I pray you to give me, in your
Calcutta paper, space enough to reply to the mendacious comments of one
of our religious neighbors upon the Theosophical Society. The Indian
Christian Herald, in the number of April 4th (which unhappily
has just now reached my eye), with a generosity peculiar to religious papers,
filled two pages with pious abuse of our Society as a body. I gather from
it, moreover, that The Friend of India had previously gone out of
its way to vilify the Society, since the former paper observes that:
The Theosophical
Society has merited the epithets employed about it by The Friend of
India.
To my everlasting confusion be it said, that I am guilty of the crime
of not only never reading, but also of never having so much as laid my eyes
upon that last named veteran organ. Nor can any of our Theosophists be charged
with abusing the precious privilege of reading the missionary journals,
a considerable time having elapsed since each of us was weaned, and relinquished
milk-and-water pap. Not that we shirk the somniferous task under the spur
of necessity. Were not the proof of our present writing itself sufficient,
I need only cite the case of the Bombay missionary organ, The Dnyanodaya,
which, on the 17th ult., infamously libelled us, and on the 25th was forced
by Colonel Olcotts solicitor, Mr. Turner, to write an ample apology,
in order to avoid a criminal prosecution for defamation of character. We
regret now to see that while the truly good and pious writer of the Herald
was able to rise to the level of Billingsgate, he would not (or dared not?)
climb to the height of actionable slander. Truly prudence is a great virtue!
Confronted, as we all have so often been, with the intolerant bigotry religious
"zeal" they call it and puerile anathemas of the clerical
"followers of the meek and lowly Jesus," no Theosophist is surprised
to find the peas from the Herald-shooter rattling against
his armour. It adds to the clatter, but no one is mortally hurt. And, after
all, how natural that the poor fellows who try to administer spiritual food
to the benighted heathen much after the fashion of the Strasburg goose-fatteners,
who thrust balls of meal down the throats of the captive birds, unmasticated,
to swell their livers should shake at the intrusion of Europeans who
are ready to analyze for the heathen these scripture-balls they are asked
to grease with blind faith and swallow without chewing! People like us,
who would have the effrontery to claim for the "heathen" the same
right to analyze the Bible as the Christian clergy claim to analyze
and even to revile the sacred Scriptures of other people, must of course
be put down. And the very Christian Herald tries his hand. It says:
Let us without any
bias or prejudice reflect . . . about the Theosophical
Society . . . such a mortal degradation of persons [the Buddhist, Âryan,
Jain, Parsî, Hebrew and Mussulman Theosophists, included? who can
see nothing good in the Bible . . . [and who ought to remember
that the Bible is not only a blessed book, but our book [!.
The latter piece of presumptuous conceit cannot be allowed to pass unnoticed.
Before I answer the preceding invectives mean to demand a clear definition
of this last sentence, "our Book." Whose
Book? The Heralds? "Our" must mean that; for the
seven thick volumes of the Speakers Commentary on the Old Testament* show that the possessive pronoun and the singular
noun in question can no longer be used by Christians when speaking of the
Bible. So numerous and glaring have been the mistakes
and mis-translations detected by the forty divines of the Anglican
Church, during their seven years revision of the Old Testament
that the London Quarterly Review (No. 294, April, 1879), the
organ of the most extreme orthodoxy, is driven in despair to say:
The time has certainly
passed when the whole Bible could be practically
esteemed a single Book miraculously communicated in successive portions
from heaven, put into writing no doubt by human hands, but at the dictation
of the divine spirit.
So we see beyond question that if it is anybodys "Book"
it must be The Indian Christian Heralds; for,
in fact, its editors add:
We feel it to be no more a collection
of books, but the book.
But here is another bitter pill for your contemporary. It says in a pious
gush:
The words which had come from the
prophets of the despised Israel have been the life-blood of the worlds devotion.
But the inexorable quarterly reviewer, after reluctantly abandoning to
the analytical scalpels of Canon Cook and Bishop Harold Browne the Mosaic
miracles whose supernatural character is no longer affirmed, but they
are allowed to be "natural phenomena" turns to the pretended
Old Testament prophecies of Christ, and sadly says:
In the poetical [psalms and songs
and the prophetical books especially the number of corrections is enormous.
And he shows how the commentators upon Isaiah and the other so-called
prophets have reluctantly admitted that the time-worn verses which have
been made to serve as predictive of Christ have in truth no such meaning.
He says:
It requires an effort to
break the association, and to realize how much less they [the prophecies must have meant at first
to the writers themselves. But it is just this that the critical
expositor is bound to do . . . for this some courage is required, for the
result is apt to seem like a disenchantment for the worse, a descent to
an inferior level, a profanation of the paradise in which ardent souls
have found spiritual sustenance and delight.
(Such "souls" as the Herald editors?) What wonder,
then, that the explosion of these seven theological torpedoes as the
seven volumes of the Speakers Commentary may truly be called should
force the reviewer into saying:
To us, we confess, every attempt
to place the older Scriptures on the same supreme pinnacle on which the
New Testament of later Revelation stands, is doomed to failure.
The Herald is welcome to what is left of its "Book."
How childishly absurd it was then of the Herald to make a whole
Society the scapegoat for the sins of one individual! It is now universally
known that the Society comprises fellows of many nationalities and many
different religious faiths, and that its Council is made up of the representatives
of these faiths; yet the Herald endorses the falsehood that the Societys
principles are "a strange compound of Paganism and Atheism," and
its creed "a creed as comprehensive as it is
incomprehensible." What other answer does this calumny require than
the fact that our President has publicly declared that it had "no creed
to offer for the worlds acceptance,"
and that in art. viii of the Societys Rules, appended
to the printed Address, in an enumeration of the plans of the Society, the
first paragraph says that it aims:
To keep alive in man his belief
that he has a soul, and the Universe a God.
If this is a "compound of Paganism and Atheism, then
let the Herald make the most of it.
But the Society is not the real offender; the clerical stones are thrown
into my garden. The Heralds quotation of au expression used
by me, in commenting upon a passage of Sir John Kays Sepoy War,
making The Friend of India and Co. primarily responsible for
that bloody tragedy, shows the whole animus. It was I who said (see Indian
Spectator, March 2nd) that:
India owes everything to the
British Government and not to Christianity.
i.e., to missionaries. I may have lost my
"senses outright," as The Indian Christian Herald politely
remarks, but I think I have enough left to see through the inane sophistries
which they make do duty for arguments.
We have only to say to the Herald the following: (1) It is just
because we do live in "an age of enlightenment and progress,"
in which there is (or should be) room for every form of belief, that such
Augustinian tirades as the Heralds are out of place. (2) We
have not a
Mortal hatred for Christianity
and its Divine Founder,
for the tendency of the Society is to emancipate its fellows from
all hatred or preference for any one exoteric form of religion i.e.,
with more of the human than divine element in it over another (see
rules); neither can we hate a "Founder" whom the majority of us
do not believe to have ever existed. (3) To "retain" a "reverence
for the Bible" one must at some time have had it, and
if our own investigations had not long since convinced us that the Bible
was no more the "Word of God" than half a dozen other holy
books, the present conclusions of the Anglican divines at least as
far as the Old Testament is concerned would have removed the
last vestige of doubt upon that point. And besides sundry American clergymen
and bishops we have among our Fellows a vicar of the Church of England,
who is one of its most learned antiquarians. (4) The assertion that the
Pure monotheism of the
Vedas is a pure myth.
is a pure falsehood, beside being an insult to Max Müller and other
Western Orientalists, who have proved the fact; to say nothing of that great
Âryan scholar, preacher and reformer, Svamî Dyanand Sarasvati.
"Degraded humanity" that we are, there must be indeed "something
radically wrong and corrupt" in our moral nature,"
for, we confess to joy at seeing our Society constantly growing from accessions
of some of the most influential laymen of different countries. And it moreover
delights us to think that when we reach the bottom of the ditch, we will
have as bedfellows half the Christian clergy, if the Speakers Commentary
makes as sad havoc with the divinity of the New Testament as
it has with that of the Old. Our Indian Christian Pecksniff
in righteous indignation exclaims:
How they managed to sink so
low in the scale of moral and spiritual being must be a sadly interesting study
for metaphysicians.
Sad, indeed; but sadder still to reflect that unless the editors of The
Indian Christian Herald are protected by post-mortem fire-insurance
policies, they are in danger themselves of eternal torment.
Whosoever shall say to his brother, Thou fool, shall be in danger Of
hell fire, says Lord Jesus, "the Desire of nations," in Matthew,
v. 22, unless dreadful thought! this verse should be also
found a mistranslation.
H. P. BLAVATSKY
Corresponding Secretary of the Theosophical Society.
_____
[N.B. We insert the above letter with great reluctance.
The subject matter of the letter is not fit for our columns, and we have
no sympathy with those who attack the religious creed of other men. The
matter of fact is, a Calcutta paper attacks a body of men, and the latter
are thrown at a great disadvantage if they are not allowed an opportunity
by another paper of replying to the attack. It is from that feeling
alone that we have given place to the above letter. ED. A. B. Patrika.
[From The Amrita Bazar Patrika, June 13th, 1879.
H. P. Blavatsky
* The Bible according to the authorized version (A.D. 1611), with
an explanatory and critical commentary and a revision of the translation,
by bishops and other clergy of the Anglican Church. Edited by F. C. Cook,
M.A., Canon of Exeter, Preacher at Lincolns Inn, Chaplain in ordinary
to the Queen. Vols. i.-vi. The Old Testament. London, 1871-1876.
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The Theosophical Society and its Aim. Address delivered
by Colonel H. S. Olcott, at the Framji Cowasji Hall, Bombay, March 23rd,
1879.
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