Enlightenment
Human Body
Human Spirit
Vision
Human Mind
Raja
Yoga
Mind
Power
Gnani
Yoga
Adv.Philosophy
Fastrack
Art of
Living
Drahla
FourteenLessons
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Kyballion
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A STUDY OF
THE HERMETIC
PHILOSOPHY OF ANCIENT EGYPT AND GREECE
BY THREE INITIATES
"THE LIPS OF WISDOM ARE CLOSED, EXCEPT TO THE
EARS OF UNDERSTANDING"
Contents
CHAPTER I THE HERMETIC
PHILOSOPHY
CHAPTER II
THE SEVEN HERMETIC PRINCIPLES
CHAPTER III
MENTAL TRANSMUTATION
CHAPTER IV
THE ALL
CHAPTER V
THE MENTAL UNIVERSE
CHAPTER VI
THE DIVINE PARADOX
CHAPTER VII
"THE ALL IN ALL
CHAPTER
VIII THE PLANES OF
CORRESPONDENCE
CHAPTER IX
VIBRATION
CHAPTER
X POLARITY
CHAPTER XI
RHYTHM
CHAPTER XII
CAUSATION
CHAPTER
XIII GENDER
CHAPTER XIV
MENTAL GENDER
CHAPTER XV
HERMETIC AXIOMS
Introduction
We
take great pleasure in presenting to the attention
of students and investigators of the Secret
Doctrines this little work based upon the
world-old Hermetic Teachings. There has been so
little written upon this subject, notwithstanding
the countless references to the Teachings in the
many works upon occultism, that the many earnest
searchers after the Arcane Truths will doubtless
welcome the appearance of the present volume.
The
purpose of this work is not the enunciation of any
special philosophy or doctrine, but rather is to
give to the students a statement of the Truth that
will serve to reconcile the many bits of occult
knowledge that they may have acquired, but which
are apparently opposed to each other and which
often serve to discourage and disgust the beginner
in the study. Our intent is not to erect a new
Temple of Knowledge, but rather to place in the
hands of the student a Master-Key with which he
may open the many inner doors in the Temple of
Mystery through the main portals he has already
entered.
There is no portion of the
occult teachings possessed by the world which have
been so closely guarded as the fragments of the
Hermetic Teachings which have come down to us over
the tens of centuries which have elapsed since the
lifetime of its great founder, Hermes
Trismegistus, the "scribe of the gods" who dwelt
in old Egypt in the days when the present race of
men was in its infancy. Contemporary with Abraham,
and, if the legends be true, an instructor of that
venerable sage, Hermes was, and is, the Great
Central Sun of Occultism, whose rays have served
to illumine the countless teachings which have
been promulgated since his time. All the
fundamental and basic teachings embedded in the
esoteric teachings of every race may be traced
back to Hermes. Even the most ancient teachings of
India undoubtedly have their roots in the original
Hermetic Teachings.
From
the land of the Ganges many advanced occultists
wandered to the land of Egypt, and sat at the feet
of the Master. From him they obtained the
Master-Key which explained and reconciled their
divergent views, and thus the Secret Doctrine was
firmly established.
From other lands also came the
learned ones, all of whom regarded Hermes as the
Master of Masters, and his influence was so great
that in spite of the many wanderings from the path
on the part of the centuries of teachers in these
different lands, there may still be found a
certain basic resemblance and correspondence which
underlies the many and often quite divergent
theories entertained and taught by the occultists
of these different lands today. The student of
Comparative Religions will be able to perceive the
influence of the Hermetic Teachings in every
religion worthy of the name, now known to man,
whether it be a dead religion or one in full vigor
in our own times. There is always a certain
correspondence in spite of the contradictory
features, and the Hermetic Teachings act as the
Great Reconciler.
The
lifework of Hermes seems to have been in the
direction of planting the great Seed-Truth which
has grown and blossomed in so many strange forms,
rather than to establish a school of philosophy
which would dominate the world's thought. But,
nevertheless, the original truths taught by him
have been kept intact in their original purity by
a few men in each age, who, refusing great numbers
of half-developed students and followers, followed
the Hermetic custom and reserved their truth for
the few who were ready to comprehend and master
it. From lip to ear the truth has been handed down
among the few. There have always been a few
Initiates in each generation, in the various lands
of the earth, who kept alive the sacred flame of
the Hermetic Teachings, and such have always been
willing to use their lamps to re-light the lesser
lamps of the outside world, when the light of
truth grew dim, and clouded by reason of neglect,
and when the wicks became clogged with foreign
matter. There were always a few to tend faithfully
the altar of the Truth, upon which was kept alight
the Perpetual Lamp of Wisdom. These men devoted
their lives to the labor of love which the poet
has so well stated in his lines:
"0,
let not the flame die out! Cherished age after age
in its dark cavern -- in its holy temples
cherished. Fed by pure ministers of love “let not
the flame die out!
These
men have never sought popular approval, nor
numbers of followers. They are indifferent to
these things, for they know how few there are in
each generation who are ready for the truth, or
who would recognize it if it were presented to
them. They reserve the "strong meat for men" while
others furnish the "milk for babes. They reserve
their pearls of wisdom for the few elect, who
recognize their value and who wear them in their
crowns, instead of casting them before the
materialistic vulgar swine, who would trample them
in the mud and mix them with their disgusting
mental food. But still these men have never
forgotten or overlooked the original teachings of
Hermes, regarding the passing on of the words of
truth to those ready to receive it, which teaching
is stated in The Kybalion as follows: "Where fall
the footsteps of the Master, the ears of those
ready for his Teaching open wide. And again:
"When the ears of the student
are ready to hear, then cometh the lips to fill
them with wisdom. But their customary attitude has
always been strictly in accordance with the other
Hermetic aphorism, also in The Kybalion: "The lips
of Wisdom are closed, except to the ears of
Understanding.
There
are those who have criticised this attitude of the
Hermetists, and who have claimed that they did not
manifest the proper spirit in their policy of
seclusion and reticence. But a moment's glance
back over the pages of history will show the
wisdom of the Masters, who knew the folly of
attempting to teach to the world that which it was
neither ready or willing to receive. The
Hermetists have never sought to be martyrs, and
have, instead, sat silently aside with a pitying
smile on their closed lips, while the "heathen
raged noisily about them in their customary
amusement of putting to death and torture the
honest but misguided enthusiasts who imagined that
they could force upon a race of barbarians the
truth capable of being understood only by the
elect who had advanced along The Path.
And
the spirit of persecution has not as yet died out
in the land. There are certain Hermetic Teachings,
which, if publicly promulgated, would bring down
upon the teachers a great cry of scorn and
revilement from the multitude, who would again
raise the cry of
"Crucify! Crucify.
In this little work we have
endeavored to give you an idea of the fundamental
teachings of The Kybalion, striving to give you
the working Principles, leaving you to apply them
yourselves, rather than attempting to work out the
teaching in detail. If you are a true student, you
will be able to work out and apply these
Principles“if not, then you must develop yourself
into one, for otherwise the Hermetic Teachings
will be as "words, words, words to you.
THE THREE INITIATES.
CHAPTER
I THE
HERMETIC PHILOSOPHY
"The lips of wisdom are
closed, except to the ears of Understanding". The
Kybalion.
From old Egypt have come the fundamental
esoteric and occult teachings which have so strongly
influenced the philosophies of all races, nations and
peoples, for several thousand years. Egypt, the home
of the Pyramids and the Sphinx, was the birthplace of
the Hidden Wisdom and Mystic Teachings. From her
Secret Doctrine all nations have borrowed. India,
Persia, Chaldea, Medea, China, Japan, Assyria, ancient
Greece and Rome, and other ancient countries partook
liberally at the feast of knowledge which the
Hierophants and Masters of the Land of Isis so freely
provided for those who came prepared to partake of the
great store of Mystic and Occult Lore which the
master-minds of that ancient land had gathered
together.
In ancient Egypt dwelt
the great Adepts and Masters who have never been
surpassed, and who seldom have been equaled, during
the centuries that have taken their processional
flight since the days of the Great Hermes. In Egypt
was located the Great Lodge of Lodges of the Mystics.
At the doors of her Temples entered the Neophytes who
afterward, as Hierophants, Adepts, and Masters,
traveled to the four corners of the earth, carrying
with them the precious knowledge which they were
ready, anxious, and willing to pass on to those who
were ready to receive the same. All students of the
Occult recognize the debt that they owe to these
venerable Masters of that ancient land.
But among these great
Masters of Ancient Egypt there once dwelt one of whom
Masters hailed as "The Master of Masters. This man, if
"man" indeed he was, dwelt in Egypt in the earliest
days. He was known as Hermes Trismegistus. He was the
father of the Occult Wisdom; the founder of Astrology;
the discoverer of Alchemy. The details of his life
story are lost to history, owing to the lapse of the
years, though several of the ancient countries
disputed with each other in their claims to the honor
of having furnished his birthplace“and this thousands
of years ago. The date of his sojourn in Egypt, in
that his last incarnation on this planet, is not now
known, but it has been fixed at the early days of the
oldest dynasties of Egypt“long before the days of
Moses. The best authorities regard him as a
contemporary of Abraham, and some of the Jewish
traditions go so far as to claim that Abraham acquired
a portion of his mystic knowledge from Hermes himself.
As the years rolled by
after his passing from this plane of life (tradition
recording that he lived three hundred years in the
flesh), the Egyptians deified Hermes, and made him one
of their gods, under the name of Thoth. Years after,
the people of Ancient Greece also made him one of
their many gods“calling him "Hermes, the god of
Wisdom. The Egyptians revered his memory for many
centuries “yes, tens of centuries“.calling him "the
Scribe of the Gods" and bestowing upon him,
distinctively, his ancient title, "Trismegistus" which
means ''the thrice-great; "the great-great; "the
greatest-great; etc. In all the ancient lands, the
name of Hermes Trismegistus was revered, the name
being synonymous with the "Fount of Wisdom".
Even to this day, we
use the term "hermetic" in the sense of "secret",
"sealed" so that nothing can escape; etc., and this by
reason of the fact that the followers of Hermes always
observed the principle of secrecy in their teachings.
They did not believe in "casting pearls before swine"
but rather held to the teaching "milk for babes; meat
for strong men" both of which maxims are familiar to
readers of the Christian scriptures, but both of which
had been used by the Egyptians for centuries before
the Christian era.
And this policy of
careful dissemination of the truth has always
characterized the Hermetics, even unto the present
day. The Hermetic Teachings are to be found in all
lands, among all religions, but never identified with
any particular country, nor with any particular
religious sect. This because of the warning of the
ancient teachers against allowing the Secret Doctrine
to become crystallized into a creed. The wisdom of
this caution is apparent to all students of history.
The ancient occultism of India and Persia degenerated,
and was largely lost, owing to the fact that the
teachers became priests, and so mixed theology with
the philosophy, the result being that the occultism of
India and Persia has been gradually lost amidst the
mass of religious superstition, cults, creeds and
"gods. So it was with Ancient Greece and Rome. So it
was with the Hermetic Teachings of the Gnostics and
Early Christians, which were lost at the time of
Constantine, whose iron hand smothered philosophy with
the blanket of theology, losing to the Christian
Church that which was its very essence and spirit, and
causing it to grope throughout several centuries
before it found the way back to its ancient faith, the
indications apparent to all careful observers in this
Twentieth Century being that the Church is now
struggling to get back to its ancient mystic
teachings.
But there were always
a few faithful souls who kept alive the Flame, tending
it carefully, and not allowing its light to become
extinguished. And thanks to these staunch hearts, and
fearless minds, we have the truth still with us. But
it is not found in books, to any great extent. It has
been passed along from Master to Student; from
Initiate to Hierophant; from lip to ear. When it was
written down at all, its meaning was veiled in terms
of alchemy and astrology, so that only those
possessing the key could read it aright. This was made
necessary in order to avoid the persecutions of the
theologians of the Middle Ages, who fought the Secret
Doctrine with fire and sword; stake, gibbet and cross.
Even to this day there will be found but few reliable
books on the Hermetic Philosophy, although there are
countless references to it in many books written on
various phases of Occultism. And yet, the Hermetic
Philosophy is the only Master Key which will open all
the doors of the Occult Teachings!
In the early days,
there was a compilation of certain Basic Hermetic
Doctrines, passed on from teacher to student, which
was known as "THE KYBALION" the exact significance and
meaning of the term having been lost for several
centuries. This teaching, however, is known to many to
whom it has descended, from mouth to ear, on and on
throughout the centuries.
Its precepts have
never been written down, or printed, so far as we
know. It was merely a collection of maxims, axioms,
and precepts, which were non-understandable to
outsiders, but which were readily understood by
students, after the axioms, maxims, and precepts had
been explained and exemplified by the Hermetic
Initiates to their Neophytes. These teachings really
constituted the basic principles of "The Art of
Hermetic Alchemy" which, contrary to the general
belief, dealt in the mastery of Mental Forces, rather
than Material Elements“the Transmutation of one kind
of Mental Vibrations into others. instead of the
changing of one kind of metal into another. The
legends of the "Philosopher's Stone which would turn
base metal into Gold, was an allegory relating to
Hermetic Philosophy, readily understood by all
students of true Hermeticism.
In this little book,
of which this is the First Lesson, we invite our
students to examine into the Hermetic Teachings, as
set forth in THE KYBALION, and as explained by
ourselves, humble students of the Teachings, who,
while bearing the title of Initiates, are still
students at the feet of HERMES, the Master. We herein
give you many of the maxims, axioms and precepts of
THE KYBALION, accompanied by explanations and
illustrations which we deem likely to render the
teachings more easily comprehended by the modern
student, particularly as the original text is
purposely veiled in obscure terms.
The original maxims,
axioms, and precepts of "THE KYBALION are printed
herein, in quotation marks, the proper credit being
given. Our own work is printed in the regular way, in
the body of the work. We trust that the many students
to whom we now offer this little work will derive as
much benefit from the study of its pages as have the
many who have gone on before, treading the same Path
to Mastery throughout the centuries that have passed
since the times of HERMES TRISMEGISTUS“the Master of
Masters“the Great-Great. In the words of "THE
KYBALION:
"Where fall the
footsteps of the Master, the ears of those ready for
his Teaching open wide.“The Kybalion.
"When the ears of the
student are ready to hear, then cometh the lips to
fill them with Wisdom.“The Kybalion.
So that according to
the Teachings, the passage of this book to those ready
for the instruction will attract the attention of such
as are prepared to receive the Teaching. And,
likewise, when the pupil is ready to receive the
truth, then will this little book come to him, or her.
Such is The Law. The Hermetic Principle of Cause and
Effect, in its aspect of The Law of Attraction, will
bring lips and ear together“pupil and book in company.
So let it be!
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