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A Treatise on White Magic - Rule One - The Way of the Disciple |
This brings me to the consideration of the seventh point I
made in my earlier analysis of Rule I. I said, "The soul's meditation is rhythmic and
cyclic in its nature as is all else in the cosmos. The soul breathes and its form lives
thereby". The rhythmic nature of the soul's meditation must not be overlooked in the
life of the aspirant. There is an ebb and flow in all nature, and in the tides of the
ocean we have a wonderful picturing of an eternal law. As the aspirant adjusts himself to
the tides of the soul life he begins to realize that there is ever a flowing in, a
vitalizing and a stimulating which is followed by a flowing out as sure and as inevitable
as the immutable laws of force. This ebb and flow can be seen functioning in the processes
of death and incarnation. It can be seen also over the entire process of a man's lives,
for some lives can be seen to be apparently static and uneventful, slow and inert from the
angle of the soul's experience, whilst others are vibrant, full of experience and of
growth. This should be remembered by all of you who are workers when you are seeking to
help others to live rightly. Are they on the ebb or are they being subjected to the flow
of the soul energy? Are they passing through a period of temporary quiescence, preparatory
to greater impulse and effort, so that the work to be done must be that of strengthening
and stabilizing in order to enable them to "stand in spiritual being", or are
they being subjected to a cyclic inflow of forces? In this case the worker must seek to
aid in the direction and utilization of the energy which (if misdirected) will eventuate
in wrecked lives but which when wisely utilized will produce a full and fruitful service. The above thoughts can also be applied by the student of humanity to the great racial cycles and much of interest will be discovered. Again, and of more vital [63] importance to us, these cyclic impulses in the life of the disciple are of a greater frequency and speed and forcefulness than in the life of the average man. They alternate with a distressing rapidity. The hill and valley experience of the mystic is but one way of expressing this ebb and flow. Sometimes the disciple is walking in the sunlight and at other times in the dark; sometimes he knows the joy of full communion and again all seems dull and sterile; his service is on occasion a fruitful and satisfying experience and he seems to be able to really aid; at other times he feels that he has naught to offer and his service is arid and apparently without results. All is clear to him some days and he seems to stand on the mountain top looking out over a sunlit landscape, where all is clear to his vision. He knows and feels himself to be a son of God. Later, however, the clouds seem to descend and he is sure of nothing, and seems to know nothing. He walks in the sunlight and is almost overpowered by the brilliance and heat of the solar rays, and wonders how long this uneven experience and the violent alternation of these opposites is to go on. Once however that he grasps the fact he is watching the effect of the cyclic impulses and the effect of the soul's meditation upon his form nature, the meaning becomes clearer and he realizes that it is that form aspect which is failing in its response, and reacting to energy with unevenness. He then learns that once he can live in the soul consciousness and attain that "high altitude" (if I might so express it) at will, the fluctuations of the form life will not touch him. He then perceives the narrow-edged razor path which leads from the plane of physical life to the soul realm, and finds that when he can tread it with steadiness it leads him out of the ever changing world of the senses into the clear light of day and into the world of reality. The form side of life then becomes to him simply a [64] field for service and not a field of sensuous perception. Let the student ponder upon this last sentence. Let him aim to live as a soul. Then the cyclic impulses, emanating from the soul, are known to be impulses for which he himself is responsible and which he has sent forth; he then knows himself to be the initiating cause and is not subject to the effects. Looked at from another angle we get two factors, the breath and the form which the breath energizes and drives into activity. Upon careful study, it becomes apparent that we have, for aeons of time, identified ourselves with the form; we have emphasized the effects of the imparted activity but have not understood the nature of the breath, nor known the nature of the One who breathes. Now in our work we are concerning ourselves with that One Who, breathing rhythmically, will drive the form into right action and right control. This is our objective and our goal. A right understanding is necessary nevertheless if we are to appreciate intelligently our task and its effects. |
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