Spiritual Evolution
The universe is even as a great temple.
CLAUDE de ST. MARTIN
The central tenets of Theosophia are not derived from any
ancient or modern sect but represent the accumulated wisdom of
the ages, the unrecorded inheritance of humanity. Its vast scheme
of cosmic and human evolution furnishes all true seekers with the
symbolic alphabet necessary to interpret their recurrent visions
as well as the universal framework and metaphysical vocabulary,
drawn from many mystics and seers, which enable them to
communicate their own intuitive perceptions. All authentic
mystical writings are enriched by the alchemical flavour of
Theosophical thought. Theosophy is an integrated system of
fundamental verities taught by Initiates and Adepts across
millennia. It is the Philosophia Perennis, the philosophy of
human perfectibility, the science of spirituality and the
religion of responsibility. It is the primeval fount of myriad
religious systems as well as the hidden essence and esoteric
wisdom of each. Man, an immortal monad, has been able to preserve
this sacred heritage through the sacrificial efforts of
enlightened and compassionate individuals, or Bodhisattvas, who
constitute an ancient Brotherhood. They quietly assist in the
ethical evolution and spiritual development of the whole of
humanity. Theosophia is Divine Wisdom, transmitted and verified
over aeons by the sages who belong to this secret Brotherhood.
The supreme presupposition of theosophical thought is an
eternal substance-principle postulated as the ineffable Ground of
all being. It is called a substance-principle because it becomes
increasingly substantial and differentiated on the plane of
manifestations while it essentially remains a homogeneous
principle in abstract space and eternal duration. The perceived
universe is a complex mirroring of this Unknown Source, all
finite conceptions of which are necessarily incomplete. It is the
Absolute Negation of all that exists. It is Be-ness or Sat, the
Secondless Reality, the No-thing of ancient philosophy, the
Boundless Lir, the Unknown Beginning of Celtic cosmogony.
Compared with It, all manifestation is no more than an
impermanent illusion or maya, a kaleidoscopic medium through
which the one Reality shows itself in a series of reflections.
Spirit and matter are the two facets of this indivisible
principle, and only seem to be separate during a vast period of
cosmic manifestation. They radiate from this transcendent source,
yet are not causally related to It, since neither quality nor
mode may properly be ascribed to It. They appear periodically on
the objective plane as the opposite poles of this Reality yet
they are not inherently separate, but mutually coexist as spirit-
matter. In manifestation this substratum differentiates itself
into seven planes of increasing density, reaching towards the
region of sense data. Everywhere the root essence of homogeneous
substance is the same, transforming itself by minute degrees from
the most ethereal to the most gross.
The seven planes of manifestation may be seen as
condensations of rarefied matter and also as living streams of
intelligences -- primordial rays proceeding from an invisible
Spiritual Sun. All modes of activity in the universe are
internally guided by powers and potencies arrayed in an almost
endless series of hierarchies, each with its exact function and
precise scope of action. They are called Dhyan Chohans in Tibetan
cosmogony and bear many other titles in the rich panoply of
religious traditions -- Angels, Devas, Gods, Elohim, etc. All
these are transmitting agents of cosmic Law (Rta) which guides
the evolution of each atom on every plane in space, the
hierarchies varying enormously in their respective degrees of
creative consciousness and monadic intelligence. As an aggregate,
this immense host of forces forms the manifesting Verbum of an
unmanifest Presence, constituting simultaneously the active Mind
of the cosmos and its immutable Law. The idea of myriad
hierarchies of intelligences animating visible Nature is a vital
key to understanding all true mysticism. Many flashes of
intuitive perception reveal multitudes of radiant beings
elaborating the interior architecture of matter. Great mystics
show a reverential recognition of the Logos or Verbum, the Army
of the Voice, operating behind the screen of surface events as
the noumenal cause of natural phenomena. This involves
deciphering the signs of these intelligent forces by following
the traces of their effects. The natural world bears the
signatures of a divine archetypal world. With proper keys to
archaic symbolism, the true seeker can read these signatures and
recover the lost knowledge which would restore a primeval state
of gnosis equivalent to that of the gods. The letters composing
the Sanskrit language are the phenomenal expressions of these
finer forces, and by understanding them one could discover the
root vibration, the ineffable Word, reverberating throughout the
sentient world of visible Nature.
The arcane teaching concerning the Great Chain of Being in
the supernatural realm continually reappears in human history as
the inexhaustible fountain-head of aesthetic expression, heroic
action and mystic illumination. The Candle of Vision, the
Magician of the Beautiful, the Mount of Transfiguration, the
Mighty Mother, are all different faces of the divine Logos. The
diverse expressions of creativity in the arts, religion and
philosophy stem from this common unseen source, and the search
for its origin is the hallowed mission of many a mystic and
artist. The problem of tracing particulars to universals is as
crucial to art as to psychology. The sevenfold classification of
man's inner constitution corresponds to seven cosmic planes of
being. Man is truly a microcosm and miniature copy of the
macrocosm. Like the macrocosm, the individual is divine in
essence, a direct radiation from the central Spiritual Sun. As
pure spirit, every human being needs the vestures through which
life may be experienced on differentiated planes of existence, so
that one can become fully conscious of individual immortality and
one's indissoluble identity with the whole. Every person is a
complete reflection of the universe, revealing oneself to oneself
by means of seven differentiations. In one's deepest self, the
individual is Atman, the universal Spirit which is mirrored in
the luminous soul or Buddhi. The light of Buddhi is focussed
through manas or impersonal intellect the source of human
individuation. These three together constitute the imperishable
fire in man, the immortal Triad that undertakes an immense
pilgrimage through successive incarnations to emerge as an
effortlessly self-conscious agent of the divine will, the Light
of the Logos, Brahma Vach.
Below this overbrooding Triad is the volatile quaternary of
principles drawn from the lower planes of cosmic matter: they are
kama, the force of blind passion and chaotic desire shared by man
with animal life; prana, the life-current energizing the whirling
atoms on the objective plane of existence; the astral
paradigmatic body (linga sarira), the original form around which
the physical molecules shape themselves, and hence the model for
the physical frame (sthula sarira). This quaternary of
principles is evanescent and changeable, established for man's
use at the time of incarnation and dissolved at death into its
primary constituents on their corresponding planes. The real man,
the higher Triad, recedes from the physical plane to await the
next incarnation. The function of each of these sheaths differs
from one individual to another according to the level of
spiritual development of the incarnated soul. The astral body of
the Adept is of a much higher degree of resilience and purity
than that of the average man. In visionaries and mystics, the
sheaths intervening between the spiritual man and the brain-mind
are sufficiently transparent so that they can receive
communications from the overbrooding Triad in a relatively lucid
manner. Man is a compound being simultaneously experiencing two
worlds, inner and outer. Each person's present life-experience is
but a minute portion of what was witnessed by the immortal
individuality in previous incarnations. Thus if men and women
assiduously search within themselves, they can recover a vast
heritage of knowledge spanning aeons. These memories are locked
in mansions of the soul which only ardent desire and strong
discipline can penetrate.
Memory is integral to consciousness, and since all matter is
alive and conscious, all beings from cells to deities have memory
of some type. In man, memory is generally divided into four
categories: physical memory, remembrance, recollection and
reminiscence. In remembrance, an idea impinges upon the mind from
the past by free association; in recollection, the mind
deliberately searches it out. Reminiscence, however, is of
another order altogether. Called 'soul-memory', it links every
human being to previous lives and assures each that he or she
will live again. In principle, any man or woman may recover the
knowledge gained in previous incarnations and maintain continuity
with the sutratman, the thread-soul, the eternal witness to every
incarnation. There are also types of memory which are
indistinguishable from prophecy, since the more one progresses
towards homogeneous and rarefied planes of existence, the more
past, present and future collapse into eternal duration, within
the boundless perspective of which an entire cycle of
manifestation may be surveyed. Such was the level of insight
reached by the great seers who recorded their findings in what is
known as Gupta Vidya or the Secret Doctrine. Some mystics have
penetrated deeply into the realms of reminiscence bringing back
the fruits of knowledge in previous lives. Greater still is the
ability to enter into former and more spiritual epochs of
humanity and to make those visions come alive for those who had
lost all but a faint intuition of a larger sense of self.
The source and destiny of the soul's inward life
fundamentally involve the entire scope of evolution. Coeval with
the manifestation of the seven worlds of the cosmic plenum is the
re-emergence of beings who assume once more the evolutionary
pilgrimage after an immense period of rest. The emanation of
matter and spirit into the objective plane of existence is but
half the cycle. Its return brings all beings and forms to the
bosom of absolute darkness. The period of manifestation covering
trillions of years is called a manvantara and the corresponding
period of rest, called pralaya, lasts for an equal duration. They
are the Days and Nights of Brahma, which were reckoned with
meticulous precision by the ancient Aryans. The whole span of the
manvantara is governed by the law of periodicity, which regulates
rates of activity on all planes of being. This is sometimes
spoken of as the Great Breath which preserves the cosmos. The
essence of life is motion, growth and expansion of awareness in
every atom. Each atom is at its core a monad, an expression of
the highest self (Atman), and its vesture is the spiritual soul
(Buddhi). Prior to the monad's emergence in the human family, it
undergoes aeons of experience in the lower kingdoms of Nature,
developing by natural impulse (metempsychosis) until the latent
thinking faculty of manas is awakened by the sacrificial efforts
of beings who have risen far above the human state in manvantaras
past. They kindle the spark of self-consciousness, making the
unconscious monad a true man (Manushya), capable of thought,
reflection and deliberate action. The soul embarks upon a long
cycle of incarnations in human form to prepare itself for entry
into still greater planes of existence.
The evolutionary tide on earth is regulated by the unerring
hand of cyclic law. Man passes through a series of Rounds and
Races, which allows him to assimilate the knowledge of every
plane of existence, from the most ethereal to the most material.
Man's planetary evolution describes a spiral passing from spirit
into matter and returning to spirit again with a wholly self-
conscious mastery of the process. Each Round is a major
evolutionary period lasting many millions of years. Each Race in
turn witnesses the rise and fall of continents, civilizations and
nations. An earlier Race than our own, the Lemurian, lived in an
idyllic Golden Age, an epoch ruled by natural religion, universal
fraternity and spontaneous devotion to spiritual teachers. Many
of the myths regarding an era of childlike purity and unsullied
trust in humanity's early flowering preserve the flavour of this
period. As man evolved more material vestures, kama or passion
tainted his power of thought and inflamed his irrational
tendencies. The nightmare tales of Atlantean sorcerers are the
heavy heirloom of contemporary humanity. The destruction of
Atlantis ushered in the Aryan race of our own epoch. The Indian
Sages who inaugurated this period are among the torch-bearers for
the humanity of our time. Intuitive mystics recognize the sacred
role of ancient India as mother and preserver of the spiritual
heritage of present humanity. The classical Indian scriptures
resonate with the authentic voice of the Verbum, uncorrupted by
time and human ignorance.
Pertinent to historical insight is the doctrine of the yugas,
the cycle of four epochs through which every Race passes: the
Golden, Silver, Bronze and Iron ages. The yugas indicate a broad
sweep of karmic activity at any point in the life of an
individual or collection of individuals. The entire globe may not
be undergoing the same age simultaneously nor may any one
individual be necessarily in the same epoch as his social milieu.
According to Hindu calculations, Kali Yuga began over five
thousand years ago and will last altogether for a total of four
hundred thirty-two thousand years. This Dark Age is characterized
by widespread confusion of roles, inversion of ethical values and
enormous suffering owing to spiritual blindness. A.E. celebrated
the myth of the Golden Age as extolling the plenitude of man's
creative potential. The doctrine of the yugas is not
deterministic. It merely suggests the relative levels of
consciousness which most human beings tend to hold in common.
Thus a Golden Age vibration can be inserted into an Iron Age to
ameliorate the collective predicament of mankind. The Golden Age
surrounded human beings as a primordial state of divine
consciousness, but their own pride and ignorance precluded its
recovery. In the wonder of childhood, in archaic myths, in the
sporadic illuminations of great artists and in mystical visions,
one may discern shimmering glimpses of the Golden Age of
universal eros, the rightful original estate of humanity.
The progress of man in harmony with cyclic law is
facilitated by a mature grasp of karma and rebirth. These twin
doctrines of responsibility and hope unravel many of the riddles
of life and Nature. They show that every person's life and
character are the outcome of previous lives and thought-patterns,
that each one is his or her own judge and executioner, and that
all rise or fall strictly by their own merits and misdeeds.
Nothing is left to chance or accident in life but everything is
under the governance of a universal law of ethical causation. Man
is essentially a thinker, and all thoughts initiate causes that
generate suffering or bliss. The immortal Triad endures the
mistakes and follies of the turbulent quaternary until such time
as it can assume its rightful stature and act freely in
consonance with cosmic order and natural law. As man is
constantly projecting a series of thoughts and images, individual
responsibility is irrevocable. Each person is the centre of any
disturbance of universal harmony and the ripples of effects must
return to him. Thus the law of karma or justice signifies moral
interdependence and human solidarity. Karma must not be seen as a
providential means of divine retribution but rather as a
universal current touching those who bear the burden of its
effects. This has been called the law of spiritual gravitation.
The entire scope of man's affairs -- his environment, friends,
family, employment and the like -- are all dictated by the needs
of the soul. Karma works on the soul's behalf to provide those
opportunities for knowledge and experience which would aid its
progress. This concept could be expanded so as to encompass all
connections with other human beings of even the most casual kind,
seeing them as karmically ordained not for one's own progress but
for the sake of those who struggle with the dire limitations of
ignorance, poverty or despair. A deeply moving account of this
trial is given in The Hero in Man, wherein, while walking among
the wretched outcasts of Dublin, A.E. rejoiced in the conviction
that the benevolence he felt for each benighted soul would forge
a spiritual bond through which he might help them in the future.
Karma means a summons to the path of action and duty. As one
cannot separate one's own karma from that of one's fellow-men,
one may determine to devote one's life to the remission of the
karmic burden of others.
At death the true Self or immortal Triad casts off the physical
and astral bodies and is released from the thraldom of passions
and desires. Its natural tropism to gravitate upwards allows it
to enter the rarefied plane of consciousness where its thoughts
are carried to culmination, clothed in a finer body suited to
that sublime existence. This state, Devachan, is a period of rest
and assimilation between lives and the basis of the popular
mythology of heaven. On the other hand, the lower quaternary
languishes after death in Kamaloka, the origin of theological
dogmas concerning hell and purgatory. There it dissolves by
degrees back into its primary elements at a rate determined by
the cohesion given them by the narcissistic personality during
life on earth. Inflamed passions and poisonous thoughts sustained
for long periods of time endow this entity with a vivid,
vicarious and ghoulish existence. This plane of consciousness,
termed 'the astral light' by Eliphas Levi, is intimately
connected with the lives and thoughts of most of mankind. It is
the vast slag-heap of Nature into which all selfish and evil
thoughts are poured and then rebound back to pollute and
contaminate human life on earth. This plane of carnalized thought
tends to perpetuate the horrors of the Iron Age and condemn man
to a state of spiritual darkness.
The crucial difference between individuals lies in whether
they are enslaved by the astral light (the region of psyche) or
whether they are capable of rising above it to a calm awareness
of the wisdom and compassion latent in their higher nature, the
realm of nous. Beyond the region of psychic action lies the
pristine sphere of noetic awareness called Akasha, from which
empyrean individuals could derive the inspiration needed to go
forth and inaugurate a Golden Age by laying down the foundations
of a regenerated civilization. Sages, past and present, have
accomplished the arduous transformation of their own natures,
overcoming every vice and limitation and perfecting themselves in
noetic ideation and sacrificial action. Mahatmas or Hierophants
renounce everything for the sake of suffering humanity. Solitary
mystics on the ancient path of service salute them as guides and
preceptors and acknowledge their invisible presence behind their
own modest labours for mankind. These wise beings are the noble
trustees of the Philosophia Perennis and the compassionate
Teachers of the human family. The mystical pilgrimage of mankind
is an authentic reflection of their ageless Wisdom.
Hermes, August 1979 Raghavan Iyer
For countless generations hath the adept builded a fane of
imperishable rocks, a giant's Tower of INFINITE THOUGHT, wherein
the Titan dwelt, and will yet, if need be, dwell alone, emerging
from it but at the end of every cycle, to invite the elect of
mankind to co-operate with him and help in his turn enlighten
superstitious man.
MAHATMA K. H.
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