To the Editors of LUCIFER:
"I avail myself of your invitation to correspondents, in order
to ask a question.
"How is it that we hear nothing now of the signs and wonders
with which Neo-theosophy was ushered in? Is the 'age of miracles' past in the Society?"
"Yours respectfully"
"O"
"Occult phenomena," is what our correspondent apparently
refers to. They failed to produce the desired effect, but they
were, in no sense of the word, "miracles." It was supposed
that intelligent people, especially men of science, would, at
least, have recognized the existence of a new and deeply interesting
field of enquiry and research when they witnessed physical effects
produced at will, for which they were not able to account. It
was supposed that theologians would have welcomed the proof, of
which they stand so sadly in need in these agnostic days, that
the soul and the spirit are not mere creations of their fancy,
due to ignorance of the physical constitution of man, but entities
quite as real as the body, and much more important. These expectations
were not realized. The phenomena were misunderstood and misrepresented,
both as regards their nature and their purpose.
In the light which experience has now thrown upon the matter the
explanation of this unfortunate circumstance is not far to seek.
Neither science nor religion acknowledges the existence of the
Occult, as the term is understood and employed in theosophy; in
the sense, that is to say, of a super-material, but not super-natural,
region, governed by law; nor do they recognize the existence of
latent powers and possibilities in man. Any interference with
the every-day routine of the material world is attributed, by
religion, to the arbitrary will of a good or an evil autocrat,
inhabiting a supernatural region inaccessible to man, and subject
to no law, either in his actions or constitution, and for a knowledge
of whose ideas and wishes mortals are entirely dependent upon
inspired communications delivered through an accredited messenger.
The power of working so-called miracles has always been deemed
the proper and sufficient credentials of a messenger from heaven,
and the mental habit of regarding any occult power in that light
is still so strong that any exercise of that power is supposed
to be "miraculous," or to claim to be so. It is needless
to say that this way of regarding extraordinary occurrences is
in direct opposition to the scientific spirit of the age, nor
is it the position practically occupied by the more intelligent
portion of mankind at present. When people see wonders, nowadays,
the sentiment excited in their minds is no longer veneration and awe, but curiosity.
It was in the hope of arousing and utilizing this spirit of curiosity
that occult phenomena were shown. It was believed that this manipulation
of forces of nature which lie below the surface that surface
of things which modern science scratches and pecks at so industriously
and so proudly would have led to enquiry into the nature and
the laws of those forces, unknown to science, but perfectly known
to occultism. That the phenomena did excite curiosity in the minds
of those who witnessed them, is certainly true, but it was, unfortunately,
for the most part of an idle kind. The greater number of the witnesses
developed an insatiable appetite for phenomena for their own sake,
without any thought of studying the philosophy or the science
of whose truth and power the phenomena were merely trivial and,
so to say, accidental illustrations. In but a few cases the curiosity
which was awakened gave birth to the serious desire to study the
philosophy and the science themselves and for their own sake.
Experience has taught the leaders of the movement that the vast
majority of professing Christians are absolutely precluded by
their mental condition and attitude the result of centuries of
superstitious teaching from calmly examining the phenomena in
their aspect of natural occurrences governed by law. The Roman
Catholic Church, true to its traditions, excuses itself from the
examination of any occult phenomena on the plea that they are
necessarily the work of the Devil, whenever they occur outside
of its own pale, since it has a lawful monopoly of the legitimate
miracle business. The Protestant Church denies the personal intervention
of the Evil One on the material plane; but, never having gone
into the miracle business itself, it is apparently a little doubtful
whether it would know a bonafide miracle if it saw one,
but, being just as unable as its elder sister to conceive the
extension of the reign of law beyond the limits of matter and
force, as known to us in our present state of consciousness, it
excuses itself from the study of occult phenomena on the plea
that they lie within the province of science rather than of religion.
Now science has its miracles as well as the Church of Rome. But,
as it is altogether dependent upon its instrument-maker for the
production of these miracles, and, as it claims to be in possession
of the last known word in regard to the laws of nature, it was
hardly to be expected that it would take very kindly to "miracles,"
in whose production apparatus has no part, and which claim to
be instances of the operation of forces and laws of which it has
no knowledge. Modern science, moreover, labours under disabilities
with respect to the investigation of the Occult quite as embarrassing
as those of Religion; for, while Religion cannot grasp the idea
of natural law as applied to the supersensuous Universe, Science
does not allow the existence of any supersensuous universe at
all to which the reign of law could be extended; nor can it conceive
the possibility of any other state of consciousness than our present
terrestrial one. It was, therefore, hardly to be expected that
science would undertake the task it was called upon to perform
with much earnestness and enthusiasm; and, indeed, it seems to
have felt that it was not expected to treat the phenomena of occultism
less cavalierly than it had treated divine miracles. So it calmly
proceeded at once to pooh-pooh the phenomena; and, when obliged
to express some kind of opinion, it did not hesitate, without
examination, and on hearsay reports, to attribute them to fraudulent
contrivances wires, trapdoors, and so forth.
It was bad enough for the leaders of the movement, when they endeavoured
to call the attention of the world to the great and unknown field
for scientific and religious enquiry which lies on the borderland
between matter and spirit, to find themselves set down as agents
of his Satanic Majesty, or as superior adepts in the charlatan
line; but the unkindest cut of all, perhaps, came from a class
of people whose own experiences, rightly understood, ought certainly
to have taught them better: the occult phenomena were claimed
by the Spiritualists as the work of their dear departed ones,
but the leaders in Theosophy were declared to be somewhat less
even than mediums in disguise.
Never were the phenomena presented in any other character than
that of instances of a power over perfectly natural though
unrecognized forces, and incidentally over matter, possessed
by certain individuals who have attained to a larger and higher
knowledge of the Universe than has been reached by scientists
and theologians, or can ever be reached by them, by the roads
they are now respectively pursuing. Yet this power is latent in
all men, and could, in time, be wielded by anyone who would cultivate
the knowledge and conform to the conditions necessary for its
development. Nevertheless, except in a few isolated and honourable
instances, never was it received in any other character than as
would-be miracles, or as works of the Devil, or as vulgar tricks,
or as amusing gape-seed, or as the performances of those dangerous
"spooks" that masquerade in seance rooms, and feed on
the vital energies of mediums and sitters. And, from all sides,
theosophy and theosophists were attacked with a rancour and bitterness,
with an absolute disregard alike of fact and logic, and with malice,
hatred and uncharitableness that would be utterly inconceivable,
did not religious history teach us what mean and unreasoning animals
ignorant men become when their cherished prejudices are touched;
and did not the history of scientific research teach us, in its
turn, how very like an ignorant man a learned man can behave,
when the truth of his theories is called in question.
An occultist can produce phenomena, but he cannot supply the world
with brains, nor with the intelligence and good faith necessary
to understand and appreciate them. Therefore, it is hardly to
be wondered at, that word came to abandon phenomena and
let the ideas of Theosophy stand on their own intrinsic merits.
Lucifer, February, 1888
H. P. Blavatsky
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