lines the nature which is the inevitable
outcome of his previous desires, thoughts, and actions; that future nature is
as inevitable as the present, the result of the conditions which he now
deliberately makes.
"Habit
is second nature," says the proverb, and thought creates habits. Where there
is Law, no achievement is impossible, and karma is the guarantee of man’s
evolution into mental and moral perfection.
APPLY THIS
LAW
We have
now to apply this law to ordinary human life, to apply principle to practice.
It has been the loss of the intelligible relations between eternal
principles and transitory events that has rendered
modern religion so inoperative in common life. A man will clean up his backyard
when he
understands
the relation between dirt and disease; but he leaves his mental and moral
backyards uncleansed, because he sees no relation
between his mental and moral defects and the various ghastly after-death
experiences with which he is threatened by religions. Hence he either
disbelieves the threats and goes carelessly on his way, or hopes to escape
consequences by some artificial compact with the authorities. In either case,
he does not cleanse his ways.
When he
realizes that law is as inviolable in the mental and moral worlds as in the
physical, it may well be hoped that he will become as reasonable in the former
as he already is in the latter.
MAN IN THE
THREE WORLDS
Man, as we
know, is living normally in three worlds, the physical, emotional and mental,
is put into contact with each by a body formed of its type of matter, and acts
in each through the appropriate body. He therefore creates results in each
according to their respective laws and powers, and all
these come within the all-embracing law of karma. During his daily life in
waking consciousness he is creating "karma," i.e. results, in these
three worlds, by action, desire and
thought. While his physical body is asleep, he is
creating karma in two worlds – the emotional and the mental, the amount of
karma then created by him depending on the stage he has reached in evolution.
We may
confine ourselves to these three worlds, for those above them are not inhabited
consciously by the average man; but we should, none the less, remember that we
are like trees, the roots of which are fixed in the higher worlds, and their branches
spread in the three lower worlds in which dwell our mortal bodies, and in which
our consciousnesses are working.
Laws work
within their own worlds, and must be studied as though their workings were
independent; just as every science studies the laws working within its own
department, but does not forget the wider working of further-reaching
conditions, so must man, while working in the three
departments, physical, emotional and mental, remember the sweep of law which
includes them all within its area of activity. In all departments laws are
inviolable and unchangeable, and each brings about its own full effect,
although the final result of their interaction is the effective force that
remains when all balancing of opposing forces has been made.
All that
is true of laws in general is true of karma, the
great law. Causes being present, events must
follow. But by taking away, or adding causes, events must be modified.
A person
gets drunk; may he say: "My karma is to get drunk"? He gets drunk
because of certain tendencies existing in himself, the
presence of loose
companions, and an environment where drink is sold. Let
us suppose that he wishes to conquer his evil habit; he knows the three
conditions that lead him into drunkenness. He may say: "I am not strong
enough to resist my own tendencies in the presence of drink and the company of
loose-livers.
I will not
go where there is drink, nor will I associate with men who tempt me to
drink."
He changes
the conditions, eliminating two of them, though unable immediately to change
the third, and the new result is that he does not get drunk. He is not
"interfering with karma," but is relying on it; nor is a friend
"interfering with karma," if he persuades him to keep away from boon
companions. There is no karmic command to a man to get
drunk, but only the existence of certain
conditions
in the midst of which he certainly will get drunk; there is, it is true,
another way of changing the conditions, the putting forth a strong effort of
will; this also introduces a new condition, which will change the result – by
addition instead of elimination.
In the
only sense in which a man can "interfere" with the laws of nature he
is perfectly at liberty to do so, as much as he likes and can. He can inhibit
the acting of one force by bringing another against it; he can overcome
gravitation by muscular effort.
In this
sense, he may interfere with karma as much as he likes, and should interfere
with it when the results are objectionable. But the expression is not a happy
one, and it is liable to be misunderstood.
The law
is: such and such causes bring about such and such results. The law is
unchangeable, but the play of phenomena is ever-changing. The mightiest cause
of all causes is human will and human reason, and yet this is the cause which
is, for the most part, omitted when people talk of karma. We are causes,
because we are the divine will, one with God in our essential being, although
hampered by
ignorance and working through gross matter, which
impedes us until we conquer, by spiritualising, it.
The
changelessness of karma is not the changelessness of effects but of law, and it
is this which makes us free. Truly slaves should we
be in a world in which everything went by
chance.
But
according to our knowledge are our freedom and our safety in a world of law. In
the Middle Ages, chemists were by no means free to
bring about the results they desired, but they had to
accept results as they came, unforeseen and for the
most part undesired, even to their own serious injury. The result of an
experiment might be a useful product, or it might be the reduction of the
experimenter into fragments. Roger Bacon set
going
causes which cost him an eye and a finger, and occasionally stretched him
senseless on the floor of his cell; outside our knowledge we are in peril, and
any cause we set going may wreck us, for we are mostly Roger Bacons in the
mental and moral worlds; inside our knowledge we may move with freedom and
safety, as the well-trained chemist moves today.
It is true
in all the three worlds in which we live, that the more we know,
the more can we foresee and control. Because law is inviolable and changeless,
therefore knowledge is the condition of freedom. Let us then study karma, and
apply our knowledge to the guidance of our lives. So many people say: "Oh!
how I wish I were good," and do
not use the law to create the causes which result
in goodness; as though a chemist should say: "Oh! how
I wish I had water," without making the conditions
which would produce it.
Again, we
must remember that each force works along its own particular line, and that
when a number of forces impinge on a particular point, the resultant force is
the outcome of all of them. As in our school days we learned how to construct
a parallelogram of forces and thus find the
resultant of their composition; so with karma may we learn to understand the
conflict of forces and their composition to yield a single resultant. We hear
people asking why a good man fails in business while a bad man succeeds.
But there
is no causal connection between goodness and money-getting. We might at well
say: "I am a very good man; why cannot I fly in the air?" Goodness is
not a cause of flying, nor does it
bring in money. Tennyson touched on a great law
when, in his poem on "Wages," he declared that the wages of virtue
were not "dust," nor rest, nor pleasure, but the glory of an active
immortality. "Virtue is its own reward" in the
fullest sense of the words. If we are truthful, our reward is that our nature
becomes more truthful, and so sequentially with every virtue.
Karmic
results can only be of the nature of their causes; they are not arbitrary, like
human rewards.
UNDERSTAND
THE TRUTH
This seems
to be obvious: whence then arises the general instinct that success in life
should accompany goodness? We can successfully combat an error only when we
understand the truth which lies at the heart of it, gives it its vitality, and
leads to its spread and its persistence. The truth in this case is that, if a
man puts himself into accord with the divine law, happiness is the result of
such harmony. The error is to identify worldly success with happiness, and to
disregard the element of time.
A man
going into business determines to be
truthful, and to take no unfair advantage over others.
He sees those who are untruthful and unscrupulous going ahead of him; if he is
weak, he becomes discouraged, even, perchance, imitates them. If he is strong,
he says: "I will work in harmony with the divine law, no matter what may
be the immediate worldly results": inner peace and happiness are then his,
but success does not accrue to him; nevertheless, in the long run even that may
fall to him, for what he loses in money he gains in confidence, whereas the man
who once betrays may at any time betray again, and none will trust him. In a
competitive society, lack of scrupulousness yields immediate success, whereas
in a cooperative society conscientiousness would "pay". To give
starvation wages to workers forced by competition to accept them may lead to
immediate success as against business rivals, and the man who gives a decent
living wage may find himself outpaced in
the race for wealth; but, in the long run, the
latter will have better work done for him, and in the future will reap the
harvest of happiness whereof he sowed the seed.
We must
decide on our course and accept its results, not looking for money as payment
for goodness, nor seeing injustice when unscrupulous shrewdness reaches that at
which it aimed.
An instructive,
if not very pleasant, Indian story is told of a man who wronged another, and the injured man cried for redress to the King.
When the punishment to be inflicted on his enemy was given into his hands, he
prayed the King to enrich his foe; asked for the reason of his strange behaviour, he grimly said that wealth and worldly
prosperity would give him greater opportunities for wrongdoing, and would thus
entail on him bitter suffering in the life after death. Often the worst enemy
of virtue is in easy material conditions, and these, which are spoken of as
good karma, are often the reverse in their results.
Many who
do fairly well in adversity go astray in prosperity, and become intoxicated
with worldly delights.
Let us now
consider how a man affects his surroundings, or, in scientific phrase, how the
organism acts on its environment.
MAN AND
HIS SURROUNDINGS
Man
affects his surroundings in innumerable ways, which may all be classified into
three modes of self-expression: he affects them by Will, by Thought, by
Action.
The
developed man is able to draw his energies together and to fuse them into one,
ready to go forth from him, and to cause action. This concentration of his energies
into a single force, held in suspense within him, in leash ready for
outrush, is Will; it is an interior concentration,
one mode of the triple Self-expression. In the
subhuman
kingdoms, and in the lower divisions of the human, the pleasure-giving and
pain-giving objects around the living creature draw out its energies, and we
call these multifarious energies brought out by external objects its desires,
whether of attraction or repulsion.
Only when
these are all drawn in, united and pointed towards a single aim, can we term
this single energy, ready to go forth, the Will.
This Will is Self-expression, i.e., it is directed by the Self; the Self
determines the line to be taken,
basing its determination on previous experience.
In the
subhuman and lower human kingdoms, desires are an important factor in karma,
giving rise to most mixed results; in the higher human, Will is the most potent
karmic cause, and as man
transmutes desires into Will, he "rules his
stars".
The mode
of Self-expression called Thought belongs to the aspect of the Self by which he
becomes aware of the outer world, the aspect of Cognition. This obtains
knowledge, and the working of the Self on the knowledge obtained is Thought.
This,
again, is an important factor in karma, since it is creative, and as we know,
builds character.
The mode
of Self-expression which directly affects the environment, the energy giving
forth from the Self, is Activity, the action of the Self on the Not-Self.
The power
of concentrating all energies into one is Will; the power of becoming aware of
an external world is Cognition; the power of affecting that outside world is
Activity. This action is inevitably followed by a reaction from the outside
world – karma. The inner cause of the reaction is Will; the nature of the
reaction is due to Cognition; the immediate provoker of the reaction is
Activity. These spin the three threads of the karmic rope.
THE THREE
FATES
"God
created man in His own image," says a Hebrew Scripture, and the Trinities
of the great religions are the symbols of the three aspects of the divine
consciousness, reflected in the triplicity of the
human. The first Logos of the Theosophist, the Mahadeva
of the Hindu, the Father of the Christians, has Will as predominant, and shows
forth the power of sovereignty, the Law by which the universe is built. The
Second Logos, Vishnu, the Son, is Wisdom, that all-sustaining and all-pervading
power by which the universe is preserved. The Third Logos, Brahma, the Holy
Spirit, is the Agent, the creative power by which
the universe is brought into manifestation. There
is nothing in divine or human consciousness which does not find itself within
one or other of these modes of Self-expression.
Again,
matter has three fundamental qualities responsive severally to these modes of consciousness, and without these it could no more be
manifested than Consciousness could express itself without its modes. It has
inertia (tamas),
the very foundation of all, the stability
necessary to existence, the quality which answers to Will. It has mobility
(rajas), the capacity to be moved,
answering to Activity. It has rhythm (sattva), the equaliser of
movement (without which movement would be chaotic, destructive), answering to
Cognition.
The Yoga
system, considering all from the standpoint of consciousness, names this
rhythmic quality "cognisability," that
which makes that matter should be known by Spirit.
All that
is in our consciousness, affecting the environment, and all
the environment affected by our consciousness, make up our world. The
interrelation between our consciousness and our environment is our karma. By
these three modes
of consciousness we spin our individual karma,
the universal interrelation between Self and Not-Self being specialized by us
into this individual
interrelation As we rise above separateness, the individual
again becomes the universal interrelation, but this universal interrelation
cannot be transcended while manifestation endures. This specializing of the
universal, and the later universalizing of the special make up of the
"world’s eternal ways" – the Path of Forthgoing to gather experience,
the Path of Return, bringing the sheaves of experience home; this is the Great
Wheel of Evolution, so relentless when seen
from the standpoint of Matter, so beauteous when
seen from the standpoint of Spirit.
"Life
is not a cry, but a song."
THE PAIR
OF TRIPLETS
Thus we
have three factors in spirit for the creation of Karma, and three corresponding
qualities in matter, and we must study these in order to make our Karma that
which we would have it be. We may study them in any order, but for many reasons
it is convenient to take the cognitive factor first, because in that lies the
power of knowledge and of choice.
We can
change our desires by the use of thought, we cannot change our thoughts, though
we may colour them, by desire; so, in the final analysis action is set in
motion by thought.
In the
earliest stages of savagery as with the newly born infant action is caused by
attractions and repulsions. But almost immediately memory comes in, the memory
of an attraction, with the wish to re-experience it; the memory of a repulsion,
with the wish to avoid it. A thing has given pleasure, it is remembered, i.e.,
thought about, it is desired, action to grasp it follows.
The three
cannot really be separated, for there is no action which is not preceded by
thought and desire, and which does not again set them going, after it is
performed.
Action is
the outer sign of the invisible thought and desire,
and in its very accomplishment gives birth to a fresh thought and desire. The
three form a circle, perpetually retraced.
THOUGHT,
THE BUILDER
Now
thought works on matter; every change in consciousness is answered by a
vibration in matter, and a similar change, however often repeated, brings about
a similar vibration. This vibration is strongest in the matter nearest to you,
and the matter nearest to you is your own mental body.
If you
repeat a thought, it repeats the
corresponding
vibration, and, as when matter has vibrated in a particular way once it is
easier for it to vibrate in that same way again than to vibrate in a new way,
the more often you repeat a thought the more ready the vibrationary
response. Presently, after much repetition, a tendency will be set
up in the matter of your mental body,
automatically
to repeat the vibration on its own account; when it does this – since the
vibration in matter and the thought in consciousness are inseparably linked –
the thought appears in the
mind without any previous activity on the part of
consciousness.
Hence when
you have thought over a thing – a virtue, an emotion, a wish – and have
deliberately come to the conclusion that it is a desirable thing to have that
virtue, to feel that emotion, to be moved by that wish, you quietly set to work
to create a habit of thought.
You think
deliberately of it every morning for a few minutes, and soon you find that it arises
spontaneously in the mind (by the aforesaid automatic activity of matter). You
persist in your thought-creation until you have formed a strong
habit of thought, a habit which can only be changed
by an equally prolonged process of thinking in the opposite direction.
Even
against the opposition of the will, the thought recurs to the mind – as many
have found when they are unable to sleep in consequence of the involuntary
recurrence of a harassing thought. If you have thus established the habit, say,
of
honesty, you will act honestly automatically; and if
some strong gust of desire sweeps you into
dishonesty on some occasion, the honest habit will
torment you as it would never torment a habitual thief.
You have
created the habit of honesty; the thief has
no such habit; hence you suffer mentally when
the habit is broken, and the thief suffers not at all.
Persistence
in strengthening such a mental habit until it is stronger than any force which
can be brought to bear upon it makes the reliable
man; he literally cannot lie, cannot steal; he
has built himself an impregnable virtue.
By
thought, then, you can build any habit you choose to build. There is no
virtue which you cannot create by thought. The
forces of nature work with you, for you understand how to use them, and they
become your servants.
If you
love your husband, your wife, your child, you find that this emotion of love
causes happiness in those who feel it. If you spread the love
outwards to others, an increase of happiness results.
You,
seeing this and wishful for the happiness of all, deliberately begin to think
love to others, in an ever wider and wider circle, until the love-attitude is
your normal attitude towards all you meet. You have created the love-habit, and
have generalized an emotion into a virtue, for a virtue is only a good emotion
made general and permanent (See
Bhagavan Das’ The Science of Emotions)
Everything
is under law; you cannot obtain mental ability or moral virtue by sitting still
and doing nothing. You can obtain both by strenuous and
persevering thinking. You can build your mental and moral
nature by thinking, for "man is created by thought; what he thinks upon,
that he becomes; therefore think" on that which you aspire to be, and
inevitably it shall be yours.
Thus shall
you become a mental and moral athlete, and your character shall grow rapidly;
you made in the past the character with which you were born; you are making now
the character with which you will die, and will return. This is
karma.
Every one
is born with a character, and the character is the most important part of
karma. The Musalman says that "a man is born
with his destiny tied round his neck". For a man’s destiny depends chiefly
on his character.
A strong character
can overcome the most unfavourable circumstances, and
overclimb
the most difficult obstacles. A weak character is
buffeted by circumstances, and fails before the most trivial obstacles.
PRACTICAL
MEDITATION
The whole
theory of meditation is built upon these laws of thought; for meditation is
only deliberate and persevering thought, aimed at a specific
object, and hence is a potent karmic cause. By using
knowledge and thought to modify character, you can bring about very quickly a
desired result.
If you
were born a coward, you can think yourself brave; if you were born dishonest,
you can
think yourself honest: if you were born untruthful,
you can think yourself truthful. Have confidence in yourself and in the law.
There is another point we
must not forget. Concrete thought finds its
natural realisation in action, and if you do not act
out a thought, then by reaction you weaken the thought.
Strenuous
action along the line of the thinking must follow the thought, otherwise
progress will be slow.
Realise, then, that while you cannot now help the
character with which you were born, while it is a fact which must profoundly
influence your present destiny, marking out your line of activity in this life,
yet you can, by thought and by action based thereon, change your inborn
character, eliminate its weaknesses, eradicate its faults, strengthen its good
qualities, enlarge its capacities.
You are
born with a given character, but you can change it. Knowledge is offered to you
as to the means of changing, and each must put that knowledge into practice for
himself.
WILL AND
DESIRE
Desire and
Activity remain to be considered. Will is the energy prompting to action, and
while it is attracted and repelled by outside objects, we call it
desire, the lower aspect of Will, as thought is the
lower aspect of Cognition.
If a man,
confronted by a pleasure-giving object, grasps it without thought,
he is moved by desire; if he holds himself back, saying: "I must not enjoy
it now, because I have a duty to perform," he is moved by Will. When the
energy of the Self is controlled and guided by right reason, it is Will: when
it rushes out unbridled, drawn hither and thither by attractive objects, it is
Desire.
Desire
arises in us spontaneously; we like one thing, we dislike another, and our
likes and dislikes are involuntary; are not under the control of the Will nor
of the reason.
We may
make up reasons for them when we wish to justify them, but they are elemental,
non-rational, precedent of thought. None the less may
they be brought under control, and changed –
though not directly.
Consider
physical taste; an olive, preserved in brine, is offered to a child, and is
generally rejected with disgust. But it is a fashionable thing to like
olives, and your people persevere in eating them,
determined to like them, and presently they are fond of them. They have changed
their disliking to liking.
How is the
change of taste brought about? By the action of Will,
directed by the mind.
THE
MASTERY OF DESIRE
We can
change desires by thought. The desire nature with which we are born is good,
bad, or indifferent, and it follows its own way in early childhood.
Presently
we examine it, and mark some desires as useful, others as useless or even
noxious. We then form a mental image of the desire nature which would be useful
and noble, and we deliberately set to work to create it by thought-power.
There are
some physical desires which we see will bring about disease if left
uncontrolled: eating too much, because of the gratification of the palate;
drinking alcoholic liquors, because they exhilarate
and vivify; yielding to the pleasures of sex.
We see in
the persons of others that these cause obesity, shaken nerves, premature
exhaustion. We determine not to yield to them; we bridle the horses of the
senses with the bits and reins of the mind, and deliberately hold them in,
although they struggle; if they are very refractory we call up the image of the
glutton, the drunkard, the worn-out profligate, and so create a repulsion for
the causes which made them what they are. And so with
all other desires. Deliberately choose out and
encourage those which lead to refining and elevating pleasures, and reject
those which result in coarseness of body and of mind.
There will
be failures in your resistance, but in spite of failures, persevere. At first,
you will yield to the desire, and only remember too late that you had resolved
to abstain; persevere. Presently the desire and the memory of the good
resolution will arise together, and there will be a period of struggle – your Kurukshetra – and you will sometimes succeed and sometimes
fail; persevere. Then successes will multiply, and failures be
few;
persevere. Then desire dies, and you watch beside its
tomb, lest it should only be entranced, and revive. Finally you have done with
that form of desire for
ever. You have worked with the law and have
conquered.
TWO OTHER
POINTS
Students
are sometimes troubled because in their dreams they yield to a vice which down
here they have conquered, or feel the stirring of a desire which they thought
long slain. Knowledge will destroy the trouble. In a dream, a man is in his
astral body, and a stirring of desire, too weak to cause physical matter to
vibrate, will cause a vibration in astral matter; let the dreamer resist, as he
soon will if he determines to do so, and the desire will cease.
Further,
he should remember that there will be left for some time in the astral body
effete matter, which was formerly used when the desire arose, but
which is now, from disuse, in process of
disintegration.
This may
be temporarily vivified by a passing desire-form and thus caused to vibrate
artificially. This may happen to a man when he is either sleeping or waking.
It is but the
artificial movement of a corpse. Let him repudiate it: "
Thou are not from me. Get thee gone." And the vibration will be
stilled.
The
warrior who is battling with desire must not let his mind dwell on the objects
which arouse desire. Again, thought is creative. Thought will awaken desire,
and stir it into vigorous activity. Of the man who abstained from action but
enjoyed in thought, Shri Krishna sternly said:
"That deluded man is called a hypocrite." Nourished by thought,
desires cannot die.
They will
but become stronger by physical repression when fed by thought. It is better
not
to fight desire, but rather to evade it. If it
arises, turn the mind to something else, to a book, a game, to anything which
is at once pure and attractive. By fighting it, the mind dwells on it, and thus
feeds and strengthens it. If you know that the desire is likely to arise, have
ready something to which to turn at once. So shall it be starved out, having no
nourishment of either act or thought.
Never let
us forget that objects are desirable because of the immanence of God.
"There is nothing moving or unmoving that can exist bereft of Me."
At a
certain stage of evolution, the attraction to them makes for progress. Only
later on, are they superseded. The child plays with a doll; it is well; it
draws out the germinal mother-love. But a grown woman playing with a doll would
be pitiable.
Objects of
desire draw out emotions which aid in development, and stimulate exertion.
They cease
to be useful when we have grown beyond them, and in ceasing to be useful they
become mischievous.
The
bearing of all this on karma is self-evident. Since by desire we create
opportunities and attract within our reach the objects of desire, our desires
now map out our opportunities and our possessions
hereafter. By harbouring none but pure desires, and
wishing for naught that cannot be used in service, we ensure a future of
opportunities for helping our fellows, and of possessions
which shall be consecrated to the Master’s work.
THE THIRD
THREAD
We have
now to consider how karma works in relation to activity, the third aspect of
the Self. Our activities – the ways in which we affect the outer world of
matter – spin the third thread of our karma, and in many respects this is the
least important. Our thoughts and our desires so soon as they flow outwards, by producing vibrations in
the mental and astral matter surrounding us, or by
creating specific thought-forms and desire-forms,
become activities, are our action on the outer worlds of life and form, of
consciousness and bodies.
The moment
they speed outwards they affect other things and other people, they are the
action, or the reaction as the case may be, of the organism on the
environment. The reaction of our thoughts on ourselves,
as we have seen, is the building of character and of faculty; the reaction of
our desires on ourselves is the gaining of opportunities and objects and of
power; the reaction of our
activities on ourselves is our environment, the
conditions and circumstances, the friends and enemies, that surround us.
The
nearest circumstance, the expression of part of our past activities, is our
physical body; this is shaped for us by an elemental specially created for the
task; our body is nature’s answer to such part of the sum of our past
activities as can be expressed in a single material form, and
"nature" is here the Lords of Karma, the mighty Angels
of Judgment, the Recorders of the Past. Two
parts of karma we bring with us – our thought-nature and our desire-nature, the
germinal tendencies we have created in our age-long past; the third part of
karma we are born into; that which limits our Self-expression and constrains
us; our past action on the external world reacts upon us as the sum of our
limitations – our environment, including our physical body.
It is
probable that a close study of past activities and present environment would
result in a knowledge of details that at present we do
not possess. We read in Buddhist and Hindu Scriptures a mass of details on this
subject,
probably drawn from meticulous careful observation. At
present, we modern students can only affirm a few broad facts. Extreme cruelty
inflicted on the helpless – on heretics, on children, on animals – reacts on
inquisitors, on brutal parents and teachers, on vivisectors,
as physical deformity, more or less revolting and extreme, according to the
nature and extent of the cruelty.
PERFECT
JUSTICE
From the
physical agony inflicted results physical agony endured, for karma is the
restoration of the equilibrium disturbed. Motive, in this region, does not
mitigate, any more than the pain of a burn is mitigated because the injury has
been sustained in saving a child from the fire.
Where a
good motive existed, however intellectually misdirected – as the saving of
souls from the torture of hell, in the case of the inquisitor, or the saving of
bodies from the torture of disease, in the case of the vivisector
– it has its full result in the region of the character.
Hence we
may find a person born deformed, with a gentle and patient character, showing
that in a past life he strove to see the right and did the wrong. The Angels of
Judgment are utterly just, and the golden thread of completely misdirected love
may gleam beside the black thread woven by cruelty;
none the less will the black thread draw to the
doer of cruelty a misshapen body.
On the
other hand, where lust of power and indifference to the pain of others have
mingled their baleful influences with the infliction of cruelty, there will be
found also a mental and emotional twist; a historical case is that of Marat, who, instead of expiating the cruelty of the past,
intensified it by new cruelty in the very life in which he was reaping the
harvest of previous
evil. Hereditary and congenital diseases, again,
are the reaction from past misdeeds.
The
drunkard of a previous life will be born into a family in which drunkenness has
left diseases of the nerves – epilepsy and the like. The profligate will be
born into a family tainted with diseases which spring from sexual vice. A
"bad heredity" is the reaction from wrong activities in the past.
Often the
man who is reaping these sad harvests shows in his moral nature that he has
purged himself from the evil, though the physical harvesting remains.
A
steadfast patience, a sweet enduring content, tell that the evil lies behind,
that victory has been gained, though the wounds sustained in the conflict smart
and sting. So may a soldier, sorely maimed in a fierce battle remain mutilated
for the rest of his physical life, and yet not regret with any keenness the
anguish and the loss which mark that he has gloriously discharged his duty to
his Flag.
And these
warriors who have conquered in a greater battle need not lament too bitterly
over the weakness or deformity of a body which tells of a
strife which is past, but may wear patiently the
badge of a struggle with an evil they have
overcome, knowing that in another life no scar of that
struggle shall remain.
OUR
ENVIRONMENT
The nation
and the family into which a man is born give him the field suitable for the
development of faculties he needs, or for the exercise of faculties he
has gained, which are required for the helping of
others at that place and time.
Sometimes
a strenuous life passed in the company of superiors, which has stimulated
latent powers and quickened the growth of germinal faculties, is
followed by one of ease amid ordinary people, in order
to test the reality of the strength acquired and the solidity of the apparent
conquest over self.
Sometimes,
when an ego has definitely gained certain mental faculties and has secured them
as part of his mental equipment by sufficient practice, he will be born into
surroundings where these are useless, and confronted by tasks of a most
uncongenial nature. A man ignorant of karma will fret and fume, will perform
grudgingly his distasteful duties, and will think regretfully of his
"wasted talents, while that fool Jones is in a place which he
is not fit to fill"; he does not realise that
Jones has to learn a lesson which he himself has
already mastered, and that he himself would not be
evolving further by repeating over again that which he has already done. In a
similar situation, the knower of karma will quietly study his surroundings,
will realise that he would gain
nothing by
doing that which it would be easy for him to do – i.e., that which he has
already done well in the past – and will address himself contentedly to the
uncongenial work, seeking to understand what it has to teach him, and
resolutely
settling himself to learn the new lesson.
OUR KITH
AND KIN
So also
with an ego who finds himself entangled with family responsibilities and
duties, when he would fain spring forward to answer a call for helpers in a
larger work. If ignorant of karma, he will fret against his bonds, or even
break them, and thus ensure their return to the future. The knower of karma
will see in these duties the reactions from his own past activities, and will
patiently accept and discharge them; he knows that when they are fully paid,
they will drop away from him and leave him free, and that meanwhile they have
some lessons to teach him which it is incumbent upon him to learn; he will seek
to see those lessons and to learn them, sure that the powers they evoke will
make him a more efficient helper when he is free to answer to the call to which
his whole nature is thrilling in response.
Again, the
knower of karma will seek to establish in his nation and his family, conditions
which will attract to each egos of an advanced and noble type.
He will
see to it that his household arrangements, its scrupulous cleanliness, its
hygienic conditions, its harmony, good feeling, and loving-kindness, the purity
of its mental and moral atmosphere, shall form a magnet of attraction, drawing
towards it and into relationship with it egos of a high level, whether they be
seeking embodiment – if young parents are members of the household – or be
already in bodies, coming into the family as future
husbands and wives, friends, or dependents. So far as his power extends, he
will help in forming similar conditions in his town, his province, his country.
He knows
that egos must be born amid surroundings suitable for them, and that,
therefore, by providing good surroundings he will attract egos of desirable
type.
OUR NATION
With
regard to national environment, the knower of karma must carefully study the
national conditions into which he is born, in order to see whether he is born
therein chiefly to develop qualities in which he is deficient, or chiefly
to help his nation by qualities well developed
in himself. In times of transition, many egos may be born into a nation, with
qualities of the type of
required in the new conditions into which that nation
is passing.
Thus, in
cooperation
shall replace competition, there have been born a number of egos of vast organising ability, of highly developed will power, and
keen commercial intelligence; they have created Trusts, organisations
of industry built with consummate ability, manifesting the economical
advantages of doing away with competition, of controlling production and
supply, of meeting, but not
over-meeting, demand. They have thus opened the way to
cooperative production and distribution, and prepared for a happier future.
Soon will be born the egos who will see in the
securing of the comfort of the nation a greater stimulus
than
personal gain, and they will complete the transition process; the one set have
gathered into a head the forces of individualism; the other set will bend these
forces to the common good.
Thus is
environment governed by karma, and by a knowledge of
law the desired environment may be created. If it grips us when once called
into being, it is none the less ours to decide what that being shall be. Our
power over that future environment is now in our hands, for its creator is the
activities of the
present.
THE LIGHT
FOR A GOOD MAN
Here is
the light for a good man who finds himself surrounded by unhappy conditions. He
has made his character, and he has also made his circumstances.
His good
thoughts and desires have made him what he is; the misdirection of them has
created the environment through which he suffers. Let him, then, not be
satisfied with being good, but see to it also that his influence on all around
him is beneficial. Then shall it react on him as good environment.
For
instance: a mother is very unselfish, and she spoils her son by yielding, at
her own cost,
to all his whims, aiding him not at all to
overcome his own selfish inclinations, fostering the lower nature, starving the
higher. The son grows up
selfish, uncontrolled, the slave of his own whims and
desires.
He causes
unhappiness in the home, perchance brings upon it debt and disgrace. This
reaction is the environment she created by her unwisdom,
and she must bear the distresses it brings upon her.
A selfish
man may, on the other hand, create for himself in the
future an environment regarded as fortunate by the world. With the hope of
gaining a
title, he builds a hospital and equips it fully;
many sufferers therein find relief, many sick unto death have their last
moments soothed, many children are lovingly nursed back into health.
The
reaction from all this will be easy and
pleasant surroundings for himself; he will reap the
harvest of the physical good which he has sown. But his selfishness will also
sow according to its kind, and mentally and morally he will reap that harvest
also, a harvest of disappointment and of pain.
KNOWLEDGE
OF LAW
The knowledge
of karma will not only enable a man to build, as he wills, his own future, but
it will also enable him to understand the workings of karmic law in the cases
of others, and thus more effectively to help them. Only by knowledge
of law can we move fearlessly and usefully in
worlds where law is inviolable, and, secure ourselves, enable others to reach a
similar security.
In the
physical world the supremacy of law is universally admitted, and the man who
disregards "natural law" is regarded not as a criminal but as a fool.
Equal is the folly, and more far-reaching, of disregarding "natural
law" in the worlds above the physical, and of imagining that, while law in
the physical world is omnipresent, the mental and moral worlds are lawless and
disorderly. In those
worlds, as in the physical, law is inviolable and
omnipresent, and of all is it true:
Though the
mills of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding Small;
Though with patience He stands waiting, with exactness Grinds He all.
We have
seen that our present is the outcome of our past, that
by thought we have built our character, by desires our opportunities of
satisfying them, by actions our environment. Let us now consider how far we can
modify in the
present these results of our past, how far we are
compelled, how far we are free.
THE
OPPOSING SCHOOLS
In the
thought of the outer world, quite apart from the ideas of reincarnation and
karma, there has been much opposing opinion. Robert Owen and his school
regarded man as the creation of circumstances, ignoring heredity, that faint
scientific
reflection of karma; they considered that by changing the environment the man
could be changed, most effectively if the child were taken ere he had formed
bad habits; a child taken out of evil surroundings and placed amid good ones
would grow into a good man.
The
failure of Robert Owen’s social experiment
showed that his theory did not contain all the
truth. Others, realising the force of heredity,
almost ignored environment; "Nature," said Ludwig Buchner,
"is stronger than nurture." In both these extreme views there is
truth. Inasmuch
as the child brings with him the nature built in
his past, but dons the garment of a new mentality and a new emotional nature,
in which his self-created
faculties
and qualities exist indeed, but as germs, not as fully developed powers, these
germs may be nourished into rapid growth or atrophied by lack of nourishment,
and this is wrought by the influence of the environment for good or ill.
Moreover,
the child puts on also the garment of a new physical body, with its own
physical heredity, designed for the expression of some of the powers he brings
with him, and this can be largely affected by his environment, and developed
healthily or unhealthily. These facts were on the side of Robert
Owen’s theory, and they explain the successes gained
by such philanthropic institutions as Dr. Barnardo’s
Homes, wherein germs of good are cultured and germs of evil are starved out.
But the
congenital criminal, and beings of that
ilk, none may redeem in a single life, and these,
of various grades, are the nonsuccesses of the benevolent rescuer.
Equally
true is it, as the opposite school affirmed, that inborn character is a force
with which every educationalist must reckon; he cannot create faculties which
are not there; he cannot wholly eradicate evil tendencies which, below the
surface, throw out roots, seeking appropriate
nourishment; some nourishment reaches them from the thought-atmosphere around,
from the evil desire-forms which arise from the evil in ) others, forms of
thoughts and desires which float in the air around, and cannot wholly be shut
out – save by occult means, unknown to the ordinary educationalist.
THE MORE
MODERN VIEW
The more modern
scientific view that organism and environment act and react upon each other,
each modifying the other, and that from the modifications new actions and
reactions arise, and so on perpetually, takes in that which is true
in each of
the earlier views; it only needs to be expanded by the recognition of an
enduring consciousness passing from life to life bringing its past with it,
ever-growing, ever-evolving, and with its growth and evolution becoming an ever
more and more potent factor in the direction and
control of its future destiny.
Thus we
reach the Theosophic standpoint; we cannot now help
that which we have brought with us, nor can we help the environment into which
we have been thrown; but we can modify both, and the more we know, the more effectively
can we
modify.
SELF-EXAMINATION
The first
step is deliberately to examine what we may call our "stock in trade"
; our inborn faculties and qualities, good and bad, our powers and our
weaknesses, our present opportunities, our actual
environment. Our character is that which is most rapidly modifiable, and on
this we should set to work, selecting the qualities which it is desirable to
strengthen, the weaknesses which form our most pressing dangers.
We take
them one by one, and use our thought-power in the way before described,
remembering always that we must never think of the weakness, but of its
corresponding power. We think that which we desire to be, and gradually,
inevitably, we become it. The law cannot fail; we have only to work with it in
order to succeed.
The
desire-nature is similarly modified by thought, and we create the thought-forms
of the opportunities we need; alert to see and to grasp a suitable opportunity,
our will also fixes itself on the forms our thought creates, and thus draws
them within reach, literally making and then grasping the opportunities which
the karma of the past does not present to us.
Hardest of
all to change is our environment, for here we are dealing with the densest form
of matter, that on which our thought-force is least potent.
Here our
freedom is very restricted, for we are at our weakest and the past is at its
strongest. Yet are we not wholly helpless, for here, either by struggling or by
yielding, we can conquer in the end. Such undesirable part of our surroundings
as we can change by strenuous effort, we
promptly set to work to change; that which we cannot thus change, we accept,
and set ourselves to learn whatever it has to teach.
When we
have learnt its lesson, it will drop away from us, like an outworn garment. We
have an undesirable family; well, these are the egos we have
drawn around us by our past; we fulfill every
obligation cheerfully and patiently, honourably
paying our debts; we acquire patience through the
annoyances they inflict on us, fortitude through their
daily irritations, forgiveness through their wrongs. We use them as a sculptor
uses his tools, to chip off our excrescences and to smooth and polish away our roughnesses.
When their
usefulness to us is over, they will be removed by circumstances, carried off
elsewhere. And so with other parts of our environment, which, on the surface,
are distressful; like a skillful sailor, who trims his sails to a wind he
cannot change and thus forces it to carry him on his way, we use the
circumstances we cannot alter by adapting
ourselves to them in such a fashion that they are
compelled to help us.
Thus we
are partly compelled and partly free. We must work amid and with the conditions
which we have created, but we are free within them to work upon them.
We
ourselves, eternal Spirits, are inherently free, but we can only work in and
through the thought-nature, the desire-nature, and the physical nature, which
we have created; these are our materials and our tools, and we can have none
other till we make these anew.
OUT OF THE
PAST
Another
point of great importance to remember is that the karma of the past is of very
mixed character; we have not to breast a single current, the totality of the
past, but a stream made up of currents running in various directions, some
opposing us, some helping us; the effective force we
have to face, the resultant left when all these opposition have neutralized
each other, may be one which it is by no means beyond our present power to
overcome.
Face to
face with a piece of evil karma from the past, we should ever grapple with it,
striving to
overcome it, remembering that it embodies only a part
of our past, and that other parts of that same past are with us, strengthening
and invigorating us for the contest. The present effort, added to those forces
from the past, may be, often is, just enough to overcome the opposition.
Or, again,
an opportunity presents itself, and we hesitate to take advantage of it,
fearing that our resources are inadequate to discharge the responsibilities it
brings; but it would not be there unless our karma had brought it to us, the
fruit of a past desire; let us seize it, bravely
and tenaciously, and we shall find that the very effort has awakened latent
powers slumbering within us,
unknown to us, and needing a stimulus from outside to
arouse them into activity.
So many of
our powers, created by effort in the past, are on the verge of expression, and
only need opportunity to flower into action.
We should
always aim at a little more than we think we can do – not at a thing wholly
beyond our present powers, but at that which seems to be just out of reach. As
we work to achieve it, all the karmic force acquired in the past comes
to our aid to strengthen us. The fact that we
can nearly do a thing means that we have worked for it in the past, and the
accumulated strength of those past efforts is within us.
That we
can do a little means the power of doing more; and even if we fail, the power
put forth to the utmost passes into the reservoir of
our forces, and the failure of today means the
victory of tomorrow
When
circumstances are adverse, the same thing holds good; we may have reached the
point where one more effort means success. Therefore did Bhishma
counsel effort under all conditions, and utter the encouraging phrase;
"Exertion is
greater than destiny."
The result
of many past exertions is embodied in our karma, and the present exertion added
to them may make our force adequate for the achievement of our aim.
There are
cases where the force of the karma of the past is so strong that no effort of
the present can suffice to overbear it. Yet should effort be made,
since few know when one of these cases is upon
them, and, at the worst, the effort made diminishes that karmic force for the
future. A chemist often labours for years to discover
a force, or an arrangement of matter, which will enable him to achieve a result
at which he is aiming. He is often thwarted, but he does not acknowledge
himself defeated. He cannot change the chemical elements; he cannot change the
laws of chemical combination; he accepts these ungrudgingly,
and there lies "the sublime patience of the
investigator". But the knowledge of the investigator, ever increasing by
virtue of his patient experiments, at last touches the point where it enables
him to bring about the desired result.
Precisely
the same spirit should be acquired by the student of karma; he should accept
the inevitable without complaint, but untiredly seek
the methods whereby his aim may be secured, sure that his only limitation is
his ignorance, and that perfect knowledge must mean perfect power.
OLD
FRIENDSHIPS
Another
fact of the greatest importance is that we are brought by karma in touch with
people whom we have known in the past, to some of whom we owe debts, some of
whom owe debts to us. No man treads his long pilgrimage alone, and the egos
to whom he is linked by many ties in a common
past come from all parts of the world to surround him in the present. We have
known some one in the past who has gone ahead of us in evolution; perchance we
then did him some service, and a
karmic tie was formed. In the present, that tie
draws us within the orbit of his activity, and we receive from outside us a new
impulse of force, a power, not our own, impelling us to listen and to obey.
Many of
such helpful karmic links have we seen within the Theosophical Society. Long,
long ago, He who is the Master K.H. was taken prisoner in a battle with an
Egyptian army, and was generously befriended and sheltered by an Egyptian of
high rank. Thousands of years later, help is needed for the nascent
Theosophical Society, and the Master, looking over
sees His old friend of the Egyptian and other
lives, now Mr. A.P. Sinnett, editing the leading Anglo-Indian newspaper, The
Pioneer. Mr. Sinnett goes, as usual, to Simla; Mme
Blavatsky goes up thither, to form the link; Mr. Sinnett is drawn within the
immediate influence of the Master, receives instruction from Him, and becomes
the author of
The Occult
World and of Esoteric Buddhism,
carrying to thousands the message of Theosophy.
Such
rights we win by help given in the past, the right to help in higher ways and
with further reaching effects, while we ourselves are also helped by the
tightening of ancient links of friendship won by service, royally recompensed
by that priceless gift of knowledge, gained by one and shed abroad for many.
WE GROW BY
GIVING
In truth,
in this world of law, where action and reaction are equal, all help which is
given comes back to the giver, as a ball thrown against a wall bounds back to
the hand of the thrower. That which we give returns to us; hence, even for a
selfish reason, it is well to give, and to give abundantly. "Cast thy
bread upon the waters, and thou shalt
find it after many days," To give, even
from a selfish motive, is good, for it leads to an
interchange of worthy human feelings, by which both giver and receiver grow and
expand, so that the Divine within each has opportunity of larger expression.
Even
though the gift, at first, be a matter of calculation – "He that hath pity
upon the poor lendeth unto the Lord: and look, what
he layeth out, it shall be paid him again" – yet
gradually the love evoked shall make future giving spontaneous and unselfish,
and thus karmic links of love shall bind ego to ego in the long series of human
lives. All personal links, whether of love or hate, grow out of the past, and
in each life we strengthen the ties that bind us to our friends and ensure our
return together in the lives that lie in front. Thus
do we build up a true family, outside all ties of blood, and return to earth
over and over again to
knit closer the ancient bonds.
COLLECTIVE
KARMA
Before
completing this imperfect study we must consider what is termed Collective
Karma, the complex into which are woven the results of the collective thoughts,
desires and activities of groups, whether large or small.
The
principles at work are the same, but the factors are far more numerous, and
this
multiplicity immensely increases the difficulty of
understanding the effects.
The idea
of considering a group as a larger individual is not alien from modern science,
and such larger individuals generate karma along lines similar to those which
we have been studying. A family, a nation, a sub-race, a
race, are all but
larger individuals, each having a past behind it,
the creator of its present, each with a future ahead of it, now in course of
creation. An ego coming into
such a larger individual must share in its general
karma; his own special karma has brought him into it, and must be worked out
within it, the larger karma often offering conditions which enable the smaller
to act.
FAMILY
KARMA
Let us
consider the collective karma of a family. The family has a thought-atmosphere
of its own, into the colouring of which enter family
traditions and customs, family ways of regarding the external world, family pride
in the past, a strong sense of family honour.
All the
thought-forms of a member of the family will be influenced by these conditions,
built up perhaps through hundreds of years, and shaping, moulding,
colouring, all the thoughts, desires and activities
of the individual newly born into it.
Tendencies
in him that conflict with family traditions will be suppressed, all
unconsciously to
him; the things "a fellow cannot do"
will have for him no attraction; he will be lifted above various temptations,
and the seeds of evil which such temptations might have vivified in him will
quietly atrophy away. The collective karma of the family will provide him with
opportunities for distinction, open out avenues of usefulness, bring him
advantages in the struggle for life, and ensure his
success. How has he come into conditions so favourable? It may be by a personal tie with some one
already there, a service rendered in a previous life, a bond of affection, an
unexhausted relationship. This avails to draw him into the
circle,
and he then profits by the various karmic results which belong to the family in
virtue of its collective past, of the courage, ability, usefulness of
some of its members, that have left an inheritance
of social consideration as a family heirloom.
Where the
family karma is bad the individual born into it suffers, as in the former case
he profits, and the collective karma hinders, as in the former
instance it promoted, his welfare.
In both
cases the individual will usually have built up in himself characteristics
which demand for their full exercise the environment provided by
the family.
But a very
strong personal tie, or unusual service, might, without this, draw a man into a
family wherein was his beneficiary, and so give him an opportunity which,
generally, he has not deserved, but had won by this special act of his past.
NATIONAL
KARMA
Let us
think on the collective karma of a nation. Face to face with this, the
individual is comparatively helpless, for nothing he can do
can free him from this, and he must trim his sails to it as best he may.
Even a Master can but slightly modify national karma,
or change the national atmosphere.
The rise
and fall of nations are brought about by collective karma. Acts of national
righteousness or of national criminality, led up to by noble or base
thinking, largely directed by national ideals, bring
about national ascent or national descent. The actions of the Spanish
Inquisition, the driving of the Jews and of the Moors out of Spain, the
atrocious cruelties accompanying the conquests of Mexico and Peru – all these
were national crimes, which dragged Spain down from its splendid position of
power, and reduced it to comparative
powerlessness.
Seismic
changes – earthquakes, volcanoes, floods – or national catastrophes like famine
and plague, all are cases of collective karma, brought about by great streams
of thoughts and actions of a collective rather than an individual character.
As with a
family, so with a nation to a much greater degree, will there be an atmosphere
created by the nation’s past; and national traditions, customs, viewpoints,
will exercise a vast influence on the minds of all who dwell within the nation.
Few individuals can free themselves wholly from these influences, and consider
a question affecting the nation without any bias, or see it from a
standpoint other than that of their own people.
Hence
largely arise international quarrels and suspicions, mistaken views, and
distorted opinions of
the motives of another nation. Many a war has
broken out in consequence of the differences in the thought-atmospheres
surrounding the prospective combatants, and these difficulties are multiplied
when the nations spring from different racial stocks, as, say, the Italians and
the Turks.
All the
knower of karma can do, in these cases, is to realise
the fact that his opinions and views are
largely
the product of the larger individuality of his nation, and to check this bias
as much as he can, giving full weight to the views obtained from the standpoint
of the antagonistic nation.
When a man
finds himself in the grip of a national karma which he cannot resist – say that
he is a member of a conquered nation – he should calmly study the causes which
have led to the national subjugation, and should set to work to remedy them, endeavouring to influence public opinion along lines which
will eradicate these causes.
There was
an article published in East and West – Mr. Malabari’s
paper – some time ago on the national karma of
national
karma of India was that it should be conquered – obviously true, else the
conquest of India would not have taken place – and that it should therefore
accept its lot of service, and not try to change any of the existing conditions
– as obviously wrong. The knower of karma would say:
The Indians
were not the original possessors of this country; they came down from
conquering the land, subduing its then peoples, and
reducing them to servitude; during thousands of years they conquered and ruled,
and they generated a national karma.
They trod
down the conquered tribes, and made them slaves, oppressing them and taking
advantage of them. The bad karma thus made brought
down upon them in turn many invaders. Greeks, Mughals, Portuguese, Dutch, French, English – they all
came, and fought, and conquered, and possessed. Still the lesson of karma has
not been learned, though the millions of the untouchables are a standing proof
of the wrongs inflicted upon them.
Now the
Indians ask for a share in the government of their own country, and they are
hampered by this bad national karma. Let them, then, while asking for the
growth of freedom for themselves, atone to these
untouchables by giving them social
freedom and lifting them in the social scale. A
national effort must remove this national evil, and do away with a continuing
cause of national weakness.
India must
redeem the wrong she has done, and cleanse her hands from oppression; so shall
she change her national karma, and build the foundation of freedom. Karma will
work for freedom and not against it, when the karma generated by oppression is
changed into the karma made by uplifting and respecting. Public feeling can be
changed, and every man who speaks graciously and kindly to an inferior is
helping to change it. Meanwhile all whose own individual karma has brought them
into the nation should recognise facts as they are,
but should set to work to change those that are undesirable. National karma may
be changed, like individual karma, but as the causes are of longer continuance,
so must be the effects, and the new causes introduced can only slowly modify
the results outgrowing from the past.
NATIONAL
DISASTERS
The karma
which brings about seismic
catastrophes and other national disasters includes in its
sweep vast numbers of individuals whose special karma contains sudden death,
disease, or prolonged physical suffering. It is interesting and
instructive to notice the way in which people who have
not such karmic liabilities are called away from the scene of a great
catastrophe, while others
are hurried into it; when an earthquake slays a
number of people there will be cases of "miraculous escape" – one
called away by a telegram, by urgent business, etc. – and of equally miraculous
tossing of victims into the place in
time for their slaying.
If such
calling away proved to be impossible, then some special arrangement at the
moment guarded from death, a beam, keeping off falling stones, or the like.
When a
natural catastrophe is impending, people with appropriate individual karma are
gathered together in the place, as in the flood at
India a
few years ago, there were some victims who had posted back in hot haste – to be
killed. Others left the place the night before – to be saved from death.
The local
catastrophe is used to work off particular karmas. Or a carriage taking a man
to the station is stopped in a street block, and he misses the
train. He is angry, but the train is wrecked and he
is saved. It is not that the block was there in order to stop him, but that the
block was utilised for the
purpose. At
Sometimes
an ego has a debt of sudden death to pay, but it has not been included in the debts
to be discharged during the present incarnation; but his presence in some
accident brought about by a collective karma offers the opportunity of
discharging the debt "out of due time". The ego
prefers to seize the opportunity and to get rid of the karma, and his body is
struck away with the rest.
HOW THE
EGO SELECTS
Individual
characteristics developed in one life may bring their owner in another life
into a nation which offers peculiar facilities for their exercise.
Thus a man who had developed a strong concrete mind, apt for
commerce, say, in the vaishya (merchant) caste in
general benefit the stores accumulated as personal
possessions. Thus the old ideal will be planted in the midst of a new civilisation, and will spread abroad through another
people.
A
colonizing nation, like
These have
a karmic claim against
The debt
due to them by the summary closing of their previous existences should be paid
by education and training, thus quickening their evolution and lifting them out
of their natural savagery.
THE FRENCH
REVOLUTION
The
collective selfishness and indifference of the well-to-do towards the poor and
miserable, leaving them to fester in overcrowded slums, among degrading and
evil-provoking surroundings, bring down upon themselves social troubles, labour
unrest, threatening combinations. Carried to excess
in
the nobility.
Taught by
Theosophy to see the workings of karmic law in the history of nations as well
as in that of individuals, we should be forces making for national welfare and
prosperity. The
strongest karmic cause is the power of thought, and
this is as true for nations as for individuals.
A NOBLE
NATIONAL IDEAL
To hold up
a noble national ideal is to set going the most powerful karmic force, for into
such an ideal the thoughts of many are ever flowing, and it
becomes stronger by the daily influx. Public opinion
continually changes under the flow of its influences, and reproduces that which
is constantly held up for its admiration. The thought-force accumulatesuntil
it becomes irresistible and lifts the whole nation upwards to a higher level.
The knowers of karma can work deliberately and consciously,
sure of their ground, sure of their methods, relying on the Good Law. Thus they
become conscious cooperators with the Divine Will which
works in evolution, and are filled with a deep peace and an unending joy.
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material on this Website
Independent Theosophy Blog
One liners and quick explanations
About aspects of Theosophy
The
Voice of the Silence Website
An
Independent Theosophical Republic
Links
to Free Online Theosophy
Study
Resources; Courses, Writings,
The main
criteria for the inclusion of
links on this site is that they have some
relationship (however tenuous) to Theosophy
and are lightweight, amusing or entertaining.
Topics include
Quantum Theory and Socks,
Dick Dastardly and Legendary Blues Singers.
An
entertaining introduction to Theosophy
For
everyone everywhere, not just in Wales
It’s all “water
under the bridge” but everything you do
makes an imprint on the Space-Time Continuum.
A selection of
articles on Reincarnation
Provided in
response to the large number
of enquiries we receive on this subject
No
Aardvarks were harmed in the
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
The
Birmingham Annie Besant Lodge
_________________________
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
The Terraced Maze of Glastonbury Tor
Glastonbury and
Joseph of Arimathea
The Grave of King Arthur & Guinevere
Views of Glastonbury High Street
The Theosophy Cardiff Guide to
_____________________
Camberley Surrey England GU15 2LF
Tekels Park to be Sold to a Developer
Concerns are raised about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
Surrey, England is to be sold to a developer
Tekels Park is a 50 acre woodland
park, purchased
for the Adyar
Theosophical Society in England in 1929.
In addition to concern about the
park, many are
worried about the
future of the Tekels Park Deer
as they are not a
protected species.
Confusion as the Theoversity
moves out of
Tekels Park to Southampton, Glastonbury &
Chorley in Lancashire while the leadership claim
that the
Theosophical Society will carry on using
Tekels Park despite its sale to a developer
Anyone planning a “Spiritual” stay at
the
Tekels Park Guest House should be
aware of the sale.
Future
of Tekels Park Badgers in Doubt
Magnificent
Tekels Park to be Sold to a Developer
Tekels Park & the Loch Ness Monster
A Satirical view
of the sale of Tekels Park
in Camberley, Surrey to a developer
The Toff’s Guide to the Sale of
Tekels Park
What the men in
top hats have to
say about the sale
of Tekels Park
________________________
& of course
you don’t need to live in Wales
to take advantage of this guide
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A
B
C
D
EFG
H
IJ
KL
M
N
OP
QR
S
T
UV
WXYZ
Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
___________________________
Classic Introductory
Theosophy Text
A Text Book of Theosophy By C
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man
After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical
Study
_____________________
Preface to the American Edition Introduction
Occultism and its Adepts The Theosophical Society
First Occult Experiences Teachings of Occult Philosophy
Later Occult Phenomena Appendix
Try these if you are looking
for a
local Theosophy Group
or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Top of Form
_____________________________
Theosophical
Movement in Wales
Mystery Benefactor Boosts Theosophy
in Bangor, Conwy & Swansea 2009