PEOPLE
speak of pure mathematics and applied mathematics; the former belong properly
to the region of the ideal, not of the ideal in the sense of the fanciful, for
there is nothing less fanciful than mathematics, but the ideal in the sense
of the metaphysical, which is the really real; the latter is the very imperfect
expression of the former in terms of matter, and roughly utilized for the
purposes of this mundane existence. Now it is a question which demands the
very serious attention of the Fellows of this Society, whether there does
not exist something which bears the same relation to “pure Theosophy” that applied
mathematics bear to pure. If “applied Theosophy” expresses any real
idea, what is implied in the term? Can the Fellows of the Theosophical Society
apply their knowledge to the affairs of our mundane existence? Is it possible
to materialize, however imperfectly, the great mass of high aspirations and altruistic
sentiments that have accumulated in the literature of Theosophy and in the souls
of Theosophists, and which at present, for want of an outlet, seem to threaten
us with a congestion of spirituality?
The
first question that naturally arises is, whether the action of the Theosophical
Society in every respect should be limited to its declared Objects. On the general
principle that every one should mind his own business, the presumption is in
favor of this view. No one on joining our Society relinquishes his right to take
a personal part in any other movement for the benefit of his fellow men, nor
escapes his duty of doing so. But every “Cause” has its special
organization and organs, and pre-empted field of work, and if the Objects of
the Theosophical Society are taken seriously by its Fellows, are they not enough
to occupy very fully all the time and energy these are likely to be able to
spare from the routine business of life? Of the three Objects, two are distinctly
separated from everything else. The study of Eastern philosophies, religions
and sciences, and the investigation of the obscure forces in Nature and powers
in man, are specialties, which have little or no direct connection with the
altruism which it is the peculiar function of Theosophy as an ethical system
to publish to the world; more than this, they may be said to be both of them
unsocial in their nature, since their tendency is to isolate anyone who seriously
occupies himself with them from sympathetic intercourse with his neighbors.
The first Object is altogether different. To “form the nucleus of Universal
Brotherhood,” so far from conducing to retirement and concentration,
is a purpose so high, so deep, so broad, so universally sympathetic, so distant
of realization, that it becomes vague and confused when the attention is directed
to it, and to most Fellows this Object is about equivalent in practice to the
formation of a nucleus for the recurrence of the Golden Age, or for the re-establishment
of the Garden of Eden.
Now,
experience proves, what reason might have foreseen, that a comparatively small
proportion of the Fellows of the Society take up seriously either of the two
contracting Objects, and that only an exceptionally enthusiastic Brother
is moved to action by the expanding one; from
which it follows that as far as concerns any activity or good influence in the
practical affairs of life, the Fellows as a corporate body might as
well be shut up in a little community like the Shakers, from whom the world
hears once in every ten years or so.
If
this, however, were all there were in the Theosophical Society, it
would never have become the well-known, by many much esteemed, and,
in certain quarters, roundly abused, institution that it is. The fact
is that those who join the Society bring into it their knowledge and
their activity, and the reputation of the Society has been built up
by the individual efforts of its Fellows. Take away Isis Unveiled;
The Secret Doctrine; Light on the Path;
Esoteric Buddhism; Theosophy, Religion,
and the Occult Science, and half a dozen other works, together
with Theosophical magazines -- all of them distinctly due to personal
effort — and what would be left of the renown or notoriety of the
Society? Since, however, the Theosophical Society is composed of its
Fellows, and is what its Fellows make it, to say all that is in no
way to disparage the Society, any more than it would detract from
the beauty or utility of a Coral Island in the South Seas, to say
that it owed its existence to the individual labors of the little
lives that raised it from the bottom of the ocean. It is a mass of
coral cells certainly, but it is something more it is a coral
Island, with an added individuality of its own.
What
the Society has hitherto done — its great merit in the eyes of some,
and its terrible fault in the estimation of others — is to make
people think.
No one can for long belong to the Theosophical Society without beginning to
question himself. He begins to ask himself: “How do I know that?”.
“Why do I believe this?” “What reason have I to be so certain
that I am right, and so sure that my neighbors are wrong?” “What
is my warrant for declaring this action, or that practice, to be good, and
their opposite bad?” The very air of Theosophy is charged with the
spirit of enquiry. It is not the “skeptical” spirit, nor is it
the “agnostic”.
It is a real desire to know and to learn the truth, as far as it is possible
for any creature to know it who is so limited by his capacities and so biased
by his prejudices as is man. It is that which has raised the Theosophical
Society above the level of all other aggregations or organizations of men,
and which, so long as its Fellows abstain from dogmatizing, must keep it on
an altogether higher plane. To the Theologian, to the Philosopher, to the Skeptic,
to the Spiritualist, to the Materialist, it says the same thing — study
man and Nature, and compare what you find there with your own pre-existing
ideas and theories. In proportion as anyone follows this advice he spontaneously
inclines towards Theosophy, which is the least common multiple and greatest
common measure of all the “ists,” the “tys” and the “isms”.
There is nothing in the Objects of the Society which would enable any person
unacquainted with its history to divine from them alone what would be the ideas
of a Fellow of the Society upon almost any subject. The fact is that the Theosophical
Society attracts persons who have got a natural disposition to examine, analyze,
reflect; and when this tendency does not exist — when people join the
Society from special sympathy with one or more of its Objects — they
very soon begin to ponder over the problems of existence, for they find themselves
involuntarily and instinctively subjecting their own pet theories and cherished
weaknesses to the process of examination which is the slogan of the Society.
The result of an examination thus candidly made is almost invariably a view
of life and of the universe in more or less resemblance to that of the Eastern
religions and philosophies when these are purified of their superstition and
priest-made masks. It is a mistake to imagine that what is known as Theosophy
at present has been learned from the writings of the ancients; it is an independent
growth in the modern mind which to many appears spontaneous, because they
cannot discern whence the seeds come. Theosophy, like man himself, has many
different sources. All Science, all Philosophy, all Religion, are its progenitors;
it appears when the seed of an enquiring spirit is dropped into a personal
soil sufficiently unprejudiced and altruistic to give it nourishment. The
modern world is thinking out the problems of life in the rough, and then comparing
its conclusions with the ideas of the ancients by way of corroborating or
verifying them. Here and there a Fellow of the Society outside of India may
be found who is willing to accept the Eastern Initiates, whether ancient or
modern, as teachers; but the majority prefer to think and theorize for themselves,
which is, after all, the best way for anyone to learn who can think and theorize
logically.
We have, then, a Society without
opinions, but with certain “Objects”, certain principles,
and certain methods, and we have as a result a tendency to certain modes of thought,
and certain theories of the Universe, to which theories the name of Theosophy
has been given, and when these theories are examined, they are found not only
to resemble those contained in the Eastern systems of philosophy, but a closer
scrutiny shows that the very same ideas, only sadly mutilated, underlie all
religions, and are contained in a more or less diluted form in all philosophies.
Not only this: a careful comparison of the root of the Theosophical system
with the latest discoveries and most advanced conjectures of modern science,
and of recent experimental research in the borderland between physics and metaphysics
shows an extraordinary agreement between them. We are advancing step by step;
a student can take in at a time from a teacher only a very small addition to
the knowledge which he already possesses, and the fact that The Secret Doctrine has
been so generally understood and so highly appreciated by Theosophists, shows
that their own thoughts were not so very much behind the ideas given out in
that marvelous work.
All
this, however, is only what may be called the intellectual or philosophical
side of Theosophy; and it is the fruit of the Theosophical Society's influence
only in one direction. Those who come under the influence of the Theosophic
spirit are affected ethically as well as philosophically. The same causes
which produce a certain tendency in thought produce also a disposition
to act in
a certain manner. The habit of viewing the Universe and men's lives as a divinely
wonderful system, in which progress towards ultimate perfection by means of
conscious effort is the furthest analysis which we can make of the purpose
of existence, results in a desire to exert the necessary effort in order to
ensure for ourselves, and for those whom we can help, as much of that progress
as is realizable at present. It is impossible for anyone seriously to believe
that this world is governed by a law of absolute justice — that as we
sow, so shall we reap — without finding his ideas of the value of life,
and of the things of life, radically affected thereby. If it be in our power
to become larger and stronger beings, richer in ourselves and happier in our
lives, no one but a fool would refuse to avail himself of the means of attaining
to that happier and higher state. If it be possible to help others to reach
it, no one but a selfish and unsympathetic wretch would refuse to his neighbor
the helping hand for which he feels he would himself be grateful. The consequence
is that along with enlargement of the mind there takes place an enlargement
of the sympathies as the result of Theosophic studies, and both of these conduce
to the moral growth of the individual. This moral growth exhibits itself in
two ways, internally and externally. The individual in whom it takes place
begins to regulate and purify his own life; he casts away from him all that
he feels will keep him weak and silly, and cultivates those habits and those
qualities that he knows will make him strong. He also tried to induce his neighbors
to enter the upward path, and endeavors to help those who show a disposition
to turn away from the harmful and the idiotic, which form so large a proportion
of the affairs of men's lives at present. The help he can be to single individuals
is comparatively small; for the work they, like himself, have to do at first
is the rectifying of their own faults and the purifying of their own motives,
and this every man must necessarily do for himself; and a neighbor, however
anxious to assist, can do but little more than exhort and encourage him. But
over and above these personal faults and evils, there are others which affect
a great number of persons together, against which any single individual is
powerless. Even were the dislike and fear of those wider evils general, and
every one agreed that they ought to be put down, still unless a united attack
be made upon them they cannot be abated, for individuals can make no impression
on them, and they are strong enough to resist the attack of a mob. To combat
them requires unanimity and organization. Every Fellow of the Society feels
in his heart a strong wish to aid to the best of his ability in diminishing
and if possible, destroying these evils. He sees that their existence is completely
incompatible with any success in establishing a nucleus of Universal Brotherhood.
He knows that they have their root deep down in human selfishness, and that
they are supported by many existing institutions, political, social and religious
— to which they are firmly attached by established customs and vested
interests.
Now
it is at that point that the hitch occurs. The Theosophical Society is not supposed
to promulgate opinions concerning social matters, any more than it is supposed
to do so concerning religious matters; and as for politics, they are strictly
prohibited to the Fellows, as Fellows, by the Constitution and Rules of the
Society, although personally they may and often do take an active interest
therein. Again, if anyone proposes that the Theosophical Society shall take
any part in the war against the practical evils of life, it is answered that,
as has been previously said, each evil has already got a special organization
to oppose it. There are special Societies for the suppression of drunkenness,
of cruelty, of immorality in various forms; also for the furtherance of every
kind of benevolent work; were the Theosophical Society therefore to interest
itself in these things, not only would it be going out of its legitimate province,
but it would be an interloper in the fields which others have got a prescriptive
right to occupy. Now this would be a serious argument, but for one very obvious
consideration; namely, that since the Theosophical Society has professedly,
as a body, no opinion on any subject, it is equally a transgression of its
basic principles for it to sustain or promulgate any special system of philosophy,
as in practice it decidedly does, under the name of “Theosophy”.
The Theosophical Society may be, and nominally is, a Society for the stimulation
of enquiry and research, overshadowed by the somewhat vague idea of the ultimate
realization of human brotherhood; but we have seen already that those who enter
the Society either possess already or very soon acquire, certain definite habits
of mind and ways of viewing the Universe, which are denoted and connoted by
the terms Theosophy and Theosophist. Now it is distinctly as a result of these
ideas and habits that there arises a desire, not indeed peculiar to Theosophists,
but inseparable from Theosophy, to rid the world of evil practices and evil
forces; and it follows logically that the desire to act rightly is as much
a consequence of a connection with Theosophy as the desire to think rightly;
and that therefore both are natural, spontaneous, and inevitable consequences
of Fellowship in the Theosophical Society and equally within the legitimate
sphere of the Society, whether manifested individually, or by the united effort
of a part, or of the whole of the Fellows. A Theosophist is necessarily imbued
with what was called in the Middle Ages, and is called to this day by those
who are still in the mediaeval condition of mind, a hatred of Satan and all
his works. To combat evil actively is, in fact, the ungratified desire at present
of thousands of Fellows of the Society, and it is chiefly because there is
now no outlet for their activity in that direction, which takes their attention
off of themselves and away from each other, that quarrels and scandals occur
among its Fellows. Only a small percentage of the Fellows care very much to
work at Occultism, and now there is a separate division of the Society set
apart for that purpose, under a Teacher eminently qualified to teach real Occultism
if she only had pupils capable of learning it.
This, then, is the problem, and it is of all the problems presented to us at the present
moment that which is of most importance to the Theosophical Society: Having prepared
themselves by study and self-development to take an active part in the warfare against evil,
can any means be devised whereby the Fellows of the Society can apply their knowledge
and their energies to the practical affairs of life? Practical Theosophy is an affair of the
future. Applied Theosophy is a more modest ambition, and is, or ought to be, a possibility.
Now
it is evident that no greater mistake could be made than to open little departments
in the Society itself for different special purposes. A Temperance division,
Social purity division, a Woman’s rights division, an Anti-cruelty division,
would be so many mistakes, unless the intention were similar to that which was
manifested in the establishment of the Esoteric Division — to isolate
a certain group of Fellows from the main work of the Society, for the mutual
benefit of all concerned. It would be a blunder, not only because these special
divisions would intrude upon the work now being done by special organizations,
but also because the real work of the Theosophical Society is, and always
must be, accomplished upon the plane of ideas, not on that of material things.
Moreover any specialization of functions tends not only to develop a particular
part, but also to draw into that part all that appertains to the exercise of
that function, previously contained in the other parts. Already the effect of
clearly divided Objects has been the formation in the Society of unrecognized
but not unreal divisions, in the shape of groups which are exclusively addicted
to psychic experiments, to the philosophy of the Hindus, to ethics of Buddhism,
or to the speculations of modern Western thinkers. Were the Fellows encouraged
to follow their natural affinities in the application of their Theosophy to
the affairs of life, as they do their predilections for the study of Theosophy
in one or other of its various aspects, they would become still more one-sided
and partially developed Theosophists than they are at present, and this further
isolation of its Fellows from one another would tend to weaken the Society still
more as a united body.
If
the Fellows of the Theosophical Society are to apply their Theosophy to the
affairs of life, it must be through the Society, and as individual units of the
whole — not as isolated individuals. It is well known that in metaphysics
two and two do not make four but five, and that the fifth is frequently by far
the most important part of the sum. The same idea is expressed in the fable of
the bundle of sticks; tied together they are unbreakable, singly they can be
snapped with ease. Union or unity adds certain qualities and powers that were
not there before, and the vehicle in which these powers reside is the unit which
is added to the number of the sticks by tying them together. It is this mystic
individuality, “the sum total”; that
gives strength to all societies and congregations of men, and becomes the real
dominating power, to which all contribute some of their force and which stands
behind every unit and lends its whole strength to it. Without it a Fellow of
the Theosophical Society would be as powerless as any other isolated man or woman
in the community. With it behind him an F.T.S is a power in proportion to the
unity and singleness of purpose of the Society to which he belongs. Who speaks
when a priest of the Roman Catholic Church utters a command? The united power
of the Church of Rome. Who speaks when a disfrocked priest says something? A
nonentity. Who
speaks when the Judge, the General, the Statesman open their mouths? “
The State — the tremendous and often tyrannical personality that comes
into life and action when the units that composed it are bound together, through
organization, by a common will and a common purpose.
It
is this added increment, and this only, that gives to the Theosophical Society
its extraordinary, and to many unaccountable, power. Weak in numbers, contemptible
in organization, distracted by personal jealousies, subject to constant endeavors
on the part of ambitious individuals to break it up into pieces which they can
distribute among themselves, the Theosophical Society is a power in the world
notwithstanding all the assaults that are made upon it by outsiders, and the
disintegrating influences within. Why? Because upon a plane higher than the
physical the Fellows are united and strong. They are united in their ideas of
the purpose of life, and of the government of the Universe — in other
words, they are strong in that they are individual cells composing the body
called the Theosophical Society, as it exists in both the physical and the
spiritual worlds.
Quarrel as they may among themselves, be as small and provincial as they choose, the
Fellows of the Society cannot help contributing their little quota of Theosophical ideas to
that united whole idea which is the spirit of the Theosophical Society, and therefore its very
life and real self. And those who attack the Society are frequently its supporters; for they
attack it on the external plane, while, unknown to themselves in spite of themselves, they
support it upon the plane where its real life is passed, for those who are its enemies are
generally ignorant of its true nature, and are frequently themselves imbued with eminently
Theosophic ideas and aspirations, which nourish the Society on the ideal plane, and
constantly tend to draw those in whom they exist, more and more in the direction of the
Theosophical Society in its materialized form on earth.
If
then the real power of Theosophy in the world is exercised in the realm of
thought; and if the direction in which that power is exerted is a natural consequence
of the growth of certain ideas in the minds of those who carry out the objects
of the Society, it stands to reason that the gigantic evils of our modern world
must be attacked with immaterial weapons and in the intellectual and moral planes.
How can this be accomplished? Simply by perceiving the fact, understanding it
and acknowledging it. Then the actual work will be accomplished quietly, almost
silently, and apparently spontaneously, just as the great reforming work of
the Society is now being accomplished — by individuals — who,
while contributing to the strength of the Society, draw from it in return a
force that gives to their utterances an importance and a power which had they
spoken as isolated individuals, and not as Fellows of the Society, their words
would not have had.
There
does not, and can not, exist the slightest doubt as to the direction in which
the power of the Theosophical Society would be applied in practical things.
If the tendency of Fellowship in the Society is to develop certain habits of
philosophic thought, its tendency is even stronger to give rise to definite
ethical views and moral principles. However much and bitterly the Fellows may
disagree as to the duration of Devachan or the number and viability of the
Principles in man, or any other point of occult doctrine, it would be hard
to get up a dispute among the brethren as to the evil of intemperance, or the
abomination of cruelty, or about any other of the crying sins of our times.
Not only is that the case but they would all give the same reasons, for their
detestation of these evils, reasons founded on their Theosophical ideas and
principles. Still, of what avail or utility to the world are their ideas and
wishes in these matters at present? Who cares to have the good-word or influence
of the Theosophical Society for any benevolent movement, any reform, or any
attempt to do justice?
No One. There is not a “cause” today that would not rather
see the minister of some microscopic Christian sect on the platform at its
Annual Meeting than the most prominent member of the Theosophical Society —
for the good and sufficient reason that the Rev Gentleman would carry with
him the unseen but not unfelt influence and authority of the body to which
he belongs, while the F.T.S would represent nothing but himself. This condition
of things should not exist, and all that is needed to remedy it is for all
of us to see and understand that the ethical is just as much a part
of the Theosophical idea, and just as much the business of the Fellows of
the Society as the philosophical.
But
it is only as a united whole that the Theosophical Society can ever be a power
in the world for good, or a vehicle for the exercise of the altruistic efforts
of its Fellows. The action of the Theosophical Society is on the plane of ideas,
which is the plane of realities, in that material things are but pre-existing
ideals brought down into this earthly sphere. The Theosophical Society does
not mean a number of little coteries, nor a few larger coteries composed of
a collection of the smaller ones. It does not mean a few hundred Presidents
of little Branches, or half a score of “General Secretaries”, it
does not mean even the Fellows that compose the Society at any particular time,
for these come and go and the Society remains intact, as the cells of the body
change, while the body remains the same person, animated by the same spirit.
The real Theosophical Society is an indivisible unit, animated by an individual
life! Its soul is the love of truth, its vital principle is kindness, and it
dwells in a world above the material, where no enemy can touch it. It depends
for its manifestation on earth upon an appropriate vehicle, and the first condition
necessary in that vehicle is that it shall be a united whole. The Theosophical
Society is an ideal power for good diffused over the whole world, but it requires
material conditions, and the most important of these is a material center,
from which and to which the efferent and afferent forces shall circulate. This
is a condition of the life of all organizations, and of all organisms, and
the Theosophical Society is both; it is an organization on the material plane,
an organism on the spiritual. A common center, therefore, is as necessary for
spiritual as for physical reasons. “Adyar” is not a place only,
it is a principle. It is a name which ought to carry with it a power far greater
than that conveyed by the name “Rome”. ADYAR is
the center of the Theosophical movement — not “7 Duke Street,
Adelphi,”
or “Post Office Box 2659, New York.
ADYAR
is a principle and a symbol, as well as a locality. ADYAR
is the name which means on the material plane the Headquarters of an international,
or, more properly speaking, world-wide Society of persons who have common aims
and objects, and are imbued with a common spirit. It means on the supra-physical
plane a center of life and energy, the point to and from which the currents
run between the ideal and the material. Every loyal Fellow has in his heart
a little ADYAR,
for he has in him a spark of the spiritual fire which the name typifies. ADYAR
is the symbol of our unity as a Society, and so long as it exists in the heart
of its Fellows the powers of the enemy can never prevail against the Theosophical
Society.
What
then, to recapitulate, must be our answer to the questions with which we started:
Is such a thing as “Applied Theosophy” possible? If so, of what
does it consist?
We
have seen that there is no reason why the ideas and influence of the Theosophical
Society should not be as great in combating wickedness in the practical department
of life as in combating error in the philosophical. The Objects of the Society
neither order nor forbid interference with either; but they predispose the
Fellows to exert an active influence in both, by evolving in their minds a
perception of truer and better things, and a desire for their realization.
We have seen that it is not by making the Society itself an instrument on the
physical plane that its power can be utilized for good; but that its influence
must be a moral one, consisting of the combined and united thoughts and wishes
of the whole Society, focused upon any individual point, and acting through
the personality of its individual Fellows. We have seen that all that is necessary
to make such a united power manifest is that its existence should be acknowledged
and felt by the Fellows themselves; and that to acknowledge and feel it, and
thus bring it from the latent to the active condition, the Fellows must perceive
that the Theosophical Society is a living entity, “ideal” if one
chooses to call it so, but an entity one and indivisible alike upon
the material plane and on the supra-physical plane. We have also seen that
the visible center of the Society, “ADYAR”,
is symbolical of the principle of unity, as well as of the material life of
the Society, and that in every sense loyalty to “ADYAR”
means loyalty to the Objects of the Society and to the principles of Theosophy.
The
answer to our questions then must be that Applied Theosophy is surely a possibility;
and that it consists of the moral influence brought to bear upon the practical
evils of life by the exertions of individual Fellows who have behind them, severally
and collectively, the spiritual power created by unity of purpose, of ideas
and loyalty to the truth; a power for good of which the terrestrial ADYAR
is the physical center and Headquarters; while the spiritual ADYAR
is the channel by means of which powerful influences from a higher sphere, unseen
but not unfelt, enter the Society through the hearts of each and all of its
Fellows, thence to be outpoured upon the whole world.
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