May 30, 2015

The Pythagorean Y

A Choice Between Two Paths

Carlos Cardoso Aveline

One of the editions of the Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library, and the Pythagorean “Y”




The verses and the image of the Pythagorean Y contain a challenge to students of classical and esoteric philosophy, as well as to mystics of every religion.

Of uncertain authorship, ascribed in a vague way to “Maximinus”, the verses have also been falsely ascribed to Virgil.  Yet they are certainly ancient, and the main idea in them belongs to universal wisdom and literature. 

They say:

“The Pythagoric Letter two ways spread,
Shows the two paths in which Man’s life is led.
The right hand track to sacred Virtue tends,
Though steep and rough at first, in rest it ends;
The other broad and smooth, but from its Crown
On rocks the Traveller is tumbled down.
He who to Virtue by harsh toils aspires,
Subduing pains, worth and renown acquires;
But who seeks slothful luxury, and flies,
The labor of great acts, dishonored dies.” [1]

The image of such a choice presenting itself to human soul is already present in Hesiod, and one finds a longer description of it at Chapter I, Book II, of Xenophon’s work on the life and sayings of Socrates.

Xenophon narrates how Hercules, in his youth, had to make the choice between the two ways.

Centuries after Xenophon, the Christian authors of the Gospels copied the idea and ascribed it to Jesus. One can see that by reading Matthew, 7: 13-15:

“Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat:  because strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it. Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.”

Mystical teachings are clad in symbolism.

One’s “cross” is one’s karma, and in Matthew 16: 24 one sees further information on the narrow path of the Pythagoreans:

“Then said Jesus unto his disciples, ‘If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me’.”

Such a choice between the two paths is also Stoic, and it has great importance in Theosophy.  The theosophical life needs a degree of Stoic indifference to pain and pleasure.

If sincere, even an imperfect adoption of the steep and hard way that leads to transcendent truth will not be limited to the lower self of the individual. It will necessarily involve in some degree one’s higher triad and spiritual soul, or the Monad, to use the Pythagoric term.   As a result of this, in future rebirths the “narrow path” becomes the equivalent to “blind destiny”. It emerges as a gift to the subsequent lower selves.

Thus a strong conscious choice made in any given time brings about “unconscious” inheritance and “natural” results in future incarnations. New personalities will be born adapted to altruism - or they will have to adapt to it, being painfully led or restrained by circumstances, until they can somehow put themselves in active harmony with the transcendent decision made in previous lives.

Worldly “failures” can therefore indicate inner victories and reflect a spiritual renunciation unknown to the lower self.  

As the higher self reawakens in any given life, it withdraws its cooperation and support to the worldly efforts of the lower self, and suggests to it instead an entirely new direction - towards altruism. Because the process involves decisions made before one’s birth, it can be largely involuntary and one’s lower self will only partially perceive it.

Along the path to transcendent self-knowledge, every personal center of consciousness faces an endless succession of tests and probations.  Progress along the “narrow path” goes on with varying levels of difficulty until the day when all that is “personal” is already consciously and willingly put at the service of that which is “impersonal”, and thus a lasting peace is finally found.

NOTE:

[1] Both verses and image are here reproduced from page 158 of “The Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library”. The volume was compiled and translated by Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie, and introduced and edited by David R. Fideler. It was published by Phanes Press, Grand Rapids, Michigan, USA, 1987, and has 362 pp. Another English language version of the same verses was published in the book “Homo Viator:  itineraries of exile, displacement and writing in Renaissance”, by George Hugo Tucker:

“The Letter [Y] of Pythagoras, cleft by a two-pronged division,
May be seen to display the very image of human life.
For the steep path of virtue takes the righthand way,
And presents difficult access at first to onlookers,
But grants rest to the weary on its lofty summit.
The lefthand path shows the pleasant route, but its endpoint
Casts and rolls its prisoners headlong down over rough rocks.
For whoever has overcome harsh misfortunes through the love
Of virtue, will obtain for himself praise and honour.
But he who pursues sloth and indolent debauchery,
Whilst heedlessly fleeing the toils set before him,
Shameful and contemptible, leads all the while a wretched life.”  


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On the role of the esoteric movement in the ethical awakening of mankind during the 21st century, see the book “The Fire and Light of Theosophical Literature”, by Carlos Cardoso Aveline.  


Published in 2013 by The Aquarian Theosophist, the volume has 255 pages and can be obtained through Amazon Books.

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May 28, 2015

On What Is Theosophy

The Many Dimensions of a Sacred Word

A Paramahansa of the Himalayas



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 An Editorial Note:

 The following text can be seen as a
meditational exercise showing that theosophy
transcends the dead letter point of view and
cannot be fully described by conventional
definitions. The article was first published at
The Theosophist”, Adyar, India, August, 1882,
pp. 273-274. Original title: “What Is Theosophy?
The magazine was then edited by Helena P.
Blavatsky: various Adepts and Initiates wrote for
the “Theosophist” in the early 1880s. One of the
meanings ascribed to the word “Paramahansa” [1] is “he
whom achieved the fourth and last phase of the way”.

(CCA)

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1) Theosophy is that branch of human perfection, by which one may establish himself with the eternal cause of invisible nature; to which this physical effect is a visible bubble.

2) Theosophy is that knowledge which leads one from animalism to Divinity.

3) Theosophy is that branch of human philosophy, which theoretically teaches one what he really is beyond mind and personal individuality (Ego).

4) Theosophy is that branch of chemistry, by which one begets IMMORTALITY.

5) Theosophy is that branch of painting (one’s self) which Time cannot efface.

6) Theosophy is that branch of husbandry (agriculture) by which one may preserve the seed without rearing the tree.

7) Theosophy is that branch of optics, which magnifies one’s view to see beyond physical nature.

8) Theosophy is that branch of human surgery, which separates physical nature from the spiritual.

9) Theosophy is that branch of Masonry, which shows the universe in an egg.

10) Theosophy is that branch of music, which harmonises physical nature with spirit.

11) Theosophy is that part of gardening, which teaches one how to rear trees out of charcoal.

12) Theosophy is that branch of sanitation, which teaches one how to purify nature by means of cause and effect.

13) Theosophy is that branch of engineering, which bridges the gulf between life and death.

14) Theosophy is that warlike art, which teaches one how to subdue (subjugate) time and death, the two mightiest foes of man.

15) Theosophy is that food, which enables one to taste the most exquisite sweetness in his own self.

16) Theosophy is that branch of navigation, which teaches one the starting point and the final goal of human life.

17) Theosophy is that branch of commerce, which makes one fit to select unerringly the commodities for both lives.

18) Theosophy is that branch of politics, which unites past and future into one present, and establishes peace with the most tumultuous off-shoots of debased nature.

19) Theosophy is that branch of mineralogy, by which one may discover the source of eternal wealth, combining life, knowledge and eternal joy into one.

20) Theosophy is that branch of astronomy, which proves that spirit is the only fixed star which sets not throughout the revolutions of nature.

21) Theosophy is that branch of gymnastics, which invigorates the mind, expands the intellect, unites the thoughts with the tie of breath [2], removes the heat of lust, and produces a balmy calmness, which is the heart’s eye, to penetrate the mysteries of nature.

22) Theosophy is that branch of mental philosophy, by which one may know the exact centre of his individual Self and its identity with the entity of the second principle of the Vedantists, or the seventh one of the present Theosophists [3], or what is commonly known by the name, God.

23) Theosophy is that branch of medicine by which one may rid himself of his sins from time immemorial.

24) Theosophy is that branch of natural philosophy, by which one may watch and witness nature in her birth - chastity - adultery and the present old age.

25) Theosophy is that occult branch of the Christian church, on which the ground-work of that church was originally planned, - i.e., the essential non-difference of God with the individual witness.

26) Theosophy is that branch of Christianity, which eliminates the spiritual Christ from the corporeal one of the orthodox generation.

27) Theosophy is that part of the Christian theology, which shows that the present churches of the West are abusing the Bible by misinterpretations.

28) Theosophy is that part of the Aryan independence, by which one may exist without the help of nature.

29) Theosophy (to be brief) is the sum total of the wisdom of the Aryan Brahma - the happiness eternal - and the life everlasting. It is Theosophy which taught the Aryans how to soar far beyond the region of Shakti and to be in perpetual joy - (the play-ground of Shakti). In short, it is the basis of all the knowledge that exists in the eternity.


A Paramahansa.

NOTES:

[1] Paramahansas are the order of the highest Yogi-Sannyasis, who alone are allowed to throw off the yoke of the Hindu caste superstitions. While all the others have to perform, more or less, the daily exoteric ceremonies of their respective Ashrams or orders, no rules of action can be assigned to these. (Note by Helena Blavatsky)

[2] This relates to occult practices. (Note by Helena Blavatsky)

[3] Jivatma, in the sense of the Vedantin, is the Soul of all life, and in that of the Theosophists it is Jiva, - vital principle. (Note by Helena Blavatsky)

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On the role of the esoteric movement in the ethical awakening of mankind during the 21st century, see the book “The Fire and Light of Theosophical Literature”, by Carlos Cardoso Aveline.  


Published in 2013 by The Aquarian Theosophist, the volume has 255 pages and can be obtained through Amazon Books.

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May 27, 2015

Some Words on Daily Life

Theosophy Has to Tell The
TRUTH to The Very Face of LIE 

A Master of the Wisdom

An image from the Himalayas,  in a painting by Nicholas Roerich


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A 2012 Editorial Note:

First published in 1888, the following
document clarifies a few fundamental
aspects of the modern theosophical effort.

In order to make it easier to read the text
from a contemplative point of view, we have
divided some of the paragraphs in smaller ones.

(CCA)

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“Remain rather as indifferent to
the abuse as to the praise of those who
can never know you as you really are…”

“Human praise and enthusiasm are short-lived
at best; the laugh of the scoffer and condemnation
of the indifferent looker-on are sure to follow, and
generally to out-weigh the admiring praise of the friendly.”




It is divine philosophy alone, the spiritual and psychic blending of man with nature, which, by revealing the fundamental truths, that lie hidden under the objects of sense and perception, can promote a spirit of unity and harmony in spite of the great diversities of conflicting creeds.

Theosophy, therefore, expects and demands from the Fellows of the Society [1] a great mutual toleration and charity for each other’s shortcomings, ungrudging mutual help in the search for truths in every department of nature - moral and physical. And this ethical standard must be unflinchingly applied to daily life.[2]

Theosophy should not represent merely a collection of moral verities, a bundle of metaphysical ethics, epitomized in theoretical dissertations. Theosophy must be made practical; and it has, therefore, to be disencumbered of useless digressions, in the sense of desultory orations and fine talk.

Let every Theosophist only do his duty,  that which he can and ought to do, and very soon the sum of human misery, within and around the areas of every Branch of your Society, will be found visibly diminished. Forget SELF in working for others - and the task will become an easy and a light one for you. . . . . . . . .

Do not set your pride in the appreciation and acknowledgment of that work by others. Why should any member of the Theosophical Society [3], striving to become a Theosophist, put any value upon his neighbours’ good or bad opinion of himself and his work, so long as he himself knows it to be useful and beneficent to other people? Human praise and enthusiasm are short-lived at best; the laugh of the scoffer and condemnation of the indifferent looker-on are sure to follow, and generally to out-weigh the admiring praise of the friendly. Do not despise the opinion of the world, nor provoke it uselessly to unjust criticism. Remain rather as indifferent to the abuse as to the praise of those who can never know you as you really are, and who ought, therefore, to find you unmoved by either, and ever placing the approval or condemnation of your own Inner Self higher than that of the multitudes.

Those of you who would know yourselves in the spirit of truth, learn to live alone even amidst the great crowds which may sometimes surround you. Seek communion and intercourse only with the God within your own soul; heed only the praise or blame of that deity which can never be separated from your true self, as it is verily that God itself: called the HIGHER CONSCIOUSNESS.

Put without delay your good intentions into practice, never leaving a single one to remain only an intention - expecting, meanwhile, neither reward nor even acknowledgment for the good you may have done. Reward and acknowledgment are in yourself and inseparable from you, as it is your Inner Self alone which can appreciate them at their true degree and value. For each one of you contains within the precincts of his inner tabernacle the Supreme Court - prosecutor, defence, jury and judge - whose sentence is the only one without appeal; since none can know you better than you do yourself, when once you have learned to judge that Self by the never wavering light of the inner divinity - your higher Consciousness. Let, therefore, the masses, which can never know your true selves, condemn your outer selves according to their own false lights.  . . . . . .  

The majority of the public Areopagus is generally composed of self-appointed judges, who have never made a permanent deity of any idol save their own personalities - their lower selves; for those who try in their walk in life, to follow their inner light will never be found judging, far less condemning, those weaker than themselves. What does it matter then, whether the former condemn or praise, whether they humble you or exalt you on a pinnacle?

They will never comprehend you one way or the other. They may make an idol of you, so long as they imagine you a faithful mirror of themselves on the pedestal or altar which they have reared for you, and while you amuse or benefit them. You cannot expect to be anything for them but a temporary fetish, succeeding another fetish just overthrown, and followed in your turn by another idol. Let, therefore, those who have created that idol destroy it whenever they like, casting it down with as little cause as they had for setting it up.

Your Western Society can no more live without its Khalif [4] of an hour than it can worship one for any longer period; and whenever it breaks an idol and then besmears it with mud, it is not the model, but the disfigured image created by its own foul fancy and which it has endowed with its own vices, that Society dethrones and breaks.

Theosophy can only find objective expression in an all-embracing code of life thoroughly impregnated with the spirit of mutual tolerance, charity and brotherly love. Its Society, as a body [5], has a task before it which, unless performed with the utmost discretion, will cause the world of the indifferent and the selfish to rise up in arms against it.

Theosophy has to fight intolerance, prejudice, ignorance and selfishness, hidden under the mantle of hypocrisy. It has to throw all the light it can from the torch of Truth, with which its servants are entrusted. It must do this without fear or hesitation, dreading neither reproof nor condemnation.

Theosophy, through its mouthpiece, the Society, has to tell the TRUTH to the very face of LIE; to beard the tiger in its den, without thought or fear of evil consequences, and to set at defiance calumny and threats.

As an Association, it has not only the right, but the duty to uncloak vice and do its best to redress wrongs, whether through the voice of its chosen lecturers or the printed word of its journals and publications - making its accusations, however, as impersonal as possible. But its Fellows, or Members, have individually no such right.

Its followers have, first of all, to set the example of a firmly outlined and as firmly applied morality, before they get the right to point out, even in a spirit of kindness, the absence of a like ethic unity and singleness of purpose in other associations or individuals. No Theosophist should blame a brother, whether within or outside of the association; neither may he throw a slur upon another’s actions or denounce him, lest he himself lose the right to be considered a Theosophist. For, as such, he has to turn away his gaze from the imperfections of his neighbour, and centre rather his attention upon his own shortcomings in order to correct them and become wiser. Let him not show the disparity between claim and action in another, but, whether in the case of a brother, a neighbour or simply a fellow man, let him rather ever help one weaker than himself on the arduous walk of life.

The problems of true Theosophy and its great mission are, first, the working out of clear unequivocal conceptions of ethic ideas and duties, such as shall best and most fully satisfy the right and altruistic feelings in men; and second, the modelling of these conceptions for their adaptation into such forms of daily life, as shall offer a field where they may be applied with most equitableness.

Such is the common work placed before all who are willing to act on these principles. It is a laborious task, and will require strenuous and persevering exertion; but it must lead you insensibly to progress, and leave you no room for any selfish aspirations outside the limits traced.  . . . . . .

Do not indulge personally in unbrotherly comparison between the task accomplished by yourself and the work left undone by your neighbours or brothers. In the fields of Theosophy, none is held to weed out a larger plot of ground than his strength and capacity will permit him.

Do not be too severe on the merits or demerits of one who seeks admission among your ranks, as the truth about the actual state of the inner man can only be known to Karma, and can be dealt with justly by that all-seeing LAW alone.

Even the simple presence amidst you of a well-intentioned and sympathising individual may help you magnetically. . . . . . . You are the free volunteer workers on the fields of Truth, and as such must leave no obstruction on the paths leading to that field.

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

The degree of success or failure are the landmarks the masters have to follow, as they will constitute the barriers placed with your own hands between yourselves and those whom you have asked to be your teachers. The nearer your approach to the goal contemplated - the shorter the distance between the student and the Master.


NOTES:


[1] “Fellows of the Society”, that is, “members of the theosophical movement”.  The original theosophical society ceased to exist during the 1890s. (CCA)

[2] In his book “Man for Himself”, Erich Fromm writes:  

“It is impossible to understand man and his emotional and mental disturbances without understanding the nature of value and moral conflicts. The progress of psychology lies not in the direction of divorcing an alleged ‘natural’ from an alleged ‘spiritual’ realm and focusing attention on the former, but in the return to the great tradition of humanistic ethics which looked at man in his physico-spiritual totality, believing that man’s aim is to be himself and that the condition for attaining this goal is that man be for himself.” (“Man for Himself”, Erich Fromm, Holt, Rinehart and Winston Ltd., New York, USA, 1960, 254 pp., see p. 7.) (CCA)

[3] Id est, Theosophical Movement. (CCA)

[4] Khalif, or Caliph: a person who rules or commands. (CCA)

[5] Or its Movement and associations, as bodies. (CCA)

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Some Words on Daily Life” is reproduced from “Lucifer” magazine, London, UK, January 1888 edition, pp. 344-346. It can also be found in “The Collected Writings”, H. P. Blavatsky, T.P.H., volume VII, pp. 173-175. “Lucifer” is the ancient name of planet Venus. Since the Middle Ages, the meaning of the word has been distorted by ill-advised priests.   

The editor of the magazine, H. P. Blavatsky, wrote that “Some Words on Daily Life” was written by a Master of Wisdom. Mr. C. Jinarajadasa has published the same text, with a few differences and commentaries, as Letter 82 in “Letters from the Masters of the Wisdom”, Second Series, T.P.H., Adyar, India, 1925 / 1973.

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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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May 25, 2015

How to Find the Master

Useful Information For an Effective Search

Carlos Cardoso Aveline




Since time immemorial, the topic of searching for the Master is seen as sacred in Eastern traditions. In the West, too, every student of mystical traditions looks for a guide, a teacher, a safe guiding system.

In that regard, the timeless Pedagogy of classical theosophy says that one should calmly examine in the first place the following question:

“What exactly is the Master to be looked for?”

In practical terms, for every student who possesses a reasonable amount of common sense, the Master is fundamentally his or her own higher self, the immortal soul.

If the student can’t find the light in his own consciousness, it will be a loss of time to search for it in the outside world. To follow this or that personality is almost certainly worse than useless.

On the other hand, the truth-seeker who has adopted the right method acknowledges all beings as his masters. If the student knows how to learn, he takes lessons from everything and every situation, and does not get too dependent on any external source of knowledge.

The true teacher, on his turn, teaches the student how to learn. He helps his disciple to acquire knowledge in conscious and independent ways, by observing his interaction with all beings, including the ones who are not his friends.

The real master is, therefore, transcendent. He acts in every aspect of life. The most effective teacher is the voice of the silence, the center of peace and source of ethics situated in the heart of one’s soul.

The role of the Masters of the Wisdom which inspire the theosophical movement is to give helpful elements for each student to autonomously activate his own higher levels of intelligence and gradually transfer to them his main focus.

Taking into consideration these basic points, we can better observe and understand the following fragment from the Buddhist literature:

“Make a parchment with your abraded skin,
Make a pen with your bones,
Make your blood become ink
And write the teaching of the Master”. [1]

The image means that, in order to tread the path to wisdom, the pilgrim must leave aside the indulgence and love for comfort that are often present in the lower self. Thus one can express on the physical plane the substance of spiritual soul.

NOTE:

[1] From the book “Le Bouddha et le Bouddhisme”, by Maurice Percheron, Éditions du Seuil,  France, 1956, 192 pp., see p. 67. Brazilian edition: “Buda e o Budismo”, Maurice Percheron, Editora Agir, RJ, third edition, 1994, see p. 77.

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The above article was first published in Portuguese language under the title “Como Encontrar o Mestre”.  It also appeared in English in the April 2015 edition of “The Aquarian Theosophist”.

000

On the role of the esoteric movement in the ethical awakening of mankind during the 21st century, see the book “The Fire and Light of Theosophical Literature”, by Carlos Cardoso Aveline.  


Published in 2013 by The Aquarian Theosophist, the volume has 255 pages and can be obtained through Amazon Books.

000

May 24, 2015

On the Life of the Disciple

Self-Observation And
Self-Discipline In Altruistic Work 

Robert Crosbie


The image of an hourglass suggests the fact that every
minute counts and each second makes a difference in life



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The following paragraphs are reproduced from
pp. 120-126 of the volume “The Friendly Philosopher”,
by Robert Crosbie, Theosophy Co., Los Angeles, USA, 1946,
415 pp. We add three subtitles within square brackets.

(CCA)

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“True strength lies within and can only be
aroused and used by ceasing to think that
anything in particular of an external nature is
necessary for us, in the ordinary acceptation of the word.”
(Robert Crosbie)



The life of the Disciple must be one of constant watchfulness, not merely of others, but most of all of himself.

Our tendency often is to separate our Theosophical life from our personal life. But we cannot restrict our efforts upon ourselves to include only those relations directly connected with our active Theosophical work.

In our home life and in our ordinary communications there is more probability of our slacking down than in our public, student relations. The personality has had home life and connections as its paramount stamping-ground, and is more apt to give full play to its disposition there than elsewhere. And this play can be carried on, apart from what we might call inordinate self-assertion, in small and seemingly harmless methods of keeping itself in evidence - such as telling others in the home what one is going to do in regard to matters that are not necessary to communicate. When one comes to think of it - and thinking of these things is necessary - such actions are just the efforts of the personal nature to keep itself in evidence, trying to attract attention to oneself in any way - by speech, by action, by calls for sympathy, by assumed direction to others, by patronizing speech, and the thousand and one ways that the personality keeps on tap, by means of which he keeps alive; for when suppressed in one direction, he slyly emerges in some other way. “He” will do this as long as we leave any loop-hole for “him”.

The foregoing may seem very restrictive and difficult, but it really is not. The very feeling of “restriction” comes from the personality, not from the Ego. Some Disciples who were trying, and trying very hard, have been known to draw attention to the fact that they had overcome this and suppressed that - this is the same old personality with another suit of clothes on. So it is best always not to speak about one’s self, “either as to what he shall eat, drink, or wherewithal he shall be clothed”. Here are some good maxims, to apply:

“Never ask another to do for you what you can do for yourself”; “Know where your things are and get them for yourself when you need them”; “Do for others all you can in a nice way, but don’t expect others to do for you”; “You are valuable only when you are helpful, not when you require help.”

These will be found good, if we try them out. [1]

[Guarding Against Self-Deception]

The greatest thing most students have to guard against is self-deception. The versatility of lower Manas in this direction is beyond characterization. So we have to watch to see whether our ostensible motives are not cloaks for other underlying ones. While doing this, we should be serious but cheerful - not taking “ourselves” too seriously, but the task itself  as seriously as we can. By this course we will gain insight and strength, if we never despair, never doubt - and keep quiet, thoughtful and persistent, as well as cheerful, through it all. Nothing is as bad as we think it is, nor ever will be.

[Understanding Tolerance]

People sometimes charge others with intolerance. Perhaps this accusation arises, not on account of the statements actually made, but because of the tone and feeling within and behind them. One can usually state his belief and understanding, giving his reasons therefore, without arousing antagonism. This is a good thing to strive for. Tolerance is good, if understood rightly; but there are many strange ideas in regard to it.

Some think it to be intolerance to point out to others holding different views any errors of statement or fact. But Truth never yet agreed with error, nor does error agree with error; Truth agrees only with Truth.

So if we firmly believe, and are convinced by fact and reason, that we are in possession of Truth, it would be a false tolerance which would withhold it in the face of error.

Truth exists in the world for the purpose of destroying error. Error is dogmatic and does not court close investigation. Truth courts all and every possible investigation, and, calm in its certitude, examines everything upon its merits, tests it by the standard of Truth. The average mind of the day is still under the sway of superstition, of dogma and authority, and must remain so for some time to come. Meeting frequently those who have broken loose from old forms to engulf themselves and, what is worse, others in newer forms of the same old errors, we can but keep on the straight path we know, making a trail that these very ones may follow in the future. We need not be distressed that they cannot now see. Their time will come; for all these things are provided for in the vastness of time. We have but to go on with the Work.

[True Strength is Within]

At certain stages of his student life, the Disciple often feels that getting away alone somewhere with regularity helps him keep his psychic balance. Surely it is not a good thing for progress to depend upon externals for balance. Thinking so only perpetuates the dependence, and cannot bring that inner strength and perception which is so necessary. That dependence occasions dissatisfaction at the majority of externals, and demands periodical changes, none of which brings anything lasting. From all this a nervous tension is produced which is corrosive and destructive, occupies the mind with one’s fancied needs, and reacts injuriously on the body.

True strength lies within and can only be aroused and used by ceasing to think that anything in particular of an external nature is necessary for us, in the ordinary acceptation of the word.

We have our place and our duty to fulfil and perform; externals are our temporary opportunities, and we shall be wise to use these rightly. Furthermore, we will do well if we take the attitude that “we” are not necessary to others; that if we were gone they would miss us only for a comparatively short time, and that other persons and things would finally fully occupy their attention.

Only when we have arrived at that state - the sooner the better - where we stand self-centered in the true sense, and “upon nothing depend”, can we realize our inner nature, and be of the greatest service in the world of men. All of which means that our tendency is to exaggerate our importance; and that is distinctly separative and obstructive to real knowledge and effectiveness.

Effective Theosophical work cannot be done unless there are found persons in the world who can see the necessity for it and will fit themselves more and more to supply the need. That certain persons find such an opportunity is their karma, but what they do with the opportunity depends upon their realization of its importance. Once we see something of what the Theosophical Movement means to the world, we are necessary to it - not as persons - but because we see and do. The Movement is accelerated by us to the extent we work for it, and hindered to the extent that we, as it were, let it pull us along. Of course, if we were dead and gone, or not able to grasp the great fact of such existence as the Lodge of Masters and Their work in the world, the great Movement would be going on in such measure as others - perhaps not so wise nor capable in many ways - might afford. So, every student who will strive to make himself a fitting instrument is necessary to the work, to his full capacity, Soul, Mind and Body. It is a fact of tremendous significance to our personalities! If we are impressed with the significance of it, and accept “the fight that only fortune’s favored soldiers can obtain”, we will hesitate not at all, but seeing that the present basis of action in the world is wrong will work with it as far as we must, while ourselves thinking and acting from a very different basis. Our thoughts are our thoughts; our lives are our lives, and both are devoted to our work. Having put our hands to the plough, and seeing the field that needs cultivation, we may push on in confidence and faith. More power is needed? It will come, if we will just open those big hearts of ours and let “them” work.


NOTE:

[1] Up to this point the text is reproduced from pp. 120-121 of “The Friendly Philosopher”. The rest of the article is taken from pp. 124-126.

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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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