Lesson IV The Voice of the
Silence.
Part
II of ""Light on the Path" opens
with the following statement:
Out
of the silence that is peace, a resonant
voice shall arise. And this voice will
say: It is not well, thou has reaped,
now thou must sow. And, knowing this
voice to be the silence itself, thou
wilt obey.
The
resonant
voice that proceeds from "out of the silence
that is peace" is the voice of Spirit
forcing its way into the field of
consciousness. The voice is not as plain as
when heard at the moment of illumination,
for the ear is filled with the vibrations of
the lower planes, and cannot sense so
clearly the high vibrations proceeding from
the upper regions of the mind. But the voice
is insistent, and if listened to will make
itself heard. It will not he confused with
the thought-waves with which the ether is
filled. for when one thinks of the spiritual
plane he is lifted upward mentally, and the
lower vibrations cannot reach him so
plainly. He soon learns to distinguish the
clear pure voice of Spirit from the grosser
thought-waves that are beating upon him. The
voice of Spirit always has an "upward"
tendency, and its influence is always toward
higher things.
"And
this
voice
will say: It is not well; thou hast reaped,
now thou must sow." This passage pictures
the longing which possesses the true
occultist, who had experienced the higher
consciousness, and which impels him to carry
out in actual life the truth which he has
received -- to manifest in action and
association with the world, the thought
which has come to him in the silence.
The
soul may wait in solitude until the truth
comes to it -- but the truth, when once
received and given a lodgment in the heart,
fills the soul with a divine unrest, and
causes it to go forth into the world and
live the life of the Spirit among and with
men, instead of apart and away from them.
The man to whom spiritual illumination has
come -- even in its lightest form -- is a
changed being. He radiates thought of a
different character from that emanating from
the minds of those around him. He has
different ideals and consequently different
thoughts. And his thought-waves have an
effect upon the great body of thought-waves
of the world. They leaven the mass -- they
are like the stream of pure water pouring
into the muddy pond, which pure stream
gradually hears the entire pond. His
thoughts and presence are needed in the
world's work, and so the Spiritual Mind
sends him an impulse to go forth and live
the life -- to live it among men and women,
and not apart from them. It says to him:
"Thou hast reaped, now thou must sow." "And
knowing this voice to be the silence
itself," he obeys.
There
are
three
great stages in the spiritual and mental
life of the race, and as the babe before
birth goes through all the physical changes,
shapes and forms that the race has passed
through during long ages of evolution, so
does the growing man go through the stages
of the mental and spiritual evolution of the
race. But the individual goes through only
such changes as lead up to the stage of
evolution he has reached at full maturity.
He may reach only Stage I, if he is a Stage
I individual. If he is a Stage II individual
he passes through Stage I and then on to
Stage II. If he is a Stage III soul, he
passes through Stage I, and then Stage II
(as rapidly as may be) and then unfolds into
the Stage III consciousness. Let us consider
these three stages.
Stage
I is that plane of life in which the
Instinctive Mind is in control, the
Intellect not being sufficiently developed
to assert itself fully and the Spiritual
Mind being scarcely recognized. In this
stage live the primitive races -- and the
young child. Those dwelling in it have but
little concern for aught but that which
pertains to the physical life. Their
thoughts are mainly those relating to food,
shelter, and the gratification of the
physical senses. There exists among these
people a certain freedom, democracy, and a
lack of the "I am holier than thou" or
"better than thou" feeling, which renders
their life freer and easier, and happier,
than that of those in the next highest
stage. They know little or nothing about
"sin," and generally follow their desires
without question. They have a sort of
instinctive belief in a higher power, but do
not trouble themselves much about it, nor do
they imagine that certain ceremonies or
observances are pleasing to Deity, and that
failure to perform are apt to arouse his
wrath. They do not worry much about their
chances of "salvation," and are disposed
instinctively to realize that the Power that
takes care of them Here, will take care of
them There.
Stage
II commences when the Intellect begins to
assume control. Man then begins to awaken to
a sense of "good and evil." He recognizes a
mysterious something coming from a still
higher part of his mind, which makes him
feel ashamed of doing certain selfish
things, and which causes him to experience a
feeling of peace and satisfaction when he
has done certain (comparatively) unselfish
things. But the Intellect does not stop with
this. It begins to invent "good" things, and
"bad" things. Priests and prophets arise who
say that certain things (usually the giving
of a part of one's goods to the temple) are
"good" and pleasing to Deity; and that
certain other things (for instance, the
refusal to attend the temple, or to
contribute to its support) are "bad" and
certain to be punished by Deity. These
priests and prophets invent heavens suited
to the desires of their followers, and hells
filled with the particular things that their
people fear. Things are separated into
"good" and "bad," the "bad" list seeming to
be the larger. Most of the pleasant things
of life are placed in the "bad" list for no
other reason than that they are pleasant. In
the same way the "good" list includes the
majority of unpleasant things, the
prevailing idea being that Deity delights in
seeing his children doing things unpleasant
to them, and waxes wroth if they chance to
indulge in a pleasant act. Creeds and sects
are devised, and dire punishment is meted to
those who do not accept the former and join
the latter. The idea seems to be that those
who do not agree with one's particular
conception of Deity are "against God," or
"God's enemies," and must and will be
punished by him. People often prefer to
relieve God of the task of punishing these
unbelievers, and proceed to do it
themselves.
People
in
this
stage of spiritual development are usually
quite strenuous. They declare certain days
to be "holy" (as if all days were not so)
and insist that certain places are holier
than others. They claim that certain peoples
and races are "chosen" and favored, and that
the rest are hated by Deity. They insist
that only a handful of men are to be
"saved," and that the majority of God's
children are destined to ever-lasting
damnation and punishment. Hell is very hot
when seen from the viewpoint of Stage II.
Hate, arising from the feeling of
self-righteousness, is a marked
characteristic of this stage -- sects are
formed, and hate and jealousy are manifested
between them. Fear reigns, and the Divine
Love is almost lost sight of. The
Brotherhood of Man is but a name in this
stage -- all the brotherly feeling that is
to be seen is confined to the people
belonging to some particular sect. The
outsiders are not "brothers," but "heathen,"
"pagans," "unbelievers," "dissenters,"
"heretics," etc. The sense of the Oneness of
All, which is instinctively felt in Stage I
(and both seen and felt in Stage III). is
apparently neither seen or felt in Stage II.
In this stage separateness seems to be the
keynote. As the race passes still further
along in this stage, and Intellect further
unfolds, the reasoning faculties cause it to
discard many superstitions and foolish
notions that had at one time seemed sacred
and the truth itself. Sheath after sheath is
discarded as outworn and no longer
necessary, and usually a period of disbelief
and skepticism sets in. The old things have
been thrown aside, but nothing seems to have
come to take their place. But after this
phase, the Spiritual Mind seems to
concentrate its effort to force into the
field of consciousness the internal evidence
of the truth -- of real religion -- of the
teachings of Spirit. And Man gradually
passes into Stage III.
Stage
III
people
see good in everyone -- in all things -- in
every place. Some things are seen to be more
highly developed than others, but all are
seen to form a part of the great plan. The
developed soul parts with certain things
from lack of desire, casting them off as
worn out tools or clothing. But it sees that
to others these same things are the best
they have, and are far better than some
other things which these undeveloped people
had parted company with still farther back.
It sees that all of life is on the Path --
some a little father advanced than others,
but all journeying in the same direction. It
sees all learning their lessons and
profiting by their mistakes. It sees
manifestations of both "good" and "bad"
(relative terms) in each man and woman, but
prefers to look for the "good" in the
sinner, rather than for the "bad" in the
saint. It sees in "sin" principally
mistakes, misdirected energy, and
undeveloped mind.
The
Stage
III
soul sees good in all forms of religions --
so much so that it finds it hard to follow
the narrow creeds of any particular one. It
sees the Absolute worshiped and recognized
in all the conceptions of Deity that have
ever originated in the human mind, from the
stone idol to the highest conception of
Deity known to any of "the churches," the
difference being solely in the spiritual
growth of the different worshipers. As man
grows, his conception of Deity advances -- a
man's idea of God is merely himself
magnified. The God of the advanced man does
not appeal to the savage, any more than does
the God of the savage attract the advanced
man. Each is doing the best he can, and is
setting up a conception corresponding to his
particular stage of growth. A writer has
aptly expressed this thought in these words:
"A man's god is himself at his best, and his
devil is himself at his worst." But devils
pass away from Man as his conception of
Deity enlarges.
But
the great distinguishing thought of the
Stage III man is his consciousness of the
Oneness of All. He sees, and feels, that all
the world is alive and full of intelligence
in varying degrees of manifestation. He
feels himself a part of that great life. He
feels his identity with all of Life. He
feels in touch with all of nature -- in all
its forms. In all forms of life he sees
something of himself, and recognizes that
each particular form of life has its
correspondence [sic] in something within
himself. This does not mean that he is
bloodthirsty like the tiger; vain like the
peacock; venomous like the serpent. But,
still he feels that all the attributes of
these animals are within himself -- mastered
and governed by his higher self --
still
there. And consequently he can feel
these animals, or for those of his race
in which the animal characteristics are
still in evidence. He pities them, but
does not hate his brother however much
that brother's traits may seem
undesirable and hurtful to him. And he
feels within himself all the of the
higher life as well as the lower and he
that he is unfolding and growing into
these forms, and that some day he will
be like them.
He
feels the great throbbing life of which he
is a part -- and he feels it to be his life.
The sense of separateness is slipping from
him. He feels the security that comes from
this consciousness of his identity with the
All Life, and consequently he cannot Fear,
faces today and tomorrow without fear, and
marches forward toward the Divine Adventure
with his heart. He feels at home, for is not
the Universe akin to him -- is he not among
his own? Such a consciousness divests one of
Fear, and Hate, and Condemnation. It teaches
one to be kind. makes one realize the
Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of
Man. It substitutes a knowing for a blind
belief. It makes man over, and starts him on
a new stage of his journey, a changed being,
No
wonder that one in this Stage III is
misunderstood by Stage II people. No wonder
that they often consider him to be a Stage I
man because he fails to see "evil" in what
seems so to them. No wonder that they marvel
at his seeing "good" in things that do not
appear so to them. He is like a stranger in
a strange land, and must not complain if he
be misjudged and misunderstood. But there
are more and more of these people every year
-- they are coming in great quantities, and
when they reach a sufficient number this old
earth will undergo a peaceful revolution.
That day man no longer will be content to
enjoy luxury while his brother starves -- he
will not be able to oppress and exploit his
own kind -- It will not be able to endure
much that today is passed over without
thought and feeling by the majority of
people And why will he not be able to do
these things? may be asked by some. Simply
because the man who has experienced this new
consciousness has broken down the old
feeling of separateness, and his brother's
pain is felt by him -- his brother's joy is
experienced in him -- he is in touch with
others.
From
whence
comes this uneasiness that causes men to
erect hospitals, and other charitable
institutions -- from whence comes this
feeling of discomfort at the sight of
suffering? From the Spiritual Mind that is
causing the feeling of nearness to all of
life to awaken in the mind of man, and thus
renders it more and more painful for them to
see and be aware of the pain of others --
because they begin to feel it, and
it renders them uncomfortable, and they make
at least some effort to relive it. The world
is growing kinder by reason of this dawning
consciousness, although it is still in a
barbarous state as compared to its future
condition when Stage III becomes more
common. The race to-day confronts great
changes -- the thousand straws floating
through the air show from which direction
the wind is coming, and whither it is
blowing. The breeze is just beginning to be
felt -- soon it will grow stronger, and then
the gale will come which will sweep before
it much that man has thought to be built for
ages. And after the storm man will build
better things -- things that will endure.
Have you not noticed the signs -- have you
not felt the breeze ? But, mark you this --
the final change will come not from Hate,
Revenge, or other unworthy motives -- it
will come as the result of a great and
growing Love -- a feeling that will convince
men that they are akin; that the hurt of one
is the hurt of all; that the joy of one is
the joy of all -- that all are One. Thus
with come the dawn of the Golden Age.
We may have appeared to have
wandered from our text, but what we have
said has a direct bearing upon the
question of sowing after the reaping -- of
giving after the receiving -- of working
after the acquiring of new strength, The
voice out of the silence will in-deed say
to all of us: Go forth and labor in my
vine-yard -- labor not by strenuous
effort, or by an attempt to force the
growth of living things -- thy work best
done by lying -- you are needed as
leaven to lighten the mass.
Here
follows
the next command from the little manual:
Thou who are now a disciple,
able to stand, able able to see, able to
speak; who hast conquered desire
attained to self-knowledge; who hast
seen bloom, and recognized it, and heard
the voice of the silence-- go thou to
the Hall of Learning, and read what is
written there for thee.
Let
us also read the note following this
command; it is very helpful:
NOTE.-To be able to stand, is to have
confidence; to be able to hear, is to
have opened the doors of the soul; to be
able to see, is to have obtained
perception; to be able to speak, is to
have obtained the power of helping
others; to have conquered desire, is to
have learned how to use and control the
elf; to have attained self-knowledge, is
to have retreated to the inner fortress
from whence the personal man can be
viewed with impartiality; to have seen
thy soul in its bloom, is to have
obtained a momentary glimpse in thyself
of the transfiguration which shall
essentially make thee more than man; to
recognize, is to achieve the great task
of gazing upon the blazing light without
dropping the eyes, and not falling back
in terror as though before some ghastly
phantom. This happens to some; and so,
when the victory is all but won, it is
lost. To hear the voice of silence, is
to understand that from within comes the
only true guidance; to go to the Hall of
Learning, is to enter the state in which
learning becomes possible. Then will
many words be written then for thee, and
written in fiery letters for thee easily
to read. For, when the disciple is
ready, the Master is ready also.
The
disciple
is spoken of as one able to stand; able to
hear; able to see; able to speak. The
consciousness of the Real Self enables one
to stand firmly upon his feet-causes him to
feel the Majesty of Self. It enables him to
bear the truth pouring in to him from the
thousand channels of life, all claiming
kinship with him, and willing and anxious to
impart to him knowledge and truth. It
enables him to see life as it is, in all its
varied forms-to see his relation to the
Whole and all of its parts, and to recognize
the truth when it presents itself before
him-it gives him the clear vision of the
Spirit. It enables him to speak so that his
words will reach others, even when he is
unconscious of the fact-he is possessed of
that peace which passeth understanding, and
his inward state finds utterance in his
everyday speech, and he adds a little to the
spiritual knowledge of the world.
The
manual
tells
the student who has conquered desire-that
is, who has recognized desire for what it
is, who has attained to the knowledge of the
Self; who has seen his soul in its bloom,
and recognized it, and heard the voice of
the silence; to proceed to the Hall of
Learning, and read what is written there for
him. The little note throws additional light
on the passage which follows. Its
description of the sight of "the soul in its
bloom" is particularly interesting in view
of what we have said in our last lesson-it
refers to Illumination, or the dawn of
spiritual consciousness-the flower that
blooms in the silence that follows the
storm. Well does the writer say that it is
"to have obtained a momentary glimpse in
thyself of the transfiguration which shall
eventually make the more thee more than man;
to recognize is to achieve the great task of
gazing upon the blazing light without
dropping the eyes, and not falling back in
terror as though before some ghastly
phantom." Well has the writer added that
"this happens to some; and so when the
victory is all but won, it is lost." But she
might have added, that it is only
temporarily lost, for the memory will
remain, and the soul will never rest
satisfied until it regains that which it
lost. Some who catch the glimpses of their
souls, drink back in fright, and treat the
matter as a delusion, or some "wicked
thought." It upsets one's preconceived and
conventional notion to such a degree, in
some instances, that those experiencing it
begin to be afraid that they are losing
their virtue and goodness, because they are
cease to condemn and hate "evil" as of
yore-they imagine that they are growing
"bad," and retreat from the consciousness so
far as they are able. They fail to perceive
that although one may hate the "bad' things
less, he loves the "good" things more than
ever-that is the things which are known to
be good by the Spiritual Mind, not the
manufactured and artificial "good" things
that pass current as the real article with
the majority of people.
The
little
note
also truthfully tells us that "To hear the
voice of the silence is to understand that
from within comes the only true guidance."
Remember these words-they are golden: "Understand
that from within comes the only true
guidance." If you can grasp the
meaning of these words-and have the courage
to trust and believe them, you are well
started on the Path. If you will always live
true to that little voice within, there will
be but little need of teachers and preachers
for you. And if we will but trust in that
little voice, its tones will become plainer
and stronger, and we will hear it on many
occasions. But if we turn a deaf ear to it
and refuse to heed its warning and guidance,
it will gradually grow fainter and fainter,
until its voice is no longer distinguishable
amidst the roar and bustle of the material
world.
The
Hall of Learning is the state of
consciousness which comes when the Spiritual
Mind is allowed to flow freely into the
conscious mind. Little by little the student
is impressed with the truth, so gradually,
often, that he scarcely realizes that it is
advancing-but he is continually progressing
and unfolding.
The
next four precepts are very important.
Although intended for quite advanced
students, much of their meaning may be
grasped by those who have not attained so
fully. We will try to make a little plainer
these difficult passages.
1. Stand aside in the coming
battle; and, though thou fightest, be
not though the warrior.
2. Look for the warrior, and let him in
thee.
3. Take his orders for battle, and obey
them. 4. Obey him, not as though he were
a general, but as though he were
thyself, and his spoken words were the
utterance of thy secret desires; for he
is thyself, yet infinitely wiser and
stronger than thyself. Look for him,
else, in the fever and hurry of the
fight, thou mayest pass him; and he will
not know the unless thou knowest him. If
thy cry reach his listening ear, then
will he fight in thee, and fill the dull
void within. And, if this is so, then
canst thou go through the fight cool and
unwearied, standing aside, and letting
him battle for thee. But if thou look
out for him, if thou pass him by, then
there is no safeguard for thee. Thy
brain will reel, thy heart grow
uncertain, and, in the dust of the
battlefield, thy sight and senses will
fail, and thou wilt not know thy friends
from thy enemies.
He is thyself; yet thou are but finite,
and liable to error. He is eternal and
is sure. He is eternal truth. When once
he has entered thee, and become thy
warrior, he will never utterly desert
thee, and, at the day of the great
peace, he will become one with thee.
These
four
precepts
refer to the recognition of the Real
Self-Spirit-which is within each soul, and
which is constantly struggling to cast from
itself (when the time is ripe) each
encumbering sheath of the lower self which
is hindering and containing it. The precepts
bid the soul to look within for the real
source of strength-to be guided by it-to
allow it to manifest freely through
oneself-to be led by Spirit. When one has
sufficiently freed oneself from the
restrictions and confining bonds of the
lower self, and is able to allow Spirit to
flow freely and manifest with a minimum
degree of resistance, then will Spirit act
through him and work for him, and guide him.
And even the less advanced soul may obtain
the greatest benefit from opening up itself
to the inflow of the divine principle, and
allowing it to work through it. The man who
is led by Spirit-who recognizes the
existence of the Real Self, and trusts
it-may live in a great measure apart from
the turmoil and strife of the outer world.
Not that he may withdraw from the world (for
that is often cowardice), but he is able to
take his place in the great game of Life,
and to do his work there and do it well, and
yet feel certain that while he is in
it he is not of it. He is able
practically to stand aside and see himself
act. Spirit will guide him through the
struggle, and will see that he is nourished
and cared for, and will always act for his ultimate
good. It will lead him to that which is best
for him, and will attract to him that which
he needs. Fear and unfaith are the great
obstacles to this free working of Spirit,
and until they are cast aside Spirit is
hampered and hindered in its work.
The
final
precept:
"Stand aside in the coming battle; and
though thou fightest, be thou not the
warrior," states this truth distinctly. Note
that the precept does not tell you to run
away from the battle, or to hide yourself,
or to seek seclusion. On the contrary, it
distinctly assumes that you will fight. But
it tells you to "stand aside" (that is for
you, in your present consciousness to stand
aside) and let the real self fight through
you and for you. That is, to allow Spirit to
lead you, and for you to be content with its
leading.
The
second
precept
is akin to the first. It tells you to "Look
for the warrior, and let him fight in thee."
Look for him; believe in him; trust in him;
recognize him-and let him fight the battle
for you.
"Take his orders for battle, and
obey them," says the third precept. If he
places you in a certain exposed position,
where the enemy's fire is concentrated
upon you, and your retreat seems to be
utterly cut off, fear not but obey orders
implicitly, for there is a plan behind the
orders, and you will in the end triumph.
Question not the orders, nor their result,
for they are given by a higher form of
intelligence than your present
consciousness, and have a distinct (and
good) object in view. Spirit is moving for
your advancement, and though it brings you
temporary pain and suffering, you will be
a gainer in the end. And if you once grasp
the meaning of it all, you will not feel
the suffering and pain as do others, for
they will be seen to be only temporary and
fleeting, and unreal, and you will lose
sense of them in your knowledge of the
greater thing coming to you through and by
means of them.
The
fourth
precept
tells you further to "Obey him, not as
though he were a general, but as though he
were thyself, and his spoken words were the
utterance of thy secret desires; for he is
thyself, yet infinitely wiser and stronger
than thyself." This admonition serves to
warn us of the mistake of considering Spirit
as an outside entity-a thing apart from
ourself-and to remind us that it is our real
self--ourself. Wiser and stronger
than our present conception and
consciousness of self, is Spirit, and we may
trust it implicitly.
"Look
for
him,
else, in the fever and hurry of the fight,
thou mayest pass him; and he will not know
thee unless thou knowest him," continues the
precept, and the warning is worthy of note.
In the midst of the fight we are most apt to
forget that the Real Self is working through
us, and, being excited and inflated by
success, we may imagine that we (the
conscious self) are doing all the work, and
may cease to look for the Spirit, and thus
close the channel of communication. "And he
will not know thee, unless thou knowest
him." Unless you recognize Spirit within,
Spirit will not be able to work through you
as freely as would otherwise be the case.
Unless you recognize the existence of
Spirit, you cannot expect it to respond.
Spirit's guidance is for those who desire it
and look for it.
"If
thy cry reach his listening ear, then will
he fight in thee, and fill the dull void
within." Note the promise, and the statement
that Spirit is listening-ever listening-for
your call for help. When you become
disheartened and discouraged-tired and worn
from the fight-wounded and bleeding from the
struggle-then cry to Spirit for help, and
the listening ear will hear thee and will "
fight in thee and fill the dull void
within." He who opens himself up to Spirit
no longer is conscious of the "dull void
within" which has oppressed him for so long.
"And
if this is so, then canst thou go through
the fight and unwearied, standing aside, and
letting him battle for thee." You will gain
that feeling of calm content, knowing that
thy warrior is invincible, and that the
battle must be yours in the end. He who is
conscious of Spirit working through him has
indeed acquired "that peace which passeth
understanding."
Then
it will be impossible for thee to strike one
blow amiss." True, indeed, for then every
act and move is the act and movement of
Spirit, and cannot be amiss or wrong. No
matter how meaningless or mistaken the act
or move may seem to the conscious mind at
the time, later on it will be recognized as
having been the very best thing under the
circumstances.
"But
if thou look not for him, if thou pass him
by, then there is no safeguard for thee. Thy
brain will reel, thy heart grow uncertain,
and, in the dust of the battle-field, thy
sight and senses will fail, and thou will
not know thy friends from thy enemies." Is
not this the experience of all of us before
we recognize and trust Spirit's guidance?
Have we not gone through these things, and
suffered and grieved because we could see no
light; no hope? Long have we cried aloud,
demanding to know all the reason of it
all-demanding to be told what was truth;
what was right; what was wrong. And no
answer has come to us, until we threw off
the confining bonds of the lower self, and
allowed the pure rays of Spirit to pour into
our souls.
"He
is thyself; yet thou are but finite, and
liable to error. He is eternal, and is sure.
He is eternal truth." The distinction
between the lower, temporary, consciousness
of self, and the reality, is there pointed
out. The paradox of the self and the Self is
here presented to you. Think well over it,
and the truth will gradually reach you-and
having ¦ you will never again depart
from you, no matter how dim it may seem at
times.
"When
once
he
has entered thee, and become thy warrior, he
will never utterly desert thee." Wonderful
promise. The consciousness of the existence
of the Spirit within you, once obtained, is
never entirely lost. Though you may learn to
doubt it, as not having come through your
ordinary senses, yet will the memory linger
with you-and when it is most needed you will
be able to recall the experience and again
open yourself to the inflow of the divine
wisdom and power.
"And,
at the day of the great peace, he will
become one with thee." In the time when
sheath after sheath has been cast off and
the flower of Spirit unfolds in full
bloom-when man shall become more than
man-then will the consciousness of the
individual melt into the "knowing" of
Spirit, and the soul will be at one with its
highest principle. This will not be a
surrender of individuality-but, on the
contrary will be such an enlargement of
individuality and consciousness as can
scarcely be imagined by the greatest
intellect of to-day. Then the great knowing,
power, and joy, of which we have gained a
faint glimpse during the flash of
illumination, will become a permanent
consciousness with us. Then will we pass
from the realms of the relative into the
regions of the absolute.
We
come now to another group of four precepts.
Let us consider them.
5. Listen to the song of life.
6. Store in your memory the melody you
hear.
7. Learn from it the lesson of harmony.
8. You can stand upright now, then as a
rock amid the turmoil, obeying the
warrior who is thyself and thy king.
Unconcerned in the battle wave to do his
bidding, having no longer any care as to
the result of the battle-for one thing
only is important, that the warrior
shall win; and you know he is incapable
of defeat-standing thus, cool and
awakened, use the hearing you have
acquired by pain and by the destruction
of pain. Only fragments of the great
song come to your ears while yet you are
but man. But, if you listen to it,
remember it faithfully, so that none
which has reached you is lost, and
endeavor to learn from it the meaning of
the mystery which surrounds you. In time
you will need no teacher. For as the
individual has voice, as has that in
which the individual exists. Life itself
has speech and is never silent. And its
utterance is not, as you that are deaf
may suppose, a cry: it is a song. Learn
from it that you are a part of the
harmony; learn from it to obey the laws
of the harmony.
"Listen to the song of life."
The
note that is attached to this precept is so
beautiful-so full of truth-so
instructive-that we can find nothing to add
to it, and we insert it in this place as the
best possible explanation of the precept to
which it is attached:
NOTE.-Look for it, and listen
to it, first in your own heart. At first
you may say it is not there; when I
search I find only discord. Look deeper.
If again you are disappointed, pause,
and look deeper again. There is a
natural melody, an obscure fount, in
every human heart. It may be hidden over
and utterly concealed and silenced-but
it is there. At the very base of your
nature, you will find faith, hope and
love. He that chooses evil refuses to
look within himself, shuts his ears to
the melody of his heart, as he blinds
his eyes to the light of his soul. He
does this because he finds it easier to
live in desires. But underneath all life
is the strong current that cannot be
checked; the great waters are there in
reality. Find these, and you will
perceive that none, not the most
wretched of creatures, but is a part of
it, however be blind himself in the
fact, and built up for himself a
phantasmal outer form of horror. In that
sense it is that I say to you: All those
beings among whom you struggle on are
fragments of the Divine. And so
deceptive is the illusion in which you
live, that it is hard to guess where you
will first detect the sweet voice in the
hearts of others. But know that it is
certainly within yourself. Look for it
there and, once having heard it, you
will more readily recognize it around
you.
The
sixth
precept:
"Store in your memory the melody you hear,"
and the seventh precept: "Learn from it the
lesson of harmony," relate to the fifth
precept and need no special explanation.
The
eighth
precept
is full of information. It starts with the
assurance that you (now being open to the
guidance of Spirit) can stand upright, firm
as a rock amid the turmoil, obeying the
warrior (Spirit), who is spoken of as being
"thyself and thy king" (again a reference to
the relative and the absolute relation).
It
speaks of the soul led by Spirit as being
unconcerned in the battle, save to do his
(Spirit's) bidding, and "having no longer
any care as to the result of the battle"
(that is, caring nothing about the apparent
result-the temporary defeats, pains, and
trying circumstances)-for only one thing is
important and that is that Spirit should
win, and win it must, for it is invincible,
and incapable of defeat. The soul is spoken
of as "standing thus, cool and awakened,"
and using the hearing which it has acquired
by pain and by the destruction of pain. This
paradox of "pain and the destruction of pain
is interesting. One necessarily learns
lessons from pain -- many lessons may be
learned in no other way -- and yet after the
true nature of pain is learned and fully
impressed upon the mind, then pain no longer
is pain -- pain is destroyed, and
another lesson is learned. And so the voice
of the Spirit -- the song of life -- comes
to the hearing which has been awakened both
by pain and by the destruction of pain.
Only fragments of the great song
come to your ears while you are but man.
For when you reach the stage when you may
listen (a the grand volume of the divine
song, then you are no longer man, but are
something far higher in the scale of
spiritual evolution and life. But the mere
fragments of the song are so far beyond
any other human experience that the mere
echo is worth living a life to hear. We
are further told that if you listen to it,
remember it faithfully, so that none which
has reached you is lost, and endeavor to
learn from it the meaning of the mystery
which surrounds you, the voice of Spirit
will beat upon your ears, so that, in
spite of the material interferences you
will from time to time have honed in upon
your consciousness bits of knowledge which
will seem to come from another world.
Light will be thrown gradually upon the
great problems of existence, and veil
after veil will be withdrawn.
The
precept
then gives us the glad tidings that: "In
time you will need no teacher. For as the
individual has voice, so has that in which
the individual exists. Life has speech and
is never silent. And it is not, as you that
are deaf may suppose, a cry; it. is a song.
Learn from it that you are a part of the
harmony; learn from it to obey the laws of
the harmony. In time you will have passed
beyond the need of a human teacher, for the
light of Spirit will illuminate every object
upon which you gaze, and the ears opened by
Spirit will hear the lessons coming from
every object in nature. In the stone; in the
plant; in the mountain; in the tempest; in
the sunshine; in the stars; in all things
high or low; will you perceive that great
throbbing intelligent life of which you are
a part from them will you hear notes of the
great song of life: All is One;. All is One.
As the precept tells us, the sound from
nature and nature™s things, is not a cry, as
many have supposed, but a great triumphant
song -- a song rejoicing in the Row of Life
of the singer, and vibrating in unison with
the Absolute. Learn from the song that you
are a part of the harmony; learn from it to
obey the law of the harmony.
The
next group of four precepts are along the
same lines as those preceding:
9. Regard earnestly all the life
that surrounds you.
10. Learn to look intelligently into the
hearts of men.
11. Regard more earnestly your own
heart.
12. For through your own heart comes the
one light which can illuminate life and
make it clear to your eyes.
Study the hearts of men that you may
know what is that world in which you
live, and of which you will to be a
part. Regard the constantly changing and
moving life which surrounds you for it
is formed by the hearts of men; and, as
men learn to understand their
constitution and meaning, yon will by
degrees be able to read the larger word
at life.
The
ninth
precept:
Regard earnestly all the life that surrounds
you, refers to that part of the subject
mentioned by us in the preceding paragraph
-- the knowledge that comes to one by
viewing nature by the light of the Spirit.
The
tenth
precept
tells you to Learn to look intelligently
into the hearts of men, that you may
under-stand the world of men, that forms a
part of the great world. By knowing men you
will be able to help them, and will also
learn many lessons that will aid you in your
journey along the path. But take notice of
what the little accompanying note says
regarding this study of men. Here it is:
NOTE -- From an absolutely
impersonal point of view, otherwise your
sight is colored. Therefore
impersonality must first be understood.
Intelligence is impartial; no man is
your enemy, no man is your friend. All
alike are your teachers. Your enemy
becomes a part of yourself, an extension
of yourself, a riddle hard to read. Only
one thing is more difficult to
know--your own heart. Not until the
bonds of personality are loosed, can
that profound mystery of self begin to
be seen. Not until you stand aside from
it, will it in any way reveal itself to
your understanding. Then, and not till
then, can you grasp and guide it. Then,
and not till then, can you see all its
powers and devote them to a worthy
service.
The
eleventh
precept tells you to Regard most earnestly
your own heart. And the twelfth precept goes
on to say: For through your own heart comes
the one light which can illuminate life, and
make it clear to your eyes. In your own
nature you will find all that is in the
nature of other men -- high and low -- pure
and foul -- it is all there, the foul
outlived, perhaps -- the pure yet to be
lived, perhaps -- but all there
And
if you would understand men, and their
motives. and their doings, and their
thoughts, look within, and you will
understand other men better. But do not
identify yourself with all the thoughts you
may find in your heart. View them as would
an outsider, look at them as you would upon
objects in a case in a museum -- useful to
study but not to make a part of your life.
And, remember this, that none of the
things in your heart is good enough to use
or master you -- although many of them may
be used by you to advantage. YOU are
the master, and not the mastered -- that is
if you are a delivered soul.
The
thirteenth
precept says that: Speech comes only with
knowledge. Attain to knowledge, and you will
attain to speech. The little accompanying
note is explanatory (in part) of this
precept. We here-with print it:
NOTE.--It is impossible to help
others till you have obtained some
certainty of your own. When you have
learned the first twenty-one rules, and
have entered the Hall of Learning with
your powers developed and sense
unchained, then you will find there is a
fount within you from which speech will
arise.
Do
not be worried if you anticipate being
called v,upon to impart words of comfort and
knowledge to others. You need not prepare
yourself. The person will draw forth from
you (through Spirit's guidance) just what is
beet for him or her, Fear not -- have faith.
We
must come to an end, We have tried to
explain, partially, the wonderful teachings
of this little manual -- Light on the
Path, so that the beginner, perhaps,
might be able to grasp the loose end of the
teaching, and then gradually unwind the ball
at his leisure. The task has grown heavier,
and the work less satisfactory, as the
precepts passed before as. Words are finite
-- truth is infinite -- and it is hard to
even attempt to explain infinite truth in
finite words. The thirteenth precept is the
last one that we consider. The remaining
ones must be read alone lay the student,
with the light of the Spirit. They are only
for those who have attained spiritual sight,
and to such their meaning will be more or
less plain, according to the degree of
unfoldment which has come to the individual.
We
feel that our task has been poorly executed,
although many have written us that these
lessons have opened their spiritual eyes,
and that many things heretofore very dark,
are now seen plainly. We trust that this is
indeed so, and that many more may obtain
help and comfort from our words, although to
us it seems that we have written nothing.
And yet, we know that if these words had not
some task assigned to them -- if they were
not intended to form a part of the great
work, they never would have been written. So
we send them forth to go where they will,
without R full knowledge on our part of
their destination. Perhaps some into whose
hands they may fall may understand better
than do we why they were written and sent
forth. They were produced at the dictates of
Spirit -- let Spirit attend to the placing
of them where they are called for.
In
our following lessons we will take up other
phases of occultism which may be of interest
and profit to our students. Rut before
leaving the beautiful precepts and teachings
of Light on the Path," let us urge
upon our students the importance of that
little manual. It contains within its pages
the greatest amount of high spiritual
teaching ever combined into so small a
space. Let not the student imagine that he
has mastered it, because he seems to
understand its general teachings. Let him
read it again a little later on, and he will
see new beauties in it. We have never met a
student -- no matte." how highly developed
--who could not learn something from the
little manual. Its teachings are capable of
being interpreted in many different ways,
for it portrays the experiences of the soul
as it journeys along the path. You will
remember that the upward ascent is along the
spiral path, and the soul goes around and
around but ever mounting higher. One may
think he grasps the meaning of the first
precepts of the little manual, but as he
again reaches a certain point, just one
round higher, he may again take up the first
precepts and find in them new meaning
suitable for his newly discovered needs. And
so on, and so on. Not only is there
spiritual progression along spiral lines
extending over ages, but in each life-time
there is a spiral path to be mounted, as
will be apparent to all of us who will stop
to consider the matter. The soul which has
not found the en-trance to the path, seems
to go around and around in a circle,
traveling over the same ground, and making
no real progress. Rut once it discovers the
little path which enters the circle at one
of its points, and takes steps thereon, it
finds that while it still goes around and
around, it is really traveling the spiral,
and is mounting one round higher with each
turn. And we known of no little book so
helpful on the journey as this little manual
-- "Light on the Path.
We
trust that we may be pardoned for inserting
in this lesson the following words from our
introduction to the little manual in
question. They are as appropriate at the
close of this lesson as at the beginning of
the little book:
"The little treatise," LIGHT ON
THE PATH," is a classic among
occultists, and is the best guide known
to for those who have taken the first
step on the Path of Attainment. The
writer has veiled the meaning of the
rules in the way always customary to
mystics, so that to the one who has no
grasp on the Truth these pages will
probably appear to be a mass of
contradictions and practically devoid of
sense. But to the one to whom a glimpse
of the inner life has been given, these
pages will be a treasury of the rarest
jewels, and each time he opens it he
will see new gems. To many this little
book will be the first revelation of
that which they have been all their
lives blindly seeking. To many it will
be the first bit of their spiritual
bread given to satisfy the hunger of the
soul. To many it will be the first cup
of water from the spring of life, given
to quench the thirst which has consumed
them. Those for whom this book is
intended will recognize its message, and
after reading it they will never be the
same as before it came to them. As the
poet has said: "Where I pass all my
children know me," and so will the
Children of the Light recognize the book
as for them. As for the others, we can
only say that they will in time be ready
for this great message. The book is
intended to symbolize successive steps
of the neophyte in occultism as he
progresses in the lodge work. The rules
are practically those which were given
to the neophytes of the great lodge of
the Brotherhood of Ancient Egypt, and
which for generations have been taught
guru to chela in India. The peculiarity
of the rules herein laid down, is that
their inner meaning unfolds as the
student progresses on The Path. Some
will be able to understand a number of
these rules, while others will see but
dimly even the first steps. The student,
however, will find that when he has
firmly planted his foot on one of these
steps, he will find the one just ahead
becoming dimly illuminated, so as to
give him confidence to take the next
step. Let none be discouraged; the fact
that this book attracts you is the
message to you that it is intended for
you, and will in time unfold its
meaning. Read it over and over often,
and you will find veil after veil
lifted, though veil upon veil still
remains between you and the Absolute.
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