A Decisive Factor in the Theosophical Path
John Garrigues
John Garrigues
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J. Garrigues (1868 – 1944)
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An Editorial Note:
The present article
was first published
at “Theosophy” magazine, Los Angeles,
in January 1925,
pp. 102-106. It was later
published by the
same magazine in October
1949, and by the
electronic magazine “The
Aquarian Theosophist” in its Special Issue
dated February 2006, pages
13-16. A 2012
analysis of contents, style,
and date of first
publication indicated it was
written by Garrigues.
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“How few of the many pilgrims who have
to start without chart or compass on the
shoreless Ocean of Occultism reach the
wished for land. Believe me, faithful friend,
that nothing short of full
confidence in us, in
our good motives if not in our wisdom, in our
foresight, if not omniscience - which is not to be
found on this earth - can help one to cross over
from one’s land of dream and fiction to our
Truth land, the region of stern reality and fact.”
[“The Mahatma Letters”, T.U.P., Letter
LXIV, p. 358.]
TRUST is the spiritual touch-stone. Lack of
it, in the Line which we hold in our lives, spells dust and ashes to all
apparently high endeavor.
Confidence is the first requisite to success, anywhere
and everywhere. Trust in the Law of our own imperishable natures, trust that
justice does rule, certainty of our ability to learn, to grow, to perform, to
find answers to all problems - these are the qualities for the lack of which
students suffer and fall away, to join the swelling ranks of the “disillusioned”,
and to die a spiritual death that is more bitter, and more truly “death” than
merely physical dying ever was or ever could be.
The curse of our age is suspicion. Those who distrust
themselves are afraid to trust anybody. Since the note of the times is the
discord of materialism, the common ideal of superior living is to possess vast
stores of material wealth. To have “plenty of money” is to be successful in
life. Some theosophists feel the same way about it as anybody else, salving
their concession to the race ideas with the excuse that then they could do so much for Theosophy. But the experience of
human nature discloses the saddening fact that the more of this world’s goods
one has, the more precious become the possessions and the less able does the
possessor seem to be to voluntarily part with them. Men are suspicious of one
another, knowing full well in their own hearts what they would do to their
neighbour’s wealth if the opportunity presented itself. Conditions have
actually reached a point where one cannot perform an altruistic service without
rousing the certainty in the minds of many that an ulterior purpose is
intended. If a Christ should walk the streets today, performing “miracles” and
healing the afflicted he would be suspected of doing it for gain - or else it
would be said, “He is advertising something!”. [1]
The student of Theosophy who would climb the wall of
theory and uncertainty - make a breach in the frowning ramparts of
book-knowledge - has not only to stand firmly against the roaring torrent of
materialism. He has in fact to make
progress against it. He has to do more than to believe in Altruism; he has to become altruistic. He has by
herculean efforts, steadfastly persisted in - when body, mind and even Soul
itself are so weary over the unequal combat that he would gladly perish in his
tracks - to keep doggedly on, even though all his world, himself included - believes
him to be a fool.
Confidence is the
only hard-won quality that will avail under these conditions. This confidence
is not to be come by as a result of belief or blind faith. It is the result of
reasoned faith, developed by a study and understanding of philosophy, and a
rigid adherence to ethical teachings as a mode of life. The Theosophical
dilettante will never gain it. The student who has taken up Theosophy as a
study or to make himself or herself a better teacher, doctor, lawyer, artist,
better at business, stronger intellectually - or for any of the thousand “side-issues”
that the human mind attaches itself to - will never arrive at a position of
trust, much less at conscious assurance. His knowledge will be just so much “information
and belief” to the end of his days, and no more. His confidence in himself will
fail him, when power is needed and pretence shall go for nothing.
Conviction of the truth of primary Theosophical ideas
is the first requisite for true self-confidence. This may be had first by
intellectual study and its fruits - a logical and reasoned comprehension of
philosophical rationale. Then follows a testing out of the basis provided by
observation and experience - in the affairs of the world and its inhabitants as
the moving picture of events, men, things and methods presents itself to the
mind’s eye from day to day; and especially a watchfulness and honest analysis
of the psychological process of the student himself.
The time will soon come when the student shall find he
has checked up the truth of the Theosophical teaching, so far as he is able to
confirm it at all, in these ways:
(a) by an intellectual and
philosophical synthesis, based on a foundation of self-evident truths;
(b) by application of the teaching to the
affairs of daily life, and most of all as one’s own intimate, interior
experience justifies the idea that psychology is an exact science and that
Theosophy includes it;
(c) by realizing the fact that Truth always
explains - that, given the complete explanation about anything, we have the
Truth, unconflicting with any other Truth. This last is a realization, not a form of words. It comes with a compelling force,
as if shot or projected into the mind from somewhere outside, although it
really comes from inside: Buddhi expresses itself in terms of
conviction.
Intellectual appreciation of the necessity of the existence of Masters grows simultaneously in the
meditator’s brain and heart. If there is knowledge, there must be
Knowers; knowledge does not exist in itself, but is the result of observation
and experience; and there must be Beings who have made the observations and
recorded the experience. This is as far as intellectual acuteness can take the
student of Theosophy, in crossing over from “one’s land of dream and fiction to
our Truth land, the region of stern reality and fact”. For heretofore the
effort of nearly all has been towards the acquisition of knowledge for oneself,
however much the student believes that his motive has been altruistic. The mind
and reasoning powers are satisfied; a philosophy of life that really explains
has been secured. Aside from exercise therein mentally, as a swimmer exercises
his body healthfully in clear water, no further urge is felt - for an essential quality has not been developed.
What is the essential quality which drives a man in
spite of himself to pursue that Path, the traveling of which brings “full
confidence” in Masters? It is something so rare, yet so commonly named that
incredulity is perhaps our first mental reaction when the word is set down
before our eyes: Gratitude.
But think about it: This emotion that one sometimes hears and even sees expressed by
students of Theosophy when Masters are mentioned is not Gratitude. Neither can it be called intelligent. The same thing
inundates the Christian prayer-meeting, the revival, the spiritualistic séance,
the patriotic assemblage - wherever people congregate and are “deeply stirred”.
Occasionally, on Theosophical platforms, the “Masters”, or the “Founders” have
been spoken of so feelingly that both speaker and audience have thrilled with
emotion - but that was not Gratitude.
Gratitude is not any one of the many phases of psychic
emotion which go under other names; nor does it usually show itself in words,
or expressions of so-called love. Gratitude
is the recognition that at a sacrifice, and without personal motives, something
has been done for us - a recognition so compelling that we can
never rest until we, in our turn, on a similar basis, have passed on the divine
service. Gratitude is Buddhi in action,
a universal quality, and thus spiritual. It expresses itself in
altruistic service: in work for and as Masters, who are the universal servants
in Nature. Gratitude transmuted into effective action is calm, controlled, quiet
- and powerful as cosmic electricity. Indeed, it is Fohat “stepped down” and
applied to the work in hand; for Fohat is an intelligent force, we may
remember, and forces do not exist of themselves.
Thus in those students in whom rational cognition of
the necessity of the existence of Masters has been succeeded by gratitude, one
sees the active workers for Theosophy, the Companions “all over the world . . .
engaged in bringing it forth for wider currency and propagation”. To the
Western man or woman of the day the mental process expresses itself something
like this:
“Somebody had to make the true writings available and
keep them in print; somebody had to fit up the Lodge meeting rooms, advertise
the work, keep it going - do the studying, speaking, helping, sick or well, in
season and out of season; somebody had to find the money needed - and evidently
has to keep everlastingly at it. By their sacrifice I found and have been
helped to understand the philosophy. I feel compelled to do my part - which means
all that I possibly can do - in any and every department of my Lodge
activities; and that which presently am unable to do, I will set myself to
learning with all my heart and energy”.
This, if carried out, is an exhibition of gratitude - is
gratitude. This, too, is “devotion”;
for like true gratitude, devotion is
not an emotional affair at all. Nor does this student seek to develop special
modes of service which are exclusively “his own”, and thus contract an
aggravated case of “the itch for a
following”. He works in the channels provided, which he has seen
in his own case were pure and true -
right there in the ranks with his fellows: he works for others, with others.
Confidence in himself arises in the student who thus
felt gratitude and transmuted the feeling into action. Confidence in others
inevitably follows, for he has constituted himself a worker in the ranks of
others who feel and work as he feels and works, animated by the same noblesse oblige, determined as he is
determined, intelligently happy as he is intelligently happy. The principles of
his nature have impelled him to engage in this glorious, unsought fight, in
which only fortune’s favoured soldiers may engage, so he is happy because he is
“natural” in the highest and deepest sense.
As he proceeds, confidence begets confidence: in
himself, in his fellows, in humanity, in all Nature. In his thought, Masters
are beginning to emerge as facts and not merely ideals. They are “inside”
first, and then “outside”, and then everywhere, on all sides, in every phase of
his changing days and years. “Full confidence” in Them is a matter of growth, a
growing realization, confirmed bit by bit through experience, in inner intimate
and subtle ways - ways that would present no proof whatever to another; but the
feeling that accompanies these veiled inner events does - it is unmistakable.
It is clear, unsullied, indescribably convincing.
The
student is actually “crossing over” from his land of dream and fiction to Their
Truth land. At the same time he is gaining “full confidence” in Them. The
processes are one - not two, not separate. They are merely aspects of the same
old eternal process, mentioned in the ancient writings (another confirmation of
its reality), and called in the present teachings, “building antaskarana”. This
is the meaning of the phrase that the student has “to become that Path himself”.
For how could he “cross over” if there
were no “bridge” or “Path”? How could he build it, save with his own materials,
since the “Path is within”? How could he find and transmute the materials, save
for the fact that as an evolving human being he is in touch through his own
instruments with every department of Nature? Thus does an understanding of the
scientific teachings of the philosophy merge with the ethical and
psychological. The veiled mysticism of the ancients proves true in the actual
student-life of the observant and reverent man or woman of today.
“Full confidence”, then, is a growth -
a growth through service - “without expectation and free from hope”. “The
region of stern reality and fact” must necessarily be “Truth land”, because
only the true is unchanging, and only the unchanging is real.
To
reach it is not to “go” to any place - no change in locus; nor to attract the attention of our fellowmen - nor want to;
certainly not to proclaim ourselves, directly nor indirectly. It is a different point of view, and
intelligent action therefrom. The student life and the personal life are
not separate.
NOTE:
[1] See in
our associated websites the article “If Christ Comes Back This Christmas”.
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In September
2016, after a careful analysis of the state of the esoteric movement
worldwide, a group of students decided to form the Independent Lodge of Theosophists, whose priorities include the building
of a better future in the different dimensions of life.
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