Our magazine is only four numbers old, and
already its young life is full of cares and trouble. This is all
as it should be; i.e., like every other publication, it
must fail to satisfy all its readers, and this is only in the
nature of things and the destiny of every printed organ. But what
seems a little strange in a country of culture and free thought
is that Lucifer should receive such a number of anonymous,
spiteful, and often abusive letters. This, of course, is but
a casual remark, the waste-basket in the office being the only
addressee and sufferer in this case; yet it suggests strange truths
with regard to human nature.1
Sincerity is true wisdom, it appears, only to the mind of the
moral philosopher. It is rudeness and insult to him who regards
dissimulation and deceit as culture and politeness, and holds
that the shortest, easiest, and safest way to success is to let
sleeping dogs and old customs alone. But, if the dogs are obstructing
the highway to progress and truth, and Society will, as a rule,
reject the wise words of (St.) Augustine, who recommends that
"no man should prefer custom before reason and truth,"
is it a sufficient cause for the philanthropist to walk out of,
or even deviate from, the track of truth, because the selfish
egoist chooses to do so? Very true, as remarked somewhere by Sir
Thomas Browne, that not every man is a proper champion for the
truth, nor fit to take up the gauntlet in its cause. Too many
of such defenders are apt, from inconsideration and too much zeal,
to charge the troops of error so rashly that they "remain
themselves as trophies to the enemies of truth." Nor ought
all of us (members of the Theosophical Society) to do so personally,
but rather leave it only to those among our members who have voluntarily
and beforehand sacrificed their personalities for the cause of
Truth. Thus teaches us one of the Masters of Wisdom in some fragments
of advice which are published further on for the benefit of the
Theosophists (see the article that follows this2).
While enforcing upon such public characters in our ranks as editors,
and lecturers, etc., the duty of telling fearlessly "the
Truth to the face of LIE," he yet condemns
the habit of private judgment and criticism in every individual Theosophist.
Unfortunately, these are not the ways of the public and readers.
Since our journal is entirely unsectarian, since it is neither
theistic nor atheistic, Pagan nor Christian, orthodox nor heterodox,
therefore, its editors discover eternal verities in the most opposite
religious systems and modes of thought. Thus Lucifer fails
to give full satisfaction to either infidel or Christian. In sight
of the former whether he be an Agnostic, a Secularist, or an Idealist-to
find divine or occult lore underlying "the rubbish"
in the Jewish Bible and Christian Gospels is sickening; in the
opinion of the latter, to recognise the same truth as in the Judeo-Christian
Scriptures in the Hindu, Parsi, Buddhist, or Egyptian religious
literature, is vexation of spirit and blasphemy. Hence, fierce
criticism from both sides, sneers and abuse. Each party would
have us on its own sectarian side, recognising as truth, only
that which its particular ism does.
But this cannot nor shall it be. Our motto was from the first,
and ever shall be: "THERE IS
NO RELIGION HIGHER
THAN TRUTH." Truth
we -search for, and, once found, we bring it forward before the
world, whencesoever it comes. A large majority of our readers
is fully satisfied with this our policy, and that is plainly sufficient for our purposes.
It is evident that when toleration is not the outcome of indifference
it must arise from wide-spreading charity and large-minded sympathy.
Intolerance is pre-eminently the consequence of ignorance and
jealousy. He who fondly believes that he has got the great ocean
in his family water-jug is naturally intolerant of his neighbour,
who also is pleased to imagine that he has poured the broad expanse
of the sea of truth into his own particular pitcher. But anyone
who, like the Theosophist, knows how infinite is that ocean of
eternal wisdom, to be fathomed by no one man, class, or party,
and realizes how little the largest vessel made by man contains
in comparison to what lies dormant and still unperceived in its
dark, bottomless depths, cannot help but be tolerant. For he sees
that others have filled their little water-jugs at the same great
reservoir in which he has dipped his own, and if the water in
the various pitchers seems different to the eye, it can only be
because it is discoloured by impurities that were in the vessel
before the pure crystalline element a portion of the one eternal
and immutable truth entered into it.
There is, and can be, but one absolute truth in Kosmos. And little
as we, with our present limitations, can understand it in its
essence, we still know that if it is absolute it must also be
omnipresent and universal; and that in such case, it must be underlying
every world-religion the product of the thought and knowledge
of numberless generations of thinking men. Therefore, that a portion
of truth, great or small, is found in every religious and philosophical
system, and that if we would find it, we have to search for it
at the origin and source of every such system, at its roots and
first growth, not in its later overgrowth of sects and dogmatism.
Our object is not to destroy any religion but rather to help to
filter each, thus ridding them of their respective impurities.
In this we are opposed by all those who maintain, against evidence,
that their particular pitcher alone contains the whole ocean.
How is our great work to be done if we are to be impeded and harassed
on every side by partisans and zealots? It would be already half
accomplished were the intelligent men, at least, of every sect
and system, to feel and to confess that the little wee bit of
truth they themselves own must necessarily be mingled with error,
and that their neighbours' mistakes are, Eke their own, mixed with truth.
Free discussion, temperate, candid, undefiled by personalities
and animosity, is, we think, the most efficacious means of getting
rid of error and bringing out the underlying truth; and this applies
to publications as well as to persons. It is open to a magazine
to be tolerant or intolerant; it is open to it to err in almost
every way in which an individual can err; and since every publication
of the kind has a responsibility such as falls to the lot of few
individuals, it behooves it to be ever on its guard, so that it
may advance without fear and without reproach. All this is true
in a special degree in the case of a theosophical publication,
and Lucifer feels that it would be unworthy of that designation
were it not true to the profession of the broadest tolerance and
catholicity, even while pointing out to its brothers and neighbours
the errors which they indulge in and follow. While thus keeping
strictly, in its editorials, and in articles by its individual
editors, to the spirit and teachings of pure theosophy, it nevertheless
frequently gives room to articles and letters which diverge widely
from the esoteric teachings accepted by the editors, as also by
the majority of theosophists. Readers, therefore, who are accustomed
to find in magazines and party publications only such opinions
and arguments as the editor believes to be unmistakably orthodox from
his peculiar standpoint-must not condemn any article in Lucifer
with which they are not entirely in accord, or in which expressions
are used that may be offensive from a sectarian or a prudish
point of view, on the ground that such are unfitted for a
theosophical magazine. They should remember that precisely because
Lucifer is a theosophical magazine, it opens its columns
to writers whose views of life and things may not only slightly
differ from its own, but even be diametrically opposed to the
opinion of the editors. The object of the latter is to elicit
truth, not to advance the interest of any particular ism, or
to pander to any hobbies, likes or dislikes, of any class of readers.
It is only snobs and prigs who, disregarding the truth or error
of the idea, cavil and strain merely over the expressions and
words it is couched in.
Theosophy, if meaning anything, means truth; and truth has to
deal indiscriminately and in the same spirit of impartiality with
vessels of honour and of dishonour alike. No theosophical publication
would ever dream of adopting the coarse or shall we say terribly
sincere-language of a Hosea or a Jeremiah; yet so long as those
holy prophets are found in the Christian Bible, and the
Bible is in every respectable, pious family, whether aristocratic
or plebeian; and so long as the Bible is read with bowed head
and in all reverence by young, innocent maidens and school-boys,
why should our Christian critics fall foul of any phrase which
may have to be used-if truth be spoken at all-in an occasional
article upon a scientific subject? It is to be feared that the
same sentences now found objectionable, because referring to Biblical
subjects, would be loudly praised and applauded had they been
directed against any gentile system of faith (Vide certain
missionary organs). A little charity, gentle readers-charity,
and above all fairness and JUSTICE.
Justice demands that when the reader comes across an article in
this magazine which does not immediately approve itself to his
mind by chiming in with his own peculiar ideas, he should regard
it as a problem to solve rather than as a mere subject of criticism.
Let him endeavour to learn the lesson which only opinions differing
from his own can teach him. Let him be tolerant, if not actually
charitable, and postpone his judgment till he extracts from
the article the truth it must contain, adding this new acquisition
to his store. One ever learns more from one's enemies than from
one's friends; and it is only when the reader has credited this
hidden truth to Lucifer, that he can fairly presume to
put what he believes to be the efforts of the article he does
not like to the debit account.
Lucifer, January, 1888
H. P. Blavatsky
1 "VERBUM SAP."
It is not Our intention to notice anonymous communications, even
though they should emanate in a round-about way from Lambeth Palace.
The matter "Verbum Sap" refers to is not one
of taste; the facts must be held responsible for the offence;
and, as the Scripture hath it, "Woe to them by whom the offence
cometh!" back to text
2 "Some Words on Daily
Life". Eds. back to text
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