Enlightenment
Human Body
Human Spirit
Vision
Human Mind
Raja
Yoga
Mind
Power
Gnani
Yoga
Adv.Philosophy
Fastrack
Art of
Living
Drahla
FourteenLessons
Holy Herb
RainbowWords
Kyballion
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Lesson
1
Some Light on the Path.
We greet
our old students who have returned to us for
the Advanced Course. We feel that,
hereafter, it will not be necessary to
repeat the elementary explanations which
formed such an important part of the former
class work, and we may be able to go right
to the heart of the subject, feeling assured
that each student is prepared to receive the
same. Many read the former lessons from
curiosity - some have become so interested
that they wish to go on - others have failed
to find the sensational features for which
they had hoped, and have dropped from the
ranks. It is ever so. Many come, but only a
certain percentage are ready to go on. Out
of a thousand seeds sown by the farmer, only
a hundred manifest life. But the work is
intended for that hundred, and they will
repay the farmer for his labor. In our seed
sowing, it is even more satisfactory, for
even the remaining nine hundred will show
life at some time in the future. No occult
teaching is ever wasted - all bears fruit in
its own good time. We welcome the students
in the Advanced Course - we congratulate
ourselves in having such a large number of
interested listeners - and we congratulate
the students in having reached the stage in
which they feel such an interest in the
work, and in being ready to go on.
We will
take for the subject of our first lesson
the . And we know of no better method
of directing the student's steps along The
Path than to point out to him the unequalled
precepts of the little manual "Light on the
Path," written down by "M.C." (Mabel
Collins, an English woman) at the request of
some advanced mind (in or out of the flesh)
who inspired it. In our notice in the last
instalment of the "Fourteen Lessons," we
stated that we had in mind a little work
which would perhaps make plainer the
precepts of "Light on the Path." But, upon
second though, we have thought it preferable
to make such writing a part of the Advanced
Course, instead of preparing it as a
separate book for general distribution and
sale. In this way we may speak at greater
length, and with less reserve, knowing that
the students of the course will understand
it far better than would the general public.
So, the little book will not be published,
and the teaching will be given only in these
lessons. We will quote from the little
manual, precept after precept, following
each with a brief explanation.
In this
connection it may be as well to state that
"Light on the Path" is, practically, an
inspired writing, and is so carefully worded
that it is capable of a variety of
interpretations - it carries a message
adapted to the varying requirements of the
several planes and stages of life. The
student is able to extract meanings suited
to his stage of development. In this respect
the work is different from ordinary
writings. One must take something to the
book before he is able to obtain something
from it. In "The Illumined Way" the work is
interpreted, in part, upon the lines of the
psychic or astral planes. Our interpretation
will be designed to apply to the life of the
student entering upon The Path - the
beginner. It will endeavor to explain the
first several precepts in the light of
"Karma Yoga," and will then try to point out
the plain meaning of the precepts,
pertaining to the higher desires; then
passing on to an explanation of the precepts
relating to the unfoldment of Spiritual
Consciousness, which is indeed the key-note
of the little manual. We will endeavor to
make a little plainer to the students the
hidden meanings of the little book - to put
into plain homely English, the thoughts so
beautifully expressed in the poetical
imagery of the Orient. Our work will not
contradict the interpretation given in "The
Illumined Way" - it will merely go along
side by side with it, on another plane of
life. To some, it may seem a presumptuous
undertaking to attempt to "interpret" that
gem of occult teaching "Light on the Path" -
but the undertaking has the approval of some
for whose opinions we have respect - and
has, what means still more to us - the
approval of our Higher Self. Crude though
our work may be, it must be intended to
reach some - else it would not have been
suggested.
"These rules are written for all disciples.
Attend you to them."
These rules
are indeed written for all disciples and it
will be well for us to attend to them. for
the rules for the guidance of occultists
have always been the same, and will always
remain the same - in all time - in all
countries - and under whatever name the
teaching is imparted. For they are based
upon the principles of truth, and have been
tried, tested and passed upon long ages ago,
and have come down to us bearing the marks
of the careful handling of the multitudes
who have passed on before - our elder
brothers in the Spirit - those who once trod
the path upon which we are now entering -
those who have passed on to heights which we
shall one day mount. These rules are for all
followers of The Path - they were written
for such, and there are none better. They
come to us from those who know.
"Before
the eyes can see, they must be incapable of
tears. Before the ears can hear, they must
have lost their sensitiveness. Before the
voice can speak in the presence of the
Masters, it must have lost the power to
wound. Before the soul can stand in the
presence of the Masters, its feet must be
washed in the blood of the heart."
Before the
eyes can see with the clear vision of the
Spirit, they must have grown incapable of
the tears of wounded pride - unkind
criticism - unmerited abuse - unfriendly
remarks - slights - sarcasm - the annoyances
of everyday life - the failures and
disappointments of everyday existence. We do
not mean that one should harden his soul
against these things - on the contrary
"hardening" forms no part of the occult
teachings. On the material plane, one is
constantly at the mercy of others on the
same plane, and the more finely constituted
one may be, the more keenly does he feel the
pain of life, coming from without. And if he
attempts to fight back - to pay off these
backbitings and pinpricks in like kind - the
more does he become enmeshed in the web of
material life. His only chance of escape
lies in growing so that he may rise above
that phase of existence and dwell in the
upper regions of the mind, and Spirit. This
does not mean that he should run away from
the world - on the contrary, if one attempts
to run away from the world before he has
learned its lessons, he will be thrust back
into it, again and again, until he settles
down to perform the task. But, nevertheless,
one of spiritual attainment may so live that
although he is in the midst of the fight of
everyday life - yea, may even be a captain
in the struggle - he really lives above it
all - sees it for just what it is - sees it
but as a childish game of child-like men and
women, and although he plays the game well,
he still knows it to be but a game, and not
the real thing at all. This being the case,
he begins by smiling through his tears, when
he is knocked down in the rush of the game -
then he ceases to weep at all, smiles taking
the place of the tears, for, when things are
seen in their true relation, one can
scarcely repress a smile at himself, and at
(or with) others. When one looks around and
sees the petty playthings to which men are
devoting their lives, believing that these
playthings are real, he cannot but smile.
And, when one awakens to a realization of
the reality of things, his own particular
part, which he is compelled to play, must
evoke a smile from him. These are not mere
dreams and impracticable ideas. If many of
you had an idea of how many men, high in the
puppet-play of worldly affairs, have really
awakened to the truth, it would surprise
you. Many of these men play their part well
- with energy and apparent ambition - for
they realize that there is a purpose behind
it all, and that they are necessary parts of
the machinery of evolution. But deep within
the recesses of their souls, they know it
all for what it is. One on The Path must
needs be brave, and must acquire a mastery
over the emotional nature. This precept does
not merely refer to physical tears - for
they often spring to the eyes involuntarily,
and though we may be smiling at the time, it
refers to the feeling that there is anything
for us to really cry over. It is the thought
back of the tears, rather than the tears
themselves.
The lesson
to be learned from these rules is that we
should rise above the incidents of
personality, and strive to realize our
individuality. That we should desire to
realize the I AM consciousness, which is
above the annoyance of personality. That we
should learn that these things cannot hurt
the Real Self - that they will be washed
from the sands of time by the waters of
eternity.
Likewise
our ear must lose its sensitiveness to the
unpleasant incidents of personality, before
it can hear the truth clearly, and free from
the jarring noises of the outward strife.
One must grow to be able to hear these
things, and yet smile, secure in the
knowledge of the soul and its powers, and
its destiny. One must grow to be able to
hear the unkind word - the unjust criticism
- the spiteful remark - without letting them
affect his real self. He must keep such
things on the material plane to which they
belong, and never allow his soul to descend
to where it may be affected by them. One
must learn to be able to hear the truths
which are sacred to him, spoken of
sneeringly and contemptuously by those who
do not understand - they cannot be blamed,
for they cannot understand. Let the babes
prattle, and scold, and laugh. It does them
good, and cannot hurt you or the Truth. Let
the children play - it is their nature -
some day they will (like you) have
experienced the growing-pains of spiritual
maturity, and will be going through just
what you are now. You were once like them -
they will be as you in time. Follow the old
saying, and let such things "go in one ear,
and out of the other" - do not let them
reach your real consciousness. Then will the
ear hear the things intended for it - it
will afford a clear passage for the entrance
of the Truth.
Yea,
"before the voice can speak in the presence
of the Masters, it must have lost its power
to wound." The voice that scolds, lies,
abuses, complains, and wounds, can never
reach the higher planes upon which dwell the
advanced intelligences of the race. Before
it can speak so as to be heard by those high
in the order of life, and spiritual
intelligences, it must have long since
forgotten how to wound others by unkind
words, petty spite, unworthy speech. The
advanced man does not hesitate to speak the
truth even when it is not pleasant, if it
seems right to do so, but he speaks in the
tone of a loving brother who does not
criticize from the "I am holier than thou"
position, but merely feels the other's pain
- sees his mistake - and wishes to lend him
a helping hand. Such a one has risen above
the desire to "talk back" - to "cut" another
by unkind and spiteful remarks - to "get
even" by saying, in effect, "You're
another." These things must be cast aside
like a worn-out cloak - the advanced man
needs them not.
"Before the
soul can stand in the presence of the
Masters, its feet must be washed in the
blood of the heart" - this is a "hard
saying" to many entering The Path. Many are
led astray from the real meaning of this
precept by their understanding of the word
"heart - they think it means the love
nature. But this is not the meaning -
occultism does not teach killing out true
love - it teaches that love is one of the
greatest privileges of man, and that as he
advances his love nature grows until,
finally, it includes all life. The "heart"
referred to is the emotional nature and the
instincts of the lower and more animal mind.
These things seem to be such a part of us,
before we develop, that to get rid of them
we seem to be literally tearing out our
hearts. We part with the first one thing and
then another, of the old animal nature, with
pain and suffering, and our spiritual feet
become literally washed in the blood of the
heart. Appetite - cravings of the lower
nature - desires of the animal part of us -
old habits - conventionalities - inherited
thought - racial delusions - things in the
blood and bone of our nature, must be thrown
off, one by one, with much misgivings and
doubts at first - and with much pain and
heart-bleeding until we reach a position
from which we can see what it all means. Not
only the desires of the lower self are to be
torn out, but we must, of necessity, part
with many things which have always seemed
dear and sacred to us, but which appear as
but childish imaginings in the pure light
which is beginning to be poured out from our
Spiritual Mind. But even though we see these
things for what they are, still it pains us
to part from them, and we cry aloud, and our
heart bleeds. Then we often come to a
parting of the ways - a place where we are
forced to part mental company with those who
are dear to us, leaving them to travel their
own road while we take a step upon a new and
(to us) an untried path of thought. All this
means pain. And then the horror of mental
and spiritual loneliness which comes over
one soon after he has taken the first few
steps on The Path - that first initiation
which has tried the souls of many who read
these words - that frightful feeling of
being alone - with no one near who can
understand and appreciate your feelings. And
then, the sense of seeing the great problem
of life, which others do not recognize the
existence of any unsolved problem, and who
accordingly go on their way, dancing,
fighting, quarreling, and showing all the
signs of spiritual blindness, while you were
compelled to stand alone and bear the awful
sight. Then, indeed, does the blood of your
heart gush forth. And then, the
consciousness of the world's pain and your
failure to understand its meaning - your
feeling of impotence when you tried to find
a remedy for it. All this causes your heart
to bleed. And all these things come from
your spiritual awakening - the man of the
material plane has felt some of these things
- has seen them not. Then when the feet of
the soul have been bathed in the blood of
the heart, the eye begins to see the
spiritual truths - the ear begins to hear
them - the tongue begins to be able to speak
them to others, and to converse with those
who have advanced along The Path. And the
soul is able to stand erect and gaze into
the face of other advanced souls, for it has
begun to understand the mysteries of life -
the meaning of it all - has been able to
grasp something of the Great Plan - has been
able to feel the consciousness of its own
existence - has been able to say: "I AM"
with meaning - has found itself - has
conquered pain by rising above it. Take
these thoughts with you into the Silence,
and let the truth sink into your mind, that
it may take root, grow, blossom, and bear
fruit.
"1. Kill out ambition.
"2. Kill out desire of life.
"3. Kill out desire of comfort.
"4.
Work as those work who are ambitious.
Respect life as those who desire it. Be
happy as those are who live for happiness."
Much of the
occult truth is written in the form of
paradox-showing both sides of the shield.
This is in according with nature's plan. All
statements of truth are but partial
statements-there are two good sides of every
argument - any bit of truth is but a
half-truth, hunt diligently enough and you
will find the opposite half-everything "it
is and it isn't"-any full statement of truth
must of necessity be paradoxical. This
because our finite point-of-view enables us
to see but one side of a subject at a time.
From the point of view of the infinite, all
sides are seen at the same time-all points
of a globe being visible to the infinite
seer, who is also able to see through the
globe as well as around it.
The above
mentioned four precepts are illustrations of
this law of paradox. They are generally
dismissed as non-understandable by the
average person who reads them. And yet they
are quite reasonable and absolutely true.
The key to
the understanding of these (and all) truths
lies in the ability to distinguish between
the "relative" or lower, point of view, and
the "absolute" or higher one. Remember this
well, for it will help you to see into many
a dark corner-to make easy many a hard
saying. Let us apply the test to these four
precepts.
We are told
to: "Kill out ambition." The average man
recoils from this statement, and cries out
that such a course would render a man a
spiritless and worthless creature, for
ambition seems to be at the bottom of all of
man's accomplishments. Then, as he throws
down the book, he sees, in the fourth
precept: "Work as those who are
ambitious"-and, unless he sees with the eyes
of the Spiritual Mind, he becomes more
confused than ever. But the two things are
possible - yes, are absolutely feasible as
well as proper. The "ambition" alluded to is
that emotion which urges a man to attain
from vainglorious, selfish motives, and
which impels him to crush all in his path,
and to drive to the wall all with whom he
comes into contact. Such ambition is but the
counterfeit of real ambition, and is as
abnormal as is the morbid appetites which
counterfeit and assume the guise of hunger
and thirst-the ridiculous customs of
decorating the persons with barbarous
ornamentations, which counterfeits the
natural instinct of putting on some slight
covering as protection from the weather -
the absurd custom of burdening oneself and
others with the maintenance of palatial
mansions, which counterfeits man's natural
desire for a home-spot and shelter - the
licentious and erotic practices of many men
and women, which are but counterfeits of the
natural sexual instincts of normal man and
woman, the object of which is, primarily,
the preservation of the race. The
"ambitious" man becomes insane for success,
because the instinct has become perverted
and abnormal. He imagines that the things
for which he is striving will bring him
happiness, but he is disappointed - they
turn to ashes like Dead Sea fruit - because
they are not the source of permanent
happiness. He ties himself to the things he
creates, and becomes their slave rather than
their master. He regards money not as a
means of securing necessities and
nourishment (mental and physical) for
himself and others, but as a thing valuable
of itself - he has the spirit of the miser.
Or, he may seek power for selfish reasons -
to gratify his vanity - to show the world
that he is mightier than his fellow men - to
stand above the crowd. All poor, petty,
childish ambitions, unworthy of a real Man,
and which must be outgrown before the man
may progress - but perhaps the very lessons
he is receiving are just the ones needed for
his awakening. In short, the man of the
abnormal ambition works for things for the
sake of selfish reward, and is inevitably
disappointed, for he is pinning his hopes on
things which fail him in the hour of need -
is leaning on a broken reed.
Now let us
look upon the other side of the shield. The
fourth precept contains these words: "Work
as those work who are ambitious." There it
is. One who works this way may appear to the
world as the typical ambitious man, but the
resemblance is merely outward. The
"ambitious" man is the abnormal thing. The
Man who works for work's sake - in obedience
to the desire to work - the craving to
create - because he gives full expression to
the creative part of his nature - is the
real thing. And the latter is able to do
better work - more lasting work - than the
first mentioned man. And then, besides, he
gains happiness from his work - he feels the
joy which comes from doing - he lets the
creative impulse of the All Life flow
through him, and he does great things - he
accomplishes, and is happy in his work and
through his work. And so long as he keeps
true to his ideals he will be safe and
secure in that joy, and will be doing well
his share of the world's work. But, as he
mounts the ladder of Success, he is
subjected to terrible temptations, and often
allows the abnormal ambition to take
possession of him, the result being that in
his next incarnation he will have to learn
his lesson all over again, and again until
he has mastered it.
Every man
has his work in the world to do, and he
should do it the best he knows how - should
do it cheerfully - should do it
intelligently. And he should let have full
expression that instinct which impels him to
do things right - better than they have been
done before (not that he may triumph over
others, but because the world needs things
done better).
True
occultism does not teach that man should sit
around doing nothing but meditating, with
his gaze fasted upon his umbilicus, as is
the custom with some of the ignorant Hindu
fakirs and devotees, who ape the terms and
language of the Yogi teachers, and
prostitute their teachings. On the contrary,
it teaches that it is man's duty and
glorious privilege to participate in the
world's work, and that he who is able to do
something a little better than it has ever
been done before is blessed, and a
benefactor to the race. It recognizes the
Divine urge to create, which is found in all
men and women, and believes in giving it the
fullest expression. It teaches that no life
is fully rounded out and complete, unless
some useful work is a part of it. It
believes that intelligent work helps toward
spiritual unfoldment, and is in fact
necessary to it. It does not teach the
beauty of unintelligent drudgery - for there
is no beauty in such work - but it teaches
that in the humblest task may be found
interest to the one who looks for it, and
that such a one always finds a better way of
doing the thing, and thus adds something to
the world's store of knowledge. It teaches
the real ambition - that love of work for
work's sake - rather than that work which is
performed for the world's counterfeit
reward. Therefore when the precept says:
"Kill out Ambition - Work as those work who
are ambitious," you will understand it. This
life is possible to those who understand
"Karma Yoga," one of the great branches of
the Yogi Philosophy, upon which it may be
our privilege to write at some future time.
Read over these words, until you fully grasp
their meaning-until you feel them as well as
see them. The gist of these teachings upon
the subject of Ambition, may be summed up by
saying: Kill out the relative Ambition,
which causes you to tie yourself to the
objects and rewards of your work, and which
yields nothing but disappointment and
repressed growth - but develop and express
fully the absolute Ambition, which causes
you to work for work's sake - for the joy
which comes to the worker - from the desire
to express the Divine Instinct to create -
and which causes you to do the thing you
have to do, the best you know how - better
than it has ever been done, if possible -
and which enables you to work in harmony and
unison with the Divine work which is
constantly going on, instead of in harmony
and discord. Let the Divine energy work
through you, and express itself fully in
your work. Open yourself to it, and you will
taste of the joy which comes from work of
this kind - this is the true ambition - the
other is but a miserable counterfeit which
retards the growth of the soul.
"Kill out
desire of life," says the second precept -
but the fourth precept answers back:
"Respect life as those who desire it." This
is another truth expressed in paradox. One
must eradicate from the mind the idea that
physical life is everything. Such an idea
prevents one from recognizing the fuller
life of the soul, and makes this particular
life in the body the whole thing, instead of
merely a grain of sand on the shores of the
everlasting sea. One must grow to feel that
he will always be alive, whether he is in
the body or out of it, and that this
particular physical "life" is merely a thing
to be used by the Real Self, which cannot
die. Therefore kill out that desire of life
which causes you to fear death, and which
makes you attach undue importance to the
mere bodily existence, to the impairment of
the broader life of consciousness. Pluck
from your mind that idea that when the body
dies, you die - for you live on, as much
alive as you are this moment, possibly still
more alive. See physical life for what it
is, and be not deceived. Cease to look upon
"death" with horror, whether it may come to
you or some loved one. Death is just as
natural as life (in the stage of
development) and as much to be happy about.
It is hard to get rid of the old horror of
physical dissolution, and one has many hard
battles before he is able to cast off the
worn-out delusion, which has clung to the
race in spite of its constantly sounded
belief in a future life. The churches teach
of "the life beyond" to which all the
faithful should look forward, but the same
"faithful" shiver and shudder at the thought
of death, and clothe themselves in black
when a friend dies, instead of strewing
flowers around and rejoicing that the friend
is "in a better land" (to use the cant
phrase, which is so glibly used on such
occasion, but which comforteth not). One
must grow into a positive "feeling" or
consciousness, of life everlasting, before
he is able to cast off this old fear, and no
creed, or expressed belief, will serve the
purpose, until this state of consciousness
is reached. To the one who "feels" in his
consciousness this fact of the survival of
individuality, and the continuance of life
beyond the grave, death loses its terror,
and the grave its horror, and the "desire of
life" (relative) is indeed killed out,
because the knowledge of life (absolute) has
taken its place.
But we must
not forget the reverse side of the shield.
Read again the fourth precept: "Respect life
as those who desire it." This does not mean
alone the life of others, but has reference
to your own physical body as well. For in
your letting go of the old idea of the
relative importance of the life in the body,
you must avoid going to the other extreme of
neglect of the physical body. The body is
yours in pursuance of the Divine plan, and
is in fact the Temple of the Spirit. If it
were not good for you to have a body, rest
assured you would not have it. It is needed
by you in this stage of development, and you
would be unable to do your work of spiritual
unfoldment without it. Therefore, do not be
led into the folly of despising the body, or
physical life, as a thing unworthy of you.
They are worthy of you, at this stage, and
you may make great things possible through
them. To despise them is like refusing to
use the ladder which will enable you to
reach the heights. You should, indeed,
"respect life as those who desire it," and
you should respect the body as do those who
think that the body is the self. The body
should be recognized as the instrument of
the soul and Spirit, and should be kept as
clean, healthy and strong as may be. And
every means should be used to prolong the
"life" in the body which has been given you.
It should be respected and well-used. Do not
sit and pine over your confinement in this
life - you will never have another chance to
live out just the experiences you are
getting now - make the best of it. Your
"life" is a glorious thing, and you should
live always in the "Now" stage, extracting
to the full the joy which should come with
each moment of life to the advanced man.
"Life, life, more life" has cried out some
writer, and he was right. Live out each
moment of your life, in a normal, healthy,
clean way, always knowing it for what it is,
and worrying not about the past or future.
You are in eternity now as much as you ever
will be---so why not make the most of it. It
is always "Now" in life - and the supply of
"Nows" never fails.
If you ask
us for a summing-up of this idea of this
non-desiring of life, and its opposite side
of respecting it as if you really did desire
it, we will say: The desire referred to is
the relative desire, which springs from the
mistaken idea that physical life is the only
life. The absolute desire of life, arises
from the knowledge of what the whole life of
man is, and what this brief physical life is
- therefore while the advanced man does not
desire it in the old way, he does not
despise it, and really desires it because it
forms a part of his whole life, and he does
not wish to miss, or part with, any part of
that which the Divine Plan has decreed,
shall be his. The advanced man neither fears
death, nor seeks it - he fears neither death
nor life-he desires neither (relatively) and
yet he desires both, from the absolute
sense. Such a man or woman is invincible -
neither life nor death have [sic] any
terrors for such a one. When this
consciousness is once reached, the person is
filled with such power that its radiance is
felt by the world in which it moves.
Remember these words: Fear neither death,
nor life. Neither fear death, nor seek it.
When you have attained this stage, then
indeed you will know what life is - what
death is - for both are the manifestation of
LIFE.
The third
precept tells us to "Kill out desire for
comfort" - but the fourth adds: "Be happy as
those are who live for happiness." This
teaching is also paradoxical, and follows
the same line as the ones just spoken of.
Its apparent contradiction arises from the
two view-points, i. e. the relative and the
absolute. Apply this solvent to all
apparently contradictory occult teaching,
and you will be able to separate each part
so that you may carefully examine it. Let us
apply it to this case.
"Kill out
desire of comfort." At first this would seem
to advocate extreme asceticism, but this is
not the real meaning. Much that is called
asceticism is really a running away from
things which we may think are too pleasant.
There seems to be an idea in the minds of
many people of all shades of religious
belief, that because a thing produces
pleasure it must necessarily be "bad." Some
writer has made one of his characters say:
"It is so sad - it seems as if all the
pleasant things in life are wicked." There
seems to be a current belief that God takes
pleasure in seeing people unhappy and doing
unpleasant things, and accordingly many
so-called "religious" people have frowned
upon the normal pleasures of life, and have
acted as if a smile was offensive to Deity.
This is all a mistake. All normal pleasures
are given to Man to use - but none of them
must be allowed to use Man. Man must always
be the master, and not the slave, in his
relation to the pleasures of life. In
certain forms of occult training the student
is instructed in the cultivation of the
Will, and some of the exercises prescribed
for him consist of the doing of disagreeable
and unpleasant things. But this discipline
is merely to strengthen the Will of the
student, and not because there is any
special merit in the disagreeable task, or
any special virtue in the self-denial
attendant upon the doing without certain
pleasant accustomed things. The whole idea
consists in the exercising of the Will to
resist; do without; and to do things
contrary to the usual custom and habits of
the individual, which course, if practiced,
will invariably result in a strengthening of
the Will. It operates upon the principle of
exercising a muscle by calling it into play.
These exercises and practices are good, and
we may have occasion to refer to them in
some of our lessons. The fast-days and
penance prescribed by the Catholic church
have merit in the manner above indicated,
outside of any particular religious
significance.
But, to get
back to our subject, this precept is not
intended to preach asceticism. Occultism
does not insist upon that. It does teach,
however, that one should not allow himself
to be tied to the pleasures and comforts of
life to such an extent that he will cease to
advance and develop his higher nature. Man
may be ruined too much by luxury, and many
cases are known where the higher influences
at work under the Law took away from a man
those things which hindered his growth, and
placed him in a position in which he was
forced to live normally, and thereby grow
and unfold. Occultism preaches the "Simple
Life." It teaches that when a man has too
many things he is apt to let the things own
him, instead of his owning the things. He
becomes a slave rather than a master. "Kill
out desire of comfort" does not mean that
one should sleep on rough boards, as a
special virtue pleasing to Deity, or that
one should eat dry crusts in the hope of
obtaining Divine favor - neither of these
things will have any such effect - deity may
not be bribed and is not specially pleased
at the spectacle of one of his children
making a fool of himself. But the precept
does impress us that we should not be tied
to any idea of comfort, and that we should
not imagine that true happiness can arise
from any such cause. Enjoy the normal and
rational pleasures of life, but always
retain your mastery over them, and never
allow them to run away with you. And, always
remember that true happiness comes from
within, and that these luxuries and comforts
are not necessities of the real man, and are
merely things to be used for what they are
worth. These creature comforts and luxuries
are merely incidents of the physical planet,
and do not teach the Real Self. The advanced
man sees all these things, as instruments,
tools (or even toys if it is found necessary
to join in the game-life of others), but he
always knows them for what they are and is
never deceived. The idea that they are
necessary for his happiness would seem
absurd to him. And, as a man advances
spiritually, his tastes are apt to become
simpler. He may like well-made things of
good quality, best suited for their purpose,
but he does not want so many of them, and
ostentation and display become very foreign
to his states and inclinations. He does not
necessarily have to "kill out" the last
mentioned tastes - they are very apt to
leave him of themselves, finding his mental
quarters not suited to their accommodation.
Remember,
also, that the fourth precept instructs you
to "Be happy as those who live for
happiness." This does away with the
long-face and dreary atmosphere idea. It
says "be happy" (not "make believe you are
happy") as happy as those who live for the
so-called happiness coming from the things
of the physical plane. That is the same
teaching. Be happy - so live that you may
obtain a healthy, normal happiness out of
every hour of your life. The occultist is
not a miserable, sour-visaged, gloomy man,
common beliefs to the contrary
notwithstanding. His life and understanding
lifts him above the worries and fears of the
race, and his knowledge of his destiny is
most inspiring. He is able to rise above the
storm, and, riding safely on the crest of
the wave - yielding to every motion of the
swell - he escapes being submerged. When
things become too unpleasant to be borne on
the relative plane, he simply rises into the
higher regions of his mind where all is
serene and calm, and he gains a peace that
will abide with him when he again sinks to
meet the trials and burdens of the day. The
occultist is the happiest of men, for he has
ceased to fear - he knows that there is
nothing to be afraid of. And he has outgrown
many of the superstitions of the race, which
keep many people in torment. He has left
Hate and Malice behind him, and has allowed
Love to take their vacant places, and he
must, necessarily, be happier by reason of
the change. He has outgrown the idea of an
angry Deity laying traps in which to enmesh
him - he has long since learned to smile at
the childish tale of the devil with cloven
hoofs and horns, breathing fire and
brimstone, and keeping a bottomless pit into
which one will be plunged if he should
happen to forget to say his prayers, or if
he should happen not smile at God's
beautiful earth, some fine Sunday, instead
of drowsing away an hour listening to some
long-drawn-out theological sermon. He has
learned that he is a Child of God, destined
for great things, and that Deity is as a
loving Father (yes, and Mother) rather than
a cruel taskmaster. He realizes that he has
arrived at the age of maturity, and that his
destiny rests to some extent upon himself.
The occultist is necessarily an optimist -
he sees that all things are working together
for good - that life is on the path of
attainment - and that Love is over, above,
and in all. These things the occultist
learns as he progresses - and he is Happy.
Happy [sic]. Happier than "those who live
for happiness"
"Seek
in the heart the sources of evil, and
expunge it. It lives fruitfully in the heart
of the devoted disciple, as well as in the
heart of the man of desire. Only the strong
can kill it out. The weak must wait for its
growth, its fruition, its death. And it is a
plan that lives and increases throughout the
ages. It flowers when the man has
accumulated unto himself innumerable
existences. He who will enter upon the path
of power must tear this thing out of his
heart. And then the heart will bleed, and
the whole life of the man seen to be utterly
dissolved. This ordeal must be endured; it
may come at the first step of the perilous
which leads to the path of life; it may not
come until the last. But, O disciple,
remember that it has to be endured, and
fasten the energies of your soul upon the
task. Live neither in the present nor the
future, but the eternal. This giant weed
cannot flower there; this blot upon
existences is wiped out by the very
atmosphere of eternal thought."
The above
admonition is a summing up of the first
three precepts, as explained by the fourth
one. It bids the student seek out in his
heart the relative idea of life and cast it
from him. This relative idea of life carries
with it the selfish part of our nature -
that part of us which causes us to regard
ourselves as better than our brother - as
separate from our fellow-beings - as having
no connection with all of life. It is the
idea of the lower part of our mind - our
merely refined animalism. Those who have
carefully studied our former course will
understand that this part of our mind is the
brute side of us - the side of us which is
the seat of the appetites, passions, desires
of a low order, and emotions of the lower
plane. These things are not evil of
themselves, but they belong to the lower
stages of life - the animal stage - the
stage from which we have passed on (or are
now passing) to the stage of the Man
existence. But these tendencies were long
ages in forming, and are deeply embedded in
our nature, and it requires the most heroic
efforts to dislodge them - and the only way
to dislodge them is to replace them by
higher mental states. Right here, let us
call your attention to a well established
principle of occult training, and yet one
that is seldom mentioned in teaching on the
subject. We refer to the fact that a bad
habit of thought or action is more easily
eradicated by supplanting it with a good
habit - one that is directly opposed to the
habit of which one desires to get rid. To
tear out a bad habit by the roots, requires
almost superhuman strength of will, but to
crowd it out by nursing a good habit in its
place, is far more easier and seems to be
nature's plan. The good habit will gradually
crowd the bad one until it cannot exist, and
then after a final struggle for life, it
will expire. This is the easiest way to
"kill out" undesirable habits and traits.
Returning
to the subject of the relative qualities of
the mind, we would say that selfishness, and
all the animal desires, including sexual
desires on the physical plane (there is much
more in sex than physical plane
manifestation); all passion, such as hatred,
envy, malice, jealousy, desire for revenge,
self-gratification, and self-exaltation; are
also a part of it. Low pride is one of its
most subtle and dangerous manifestations,
and one which returns again, and again,
after we think we have cast it off - each
return being a more subtle form---physical
pride, being succeeded by the pride of the
intellect - pride of psychic attainments -
pride in spiritual development and growth -
pride in moral worth, chastity and character
- the "I am holier than thou" pride - and so
on. Again and again does pride, the tempter,
come to bother us. Its existence is based
upon the delusion of separateness, which
leads us to imagine that we have no
connection with other manifestations of
life, and which causes us to feel a spirit
of antagonism and unworthy rivalry toward
our fellow beings, instead of recognizing
the fact we are all parts of the One Life -
some far back struggling in the mire of the
lower stages of the road - others traveling
along the same stage of the journey as
ourselves - others still further advanced -
but all on the way - all being bits of the
same great Life. Beware of Pride - the most
subtle enemy of advancement - and supplant
it with the thought that we are all of the
same origin - having the same destiny before
us - having the same road to travel -
brothers and sisters all - all children of
God - all little scholars of Life's great
Kindergarten. Let us also realize that while
each must stand alone before he is able to
pass the test of initiation - yet are we all
interdependent, and the pain of one is the
pain of all - the sin of one is the sin of
all - that we are all parts of a race
working toward race improvement and growth -
and that love and the feeling of brotherhood
is the only sane view of the question.
The brute
instincts are still with us, constantly
forcing themselves into our field of
thought. Occultists learn to curb and
control these lower instincts, subordinating
them to the higher mental ideals which
unfold into the field of consciousness. Do
not be discouraged if you still find that
you have much of the animal within your
nature---we all have - the only difference
is that some of us have learned to control
the brute, and to keep him in leash and
subordinate and obedient to the higher parts
of our nature, while others allow the beast
to rule them, and they shiver and turn pale
when he shows his teeth, not seeming to
realize that a firm demeanor and a calm mind
will cause the beast to retreat to his
corner and allow himself to be kept behind
bars. If you find constant manifestations of
the beast within you, struggling to be free
and to assert his old power, do not be
disturbed. This is no sign of weakness, but
is really an indication that your spiritual
growth has begun. For whereas you now
recognize the brute, and feel ashamed, you
formerly did not realize his presence - were
not aware of his existence, for you were the
brute himself. It is only because you are
trying to divorce yourself from him, that
you feel ashamed of his presence. You cannot
see him until you begin to be "different"
from him. Learn to be a tamer of wild
beasts, for you have a whole menagerie
within you. The lion; the tiger; the hyena;
the ape; the pig; the peacock, and all the
rest are there, constantly showing forth
some of their characteristics. Do not fear
them - smile at them when they show
themselves - for you are stronger than they,
and can bring them to subjection - and their
appearance is useful to you in a way of
instructing you as to their existence. They
are an amusing lot, when you have reached
the stage where you are able to practically
stand aside and see them perform their
tricks, and go through their antics. You
then feel strongly that they are not YOU,
but something apart from you - something
from which you are becoming rapidly
divorced. Do not worry about the beasts -
for you are the master.
While the
above quotation from "Light on the Path"
includes all of the foregoing manifestations
of the lower nature, it seems to dwell
especially upon the delusion of the lower
self - that dream of separateness - that
exhibition of what has been called "the
working fiction of the universe," which
causes us to imagine ourselves things apart
from the rest - something better, holier,
and superior to the rest of our kind. This
manifests in the emotion of pride - the
peacock part of our mental menagerie. As we
have said, this is one of the most dangerous
of our lower qualities, because it is so
subtle and persistent. You will note that
the writer speaks of it as living
"fruitfully in the heart of the devoted
disciple, as well as in the heart of the man
of desire." This may seem strange to you,
but it is the experience of every advanced
occultist that, long after he had thought he
had left Pride behind him, he would be
startled at it appearing in a new phase -
the pride of power - the pride of intellect
- the pride of spiritual growth. And then he
would have all his work to do over again.
Let us state right here that there is a kind
of pride which is not a manifestation of the
lower self - it may be called the absolute
form of pride, if you will. We allude to
that pride of that whole - that the
intellect we manifest is part of that
universal mind - that the spiritual growth
we have attained is a bit of the great
possibilities of the race, and that much
more is ahead for all the race. But the
danger line is reached when we begin to shut
out some others from that universal pride -
the moment that we leave out one other
manifestation of life (no matter how lowly)
from our universal pride, then we make it a
selfish pride. The moment we erect a fence
with anyone on the outside, then are we
indulging in selfish pride. For there is no
outside, at the last. We are all inside -
there is no place outside of the All. When
you feel a pride with all living things -
with all of life - with all of being - then
you are not selfish. But the moment you
place yourself apart in a class - whether
that class be composed of but yourself, or
of yourself and all of mankind, except one
individual - then you are yielding to a
subtle form of selfishness. The last man
must not be left out - cannot be left out.
You are possessed of no quality or
attainment that is not the property of the
race - something that may be attained by all
in time. All that you think is superiority
is merely a little more age - a little more
experience on this plane of existence. Your
pride is the foolish infantile pride of the
child who has just passed out of "the baby
class" in the primary school and looks
condescendingly upon the new flock of little
ones who are just entering the class from
which he has just passed. To the eyes of
those in higher classes, the second grade
scholar is a subject for a kindly, playing
smile - but the little fellow does not know
that - he feels "big" and gives the peacock
quality full sway. Now, before we leave this
illustration, let us say that the little
fellow is justified in feeling proud of
having accomplished his advancement - it is
a worthy feeling - the peacock part comes in
only when he looks down upon those below
him. This is the substance of the folly of
Pride - this feeling of superiority toward
those still in the lower grade. A feeling of
joy from work attained - heights scaled - is
not unworthy, but let us beware of the
attendant feeling of superiority toward
those who are still climbing - there lies
the sting of Pride. Extract the sting, and
your wasp is harmless.
If you feel
tempted toward self-glorification,
sometimes, just remember that as compared to
some of the intelligences, who have long
since passed through your present stage of
development, you are no more than is the
intelligence of a black beetle as compared
with your own intellect - that, to the eyes
of some of the greatly developed souls, the
everyday life of even the highest of our
race on earth today is but as rare to us the
antics and gambols, fights and tumbles, of a
lot of Newfoundland puppies whose eyes have
been opened but a few days - just remember
this, we say, and you will get a better idea
of just what place you fill in the scale of
intelligence. But this does not mean
self-debasement, either. Not at all. As low
comparatively, as we may be, we are still
well on the way of advancement, and great
things are before us - we cannot be robbed
of a single bit of life - we are going on,
and on, and on, to greater and still greater
heights. But, impress this upon your soul -
not only are you going there, but all of
mankind besides - yes, even that last man.
Do not forget this. On the plane of the
eternal, there cannot be such a thing as
selfish pride - understanding has forever
wiped it out - "this giant weed cannot
flower there; this blot upon existence is
wiped out by the very atmosphere of eternal
thought."
We must
carry over to the next lesson the remainder
of our comments on the above quotation.
Mind
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