Theosophy and The Theosophical Society
Theosophy and The Theosophical Society
Theosophy and The Theosophical Society
AND
THE
TOOSOPHICAL
SOCETY
BY CLAUDE BRAGDON
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THEOSOPHY
AND THE
THEOSOPHICAL
SOCIETY
BY
CLAUDE BRAGDON
ROCHESTER
THE MANAS PRESS
1909
6P
31 f
Copyright, igog
by
Claude Bragdon
OBJECTS OF THE
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
First To form a nucleus of the Uni'versal Brotherhood of
Humanity^ ivithout distinction of Race^ Creed, Sect, Caste, or
color,
To encourage
Second of the study Comparative Religion,
Philosophy,and Science,
Third To unexplained
investigate laivs of Nature and the
powers latent in man,
THEOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
\X7RITING in the early part of the nine-
teenth century, Schopenhauer declared
that the religious literature of India, then for
the time made known to European cul-
first
[ 5]
sacred writings themselves; second, through
the sympathetic interpretation of Eastern
ideals in terms intelligible to Western under-
standing by such well-qualified and articulate
converts as the late Sir Edwin Arnold, the
late Lafcadio Hearn, and Fielding Hall; third,
through the presentment of these ideals by
such ardent and accomplished Orientals as
the late Swami Vivikananda and Okakura
Kakutzo; and lastly, through the propaganda
of the Theosophical Society, at present headed
by Mrs. Annie Besant.
Of the above enumerated sources the most
important, in the opinion of the writer, is the
one mentioned. It is true that much of
last
the Theosophical literature that
of the
early days of the Society
is hard and dry:
[6]
dom": that Science of the Soul which forms
the basis, the inner content, of every great
world religion; that this wisdom is, in its com-
pleteness, the particular possession of beings
of exalted power, knowledge, and compassion,
who conserve, develop, and at certain times
and under certain conditions give it forth to
the world
though it is at all times accessi-
ble to the earnest seeker. One of these times
being ripe, and the conditions ready, it is as-
serted that these Elder Brothers of Mankind,
in pursuance of an anciently ordained and far-
reaching plan, have given this ancient wis-
dom to the Western world through the agency
of the Theosophical Society.
The history of modern Theosophy is so
crowded with schisms and scandals, that it
may not be out of place here to narrate the
manner in which the present writer overcame a
prejudice which doubtless also exists in the
minds of many, and arrived at his present
view of the Society's actors and activities
a view which later and larger knowledge has
but tended to confirm.
[7 ]
an untroubled intellectual brow, eyes dreamy
yet penetrating behind gold-bowed glasses,
a sweet mouth and a firm chin. It was a face
to which I took an instant liking, but the an-
nounced lectures did not attract me, for they
appeared to deal with matters with which I
had been long familiar through the theosophi-
cal literature I had read when it was first
given to the world in the eighties. I had been
interested in that literature, but in common
with many others I had been deterred from
following up my interest by the bad odor
which soon afterwards came to be attached
to the very word Theosophy by reason of the
internecine warfare of the Society, and of the
alleged exposure of Madame Blavatsky, its
founder, by a member of the London Society
for Psychical Research. The Theosophists I
happened to have known did not particularly
attract me; I had no means of testing the
validity of the claims made concerning the
giving of this alleged ancient wisdom to the
Western world; moreover,the reiterated insist-
ence upon mahatmas and their miracles, with so
little said about conduct of life, had seemed to
[8]
lectures it advertised, and gained my first
[9]
accommodating, but at the same time showed
a certain reserve, which I afterwards found
to be characteristic of the man, or perhaps of
his race. We were soon facing one another
from opposite armchairs in the club library,
for all the world like two friendly but wary
antagonists about to begin some absorbing
game for a high stake. It was, in point of
fact, a game which we were playing: part of
the great game of life. The stake was the
most precious a man can play for
the soul's
salvation; our cards were our knowledge of
life; if his proved higher I lost; but all para-
doxically, if I lost I won, he converted
for if
me to his way of thinking I asked nothing
better; but I believed that I held a good hand
(to carry out the figure), and I was keen to
play it for all it was worth. The opening be-
ing mine, I led from my long suit first my :
[lo]
in many superficial ways unfitted: making
mistakes, suffering from them, learning by
them, and finally delegating her task to an-
other (Mrs. Besant), whom she had trained
for the purpose. The dissensions which had
at various times rent the Society he seemed
to regard as the reverse of unfortunate, for
though they had interfered with the rapid
spread of theosophic knowledge, like certain
diseases they had purged the organism, in that
they had discouraged triflers and faddists, and
drawn together into a compact and workable
body those earnest and devoted persons who
perceived their mission to be not the forcing
of their teachings upon reluctant minds, but
the offering of them to those who felt the
need of them. The Society, as he phrased it,
existed for the sake of Theosophy, and not
Theosophy for the sake of the Society, that
being only the small, self-conscious center, as
it were, of a new stirring of the soul of the
[12]
spiritual message the gift of Asia to the
West.
He had few belongings, lived, so to speak,
in a trunk: a wanderer, an ascetic, yet I think
I never met a happier man. All consecrated
lives, no matter how hard, are happy, but the
secret of this man's happiness, I gathered, lay
in the fact that he was doing the work of
those whom he called the Masters
the
Men Behind. To him Theosophy had never
been that granite mountain of sublime thought
which I had hitherto conceived it, but a full,
active life of endeavor on various planes of
being, under the guidance and instruction of
a beloved master to whom he was linked by
the closest karmic ties, and who, in turn,
was in communication with those highly de-
veloped human beings, supreme in wisdom,
power, and goodness: the Elder Brothers of
Mankind.
In my more intimate talks with him, Mr.
Jinarajadasa made reference to the Masters
in amanner which betrayed the fact that these
mysterious personages occupied a large part
of the foreground of his consciousness. He
alone of all the people I had ever met ap-
peared to be possessed of knowledge concern-
ing them, but he was so shy of imparting it
that if the Masters really exist the place of
their residenceand the particulars of their
lives is was given
a jealously guarded secret. I
to understand that there were none in this
[13]
country, only one in Europe, and of the num-
ber in Asia two in particular were behind the
Theosophical movement, working through
the president of the Society and some few
properly qualified members.
The only logical explanation of the mys-
tery of the Masters and their place in human
evolution will appear to those accustomed
only to Western modes of thought, even more
incredible than the mystery itself, since it in-
volves the idea of reincarnation,
of the de-
velopment of individuality by means of suc-
cessive returns to earthly existence in different
bodies, an idea which, though familiar to
two-thirds of the human family to-day, though
of all but universal acceptance in ancient
times, though taught by Pythagoras and Plato,
and reiterated in various forms by such
modern philosophers as Schopenhauer and
Goethe, and such modern poets as Shelley,
Wordsworth, and Browning (to mention only
a few), yet finds no place in the excellently
arranged but rather austerely furnished cham-
ber of modern consciousness. Granted this
evolution through repeated existences, with
the appearance of free will, that is, the power
of choice, it is inevitable that some, by wiser
choosing and by the exercise of greater effort,
should outstrip their fellows in the long jour-
ney, for we observe the thing happening all
about us within the smaller compass of a
single generation. These early ripening intel-
[H]
ligences, when they have attained to a certain
proficiency in life (far above any proficiency
known to us), become, by occult means, aware
of one another, and then, helped mutually,
and by others still higher in the evolutionary
scale, their becomes increasingly
progress
rapid, until they transcend humanity as we
know it, altogether. Moved by compassion
for the upward struggling millions, some of
them, and these are the Masters, postpone
the bliss of their Nirvana, and band together
to become the teachers, the saviors, the con-
servers of the accumulated wisdom of man-
kind, and particularly that Theo-Sophia
Divine Wisdom
which may be defined as
the law according to which spirit manifests
itself, and the application of that law to the
[5]
built and carved it into their cathedrals; it
[i6]
know them but should we? We only see
and know that which in some sort we are.
"Man animates all he can," says Emerson,
"and only that which he animates."
sees
We are creatures of imperfection, our senses,
like our mind and our moral nature, respond
feebly and to but few of the vibrations of
which the universe is full, Theosophy
teaches that we are shut off from these in-
visible helpers by our own materiality, skep-
ticism, and irreverence. There never was a
time when they were not accessible to the
earnest seeker, and they are accessible to-day.
They are more eager to give than we can be
to receive, but the initial effort must come
from below: this is the law. Christ said
truly, "Seek and ye shall find."
Theosophy comes to the Western world
reiterating this message, after the lapse of
eighteen hundred years. Mr. Jinarajadasa
was once asked in my presence why, if, as
he alleged, the teachings of Theosophy were
practically identical with the teachings of
Christ, Theosophy should be promulgated in
a Christian country like our own. His an-
swer was that the teachings of Christ have
become so overlaid by Christian orthodoxy
of one sort and another, that a new state-
ment of the Ancient Wisdom in terms intel-
ligible to the modern understanding is desira-
able in this country just as it is in his own,
where the teachings of Buddha have stiffened
[17]
into an orthodoxy of a different sort. He re-
minded the questioner that the Christ and
the Buddha both came to break down the
orthodoxy of their day. The Ancient Wis-
dom never changes: the change is in the form
alone. Its glowing truths, like the brilliants
of a kaleidoscope, from time to time in obe-
dience to some cyclic law fall into a different
order and so make a different pattern. The
present happens to be one of these transitional
periods: the moment of the turning of the
cosmic kaleidoscope.
What is this Ancient Wisdom, which, ante-
dating recorded history, is yet the New
Thought of the present hour? The answer to
that question would require, instead of the
paragraph which I shall devote to it, a sep-
arate essay a volume, an entire literature;
yet the answer lies dormant in the mind or
everyone : it is the knowledge and the love
[i8]
in detail, crossing all the t's and dotting all
[19]
ity toconcentrate all the powers of his mind
upon the subject in hand. Similarly, if a
man's aim is to know and to develop his
higher Self, he uses the same instrument: the
mind, and the same method: concentration;
but because his Self is within and behind the
mind he must turn the mind inward, and this
requires a great deal of practice. From our
childhood upward we have been taught only
to pay attention to things external, never to
pay attention to things internal. To turn the
mind, as it were, inside, stop it from going
outside, and then to concentrate all its pow-
ers and throw them upon the mind itself in
order that it may know its own nature, is very
hard work. Though I do not recommend the
experiment, for it might prove disturbing and
perhaps dangerous, I venture to assert that
any one who would eliminate from his diet
all products of ferment and decay, and for
[20]
ence. Language is always the correlative of
something; is it reasonable to suppose that
this Ancient Wisdom is all a fabric in the air,
that the centuries of effort which the Hin-
dus have devoted to the religious life have
been utterly barren of result? The argument
so often advanced, with such show of rea-
son, that the present condition of India is
not favorable to the high claims made for its
ancient religion, I have no space to answer
here, since it involves the karma of nations,
their growth and decay. It is only necessary
to remember that what is sown here is often
reaped afar; the spiritual seed sown on the
banks of the Nile and of the Ganges,
and in Palestine, so long ago, we are
about to reap here and now. For with
the simultaneous return to incarnation of
certain groups of souls, the collective hu-
man mind is rapidly entering new regions of
consciousness, and this will result in the devel-
opment of new faculties, organs, powers, in
the same slow, orderly, and healthy fashion
that those which we have already won have
been developed in the past. Every flower bed
has its early blossoms, on every tree some
fruit ripens and falls before the rest; and be-
cause the fruit of the human tree ripens
unequally, certain of those in whom these
faculties, organs, powers, are already partially
operative, are producing (for the most part
ignorantly, blindly, automatically) phenomena
[21]
so strange, so disturbing, so outside ordinary
experience, and so counter to some of the
materialistic of matter, that most
theories
scientific men have been disposed to deny
them, ignore them, or confine them to the
realm of the merely pathological. This last
has been rendered easy by reason of the fact
that just as the windfall is generally found to
have a worm prematurely de-
at its core, the
veloped human being is apt to be neurotic or
otherwise unhealthy,
the body being not
yet evolved which is able to withstand the
shock of these etheric forces. Those scientists
who have shown a disposition to examine,
understand, and classify the phenomena of
the so-called subconscious
to chart those
regions into which the mind can plunge but into
which the senses cannot as yet penetrate
find themselves handicapped, first, by the ab-
sence of any rational hypothesis to confirm or
to confute; and second, by the inadequacy for
their purpose of existing machinery and
methods since it is clear that the subjective
cannot be attained by the same instruments
and methods of study which discover the ob-
jective. Lacking the first, they have thus far
only succeeded in accumulating a mass of suf-
ficiently well authenticated, but confused and
often conflicting evidence; lacking the second,
they have seized upon the medium, the
clairvoyant, the hypnotized subject as a
means to gain their end, ignorant or un-
[22]
mindful of the harmfulness and danger of
this method.
Theosophy the Ancient Wisdom ans-
wers both these needs the first, by furnishing
:
[23]
Theosophy, because it is both a religious
science and a scientific religion, meets the
spiritual needs of the present time. These ap-
pear to be three in number : first, since this
is a practical and scientific age, religion, in
order to be a power in the world, must be
practical and scientific. Theosophy is both
these things and at no sacrifice of that mys-
tical quality which is the dynamic force at
the root of every religion. As has been said,
" it restores to the world the science of the
spirit, teaching man to know the spirit as
himself, and the mind and body as his ser-
vants." Second, the need is felt in all the
churches of some unifying, co-ordinating
force. Theosophy is such a force because it
embraces "that body of truths which forms
the basis of all religions, and which cannot
be claimed as the exclusive possession of any.
It illuminates the scriptures and the doctrines
of religion by unveiling their hidden mean-
ings, thus justifying them at the bar of intel-
ligence, as they are ever justified in the eyes
of intuition. " Third, a religion which meets
the needs of the day must embody as its car-
dinal principle the idea of human brotherhood.
Buddhism and Christianity alike embody this
Theosophy takes it directly into the
idea, but
realm of the actual by showing that the prin-
ciple of individuation whereby each man
appears to himself a separate entity is a tem-
porary state, and in the manner of an illusion
[24]
possible to be transcended: that the many
selves are in reality One Self, differing only
in the degree of their realization of this soli-
darity.
As new ferment of psychic
a result of the
life our materialistic civilization, the vast
in
reservoir of Theosophic knowledge and ex-
perience is being tapped in several different
places at once, and the Spiritualist, the Chris-
tian Scientist, the devotee of the so-called
New Thought, each bathes in his little stream
which to his newly awakened perception
seems to him ocean wide. The first com-
munes with the spirits of his dead, or that
which he believes to be such; the second
denies the existence of matter and puts
at naught the achievements of medical
and surgical science; the third meditates
on his solar plexus, and breathing through
alternate nostrils, feels new potencies stir-
ring within him. All incur dangers the
nature of which only the trained occultist
knows, and another of the missions of
it is
[25]
able to instruct the spiritualistic medium that
by relinquishing himself to the obsession of
any wandering spirit of the Astral plane
he is enervating his will and forging new
fetters for already earth-bound spirits, delay-
ing their normal evolution and his own. He
tells the Christian Scientist that by his in-
sistence upon the truth that all matter is a
manifestation of spirit, and vitalized by it, he
fails to do justice to the complementary truth,
that spirit while clothed in the matter of the
physical plane of its nature and
partakes
incurs its and must be dealt with
limitations,
according to the laws and operations of that
plane. He tells the New Thought devotee
that while meditation on theandsolar plexus
restraint of the breath mayim- for a time
prove the health and develop a low form of
psychism, without a corresponding moral and
intellectual control they degenerate into Hatha
Yoga practices which are fraught with danger.
In fine, Theosophy teaches that there are
no short cuts to health and happiness and
knowledge: that the way to liberation is by
doing one's duty and following one's con-
science, but it also teaches that without omit-
ting an essential step of the journey, by right
thinking and economy and concentration of
effort, the normal rate of advance may be
enormously accelerated.
While Theosophy concerns itself with psy-
chic phenomena, so-called, since it cog-
[26]
nizes vast realms of invisible matter, each
teeming w^ith its appropriate life realms
which man, in his normal evolution, comes
to know one by one and master just as he is
already coming to know and master the
matter of the physical plane, on which his
consciousness for the most part dwells it
nevertheless does not base its claim to con-
sideration upon "tests," upon "manifesta-
tions" as Spiritualism does. The inception
of the Theosophical movement was attended
with phenomena of a so-called miraculous
nature as every great religious movement
has been
in order to attract the attention
of the world. This is no longer necessary,
and the later policy of the Society has been
to bring the philosophical, humanitarian and
ethical aspects of the Ancient Wisdom
most prominently into view. I am in-
formed, and I have abundant reason to
believe that many of those following The-
osophic lines of training are in the pos-
session and the daily exercise of powers
which might pass among the uninformed as
miraculous, but as pupils of occultism are
pledged to use their powers neither for gain
nor for display it is small wonder that out-
siders do not see evidences of them.
The fact that the Theosophic movement
is so largely a feministic one has often elici-
ted a sneer from the unthinking, but what
spiritual movement of the present day has
[^7]
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