THE ENQUIRER
Query - Is it well to talk about Occultism to the ordinary
enquirer into Theosophy?
W.Q.J. - It is better not to do so. Ordinary enquirers may be
attracted to Theosophy because of its mysterious appearance, but that is no
reason for giving them just what they demand. For surely later on they will
find that the pursuit of the mysteries and the occult is hedged about with many
difficulties and that it demands an acquaintance with every other philosophy
that ought to have been offered to them when they first enquired. Furthermore
it is not the many who are fitted for Occultism, but rather the few, and those
few will soon find their way into the path no matter how they may have
approached it. Enquirers will then be directed to this philosophy and the
ethics of the Theosophical system, as true Occultism springs from philosophy,
and its practice is alone safely possible for those who have a right system of
ethics.
Query - How is it that H.P.B. so severely criticizes the Western
systems of Occultism and yet admits in some of her writings that they lead to
the same end as the Eastern system?
W.Q.J. - It is very true that all systems of Occultism lead to the
same end, since all must be based on similar principles however distorted some
may be in practice, but the road by one will be more difficult than by another
until the real highway of Universal Occultism is reached. It was thought by
H.P.B. that true Eastern Occultism was the primeval system and hence better
than the Western. For the Western is all overgrown with the weeds sown by
Judaism in the beginning and mediæval Christianity in the end. So it will
be found that although at bottom Western Occultism has the same doctrines as
the Eastern, a vast mass of rubbish has to be carried off in order to get at
the truth. Any one who will dive into Rosicrucianism will find those
difficulties. It must always be borne in mind, too, that H.P.B. in speaking of
Eastern Occultism had in view the real thing and not the many systems in India
which would juggle the student quite as much as the things in the Western
schools.
Speaking for my own beliefs, I do not think Western Occultism is worthy
of the name and is only a hodge-podge that produces confusion when the mere
outer crust of virtuous living is mastered. It leads to saintliness but not to
that higher knowledge which must be added to the good in order to make them
also the wise.
The Vahan, June 15, 1891
W.P. - I am very much interested in Theosophy and should like to
help the Society. What work can I do?
W.Q.J. - This is a Theosophical business question. Service is
rendered in may different ways: by work in the Branches, by spreading
literature, by explaining the doctrines and doing away with misconceptions, by
contributing money to be used in the work, by constituting oneself a loyal unit
if ability and time be lacking; and chiefly always by acquiring a knowledge of
Theosophical doctrines so as to be able to give a clear answer to inquiry. One
could also procure some inquiring correspondent and by means of letters answer
questions as to Theosophical literature and doctrines. These are all general
answers, while the question requires almost a personal examination. Any work
that is sincerely done in the Society with good motive and to the best of one's
ability is good Theosophical work.
If another by altruistic service benefits one, is not such action
vicarious and inconsistent with Karma?
W.Q.J. - A common error, which arises from incompletely viewing the
doctrine of Karma, is the idea that we interfere with Karma when we benefit
another. The question is equally applicable to the doing of any injury to
another. It cuts both ways; so we might as well ask if it is not inconsistent
with the law and vicarious for one to do any evil act which results harmfully
to fellow creature. In neither case is there vicarious atonement or
interference. If we can do good to our fellows, that is their good karma and
ours also; if we have the opportunity to thus confer benefits and refuse to do
so then that is our bad Karma in that we neglect a chance to help another. The
Masters once wrote that we should not be thinking on our good or bad Karma, but
should do our duty on every hand and at every opportunity, unmindful of what may
result to us. It is only a curious kind of conceit, which seems to be the
product of nineteenth century civilization, that causes us to falsely imagine
that we, weak and ignorant human beings, can interfere with Karma or be
vicarious atoners for others. We are all bound up together in one coil of Karma
and should ever strive by good acts, good thoughts and high aspirations, to
lift a little of the world's heavy Karma, of which our own is a part. Indeed,
no man has any Karma of his own unshared by others; we share each one in the
common Karma, and the sooner we perceive this and act accordingly the better it
will be for us and for the world.
What place have mercy and forgiveness in Theosophy, and are they
consistent with Karma?
W.Q.J. - Mercy and forgiveness should have the highest place in
that branch of Theosophy which treats of ethics as applied to our conduct. And
were it not for the prefect mercifulness of Karma - which is merciful because
it is just - we ought long ago to have been wiped out of existence. The very
fact that the oppressor, the unjust, the wicked, live out their lives is proof
of mercy in the great heart of Nature. They are thus given chance after chance
to retrieve their errors and climb, if even on the ladder of pain, to the
height of perfection. It is true that Karma is just, because it exacts payment to
the last farthing, but on the other hand it is eternally merciful, since it
unerringly pays out its compensations. Nor is the shielding from necessary pain
true mercy, but is indeed the opposite, for sometimes it is only through pain
that the soul acquires the precise knowledge and strength it requires. In my
view, mercy and justice go hand in hand when Karma issues it decrees, because
that law is accurate, faithful, powerful, and not subject to the weakness, the
failure in judgment, the ignorance that always accompany the workings of the
ordinary human judgment and action.
G.E.L. - I am a married man, without children, and my wife, who
takes no interest in Theosophy, complains that I am neglecting her to attend
Theosophical meetings or lectures in the evenings. Should I give up the
lectures?
W.Q.J. - Justice to ourselves and those dependent on us would seem
to answer that no wife has the right to demand the whole of a man's time. If
she cannot attend a lecture or meeting once a week, she ought to be willing
that her husband may. But if she considers herself the "legal owner" of the man
she married to the extent that she wishes to eat up his entire attention, then
of course dissatisfaction will supervene, unjustly founded and wholly
inexcusable. If her complaint of neglect is based upon one night in a week
devoted to a Theosophical meeting which she has no taste for, the man who
submits his own task-master, who ought not to ask other Theosophists to lay
down his duty in daily life. Questions between man and wife ought to be settled
in the family forum, and not dragged into the field of Theosophical discussion,
where they are utterly out of place.
The Vahan, August 1, 1891
B.M. - In both Europe and America, I have met a good many
Theosophists who enquire into and appear to dabble in practical applications
of the directions found in some of our literature, in the "Upanishads"
and in a little book by on Sabapathi Swamy, respecting psychic development, by
means of postures, regulating the breath and the like. What can be said upon
this?
W.Q. Judge - These attempts at practical Yoga - as it is called are
most dangerous, and in addition presumptuous and foolish. It is well understood
in the right circles in India, that the directions found in many of the
Upanishads should never be practiced except under the following conditions:
(a) a complete knowledge of all, and of the consequences, with a
knowledge of the correctives to be applied when changes take place; and
(b) the possession of a thoroughly competent guide to point out errors, to
restrain endeavor and to indicate danger, as well as to cure troubles that
ensue. Yet in the face of all this, and of repeated warnings, there are those
who will foolhardily begin the practices in complete ignorance. They do not
even pursue the ethical regulations that accompany all the other, such as the
doing away with all vices, bad habits, uncharitable thoughts and so on; but go
in for the practices, merely in the hope of procuring psychic powers. It is
time it were stopped, and time that those who give out this literature looked
into what they give out to a grasping and stiff-necked generation. That damage
has been wrought both to the Society and some of its members cannot be
contested, in face of actual experience in all parts of both countries. It is
well known that these postures, even when ignorantly used, bring on
physiological changes in the body, with great nervous derangements. Further
than that the enquiring public is frightened off from our movement by the
ill-balanced view of Theosophy and of the Society which these dabblers
promulgate. Let us halt before it is too late. Let us give out the ethical and
philosophical doctrines for the promulgation of which the Theosophical
Society was founded. Thus alone can we accomplish our mission, which is to the
world at large and not for the benefit of a few cranky investigators in a field
that can only be safely trodden by the thoroughly prepared, the fully armed and
the deeply experienced man who has a sound mind and high, pure aspirations,
joined with a sound body.
The Vahan, January 1, 1892
E.W.B. - Is it correct for Theosophists to postulate that a
"phase of Idolatry is necessary for the poor in mind?" I made and still make a
very strong objection to any phase of Idolatry being necessary.
W.Q.J. - Common-sense, truth, discrimination and right rules of
life all seem to declare that idolatry is not necessary for the Western world;
but we cannot judge the mind of the East any more than we can understand why a
Western hero-worshipper should indulge in such a practice.
G.W.R. - The Ego passes through a series of incarnations, in
some of which it may inform the body of a man, in others of a woman. Is the sex
of the vehicle chosen consciously by the spiritual Ego to perfect knowledge, or
does it depend upon the Karma engendered in a preceding life? Can any
principle be said to preponderate in one sex more than in another?
W.Q.J. - If masculine quality is the predominant characteristic, the
Ego probably will be next in a male body; if not, the other sex. But the
whole question is answered by that doctrine of Visihadwaitism which says that
"Good Karma is that which is pleasing to Ishwara (the Ego), and bad Karma that
which is displeasing to it."
P.C.W. - If animals do not reincarnate, how do they receive a
just reparation for the life of suffering which some have to endure?
W.Q.J. - The answer is easy. They do reincarnate, but that which
from them goes forth to reincarnation is not similar to the reincarnating
principle of the human being. Were we to suppose that the monads now going
through the present animal life were reincarnating in a haphazard way, then
surely law disappears, our philosophy tumbles to the ground, and a reign of
terror in the scheme of evolution ensues.
F.J.D. - What is the difference between forms seen in dreams or
vision on an astral plane and those seen on a Kama-Manasic plane? And which of
the two are considered as having the greater objective reality? If Kama-Manasic
forms accompany Devachanic consciousness, how is this connected with the Higher
Ego?
W.Q.J. - Forms seen in dreams and visions are almost always
pictures; those on the Kama-Manasic are more often actual forms of that sort of
matter. The difference - when existing - is that which there is between a
photograph of a form and the form itself. The "forms" of Devachanic
consciousness are not objective to us, but are to the being in the Devachanic
state of consciousness. As the entity is not free - hence in Devachan
- the mind creates for itself all its surroundings in every detail, and also
thereby cultivates departments of the nature which could not be cultivated to
the same extent elsewhere. The connection with the Higher Ego, as to which
F.J.D.'s ideas are vague, is the same connection as in earth-life, only
operating by a different channel.
F.G.B. - How am I to reconcile these two statements? -
(a) The Seven planes of Cosmic Consciousness correspond to the Seven States
of consciousness in man, ( S.D. I. p. 199, O, Ed.; I, p. 221, 3rd Ed.);
(b) The Seven States of consciousness in man pertain to quite another
question (than the planes of Cosmic Consciousness). ( S.D. I,
p. 200, O. Ed; I, p. 221, foot-note, 3rd Ed.)
W.Q.J. - Quotation (b) does not conflict with (a),
as attempted to be shown in the question. On p. 199 the seven planes are said
to correspond to the seven states of consciousness in man; the third note on p.
200 says that the reference in the diagram to the fourth plane and above
includes - or refers to - the four lower planes of cosmic consciousness
- which is a totally different thing from human consciousness - and that the
three higher planes of cosmic consciousness are inaccessible to
present human intellect; and that the seven states of human
consciousness pertain to another question. Quite so, and quite plain. The
querent left out the word "human" in quotation (b) thus making "a
totally different question" of the matter, for there is a great difference
between saying "human consciousness" and "consciousness in man." The entire
seven planes of cosmic consciousness must correspond with, and may yet not be
the same as, the seven states of our present human consciousness for there is
a radical disimilarity between a plane and a state, for you
may be in a certain state of consciousness and yet function on a plane quiet
different; as when the drunken man has all his consciousness in a Kamic state
and functions with it on the earthly plane. Further, the seven states of
human consciousness may perfectly well be our possession and not be developed
for the race beyond the first four states of cosmic consciousness, its
seven-fold character being potential with its own upper for divisions based
on those of the cosmic. The confusion lies in the words plane and
state.
The Vahan, May 1, 1892
S.M. - I can believe in the idea of continual progress of the
soul in higher spheres, but cannot understand the idea of its returning again
and again to this same earth; can Theosophists give any reason for the latter?
W.Q.J. - Ought to be answered by politely requesting the querent to
read what has been for years written hereupon, and after having digested it,
then to see if the question is not answered.
M.R. - Is not the Brahmanical faith the antipodes of Universal
Brotherhood, in that no one who is not born a Brahman can ever be received into
their religion?
W.Q.J. - That faith is not such antipodes, for the Brahmanical
faith is not the same as the Brahmanical law of caste, now only a perversion of
the actual and eternal divisions among men. Rightly understood and practiced,
the real, the pure Brahmanical faith increases universal brotherhood and
furnishes for Egos the right stream of heredity for future true progress. But
nowadays it is corrupted and hence fulfils not its objects.
The Vahan, June 1, 1892
S.C. - Can any one explain the following sentence, quoted from
H.P.B. in the Path for June: "Those who fall off from our living human
Mahatmas to fall into the Saptarishis - the Star Rishis - are no
Theosophists."
William Q. Judge - This is explained by the fact that there are two
classes of beings able to influence mankind at large; the one being the "living
human Mahatmas," and the other the non-human beings, who, though not strictly
in our stream of evolution, can and sometimes do affect certain human beings.
For the purposes of this answer - but not at all as a full description - the
Saptarishis, as meant by H.P.B., are in a very advanced class of elementals,
able sometimes to communicate with man, and by their apparent knowledge to
make him suppose them to be high spiritual beings regularly evolved from the
human stage. But, in fact, they are not human spirits, but of the same
character as some of the Devas of the Hindus, and only by accident, as it were,
work to the real benefit of the race. That is to say, by communicating with
them one is deflected from the normal line of human development. In some cases
they have influenced certain mediums, who, being deluded, or rather dazzled, by
the extraordinary experiences passed through, do not lean to the human side of
spiritual evolution. On the other hand, the "living human Mahatmas" form the
direct link with the human spirits of all degrees, who have charge of human
spiritual evolution.
The Vahan, August 1, 1892
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