The All
Getting Started in Theosophy
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People outside
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
1831 – 1891
____________________
Reincarnation
From
A Textbook
of Theosophy
By
C
This life of the ego in his own world, which is so glorious and so fully
satisfying for the developed man, plays but a very small part in the life of
the ordinary person, for in his case the ego has not yet reached a sufficient
stage of development to be awake in his causal body. In obedience to the law of
nature he has withdrawn into it, but in doing so he has lost the sensation of
vivid life, and restless desire to feel this once more pushes him in the
direction of another descent into matter.
This is the scheme of evolution appointed for man at the present stage –
that he shall develop by descending into grosser matter, and then ascend to
carry back into himself the result of the experiences so obtained. His real
life, therefore, covers millions of years, and what we are in the habit of
calling a life is only one day of this greater existence. Indeed, it is in
reality only a small part of one day; for a life of seventy years in the
physical world is often succeeded by a period of twenty times that length spent
in higher spheres.
Every one of us has a long line of these physical lives behind him, and
the ordinary man has a fairly long line still in front of him. Each of such
lives is a day at school. The ego puts upon himself his garment of flesh and
goes forth into the school of the physical world to learn certain lessons. He
learns them, or does not learn them, or partially learns them, as the case may
be, during his school day of earth life; then he lays aside the vesture of the
flesh and returns home to his own level for rest and refreshment. In the
morning of each new life he takes up again his lesson at the point where he
left it the night before. Some lessons he may be able to learn in one day,
while others may take him many days.
If he is an apt pupil and learns quickly what is needed, if he obtains
an intelligent grasp of the rules of the school, and takes the trouble to adapt
his conduct to them, his school life is comparatively short, and when it is
over he goes forth fully equipped into the real life of the higher worlds for
which all this is only a preparation. Other egos are duller boys who do not
learn so quickly; some of them do not understand the rules of the school, and
through that ignorance are constantly breaking them; others are wayward, and
even when they see the rules they cannot at once bring themselves to act in
harmony with them. All of these have a longer school life, and by their own
actions they delay their entry upon the real life of the higher worlds.
For this is a school in which no pupil ever fails; every one must go on
to theend. He has no choice as to that; but the length of time which he will
take in qualifying himself for the higher examinations is left entirely to his
owndiscretion. The wise pupil, seeing that school life is not a thing in
itself, but only a preparation for a more glorious and far wider life, endeavors
to comprehend as fully as possible the rules of his school, and shapes his life
in accordance with them as closely as he can, so that no time may be lost in
the learning of whatever lessons are necessary. He co-operates intelligently
with the Teachers, and sets himself to do the maximum of work which is possible
for him, in order that as soon as he can he may come of age and enter into his
kingdom as a glorified ego.
Theosophy explains to us the laws under which this school life must be
lived, and in that way gives a great advantage to its students. The first great
law is that of evolution. Every man has to become a perfect man, to unfold to
the fullest degree the divine possibilities which lie latent within him, for
that unfoldment is the object of the entire scheme so far as he is concerned.
This law of evolution steadily presses him onward to higher and higher
achievements.
The wise man tries to anticipate its demands – to run ahead of the
necessary curriculum, for in that way he not only avoids all collision with it,
but he obtains the maximum of assistance from its action. The man who lags
behind in the race of life finds its steady pressure constantly constraining
him – a pressure which, if resisted, rapidly becomes painful. Thus the laggard
on the path of evolution has always the sense of being hunted and driven by
fate, while the man who intelligently co-operates is left perfectly free to
choose the direction in which he shall move, so long as it is onward and
upward.
The second great law under which this evolution is taking place is the
law of cause and effect. There can be no effect without its cause, and every
cause must produce its effect. They are in fact not two but one, for the effect
is really part of the cause, and he who sets one in motion sets the other also. There is in Nature no
such idea as that of reward or punishment, but only of cause and effect. Any
one can see this in connection with mechanics or chemistry; the clairvoyant
sees it equally clearly with regard to the problems of evolution.
The same law obtains in the higher as in the lower worlds; there, as
here, the angle of reflection is always equal to the angle of incidence. It is
a law of mechanics that action and reaction are equal and opposite. In the
almost infinitely finer matter of the higher worlds the reaction is by no means
always
instantaneous; it may sometimes be spread over long periods of time, but
it returns inevitably and exactly.
Just as certain in its working as the mechanical law in the physical
world is the higher law, according to which the man who sends out a good
thought or does a good action receives good in return, while the man who sends
out an evil thought or does an evil action receives evil in return with equal
accuracy – once more, not in the least as a reward or punishment administered
by some external will, but simply as the definite and mechanical result of his
own activity. Man has learnt to appreciate a mechanical result in the physical
world, because the reaction is usually almost immediate and can be seen by him.
He does not invariably understand the reaction in the higher worlds because
that takes a wider sweep, and often returns not in this physical life, but in
some future one.
The action of this law affords the explanation of a number of the
problems of ordinary life. It accounts for the different destinies imposed upon
people, and also for the differences in the people themselves. If one man is
clever in a certain direction and another is stupid, it is because in a
previous life the clever man has devoted much effort to practice in that
particular direction, while the stupid man is trying it for the first time. The
genius and the precocious child are examples not of the favoritism of some
deity but of the result produced by previous lives of application. All the
varied circumstances which surround us are the result of our own actions in the
past, precisely as are the qualities of which we find ourselves in possession.
We are what we have made ourselves, and our circumstances are such as we have
deserved.
There is, however, a certain adjustment or apportionment of these
effects. Though the law is a natural law and mechanical in its operation, there
are nevertheless certain great Angels who are concerned with its
administration.
They cannot change by one feather weight the amount of the result which
follows upon any given thought or act, but they can within certain limits
expedite or delay its action, and decide what form it shall take.
If this were not done there would be at least a possibility that in his
earlier stages the man might blunder so seriously that the results of his
blundering might be more than he could bear. The plan of the Deity is to give
man a limited amount of freewill; if he uses that small amount well, he earns
the right to a little more next time; if he used it badly, suffering comes upon
him as the result of such evil use, and he finds himself restrained by the
result of his previous actions. As the man learns how to use his free will,
more and more of it is entrusted to him, so that he can acquire for himself
practically unbounded freedom in the direction of good, but his power to do
wrong is strictly restricted. He can progress as rapidly as he will, but he
cannot wreck his life in his ignorance. In the earlier stages of the savage
life of primitive man it is natural that there should be on the whole more of
evil than of good, and if the entire result of his actions came at once upon a
man as yet so little developed, it might well crush the newly evolved powers
which are still so feeble.
Besides this, the effects of his actions are varied in character. While
some of them produce immediate results, others need much more time for their
action, and so it comes to pass that as the man develops he has above him a
hovering cloud of undischarged results, some of them good, some of them bad.
Out of this mass (which we may regard for the purposes of analogy much as
though it were a debt owing to the powers of nature) a certain amount falls due
in each of his successive births; and that amount, so assigned, may be thought
of as the man’s destiny for that particular life.
All that it means is that a certain amount of joy and a certain amount
of suffering are due to him, and will unavoidably happen to him; how he will
meet this destiny and what use he will make of it, that is left entirely to his
own option. It is a certain amount of force which has to work itself out.
Nothing can prevent the action of that force, but its action may always be
modified by the application of a new force in another direction, just as is the
case in mechanics. The result of past evil is like any other debt; it may be
paid in one large check upon the bank of life – by some one supreme
catastrophe; or it may be paid in a number of smaller notes, in minor troubles
and worries; in some cases it may even be paid in the small change of a vast
number of petty annoyances. But one thing is quite certain – that, in some form
or other, paid it will have to be.
The conditions of our present life, then, are absolutely the result of
our own action in the past; and the other side of that statement is that our
actions in this life are building up conditions for the next one.
A man who finds himself limited either in powers or in outer
circumstances may not always be able to make himself or his conditions all that
he would wish in this life; but he can certainly secure for the next one
whatever he chooses.
Man’s every action ends not with himself, but invariably affects others
around him. In some cases this effect may be comparatively trivial, while in
others it may be of the most serious character. The trivial results, whether
good or bad are simply small debits or credits in our account with Nature; but
the greater effects, whether good or bad, make a personal account which is to
be settled with the individual concerned.
A man who gives a meal to a hungry beggar, or cheers him by a kindly
word, will receive the result of his good action as part of a kind of general
fund of Nature’s benefits; but one who by some good action changes the whole
current of another man’s life will assuredly have to meet that same man again
in a future life, in order that he who has been benefited may have the
opportunity of repaying the kindness that has been done to him.
One who causes annoyance to another will suffer proportionately for it
somewhere, somehow, in the future, though he may never meet again the man whom
he has troubled; but one who does serious harm to another, one who wrecks his life
or retards his evolution, must certainly meet his victim again at some later
point in the course of their lives, so that he may have the opportunity, by
kindly and self-sacrificing service, of counterbalancing the wrong which he has
done. In short, large debts must be paid personally, but small ones go into the
general fund.
In every nation there exist an almost infinite number of diverse
conditions, riches and poverty, a wide field of opportunities or a total lack
of them, facilities for development or conditions under which development is
difficult or well-nigh impossible. Amidst all these infinite possibilities the
pressure of the law of evolution tends to guide the man to precisely those
which best suit his needs at the stage at which he happens to
be.
But the action of this law is limited by that other law of which we
spoke, the law of cause and effect. The man’s actions in the past may not have
been such as to deserve (if we may put it so) the best possible opportunities;
he may have set in motion in his past certain forces the inevitable result of
which will be to produce limitations; and these limitations may operate to
prevent his receiving that best possible of opportunities, and so as the result
of his own actions in the past he may have to put up with the second-best. So
we may say that the action of the law of evolution, which if left to itself
would do the very best possible for every man, is restrained by the man’s own
previous actions.
An important feature in that limitation – one which may act most
powerfully for good or for evil – is the influence of the group of egos with
which the man has made definite links in the past – those with whom he has
formed strong ties of love or hate, of helping or of injury – those souls whom
he must meet again because of connections made with them in days of long ago.
His relation with them is a factor which must be taken into consideration
before it can be determined where and how he shall be reborn.
The will of the Deity is man’s evolution. The effort of that nature
which is an expression of the Deity is to give the man whatever is most
suitable for that evolution; but this is conditioned by the man’s deserts in
the past and by the links which he has already formed. It may be assumed that a
man descending into incarnation could learn the lessons necessary for that life
in any one of a hundred positions. From half of these or more than half he may
be debarred by the consequences of some of his many and varied actions in the
past.
Among the few possibilities which remain open to him, the choice of one
possibility in particular may be determined by the presence in that family or
in that neighborhood of other egos upon whom he has a claim for services
rendered, or to whom he in his turn owes a debt of love.
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The Empath; A Theosophical View
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_bPDlYfGT_Y&t=22s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FOi9Jy7cuQQ&t=5s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy-quIQxVxI&t=23s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3zUUZQSYFs
Clearing Emotional Debris from Your Home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0DsoHI0MMc&t=20s
Will
Life Threatening Global Problems Replace War?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K8oayLKWQi4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWTioaIUgPQ&t=17s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGgxoVItpVc&t=30s
Causes of Immediate Reincarnation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HSUd_w7x4M&t=35s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJxYtUwRjJk
Trapped in the Wheel of Samsara.
Reincarnation without Spiritual Progress
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hNhPHUgpFiQ&t=16s
Reincarnation
& Population Increase
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBfRamMv_F0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-duEHD86aY
The Benefits of Making a
Stand
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j4d7CEX00t0&t=7s
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A
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2aKJ-SRX_4
Addiction to Mental Stimulation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcHAK3RbIjA&t=7s
Reincarnation
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCZ2nHWDcsw
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