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A Treatise on White Magic - Rule Fifteen - The New Age Groups and Training |
The second great test of the sensitive disciple is fear of
failure. This is based on past experience (for all have failed), on a realization of the
immediate need and opportunity, and on an acute appreciation of individual limitation and
deficiency. It is the result oft times of a response to the lowered spiritual and physical
vitality of the race today. Never before has there been a time when fear of failure has
more widely haunted the human family. Another cause of this reaction is to be found in the
fact that mankind as a whole and for the first time in the history of the
race, senses the vision and has therefore a truer sense of relative values than ever
before. Men know themselves to be divine, and this is becoming increasingly a universal
realization. Hence the present unrest and revolt from trammeling conditions. It is however
a serious waste of time for a disciple to ponder upon a failure or to fear failing. There
is no such thing as failure; there can only be loss of time. That in itself is serious in
these days of dire world need, but the disciple must inevitably some day make good and
retrieve his past failures. I need not point out that we learn by failure, for that is a
well known truth, and is known as such by all who are attempting to live as souls. Nor
need the disciple sorrow over the failures, apparent or real, of his fellow disciples. The
sense of time produces glamor and disappointment, whereas the work goes truly
[635] forward and a lesson learnt by failure acts as a safeguard for the future. Thus it
leads to rapid growth. An honest disciple may be momentarily glamored, but in the long
run nothing can really deter him. What are a few brief years in a comparative cycle of
aeons? What is a second of time in a span of man's allotted seventy years? To the
individual disciple they appear most important; to the onlooking soul, they seem as
nothing at all. For the world perhaps, a temporary failure may connote delay in expected
help, but that again is brief, and help will come from other sources, for the Plan goes
unerringly forward. May I in all earnest offer to you the paradoxical injunction to work with utter earnestness, and yet at the same time to refuse to work with such earnestness, and not to take yourself so earnestly? Those who stand on the inner side and study the work of the world aspirants today see an almost pitiful distress of individual deficiency, a sustained and strenuous effort on their part to "make themselves what they ought to be", and yet at the same time a distressing lack of proportion, and no sense of humor whatsoever. I urge upon you to cultivate both these qualities. Do not take yourself so seriously, and you will find that you will release yourself for freer and more potent work. Take the Plan seriously and the call to serve, but waste not time in constant self-analysis. Therefore the immediate goal for all aspiring disciples at this time can be seen to be as follows:
We have merged our first point as to the immediate goal and the steps to be taken to reach it with our second point as to conduct and the factors which must be eliminated. It only remains therefore to point out the penalties which will overtake the probationary disciple and the trained worker should he give way to the glamor and to the faults inherent in his nature and permit them to hinder his work and come between him and the visioned goal. |
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