H.P.B. WAS NOT DESERTED
BY THE MASTERS
THERE are certain things connected with the personality of
the great leader which have to be referred to and explained every
now and again even in a Society whose effort is as much as possible
to avoid the discussion of personalities. Sometimes they are
disagreeable, especially when, as in the present instance, some
other persons have to be brought in. And when the great leader
is H.P. Blavatsky, a whole host of principles and postulates
as to certain laws of nature cluster around her name. For not
only was she one who brought to us from the wiser brothers of
the human family a consistent philosophy of the solar system,
but in herself she illustrated practically the existence of the
supersensuous world and of the powers of the inner and astral
man. Hence any theory or assertion touching on her relations
with the unseen and with the Masters she spoke for inevitably
opens up the discussion of some law or principle. This of course
would not be the case if we were dealing with a mere ordinary
person.
Many things were said about H.P.B. in her lifetime by those
who tried to understand her, some of them being silly and some
positively pernicious. The most pernicious was that made by Mr.
A.P. Sinnett in London in the lifetime of H.P.B., and before
the writing of the Secret Doctrine, that she was deserted
by the Masters and was the prey of elementals and elemental forces.
He was courageous about it, for he said it to her face, just
as he had often told her he thought she was a fraud in other
directions.
This theory was far-reaching, as can be seen at a glance.
For if true, then anything she might say as from the Masters
which did not agree with the opinion of the one addressed could
be disposed of as being only the vaporing of some elementals.
And that very use was made of it. It was not discussed only in
the charmed seclusion of the London Lodge, but was talked of
by nearly all of the many disciples and would-be disciples crowding
around H.P.B. It has left its mark even unto this day. And when
the total disagreement arose between H.P.B. and Mr. Sinnett as
to the relation of Mars and Mercury to this earth, and as to
the metaphysical character of the universe - H.P.B. having produced
an explanation from the Master - then the pernicious theory and
others like it were brought forward to show she was wrong, did
not have word from the Master, and that Mr. Sinnett's narrow
and materialistic views of the Master's statement - which had
been made before the alleged desertion and elemental possession
- were the correct ones. The dispute is imbedded in the Secret
Doctrine. The whole philosophy hangs upon it. The disagreement
came about because Mr. Sinnett held that his view of one of the
letters from the Master received in India - through the hand
of H.P.B. - was the correct view, whereas she said it was not.
He kept rigidly to his position, and she asked the Master for
further explanation. When this was received by her and shown
to Mr. Sinnett he denied its authenticity, and then the desertion
theory would explain the rest. He seemed to forget that she was
the channel and he was not.
Although wide publicity was not given to the charge then,
it was fully discussed by the many visitors to both camps, and
its effect remains to this day among those who of late have turned
in private against H.P.B. Among themselves they explain away
very easily, and in public they oppose those who adhere firmly
to her memory, her honor, and the truth of her statements about
the Masters and their communications to her. They think that
by dragging her down to the mediocre level on which they stand
they may pretend to understand her, and look wise as they tell
when she was and when she was not obsessed. This effort will,
of course, be unsuccessful; and some will think the matter need
not be brought forward. There are many reasons why it should
be discussed and left no longer as a secret poison: because it
leads to a negation of brotherhood; to an upholding of ingratitude,
one of the blackest crimes; and, if believed, will inevitably
lead to the destruction of the great philosophy broadly outlined
by the Masters through H.P.B.
If, as claimed by Mr. Sinnett, H.P.B. was deserted by the
Masters after they had used her for many years as their agent
and channel of communication, such desertion would be evidence
of unimaginable disloyalty on their part, utterly opposed to
their principles as stated by themselves. For when the advisability
of similar desertion was in Mr. Sinnett's mind many years before,
when he did not approve of H.P.B.'s methods of conducting the
movement in India, Master K.H. emphatically wrote him that "ingratitude
is not among our vices," asking him if he would consider
it just, "supposing you were thus to come," as H.P.B.
did, and were to "abandon all for the truth; to toil wearily
for years up the hard, steep road, not daunted by obstacles,
firm under every temptation; were to faithfully keep within your
heart the secrets entrusted to you as a trial; had worked with
all your energies, and unselfishly to spread the truth and provoke
men to correct thinking and a correct life - would you consider
it just, if, after all your efforts," you were to be treated
as you propose Mdme. Blavatsky should be treated? But this warning
evidently produced only a transient effect, for in a few years'
time, as stated, Mr. Sinnett came to the conclusion that his
suggestion had been acted upon to an even greater extent than
he had originally intended. At first he had only wished that
H.P.B. should be put on one side as a channel between himself
and the Master, leaving a newly organized T.S. to his own management
under those conditions; but he afterwards thought that H.P.B.
had been put on one side as a channel of any sort so far as the
Masters were concerned. This wholesale later desertion would
mean that in the meantime Master K.H. had entirely changed in
character and had become capable of gross ingratitude, which
is absurd. Masters are above all things loyal to those who serve
them and who sacrifice health, position and their entire lives
to the work which is the Master's; and H.P.B did all this and
more, as the Master wrote. To take the other view and imagine
that after years of such service as is described in the above
quotation, H.P.B. was left to be figuratively devoured by elementals,
would prove Masters to be merely monsters of selfishness, using
a tool not made of iron but of a wonderful human heart and soul,
and throwing this tool away without protection the moment they
had done with it.
And how about the members and more faithful disciples who
were left in ignorance of this alleged desertion? Would it have
been loyal to them? They had been taught for years to look with
respect upon H.P.B. and the teachings she gave out, and to regard
her as the Masters' channel. They received no warning that the
plan Mr. Sinnett had for so long carried in his mind could possibly
be carried out, but on the contrary often received personally
from the Masters endorsements of H.P.B.'s actions and teachings.
Those who harbored constant doubts of her veracity were reproved;
and yet it would seem for no other apparent reason than a necessary
correction by her of Mr. Sinnett's wrong interpretation of earlier
teachings she was abandoned by her old teachers and friends who
had spent years in training her for just this work!
So the whole of this far-fetched supposition is alike contrary
to brotherhood and to occultism. It violates every law of true
ethics and of the Lodge, and to crown its absurdity would make
the Secret Doctrine in large measure the work of elementals.
Deserted before the explanation of Mr. Sinnett's mistakes appeared
in that book, H.P,B. was obsessed to some advantage, it may be
thought! But in fact a great depth of ignorance is shown by those
who assert that she was deserted and who add that elementals
controlled her, doing the work for her. They do not know the
limitations of the elemental: an elemental can only copy what
already exists, cannot originate or invent, can only carry out
the exact impulse or order given, which if incomplete will cause
the result to be similarly incomplete, and will not start work
unless pushed on by a human mind and will. In no case is this
elemental supposition tenable.
The ignorance shown on this point is an example of the mental
standing of most of H.P.B.'s critics. Materialists in their bias,
they were unable to understand her teachings, methods or character,
and after badly assimilating and materializing the ideas they
got original from her, they proceeded to apply the result to
an explanation of everything about her that they could not understand,
as if they were fitting together the wooden blocks of several
different puzzles. But if in spite of all reason this view of
desertion were to be accepted, it would certainly lead in the
end, as I have said, to the destruction of the Theosophical philosophy.
Its indirect effect would be as detrimental as the direct effect
of degrading the ideal of Masters. This is clearly shown in the
Secret Doctrine.
After pointing out in her "Introductory" to the
Secret Doctrine (p. xviii) the preliminary mistake made
by the author of Esoteric Buddhism in claiming that "two
years ago (i.e., 1883) neither I nor any other European
living knew the alphabet of the Science, here for the first
time put into scientific shape," when as a matter of fact
not only H.P.B. had known all that and much more years before,
but two other Europeans and an American as well; - she proceeds
to give the Master's own explanation of his earlier letters in
regard to the Earth Chain of Globes and the relation of Mars
and Mercury thereto (vol. i, pp. 160-170, o.e.). Mr Sinnett himself
confesses that he had "an untrained mind" in Occultism
when he received the letters through H.P.B. on which Esoteric
Buddhism was based. He had a better knowledge of modern astronomical
speculations than of the occult doctrines, and so it was not
to be wondered at, as H.P.B. remarks, that he formed a materialistic
view of a metaphysical subject. But these are the Master's own
words in reply to an application from H.P.B. for an explanation
of what she well knew was a mistake on Mr. Sinnett's part - the
inclusion of Mars and Mercury as globes of the Earth Chain:
"Both (Mars and Mercury) are septenary chains, as independent
of the earth's sidereal lords and superiors and as you are independent
of the 'principles' of Daumling." "Unless less trouble
is taken to reconcile the irreconcilable - that is to say, the
metaphysical and spiritual sciences with physical or natural
philosophy, 'natural' being a synonym to them (men of science)
of that matter which falls under the perception of their corporal
senses - no progress can be really achieved. Our Globe, as taught
from the first, is at the bottom of the arc of descent, where
the matter of our perceptions exhibits itself in its grossest
form... Hence it only stands to reason that the globes which
overshadow our Earth must be on different and superior planes.
In short, as Globes, they are in coadunition but not in consubstantiality
with our Earth, and thus pertain to quite another state of
consciousness."
Unless this be accepted as the correct explanation, the entire
philosophy becomes materialistic and contradictory, analogy ceases
to be of any value, and both the base and superstructure of Theosophy
must be swept away as useless rubbish. But there is no fear of
this, for the Master's explanation will continue to be accepted
by the large majority of Theosophists.
And as to H.P.B. personally, these words might possibly be
remembered with advantage: "Masters say that Nature's laws
have set apart woe for those who spit back in the face of their
teacher, for those who try to belittle her work and make her
out to be part good and part fraud; those who have started on
the path through her must not try to belittle her work and aim.
They do not ask for slavish idolatry of a person, but loyalty
is required. They say that the Ego of that body she uses was
and is a great and brave servant of the Lodge, sent to the West
for a mission with full knowledge of the insult and obloquy to
be surely heaped upon that devoted head; and they add; 'Those
who cannot understand her had best not try to explain her; those
who do not find themselves strong enough for the task she outlined
from the very first had best not attempt it'."
William Q. Judge
Theosophy, April, 1896
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