It is with sincere and profound regret-though
with no surprise, prepared as I am for years for such declarations-that
I have read in the Rochester Occult Word, edited by Mrs.
J. Cables, the devoted president of the T.S. of that place, her
joint editorial with Mr. W. T. Brown. This sudden revulsion of
feeling is perhaps quite natural in the lady, for she has never
had the opportunities given her as Mr. Brown has; and her feeling
when she writes that after "a great desire . . . to be put
into communication with the Theosophical Mahatmas we (they) have
come to the conclusion that it is useless to strain the Psychical
eyes towards the Himalayas . . . is undeniably shared by many
theosophists. Whether the complaints are justified, and also whether
it is the "Mahatmas" or theosophists themselves who
are to blame for it is a question that remains to be settled.
It has been a pending case for several years and will have to
be now decided, as the two complainants declare over their signatures
that "we (they) need not run after Oriental mystics, who
deny their ability to help us." The last sentence, in
italics, has to be seriously examined. I ask the privilege to
make a few remarks thereon.
To begin with, the tone of the whole article is that of a true
manifesto. Condensed and weeded of its exuberance of Biblical
expressions it comes to this paraphrastical declaration: "We
have knocked at their door, and they have not answered us; we
have prayed for bread, they have denied us even a stone."
The charge is quite serious; nevertheless, that it is neither
just nor fair-is what I propose to show.
As I was the first in the United States to bring the existence
of our Masters into publicity; and, having exposed the holy names
of two members of a Brotherhood hitherto unknown to Europe and
America (save to a few mystics and Initiates of every age), yet
sacred and revered throughout the East, and especially India,
causing vulgar speculation and curiosity to grow around those
blessed names, and finally leading to a public rebuke, I believe
it my duty to contradict the fitness of the latter by explaining
the whole situation, as I feel myself the chief culprit. It may
do good to some, perchance, and will interest some others.
Let no one think withal, that I come out as a champion or a defender
of those who most assuredly need no defense. What I intend, is
to present simple facts, and let after this the situation
be judged on its own merits. To the plain statement of our brothers
and sisters that they have been "living on husks," "hunting
after strange gods" without receiving admittance, I would
ask in my turn, as plainly: "Are you sure of having knocked
at the right door? Do you feel certain that you have not lost
your way by stopping so often on your journey at strange doors,
behind which lie in wait the fiercest enemies of those you were
searching for?" Our MASTERS are not
a jealous god"; they are simply holy mortals, nevertheless,
however, higher than any in this world, morally, intellectually
and spiritually. However holy and advanced in the science of the
Mysteries -they are still men, members of a Brotherhood, who are
the first in it to show themselves subservient to its time-honored
laws and rules. And one of the first rules in it demands that
those who start on their journey Eastward, as candidates
to the notice and favors of those who are the custodians of those
Mysteries, should proceed by the straight road, without stopping
on every side-way and path, seeking to join other "Masters"
and professors often of the Left Hand Science; that they should
have confidence and show trust and patience, besides several other
conditions to fulfill. Failing in all of this from first to last,
what right has any man or woman to complain of the liability of
the Masters to help them?
Truly " 'The Dwellers of the threshold' are within!"
Once that a theosophist would become a candidate for either chelaship
or favors, he must be aware of the mutual pledge, tacitly,
if not formally offered and accepted between the two parties,
and, that such a pledge is sacred. It is a bond of seven
years of probation. If during that time, notwithstanding the
many human shortcomings and mistakes of the candidate (save two
which it is needless to specify in print) he remains throughout
every temptation true to the chosen Master, or Masters
(in the case of lay candidates), and as faithful to the Society
founded at their wish and under their orders, then the theosophist
will be initiated into ______thence-forward allowed to communicate
with his guru unreservedly, all his failings, save this
one, as specified, may be overlooked: they belong to his future
Karma, but are left for the present, to the discretion
and judgment of the Master. He alone has the power of judging
whether even during those long seven years the chela will
be favoured regardless of his mistakes and sins, with occasional
communications with, and from, the guru. The latter thoroughly
posted as to the causes and motives that led the candidate into
sins of omission and commission is the only one to judge of the
advisability or inadvisability of bestowing encouragement; as
he alone is entitled to it, seeing that he is himself under the
inexorable law of Karma, which no one from the Zulu savage up
to the highest archangel can avoid and that he has to assume
the great responsibility of the causes created by himself.
Thus, the chief and the only indispensable condition required
in the candidate or chela on probation, is simply unswerving fidelity
to the chosen Master and his purposes. This is a condition sine
qua non; not as I have said, on account of any jealous feeling,
but simply because the magnetic rapport between the two once
broken, it becomes at each time doubly difficult to re-establish
it again; and that it is neither just nor fair, that the Masters
should strain their powers for those whose future course and final
desertion they very often can plainly foresee. Yet, how many of
those who, expecting as I would call it "favours by anticipation,"
and being disappointed, instead of humbly repeating mea culpa,
tax the Masters with selfishness and injustice? They will
deliberately break the thread of connection ten times in one year,
and yet expect each time to be taken back on the old lines! I
know of one theosophist-let him be nameless though it is hoped
he will recognize himself a quiet, intelligent young gentleman,
a mystic by nature, who, in his ill-advised enthusiasm and impatience,
changed Masters and his ideas about half a dozen times
in less than three years. First he offered himself, was accepted
on probation and took the vow of chelaship; about a year later,
he suddenly got the idea of getting married, though he had several
proofs of the corporeal presence of his Master, and had several
favours bestowed upon him. Projects of marriage, failing, he sought
"Masters" under other climes, and became an enthusiastic
Rosicrucian; then be returned to theosophy as a Christian mystic;
then again sought to enliven his austerities with a wife; then
gave up the idea and turned a spiritualist. And now having applied
once more "to be taken back as a chela" (I have his
letter) and his Master remaining silent-he renounced him altogether,
to seek in he words of the above manifesto-his old "Essenian
Master and to test the spirits in his name."
The able and respected editor of the Occult Word and her
Secretary are right, and have chosen the only true path in which
with a very small dose of blind faith, they are sure to encounter
no deceptions or disappointments. "It is pleasant for some
of us," they say, "to obey the call of the 'Man of Sorrows'
who will not turn any away, because they are unworthy or have
not scored up a certain percentage of personal merit." How
do they know? unless they accept the cynically awful and
pernicious dogma of the Protestant Church, that teaches the forgiveness
of the blackest crime, provided the murderer believes sincerely
that the blood of his "Redeemer" has saved him at
the last hour-what is it but blind unphilosophical faith?
Emotionalism is not philosophy; and Buddha devoted his long self-sacrificing
life to tear people away precisely from that evil breeding
superstition. Why speak of Buddha then, in the same breath?
The doctrine of salvation by personal merit, and self-forgetfulness
is the comer-stone of the teaching of the Lord Buddha. Both the
writers may have and very likely they did" hunt after strange
gods"; but these were not our MASTERS.
They have "denied Him thrice" and now propose "with
bleeding feet and prostrate spirit" to "pray that He
(Jesus) may take us (them) once more under his wing," etc.
The "Nazarene Master" is sure to oblige them so far.
Still they will be "living on husks" plus "blind
faith." But in this they are the best judges, and no one
has a Tight to meddle with their private beliefs in our Society;
and heaven grant that they should not in their fresh disappointment
turn our bitterest enemies one day.
Yet, to those Theosophists, who are displeased with the Society
in general, no one has ever made to you any rash promises; least
of all, has either the Society or its founders ever offered their
"Masters" as a chromo-premium to the best-behaved.
For years every new member has been told that he was promised
nothing, but had everything to expect only from his own personal
merit. The Theosophist is left free and untrammeled in his actions.
Whenever displeased alia tentanda via est no harm in
trying elsewhere; unless, indeed one has offered himself and is
decided to win the Masters' favors. To such especially, I now
address myself and ask: Have you fulfilled your obligations
and pledges? Have you, who would fain lay all the blame on the
Society and the Masters-the latter the embodiment of charity,
tolerance, justice and universal love-have you led the life
requisite, and the conditions required from one who becomes
a candidate? Let him who feels in his heart and conscience that
he has, that he has never once failed seriously, never doubted
his Master's wisdom, never sought other Master or Masters
in his impatience to become an Occultist with powers; and that
he has never betrayed his theosophical duty in thought or deed,-let
him, I say, rise and protest. He can do so fearlessly;
there is no penalty attached to it, and he will not even receive
a reproach, let alone be excluded from the Society-the broadest
and most liberal in its views, the most catholic of all the Societies
known or unknown. I am afraid my invitation will remain unanswered.
During the eleven years of the existence of the Theosophical Society
I have known, out of the seventy-two regularly accepted chelas
on probation and the hundreds of lay candidates-only three
who have not hitherto failed, and one only who had
a full success. No one forces anyone into chelaship; no promises
are uttered, none except the mutual pledge between Master and
the would-be chela. Verily, Verily, many are the called but few
are chosen-or rather few who have the patience of going to the
bitter end, if bitter we can call simple perseverance and singleness of purpose.
What about the Society, in general, outside of India? Who among
the many thousands of members does lead the life? Shall
anyone say because be is a strict vegetarian-elephants and
cows are that or happens to lead a celibate life, after a
stormy youth in the opposite direction; or because he studies
the Bhagavad-Gita or the "Yoga philosophy" upside
down, that he is a theosophist according to the Masters'
hearts? As it is not the cowl that makes the monk, so, no
long hair with a poetical vacancy on the brow are sufficient to
make of one a faithful follower of divine Wisdom. Look
around you, and behold our UNIVERSAL Brotherhood
so called! The Society founded to remedy the glaring evils of
Christianity, to shun bigotry and intolerance, cant and
superstition and to cultivate real universal love extending even
to the dumb brute, what has it become in Europe and America in
these eleven years of trial? In one thing only we have succeeded
to be considered higher than our Christian Brothers, who, according
to Lawrence Oliphant's graphic expression, "kill one another
for Brotherhood's sake and fight as devils for the love of God"-and
this is that we have made away with every dogma and are
now justly and wisely trying to make away with the last vestige
of even nominal authority. But in every other respect we are as
bad as they are: backbiting, slander, uncharitableness, criticism,
incessant war-cry and ding of mutual rebukes that Christian Hell
itself might be proud of! And all this, I suppose, is the Masters'
fault: THEY will not help those who help others
on the way of salvation and liberation from selfishness with
kicks and scandals? Truly we are an example to the world,
and fit companions for the holy ascetics of the snowy Range!
And now a few words more before I close. I will be asked: "And
who are you to find fault with us? Are you, who claim nevertheless
communion with the Masters and receive daily favors from Them;
Are you so holy, faultless, and so worthy?" To this I answer:
I AM NOT. Imperfect and
faulty is my nature; many and glaring are my shortcomings and
for this my Karma is heavier than that of any other Theosophist.
It is and must be so since for so many years I stand
set in the pillory, a target for my enemies and some friends also.
Yet I accept the trial cheerfully. Why? Because I know that I
have, all my faults notwithstanding, Master's protection extended
over me. And if I have it, the reason for it is simply this: for
thirty-five years and more, ever since 1851 that I saw any Master
bodily and personally for the first time, I have never
once denied or even doubted Him, not even in thought. Never
a reproach or a murmur against Him has escaped my lips, or entered
even my brain for one instant under the heaviest trials. From
the first I knew what I had to expect, for I was told that, which
I have never ceased repeating to others: as soon as one steps
on the Path leading to the Ashrum of the blessed Masters the
last and only custodians of primitive Wisdom and Truth his Karma,
instead of having to be distributed throughout his long life,
falls upon him in a block and crushes him with its whole weight.
He who believes in what he professes and in his Master, will stand
it and come out of the trial victorious; he who doubts,
the coward who fears to receive his just dues and tries to avoid
justice being done FAILS. He will not escape
Karma just the same, but he will only lose that for which he has
risked its untimely visits. This is why, having been so constantly,
so mercilessly slashed by my Karma using my enemies as unconscious
weapons, that I have stood it all. I felt sure that Master would
not permit that I should perish; that he would always appear at
the eleventh hour and so he did. Three times I
was saved from death by Him, the last time almost against my will;
when I went again into the cold, wicked world out of love for
Him, who has taught me what I know and made me what I am. Therefore,
I do His work and bidding, and this is what has given me the lion's
strength to support shocks physical and mental, one of which
would have killed any theosophist who would go on doubting of
the mighty protection. Unswerving devotion to Him who embodies
the duty traced for me, and belief in the Wisdom collectively,
of that grand, mysterious, yet actual Brotherhood of holy men is
my only merit, and the cause of my success in Occult philosophy.
And now repeating after the Paraguru my Master's MASTER the words He had sent as a message to those who wanted to make of
the Society a "miracle club" instead of a Brotherhood
of Peace, Love and mutual assistance "Perish rather, the
Theosophical Society and its hapless Founders," I say perish
their twelve years' labour and their very lives rather than that
I should see what I do today: theosophists, outvying political
"rings" in their search for personal power and authority;
theosophists slandering and criticizing each other as two rival
Christian sects might do; finally theosophists refusing to lead
the life and then criticizing and throwing slurs on the grandest
and noblest of men, because tied by their wise laws hoary with
age and based on an experience of human nature millenniums old those
Masters refuse to interfere with Karma and to play second fiddle
to every theosophist who calls upon Them and whether he deserves it or not.
Unless radical reforms in our American and European Societies
are speedily resorted to I fear that before long there will remain
but one centre of Theosophical Societies and Theosophy in the
whole world namely, in India; on that country I call all the
blessings of my heart. All my love and aspirations belong to my
beloved brothers, the Sons of Old Aryavarta the Motherland of
my MASTER.
Path, December, 1886
H. P. Blavatsky
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