2. Form as used by the Occultist and the Mystic August
8, 1920
The subject of this letter today will interest you for we are to take up form as used
by the occultist and the mystic.
It might be of value to us if we first differentiated with care between the two types.
I would begin by a statement of fact. The mystic is not necessarily an occultist, but the
occultist embraces the mystic. Mysticism is but one step on the path of occultism. In this
solar system - the system of love in activity - the path of least resistance for the
majority is that of the mystic, or the path of love and devotion. In the next solar system
the path of least resistance will be that which we now understand as the occult path. The
mystic path will have been trodden. Wherein lies the difference between these two types?
- The mystic deals with the evolving life; the occultist deals with the form.
- The mystic deals with the God within; the occultist with God in outer manifestation.
- The mystic works from the center to the periphery; the occultist reverses the process.
- The mystic mounts by aspiration and intensest devotion to the God within or to the
Master Whom he recognizes; the occultist attains by the recognition of the law in
operation and by the wielding of the law which binds matter and conforms it to the needs
of the indwelling life. In this manner the occultist arrives at those Intelligences Who
work with the law, till he attains the fundamental Intelligence Himself. [148]
- The mystic works through the Rays of Love, Harmony and Devotion, or by the path of the
second, the fourth and the sixth rays. The occultist works through the Rays of Power,
Activity, and Ceremonial Law, or the first, the third and the seventh. Both meet and blend
through the development of mind, or through the fifth Ray of Concrete Knowledge (a
fragment of cosmic intelligence), and on this fifth ray the mystic is resolved into the
occultist and works then with all the rays.
- By finding the kingdom of God within himself and by the study of the laws of his own
being, the mystic becomes proficient in the laws which govern the universe of which he is
a part. The occultist recognizes the kingdom of God in nature or the system and regards
himself as a small part of that greater whole, and therefore governed by the same laws.
- The mystic works as a general rule under the department of the World Teacher, or the
Christ, and the occultist more frequently under that of the Manu, or Ruler, but when both
types have passed through the four minor rays in the department of the Lord of
Civilization, then a completion of their development may be seen, and the mystic becomes
the occultist and the occultist includes the characteristics of the mystic. To make it
more simple for general comprehension: after initiation the mystic is merged in the
occultist for he has become a student of occult law; he has to work with matter, with its
manipulation and uses, and he has to master and control all lower forms of manifestation,
and learn the rules whereby the building devas work. Before initiation the mystic path
might be expressed by the term, Probationary Path. Before the occultist can manipulate
wisely the matter of the solar system he must have mastered the laws that govern the
microcosm, and even though he is naturally [149] on the occult path yet he will still have
to find the God within his own being before he can safely venture on the path of occult
law.
- The mystic seeks to work from the emotional to the intuitional, and thence to the Monad,
or Spirit. The occultist works from the physical to the mental, and thence to the atma or
Spirit. One works along the line of love; the other along the line of will. The mystic
fails in the purpose of his being - that of love demonstrated in activity - unless
he coordinates the whole through the use of intelligent will. Therefore he has to become
the occultist.
- The occultist similarly fails and becomes only a selfish exponent of power working
through intelligence, unless be finds a purpose for that will and knowledge by an
animating love which will give to him sufficient motive for all that he attempts.
I have attempted to make clear to you the distinction between these two groups, as the
importance of the matter is great when studying meditation. The form used by the two types
is entirely different and when seen clairvoyantly is very interesting. |