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A Treatise on White Magic - Rule Eleven - Salvation from our Thought-Forms |
Let us remember first of all that no aspirant, no matter how
sincere and devoted, is free from faults. Were he free, he would be an adept. All
aspirants are still selfish, still prone to temper and to irritability, still subject to
depression and even at times to hatred. Oft that temper and hatred may be aroused by what
we call just causes. Injustice on the part of others, cruelty to human beings and to
animals, and the hatreds and viciousness of their fellow men do arouse in them
corresponding reactions, and cause them much suffering and delay. One thing must ever be
remembered. If an aspirant evokes hatred in an associate, if he arouses him to temper, and
if he meets with dislike and antagonism, it is because he himself is not entirely
harmless; there are still in him the seeds of trouble, for it is a law in nature that we
get what we give, and produce reactions in line with our activity, be it physical,
emotional or mental. There are certain types of men who do not come under this category. When a man has reached a stage of high initiation, the case is different. The seed ideas he seeks to convey, the work he is empowered to do, the pioneering enterprise he is endeavoring to carry forward, may - and often do - call forth from those who sense not the beauty of his cause and the rightness of the truth he enunciates, a hatred and a fury which causes him much trouble and for which he is not personally responsible. This antagonism comes from the reactionaries and the devotees of the race and it should be remembered that it is largely impersonal even though focused on him as the representative of an idea. But with these high souls I deal not, but with students of the Ageless Wisdom who are learning not only that they seldom think, but that when they do they are oft thinking [484] wrongly, for they are forced into a thought activity by reactions which have their seat in their lower nature, and are based on selfishness and lack of love. There are three lessons which every aspirant needs to learn:
With the aspirant, however, who is still learning to think, the problem is different. He is still prone to use thought matter to embody his mistaken apprehension of the real ideas; he is still apt to express his likes and dislikes through the power of thought; he is still inclined to use the mind stuff to make possible his personality desires. To this every sincere aspirant will bear witness. Much concern is being felt among many of you as to the guarding of thoughts and the protection of formulated ideas. Some thoughts are ideas, clothed in mental matter and keep their habitat on the plane of thought matter. Such are the abstract conceptions and the scarcely sensed facts of the inner occult or mystic life that pass through the mind of the thinker. They are not so difficult to guard, for their vibrations are so high and light that few people have the power to clothe them adequately in mental matter, and those few are so very scarce that the risk of such statements being unwisely promulgated is not very great. |
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