The All
Getting Started in Theosophy
(And its all
Free Stuff )
People outside
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
1831 – 1891
____________________
The Result
of Theosophical Study
From
A Textbook
of Theosophy
By
C
“Members of the Theosophical
Society study these truths and Theosophists endeavor to live them”. What manner
of men then is the true Theosophist in consequence of his knowledge? What is
the result in his daily life of all this study?
Finding that there is a Supreme Power who is directing the course of evolution,
and that He is all-wise and all-loving, the Theosophist sees that everything
which exists within this scheme must be intended to further its progress. He
realizes that the scripture which tells us that all things are working together
for good, is not indulging in a flight of poetic fancy or voicing a pious hope,
but stating a scientific fact. The final attainment of unspeakable glory is an
absolute certainty for every son of man, whatever may be his present condition;
but that is by no means all. Here and at this present moment he is on his way
toward the glory; and all the circumstances surrounding him are intended to
help and not to hinder him, if only they are rightly understood. It is sadly
true that in the world there is much of evil and of sorrow and of suffering;
yet from the higher point of view the Theosophist sees that, terrible though
this be, it is only temporary and superficial, and is all being utilized as a
factor in the progress.
When in the days of his ignorance he looked at it from its own level it
was almost impossible to see this; while he looked from beneath at the under
side of life, with his eyes fixed all the time upon some apparent evil, he
could never gain a true grasp of its meaning. Now he raises himself above it to
the higher levels of thought and consciousness, and looks down upon it with the
eye of the spirit and understands it in its entirety, so he can see that in
very truth all is well – not that all will be well at some remote period, but
that even now at this moment, in the midst of incessant striving and apparent
evil, the mighty current of evolution is still flowing, and so all is well
because all is moving on in perfect order toward the final goal.
Raising his consciousness thus above the storm and stress of worldly
life, he recognizes what used to seem to be evil, and notes how it is
apparently pressing backwards against the great stream of progress; but he also
sees that the onward sweep of the divine law of evolution bears the same
relation to this superficial evil as does the tremendous torrent of Niagara to
the fleckings of foam upon its surface. So while he sympathizes deeply with all
who suffer, he yet realizes what will be the end of that suffering, and so for
him despair or hopelessness is impossible. He applies this consideration to his
own sorrows and troubles, as
well as to those of the world, and therefore one great result of his
Theosophy is a perfect serenity – even more than that, a perpetual cheerfulness
and joy.
For him there is an utter absence of worry, because in truth there is
nothing left to worry about, since he knows that all must be well. His higher
Science makes him a confirmed optimist, for it shows him that whatever of evil
there may be in any person or in any movement, it is of necessity temporary,
because it is opposed to the resistless stream of evolution; whereas whatever
is good in any person or in any movement must necessarily be persistent and
useful, because it has behind it the omnipotence of that current, and therefore
it must abide and it must prevail.
Yet it must not for a moment be supposed that because he is so fully
assured of the final triumph of good he remains careless or unmoved by the
evils which exist in the world around him. He knows that it is his duty to
combat these to the utmost of his power, because in doing this he is working
upon the side of the great evolutionary force, and is bringing nearer the time
of its ultimate victory. None will be more active than he in labouring for the
good, even though he is absolutely free from the feeling of helplessness and
hopelessness which so
often oppresses those who are striving to help their fellowmen.
Another most valuable result of his theosophical study is the absence of
fear. Many people are constantly anxious or worried about something or other;
they are fearing lest this or that should happen to them, lest this or that
combination may fail, and so all the while they are in a condition of unrest;
and most serious of all for many is the fear of death. For the Theosophist the
whole of this feeling is entirely swept away. He realizes that great truth of
reincarnation. He knows that he has often before laid aside physical bodies,
and so he sees that death is no more than sleep – that just as sleep comes in
between our days of work and gives us rest and refreshment, so between these
days of labor here on earth, which we call lives, there comes a long night of
astral and heavenly life to give us rest and refreshment and to help us on our
way.
To the Theosophist death is simply the laying aside for a time of this
robe of flesh. He knows that it is his duty to preserve the bodily vesture as
long as possible, and gain through it all the experience he can; but when the
time comes for him to lay it down he will do so thankfully, because he knows
that the next stage will be a much pleasanter one than this.
Thus he will have no fear of death, although he realizes that he must
live his life to the appointed end, because he is here for the purpose of
progress, and that progress is the one truly momentous matter. His whole
conception of life is different; the object is not to earn so much money, not
to obtain such and such a position; the one important thing is to carry out the
Divine Plan. He knows that for this he is here, and that everything else must
give way to it.
Utterly free also is he from any religious fears or worries or troubles.
All such things are swept aside for him, because he sees clearly that progress
toward the highest is the Divine Will for us, that we cannot escape from that
progress, and that whatever comes in our way and whatever happens to us is
meant to help us along that line; that we ourselves are absolutely the only
people who can delay our advance. No longer does he trouble and fear about
himself. He simply goes on and does the duty which comes nearest in the best
way that he can, confident that if he does this all will be well for him
without his perpetual worrying. He is satisfied quietly to do his work and to
try to help his fellows in the race, knowing that the great divine Power behind
will press him onward slowly and steadily, and do for him all that can be done,
so long as his face is set steadfastly in the right direction, so long as he
does all he reasonably can.
Since he knows that we are all part of one great evolution and all
literally the children of one father, he sees that the universal brotherhood of
humanity is no mere poetical conception, but a definite fact; not a dream of
something which is to be in the dim distance of Utopia, but a condition
existing here and now.
The certainty of this all-embracing fraternity gives him a wider outlook
upon life and a broad impersonal point of view from which to regard everything.
He realizes that the true interests of all are in fact identical, and that no
man can ever make real gain for himself at the cost of loss or suffering to
some one else. This is not to him an article of religious belief, but a
scientific fact proved to him by his study. He sees that since humanity is
literally a whole, nothing which injures one man can ever be really for the
good of any other, for the harm done influences not only the doer but also
those who are about him.
He knows that the only true advantage for him is that benefit which he
shares with all. He sees that any advance which he is able to make in the way
of spiritual progress or development is something secured not for himself alone
but for others. If he gains knowledge or self-control, he assuredly acquires
much for himself, yet he takes nothing away from any one else, but on the
contrary he helps and strengthen others. Cognizant as he is of the absolute
spiritual unity of humanity, he knows that, even in this lower world, no true
profit can be made by one man which is not made in the name of and for the sake
of humanity; that one man’s progress must be a lifting of the burden of all
others; that one man’s advance in spiritual things means a very slight yet not
imperceptible advance to humanity as a whole; that every one who bears
suffering and sorrow nobly in his struggle toward the light is lifting a little
of the heavy load of the sorrow and suffering of his brothers as well.
Because he recognizes this brotherhood not merely as a hope cherished by
despairing men, but as a definite fact following in scientific series from all
other facts; because he sees this as an absolute certainty, his attitude
towards all those around him changes radically. It becomes a posture ever of
helpfulness, ever of the deepest sympathy, for he sees that nothing which clashes
with their higher interests can be the right thing for him to do, or can be
good for him in any way.
It naturally follows that he becomes filled with the widest possible
tolerance and charity. He cannot but be always tolerant, because his philosophy
shows him that it matters little what man believes, so long as he is a good man
and true. Charitable also he must be, because his wider knowledge enables him
to make allowances for many things which the ordinary man does not understand.
The standard of the Theosophist as to right and wrong is always higher
than that of the less instructed man, yet he is far gentler than the latter in
his feeling towards the sinner, because he comprehends more of human nature. He
realizes how the sin appeared to the sinner at the moment of its commission,
and so he makes more allowance than is ever made by the man who is ignorant of
all this.
He goes further than tolerance, charity, sympathy; he feels positive
love towards mankind, and that leads him to adopt a position of watchful helpfulness. He feels that every
contact with others is for him an opportunity, and the additional knowledge
which his study has brought to him enables him to give advice or help in almost
any case which comes before him. Not that he is perpetually thrusting his
opinions upon other people. On the contrary, he observes that to do this is one
of the commonest mistakes made by the uninstructed. He knows that argument is
foolish waste of energy, and therefore he declines to argue. If anyone desires
from him explanation or advice he is more than willing to give it, yet he has
no sort of wish to convert anyone else to his own way of thinking.
In every relation of life this idea of helpfulness comes into play, not
only with regard to his fellowmen but also in connection with the vast animal
kingdom which surrounds him. Units of this kingdom are often brought into close
relation with man, and this is for him an opportunity of doing something for
them. The Theosophist recognizes that these are also his brothers, even though
they may be younger brothers, and that he owes a fraternal duty to them also –
so to act and so to think that his relation with them shall be always for their
good and never for their harm.
Pre-eminently and above all, this Theosophy is to him a doctrine of
common sense. It puts before him, as far as he can at present know them, the
facts about God and man and the relations between them; then he proceeds to
take these facts into account and to act in relation to them with ordinary reason
and common sense. He regulates his life according to the laws of evolution
which it has taught him, and this gives him a totally different standpoint, and
a touchstone by which to try everything – his own thoughts and feelings, and
his own actions first of all, and then those things which come before him in
the world outside himself.
Always he applies this criterion: Is the thing right or wrong, does it
help evolution or does it hinder it? If a thought or a feeling arises within
himself, he sees at once by this test whether it is one he ought to encourage.
If it be for the greatest good of the greatest number then all is well; if it
may hinder or cause harm to any being in its progress, then it is evil and to
be avoided.
Exactly the same reason holds good if he is called upon to decide with
regard to anything outside himself. If from that point of view a thing be a
good thing, then he can consciously support it; if not, then it is not for him.
For him the question of personal interest does not come into the case at
all. He thinks simply of the good of evolution as a whole.
This gives him a definite foothold and clear criterion, and removes from
him altogether the pain of indecision and hesitation. The Will of the Deity is
man’s evolution; whatever therefore helps on that evolution must be good;
whatever stands in the way of it and delays it, that thing must be wrong, even
though it may have on its side all the weight of public opinion and immemorial
tradition.
Knowing that the true man is the ego and not the body, he sees that it
is the life of the ego only which is really of moment, and that everything
connected with the body must unhesitatingly be subordinated to those higher
interests. He
recognizes that this earth life is given to him for the purpose of
progress, and that that progress is the one important thing. The real purpose
of his life is the unfoldment of his powers as an ego, the development of his
character. He knows that there must be evolvement not only of the physical body
but also of the mental nature, of the mind, and of the spiritual perceptions.
He sees that nothing short of absolute perfection is expected of him in
connection with this development; that all power with regard to it is in his
own hands; that he has everlasting time before him in which to attain this
perfection, but the sooner it is gained the happier and more useful will he be.
He recognizes his life as nothing but a day at school, and his physical
body as a temporary vesture assumed for the purpose of learning through it. He
knows at once that this purpose of learning lessons is the only one of any real
importance, and that the man who allows himself to be diverted from that
purpose by any consideration whatever is acting with inconceivable stupidity.
To him the life devoted exclusively to physical objects, to the acquisition of
wealth or fame, appears the merest child’s play – a senseless sacrifice of all
that is really worth having for the sake of a few moment’s gratification of the
lower part of his nature. He “sets his affection on things above and not on
things of the earth”, not only because he sees this to be the right course of
action, but because he realizes so clearly the valuelessness of these things of
earth. He always tries to take the higher point of view, for he knows that the
lower is utterly unreliable – that the lower desires and feelings gather round
him like a dense fog, and make it impossible for him to see anything clearly
from that level.
Whenever he finds a struggle going on within him he remembers that he
himself is the higher, and that this which is the lower is not the real self,
but merely an uncontrolled part of one of its vehicles. He knows that though he
may fall a thousand times on the way toward his goal, his reason for trying to
reach it remains just as strong after the thousandth fall as it was in the
beginning, so that it would not only be useless but unwise and wrong to give
way to despondency and hopelessness.
He begins his journey upon the road of progress at once – not only
because he knows that it is far easier for him now than it will be if he leaves
the effort until later, but chiefly because if he makes the endeavor now and
succeeds in achieving some progress, if he rises thereby to some higher level,
he is in a position to hold out a helping hand to those who have not yet
reached even that step on the ladder which he has gained. In that way he takes
part, however humble it may be, in the great divine work of evolution.
He knows that he has arrived at his present position only by a slow
process of growth, and so he does not expect instantaneous attainments of
perfection. He sees how inevitable is the great law of cause and effect, and
that when he once grasps the working of that law he can use it intelligently,
in regard to mental and moral development, just as in the physical world we can
employ for our own assistance those laws of nature the action of which we have
learnt to understand.
Understanding what death is, he knows that there can be no need to fear
it or to mourn over it, whether it comes to himself or to those whom he loves.
It has come to them all often before, so there is nothing unfamiliar about it.
He sees death simply as a promotion from a life which is more than half
physical to one which is wholly superior, so for himself he unfeignedly
welcomes it; and even when it comes to those whom he loves, he recognizes at
once the advantage for them, even though he cannot but feel a pang of regret
that he should be temporarily separated from them so far as the physical world
is concerned. But he knows that the so-called dead are near him still, and that
he has only to cast off for a time his physical body in sleep in order to stand
side by side with them as before.
He sees clearly that the world is one, and that the same divine laws
rule the whole of it, whether it be visible or invisible to physical sight. So
he has no feeling of nervousness or strangeness in passing from one part of it
to another, and no feeling of uncertainty as to what he will find on the other
side of the veil. He knows that in that higher life there opens before him a
splendid vista of opportunities both for acquiring fresh knowledge and for
doing useful work; that life away from this dense body has a vividness and a
brilliancy to which all earthly enjoyment is as nothing; and so through his
clear knowledge and calm confidence the power of the endless life shines out
upon all those around him.
Doubt as to his future is for him impossible, for just as by looking
back on the savage he realizes that which he was in the past, so by looking to
the greatest and wisest of mankind he knows what he will be in the future. He
sees an unbroken chain of development, a ladder of perfection rising steadily
before him, yet with human beings upon every step of it, so that he knows that
those steps are possible for him to climb. It is just because of the
unchangeableness of the great law of cause and effect that he finds himself
able to climb that ladder, because, since the law works always in the same way,
he can depend upon it and he can use it, just as he uses the laws of Nature in
the physical worlds.
His knowledge of this law brings to him a sense of perspective, and
shows him that if something comes to him, it comes because he has deserved it
as a consequence of action which he has committed, of words which he has
spoken, of thought to which he has given harbor in previous days or in earlier
lives. He comprehends that all affliction is of the nature of the payment of a
debt, and therefore when he has to meet with the troubles of life he takes them
and uses them as a lesson, because he understands why they have come and is
glad of the opportunity which they give him to pay off something of his
obligations.
Again, and yet another way, does he take them as an opportunity, for he
sees that there is another side to them if he meets them in the right way. He
spends no time in bearing prospective burdens. When trouble comes to him he
does not aggravate it by foolish repining but sets himself to endure so much of
it as is inevitable, with patience and fortitude. Not that he submits himself
to it as a fatalist might, for he takes adverse circumstances as an incentive
to such development as may enable him to transcend them, and thus out of
long-past evil he brings forth a seed of future growth. For in the very act of
paying the outstanding debt he develops qualities of courage and resolution
that will stand him in good stead through all the ages that are to come.
He is distinguishable from the rest of the world by his perennial
cheerfulness, his undaunted courage under difficulties, and his ready sympathy
and helpfulness; yet he is at the same time emphatically a man who takes life
seriously, who recognizes that there is much for everyone to do in the world,
and that there is no time to waste. He knows with utter certainty that he not
only makes his own destiny but also gravely affects that of others around him,
and thus he perceives how weighty a responsibility attends the use of his
power.
He knows that thoughts are things and that it is easily possible to do
great harm or great good by their means. He knows that no man liveth to
himself, for his every thought acts upon others as well; that the vibrations
which he sends forth from his mind and from his mental nature are reproducing
themselves in the minds and the mental natures of other men, so that he is a
source either of mental health or of mental ill to all with whom he comes in
contact.
This at once imposes upon him a far higher code of social ethics than
that which is known to the outer world, for he knows that he must control not
only his acts and his words, but also his thoughts, since they may produce
effects more serious and more far-reaching than their outward expression in the
physical world. He knows that even when a man is not in the least thinking of
others, he yet inevitably affects them for good or evil. In addition to this
unconscious action of his thought upon others he also employs it consciously for
good. He sets currents in motion to carry mental help and comfort to many a
friend, and in this way he finds a whole new world of usefulness opening before
him.
He ranges himself ever on the side of the higher rather than the lower
thought, the nobler rather than the baser. He deliberately takes the optimistic
rather than the pessimistic view of everything, the helpful rather than the
cynical, because he knows that to be fundamentally the true view. By looking
continually for the good in everything that he may endeavour to strengthen it,
by striving always to help and never to hinder, he becomes ever of greater use
to his fellow-men, and is thus in his small way a co-worker with the splendid
scheme of evolution. He forgets himself utterly and lives but for the sake of
others, realizing himself as a part of that scheme; he also realizes the God
within him, and learns to become ever a truer expression of Him, and thus in
fulfilling God’s will he is not only blessed himself, but becomes a blessing to
all.
______________________
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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
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-MrG9xrROyQ&t=25s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4CHHIs0Ekg&t=34s
A
Theosophical View of Human Imagination
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D2aKJ-SRX_4
Addiction to Mental Stimulation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tcHAK3RbIjA&t=7s
Reincarnation
is Pointless without the Role of Karma
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCZ2nHWDcsw
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