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Adyar Pamphlets
No 95, November 1918
The Common
Foundation of all Religions
By H.S. Olcott
[A
lecture delivered at the Pachaiyappa's Hall, Madras, on the 26th
April, 1882]
Theosophical Publishing House Adyar, Chennai (Madras)
India
BEFORE
proceeding with my discourse I must first express the profound thanks of Madame
Blavatsky - my learned colleague - and myself for the warm and distinguished
welcome we have received, from your Committee on our landing, and this immense
assemblage which embraces so large a number of the educated men of this
Presidency. We have thus had one more proof of the fact that the progress of our
work in India is being watched with affectionate interest by the intelligent
classes of the Indian Peninsula. Once more, upon visiting for the first time a
Presidency town, we find ourselves among friends the sincerity of whose welcome
cannot be misunderstood, and which unmistakably proves that we are not received
as strangers but as brethren are who return from a distant land to their own
people. Let us hope that the fraternal ties now created between us may never be
broken, but grow stronger and stronger as time makes us all to see the necessity
for united effort on behalf of the sacred cause of Indian interests. I trust
that you will give patient attention to the thoughts that I shall now offer for
your consideration.
Religion is - according to Mr Herbert Spencer -
“a great (I should say the greatest) reality and a great truth -
nothing less than an essential and indestructible element of human nature”. He
holds that the religious institutions of the world represent a genuine and
universal feeling in the race just as really as any other institution. The
accessory superstitions which have overgrown and perverted the religious
sentiment must not be confounded with the religious sentiment itself. That
this is done is a mischievous mistake, alike of religionists and
anti-religionists. Science in clearing away these excrescences brings us
always nearer the underlying truth, and is therefore the handmaid and friend
of true religion. The substratum of truth is the one broad plateau of rock
upon which the world’s theological superstructures are reared. It is - as the
title of our lecture puts it - “the common foundation of all
religions”.
And now
what is it? What is this rock? It is a conglomerate, having more than one
element in its composition. In the first place, of necessity, is the idea of a
part of man’s nature which is non-physical; next, the idea of a
post-mortem continuation of this non-physical part; third, the existence
of an Infinite Principle underlying all phenomena; fourth, a certain
relationship between this Infinite Principle and the non-physical part of
man.
The
evolution of the grander from the lower intellectual conception in this graded
sequence is now conceded, alike by the scientist and the theologian. This
evolution is accompanied by an elimination, for in religion, as in all other
departments of thought, the light cannot be seen until the clouds are cleared
away. Primitive truth is the light, theologies the clouds; and they are clouds
still, though they glitter with all the hues of the spectrum. Fetish worship,
animal worship, hero worship, ancestor worship, nature worship, book worship;
polytheism, monotheism, theism, deism, atheism, materialism (which includes
positivism), agnosticism; the blind adoration of the idol, the blind adoration
of the crucible - these are the Alpha and the Omega of human religious thought,
the measure of relative spiritual blindness.
All these
concepts pass through a single prism - the human mind. And that is why they are
so imperfect, so incongruous, so human. A man can never see the whole light by
looking from inside his body outwardly, any more than one can see the clear
daylight through a dust-soiled window-glass, or the stars through a smeared
reflecting lens. Why? Because the physical senses are adapted only to the things
of a physical world, and religion is a transcendentalism. Religious truth is not
a thing for physical observation, but one for psychical intuition. One who has
not developed this psychical power can never know religion as a fact; he
can only accept it as a creed, or paint it to himself as an emotional
sentimentality. Bigotry is the brand to put upon one; gush that for the other.
Back of both, and equally threatening them, is Scepticism.
Like man
his religion has its ages; first, proclamation, propagandism, martyrdom;
second conquest, faith; third, neglect, self-criticism;
fourth, decadence, tenacious formalism; fifth, hypocrisy;
sixth, compromise; seventh, decay and extinction. And, like the
human race, no religion passes as a whole through these stages
seriatim. At this very day, we see the Australian sunk in the depths of
animalism, the American Red Indian just emerging from the Stone Age, the
European in the full flush of high material civilization. And so a glance at
religious history shows us the cropping up of highly heretical schools and sects
in each great religion, of which each represents some special departure from
primitive orthodoxy, some separate advance along the road towards the final goal
that we have sketched out. And I also note, as the physician observes the
symptoms of his patient, that history constantly shows in the bitter mutual
hatreds of these cliques and sects for each other, the clearest proofs that our
postulate is correct when we say - as just now - that Religion can never be
really known by the physical brain of the physical man. All these hatreds,
bitternesses and cruel reprisals of sect for sect, and world’s faith for world’s
faith, show that men mistake the non-essentials for essentials, illusions for
realities.
We can
test this statement most easily. Look away from this war of theologians to the
class of men who have developed their psychical powers and what do you see? In
place of strife, peace, agreement mutual tolerance, a brotherly concord as to
the fundamentals of religion. Whatever their exoteric creed they are greater
than and far above it, and their innate holiness and gentleness of nature give
life and strength to the Church they represent; they are the flowers of the
human tree, the brothers of all mankind; for they know what is the light that
shines behind the clouds; under the foundations of all the Churches they see the
same rock. I ask those of you who wish to be convinced of this fact to read the
Dabistan, by Mohsan Fami, who records in it his observations of the
sâdhus of twelve different religions two centuries ago. “Granting all the
premises” - the modern sceptic will say - “can you prove to me that science has
not swept away all your religious hypotheses along with the myths, legends,
superstitions and other lumber? Well, I answer, “Yes”. It is exactly on that
datum line that the Theosophical Society is building itself up. Some people
think us opponents of Science, but on the contrary we are its warmest advocates
- until it begins to dogmatize from incomplete, known data upon new facts. When
it reaches that point we challenge it and fight it with all our strength, such
as it may be, just as we fight the dogmatism of theology. For to our mind, it
does not matter whether you blindly worship a fetish, a man, a book, or a
crucible - it is blind idolatry all the same; and Science can be, and has been,
as cruel and remorseless in her way as the Church ever was in
hers.
The first
step is to have an agreement as to what the word “Science” means. I take it to
be the collection and arrangement of observed facts about Nature. If that is
correct, then I protest against half measures: I want those observations to be
complete, to cover all of Nature, not the half of it. What sort of ontology
would it be which, while pretending to investigate the laws of our being, took
note only of our anatomy, physiology and whatever relates to the physical frame
of man, leaving out all that concerns his mental function? Absurd! you would
say; but I ask you whether it is any more absurd to study man in his body
without the mind, than to study him in body and mind while ignoring the
trans-corporeal manifestations of his middle nature. You want me to define what
I mean by this “middle nature” and by its trans-corporeal manifestations: I will
do so, I start, then, with the proposition that there is more of a man than can
be burnt with fire, eaten by tigers, drowned by water, chopped to pieces with
knives, or rotted in the ground. The materialist will deny this, but it does not
matter; the proposition can be proved as easily as that he is a
man.
They have
in Europe a science which they call psychology: it is a misnomer - it is another
kind of ology - but we wont quarrel about words. Well, when you come to analyze
the Western idea that underlies this term of psychology, you will discover that
it relates only to the normal and abnormal intellectual manifestations of the
brain. One class of scientists - especially among the alienists, or students of
insanity - maintain that mind is a function of the gray vesicles of the lobes of
the brain; injure the brain by any one of a dozen accidents, and sensation is
cut off, thought ceases, mind is destroyed, the thinking, hence responsible,
entity is extinguished. All that is left is carrion, and out of this carrion,
before the accident, sprang by magneto-electrical energy all that distinguishes
man from the lowest animal, as the lotus springs from slimy
mud.
The
opposed party affirm that the brain is the organ of the mind, the machine of its
manifestation, and that the thinking something in man thinks still and still
exists even though the brain be shattered, even though the man die. The one
reflects the tone of materialistic science, the other the tone of the Christian
Churches and of the two crores of so-called modern Spiritualists. The
Materialists regard man as a Unity, a thinking machine, the other regard him as
a Duality, a compound of body and soul. There is no ground for a “middle nature”
in either of these schools. True, here and there, you will find some casual
allusion to a third and higher principle - the “spirit,” as, for instance, in
the Christian New Testament (I Thessaloniaus, v 23) where I Paul
says: “I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless
unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ” - an expression which, however sound
as theology, is dreadfully loose and heterodox as science. But the whole drift
of Christian teaching and of mediumistic teaching favours the duality theory;
the body dead, the second principle enters on a new career of its own until it
attains to a postulated summum bonum or summum malum state. Now
experienced observers of the mediumistic phenomena have seen many animated
figures or more or less substantial apparitions of deceased persons, and these
they regard as the returning souls revisiting the land of the living. They have
no idea of this middle nature. But the Hindû philosophers make a far deeper
analysis of man. Instead of a single part, or a duality, they affirm that there
are no fewer than seven distinct groups which go to make up a human being. These
are:
(1) The
Material body - Stûlasarîra
(2) The
Lingasarîra
(3) The
Life Principle - Jîva
(4) The
Kâmarûpa, resulting as Mâyâvirûpa
(5) The
Physical Intelligence (or Animal Soul) - Manas
(6) The
Spiritual Intelligence - Buddhi
(7) The
Âtmâ
And so
minute is their analysis, that each of these groups is subdivided into seven
sub-groups. Generally speaking, the first, fourth and seventh principles mark
the boundaries of the tripartite or trinitarian man. And the fourth, which comes
just midway between the gross body (Stûlasarîra) and the Âtmâ, or
divine and eternal principle, is this middle nature of which we have been in
search. Now the next question to be asked of us is whether this fourth
principle, or Mâyâvirûpa or human “Double,” is intelligent or non-intelligent,
matter or spirit; and the next, whether its existence can be scientifically
accounted for and proved. We will take them in order.
In itself
the Double is but a vapour, a mist, or a solid form according to its relative
state of condensation. Given outside the body one set of atmospheric, electric,
magnetic, telluric and other conditions, this form may be invisible yet capable
of making sounds or giving other tests of its presence; given another set of
conditions, it may be visible, but as a misty vapour; given a third set, it may
be condensed into perfect visibility and even tangibility. Volumes upon volumes
might be filled with bare paragraph abstracts of recorded instances of these
apparitional visits. Sometimes the form manifests intelligence, it speaks;
sometimes it can only show itself - I am now speaking of the apparitions of dead
persons. I have personally seen more than five hundred such apparitions at a
place in America where hundreds more saw them, and I put my experiences in the
form of a book, which was praised by some of the eminent scientists of Europe as
a careful record of scientifically accurate observations. I only mention this to
satisfy you that here is no case of hallucination or unsupported statements.
Well, then, we have here the middle nature of man acting outside of and after
the death of the physical body; though for my part - being a believer in Asiatic
Psychology - I do not believe that these post-mortem apparitions are the very
man himself - the thinking, responsible Ego. They are, I conceive, but the
vapoury image of the deceased - matter energized by a residuum of the vital
force which is still entangled in the lingering molecules. But to prove our
proposition we must show that this middle principle, this Mâyâvirûpa or
Double, can be separated from the living body at will, projected to a distance,
and animated by the full consciousness of that man.
We have
two means of proving this - (1) in the concurrent testimony of eye-witnesses as
recorded in the literature of different races; and (2) in the evidence of living
witnesses. In the Hindû religious and philosophical works there are many such
testimonies. Not to mention others, we may cite the case of Sankarâchârya, who
entranced his body, left it in the custody of his disciples, entered the body of
a Râjah just deceased, and lived in it for a number of weeks; and that of
Agastya, who appeared in the heat of the battle between Râma and Râvana, while
his body was entranced in the Nilghiris. This story is given in the Râmâyana.
In Patañjali’s Yoga Sûtras this phenomenon is affirmed to be within
the power of every Siddha who perfects himself in Yoga. As to living witnesses,
I am one myself; for I have seen the Doubles of several men acting intelligently
at great distances from their bodies, and in this pamphlet that I now show you,
[Hints on Esoteric Theosophy (Calcutta, 1882)] will be found the
certificates of no less than nine reputable persons - five Hindûs and four
Europeans - that they have seen such appearances on various occasions within the
past two years. And then we have the scores of similar attestations from
credible persons living in different parts of the world which are to be read in
many European books treating upon these subjects. I do not pretend to say that a
skeptical public can be expected to take this mass of evidence, conclusive as it
may be, without reserve; the alleged phenomenon so surpasses ordinary human
experience that, to believe its reality, each one must see for himself. I
however do affirm that we have here a case of probable verity made out; for,
under the strictest canons of scientific orthodoxy, we cannot suspect a
conspiracy to lie among so many individual witnesses, who never saw or heard of
each other, who, in fact, did not even live in the same generation, but yet
whose testimonies corroborate each other.
But if we
have a case of probable truth, the man of science will ask us what we next
demand of him. Do we allege a natural and scientific, or a supernatural, hence
unscientific, explanation for the projection of the Double of the living, and
the apparition of that of the deceased man? I answer, most assuredly, the
former. I am devoted enough to Science to deny, with all the emphasis I can give
to words, the fact that a miraculous phenomenon ever took place, in this age or
any age. Whatever has ever occurred must have done so within the operation of
natural law. To suppose anything else would be equivalent to saying that there
is no permanency in the laws of the universe, but that they can be set aside and
played with at the caprice of an irresponsible and meddlesome Power. We should
be in a universe going by jerks, started and stopped like a clock that a child
is playing with. This supernaturalism is the curse of all creeds, it hangs like
an incubus around the neck of the religions and hatches the satire of the
sceptic; it is the dry-rot that eats out the heart of any faith that builds upon
it. This it is which, carried in the body of a church, foredooms it to ultimate
destruction as surely as the hidden cancer carried in the human system will one
day kill it. And of all epochs this nineteenth century is the worst in which to
come before the public as the champions of supernatural religions. They are
going down in every land, melting before the laboratory fires like waxen images.
No, when I stand forth as the defender of Hindûism, Buddhism or Zoroastrianism,
I wish it understood that I do not claim any respect or tolerance for them
outside the limits of natural law, I believe - nay I know - that their
foundation is a scientific one, and on those conditions they must stand or fall
so far as I am concerned. I do not say they are in equally close reconciliation
with science, but I do say that whatever foundation they have, whether broad or
narrow, long or short, is and must be a scientific one. And so, too, when I ask
you to cease from making yourselves ridiculous by denying the existence of this
middle nature in man, it is because I am persuaded, as the result of much
reading and a good deal of personal experience, that the Double, or Mâyâvirûpa,
is a scientific fact.
Well
then, to return - is it matter or something else? I say matter plus
something else. And here stop a moment to think what matter is. Loose thinkers -
among whom we must class raw lads fresh from college, though they be ever so
much titled - are too apt to associate the idea of matter with the properties of
density, visibility, and tangibility. But this is very inexcusable. The air we
breathe is invisible, yet matter - its equivalents of oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen
and carbonic acid are each atomic, ponderable, demonstrable by analysis.
Electricity cannot, except under prepaid conditions, be seen, yet it is matter.
The Universal Ether of science no one ever saw, yet it is matter in a state of
extreme tenuity. Take the familiar example of forms of water, and see how they
rapidly run up the scale of tenuity until they elude the clutch of science:
stone-hard ice, melted ice, condensed steam, super-heated and invisible steam,
electricity, and - it is gone out of the world of effects into the world of
causes!
Well
then, with this warning before you, my cerebrally superheated young friend of
the Madras University, pray do not contradict me when I say that the Hindû
philosophy of man fits in with the lines of modern science much more snugly than
that of either the supernaturalistic Christian or the materialistic man of
science. As we have seen the successive forms of water running up into the
invisible world, so here, Esoteric Hindû Philosophy gives us a graduated series
of molecular arrangements in the human economy, at one end of which is the
concrete mass of the Stûlasarîra, at the other the last sublimation
called Âtmâ, or spirit. “But how can all these exist together in one
combination; is a man like a nest of boxes or baskets fitted into each other, or
do you mean to say the scientific absurdity that two things can simultaneously
occupy the same space?” This is a side question provoked by the main one, but we
must dispose of it first.
I will
say, then, that as the thing has been explained to me, each of these several
sets of atoms which compose the seven parts of man occupy the interstitial space
between the next coarser set of atoms. They are focalized as to their several
energies in what the Hindûs call the Shadadharams, or centres of vital force,
crowned by Sahasrâram, in which Âtmâ is located. This supreme point is in the
crown of the head; the others are located at the base of the spine, the abdomen,
the umbilicus, the heart, the root of the throat, and the centre of the frontal
sinus. The atoms of the Buddhi would, then, pervade the interstices of
the Manas; those of the Manas , those of the Kâmarûpa; those of
the latter those of the Jîva; those of the Stûlasarîra. And as
each coarser contains the particles of all the finer principles, therefore the
Stûlasarîra is the gross casket within which the several parts of the composite
man are contained. Pervading and energizing all is the Âtmâ, or that
incomprehensible final energy which cannot be comprehended by the physical
senses, and which is described to himself by the Brahman in the
Mândûkya-Upanishat by saying: “Thou art not this, nor that, nor the
third, nor anything which the mind can grasp with the help of the physical
perceptions.” Your popular Telugu poet beautifully and allegorically depicts
this idea in his poem Sîtârâma Añjaniyam (cosmic matter) where Sîtâ - who
is herself the personification of Prakrti - is asked by the daughters and wives
of the Rshis to point out her husband, but, through modesty, refrains. The
ladies then pointing successively to a number of different men ask each time:
“Is this thy husband?” She answers in the negative, but when they point to Râma
she is silent, for she cannot even speak of her heart’s lord before strangers.
So the poet would have us understand, while we may freely say what Âtmâ is
not, when we are required to say what it is we must be silent, for
words are powerless to express the sublime idea.
We have
now prepared the ground to answer both of the questions put to us by our
imaginary critic. The Kâmarûpa, when intelligently projected beyond the physical
body by the developed energy of an Initiate of Occult Science, contains in it
all his Manas and Buddhi (including the Chittham and Ahankâram, -
sense of individuality) - his Intelligence and Spiritual Intelligence. The
Initiate quits his earthly casket - in which are left the Jîva and Lingasarîra -
and for the moment lives, thinks and acts in this Double of himself. Its atomic
condition being less dense than that of the corporeal body, it has enhanced
powers of locomotion and perception. Barriers that would stop the body - for
example, the walls of a room - cannot stop it, for its particles may pass
through the interstices of the gross matter composing the wall. It is in the
subjective world and may traverse its space like thought, which is itself a form
of energy. Or, if he likes, the Initiate may simply project a non-intelligent
image of himself and make it appear at the spot at which he may have focalized
his thought. It depends upon him whether the image shall be but an illusionary
form, or his own self; it may be mere matter, or matter plus himself. As
to our accounting for the middle nature of man scientifically, I have already
shown that we may do this by the collection of testimonies, and by personal
observation. We may add that further proof is obtainable by the best and surest
of all methods - that of going oneself through the necessary course of
self-training and projecting one’s own Double. For this is no exclusive science
reserved for a favoured few; it is a true science based upon natural law, and
within the reach of everyone who has the requisite qualifications. The humblest
labourer may lift the veil of mystery as well as the proudest sovereign or the
haughtiest priest.
But it is
constantly asked: why are not these secrets thrown open to the world as freely
as the details of chemistry or any other branch of knowledge? It is a natural
question - for a superficial reasoner to put; but it is not a sound one. The
difference between psychic and physical sciences is that the former can only be
learned by the self-evolution of psychical powers. No college professor can
evolve them for you, nor any friend, fellow-student or relative; you must evolve
them for yourself. Can another man learn music, or Samskrit, or the art of
painting or sculpture for you? Can another eat, sleep, feel warm or cold, digest
or breathe for you? Then why should you expect him to learn psychology for you?
Anyhow he cannot do it, however much you may expect it, and that is the final
answer to all such questioners. Nor is it absolutely certain that, even
though you should try ever so much, you could evolve these powers in yourself.
Has every man the capacity for languages, or music, or poetry, or science, or
philosophy? You know that each of these require certain clear aptitudes, and if
you have them not you can never become a musician, poet, scientist or
philosopher. The branches of physical science are difficult to master, even when
you have the natural capacity; but psychical science is more difficult than
either of them - I might almost say than all combined. That is why the Mahâtmâ
has been described as “the rare efforescence of a generation of enquirers”
(Sinnett’s The Occult
World p 101), and in all generations the true Sâdhu has been reverenced
as almost a superhuman being. The term applies to him only in the sense of his
being above the weaknesses, the prejudice and the ignorance of his fellow
men.
With the
most absurd blindness to the experience of the race, we Founders of the
Theosophical Society are constantly being asked to turn its members into Adepts.
We must show the short cut to the Himavat, the private passages to the Asramums
in the Nilghiris! They are not willing to work and suffer for the getting of
knowledge, as all who have got it heretofore, they must be put into a
first-class carriage and taken straight behind the Veil of Isis! They fancy our
Society an improved sort of Miracle Club, or School of Magic wherein for ten
rupees a man can become a Mahâtmâ between the morning bath and the evening meal!
Such people entirely overlook the avowed two chief objects of the Society - the
formation of a nucleus of an Universal Brotherhood for the research after truth
and the promotion of kind feelings between man and man; and the promotion of the
study of ancient religions, philosophies and sciences. They do not appreciate
this purely unselfish part of the Society's work, nor seem to think it a noble
and most meritorious thing to labour for the enlightenment and happiness of
mankind. They have an insatiable curiosity to behold wonders, seeing which they
would not, in many instances, be stimulated to search after the hidden springs
of wisdom, but only sit with open mouth and pendulous tongue, to wonder how the
trick was done and what would be the next one?
Such
minds can get no profit by joining the Theosophical Society, and I advise them
to stay outside. We want no such selfish triflers. Ours is a serious,
hard-working, self-denying Society, and we want only men worthy to be called men
and worthy of our respect. We want men whose first question will not be “what
good can I get by joining?” “but” what good can I do by joining?” Our
work requires the services of men who can be satisfied to labour for the next
generation and the succeeding ones; men who, seeing the lamentable religious
state of the world - seeing noble faiths debased, temples, churches, and holy
shrines thronged by hypocrites and mockers - burn with a desire to rekindle the
fires of spirituality and morality upon the polluted altars, and bring the
knowledge of the Rshis within the reach of a sin-burdened world. We want Hindûs
who can love India with so pure an affection that they will count it a joy and
an honour beyond the price to work and to suffer, even, for her sake. Men we
want, who will be able to put aside for the moment their puerile hatreds of
race, and creed, and caste, as they put away a soiled cloth or a worn-out
garment; and with a loving heart and clean conscience be ready to join with
every other man - be he black or white, red or yellow, bondsman or freeman -
whose heart beats with love for India and her wide-scattered children of many
races, throughout the world. We welcome most those who are ready to trample
under foot their selfishness when it comes in conflict with the general good. We
welcome the intelligent student of science who has such broad conceptions of his
subject that he considers it quite as important to solve the mystery of Force as
to know the atomic combinations of Matter, and feeling so, is not afraid or
ashamed to take for his teacher anyone who is competent, whatever be the colour
of his skin.
Now to
take our scientific argument one step further. Granted that the existence of the
Double has been proven, and also its projectibility, how is it projected? By an
expenditure of energy, of course. That energy is the vital force set in motion
by the will. The power of concentrating the will for this purpose is one that
may be natural or acquired. There are some persons who have it naturally so
strong in them that they often send their Doubles to distant places and make
them visible, though they may never have given a day’s study to the science of
psychology; I have known both men and women of this sort. But it is an uncommon
power, and can never be exercised at all times except by the true proficient in
psychological science. The operations of the brain in mechanically evolving the
current of will-force have been more or less carefully expounded by Bain and
Maudsley, while Professors Tait and Balfour Stewart have, in their Unseen
Universe, traced for us the dynamic effect of thought evolution into the
Ether, or, as Hindûs have called it these thousands of years, the Âkâsa. They go
so far as to say that it is not an unthinkable proposition that the evolution of
thought in a single human brain may dynamically affect a distant planet. In
other words, when a thought is evolved a vibration of etheric particles is set
up, and this motion must continue on indefinitely. Now the Yogi evolves such a
current and turns it upon himself as a concentrated force; continuing the
process until the power is sufficient to force his Double out of its corporeal
encasement, and to project it to whatsoever locality he desires. We have thus
shown the fact of the Mâyâvirûpa, its capability to exist outside the body, and
the energy which causes its projection. I cannot go into details to elaborate
the argument, for I can only detain you an hour in this tropical heat. But I
have at least, I trust, shown you that I rely only upon scientific principles,
and claim no indulgence from the advocates of
supernaturalism.
And now
is this Double - which is none other than what is commonly called the “Soul,”
immortal? No, it is not. So much of it as is matter in aggregation must
ultimately obey the law of dispersion which in time breaks up and forces out of
the objective universe whatever is material. It is equally the law of planetary
as of lesser forms. As all that is material in a star was primarily condensed
from the loose atoms in space, so all that is material in the human body,
however coarse or however fine it may be, was primarily condensed from the
chaotic atoms in the Âkâsa. And to that dispersed condition they must return
whenever the centripetal force that attracted them into the human nucleus ceases
to resist the centrifugal force or attractions of the atoms in space. This
brings us right upon the problem of a continuity of existence beyond the
physical death. Here is the dividing line between the world’s religions. The
dualists affirm that this soul goes to heavenly or infernal places to be for
ever blest or punished according to the deeds done in the body. Though they do
not use the very word, yet it is the doctrine of merit they teach. For even
those extremely unscientific theologians who affirm that a punishing and
rewarding Deity has from all time preordained some to be saved and some to be
dammed, tell us that the merit of faith in a certain system of morals and
discipline and a share in the vicarious merit of another, are prerequisites to
future bliss. We may assume, therefore, that merit, or KARMA, is a corner-stone of
Religion. This is both a logical and scientific proposition, for the thoughts,
words and deeds of a man are so many causes which must work out corresponding
effects; the good ones can only produce good effects, the bad ones only bad -
unless they are antagonized and neutralized by stronger ones that are
good.
I need
not go into the metaphysical analysis of what is bad and what good. We may pass
it over with the simple postulate that whatever has either a debasing tendency
upon the individual or promotes injustice, misery, suffering, ignorance and
animalism in society is essentially bad, that what tends to the contrary is
good. I should call that a bad religion which taught that it is meritorious to
do evil that good may come; for good can never come out of evil, the evil tree
produces not good fruit. A religion that can only be propagated at the point of
the sword; or upon the martyr’s pile; or under instruments of torture; or by
devastating countries and enslaving their populations; or by cunning stratagems
seducing ignorant children or adults away from their families and castes and
ancestral creeds - is a vile and devilish religion, the enemy of truth, the
destroyer of social happiness. If a religion is not based upon a lie, the fact
can be proved and it can stand unshaken as the rocky mountain against all the
assaults of sceptics. A true religion is not one that runs to holes and corners,
like a naked leper to hide his sores, when a bold critic casts his searching eye
upon it and asks for its credentials. If I stand here to defend what is good in
Hinduism, it is because of my full conviction that, that good exists, and that
however fantastic and even childish some may think its tangled overgrowth of
customs, legends and superstitions, there is the rock of truth, of scientific
truth, below them all. On that rock it is destined to stand through countless
coming generations as it has already stood through the countless generations
which have professed that hoary Faith since the Rshis shot from their Himâlayan
heights the blazing light of spiritual truth over a dark and ignorant
world.
It is
most reasonable that you should ask me what those of you are to do who are not
gifted with the power to get outside the illusion-breeding screen of the body
and acquire an intimate actual perception of “Divine” truth through the
developed psychical senses. As we have ourselves shown that all men cannot be
Adepts, what comfort do we hold out to the rest? This involves a momentary
glance at the theory of rebirths. If this little span of human life we are now
enjoying be the entire sum of human existence; if you and I never lived before
and will never live again, then there would be no ray of hope to offer to any
mind that was not capable of the intellectual suicide of blind faith. The
doctrine of a vicarious atonement for sin is not merely unthinkable, it is
positively repulsive to one who can take a larger and more scientific view of
man’s origin and destiny than that of the dualists. One whose religious
perceptions rest upon the intuition that cause and effect are equal; that there
is a perfect and correspondential reign of Law throughout the universe; that
under any reasonable conception of eternity there must always have been at work
the same forces as are now active - must scout the assertion that this brief
instant of sentient life is our only one.
Science
has traced us back through an inconceivably long sequence of existences - in the
human, the animal, the vegetable, and the mineral kingdoms - to the cradle of
future sentient life, the Ether of space. Would a man of science, then, make
bold to affirm that you and I, who represent a relatively high stage of
evolution, came to be what we are without previous development in other births,
whether on this earth or other planets? And if he would not, he must, in
conformity with his own canons of the conservation and correlation of energy,
deduce from the whole analogy of nature that there is another life for us beyond
this life. The force which evolved us cannot be expended, it must run on in its
vibratory line until its limit is reached. And that limit the Hindû and the
Buddhist, the Jain and the Zoroastrian Adepts, all define as that abstract world
which lies beyond the phenomenal one of illusions and pain. Whatever they may
call it - whether Mukti, or Nirvâna, or Light - it is all the same idea; it is
the outcome of the eternal Principle of energy after passing around a cycle of
correlations with matter. That final limit the Middle Nature as a whole never
reaches, for it is material as to its form, size, colour and atomic relations;
if we call it the “Soul,” therefore, we may say that the “Soul” is not immortal;
for that which is material tends always to resume its primitive atomic
condition. And the Hindû philosopher, arguing from these premises, teaches that
what does escape out of the phenomenal world is Âtmâ, the SPIRIT. And thus, while from
the Hindû standpoint it is correct to say the “Soul” is not immortal, it must
also be added that the “Spirit” is; for, unlike the Soul or Middle Nature, Âtmâ
contains no mortal and perishable ingredients, but is of its essence
unchangeable and eternal.
The
confusion of the words “Soul” and “Spirit,” so common now, is perplexing and
mischievous to this last degree.
It is no
argument to bring against the Asiatic theory of Palingenesis, that we have no
remembrance of former existences. We have forgotten nineteen-twentieths of the
incidents of our present life. Memory plays as the most prankish tricks. Every
one of us can recollect some one trifling incident out of a whole day’s, month’s
year’s incidents of our earliest years, and one that was in no way important,
nor apparently more calculated than the others to impress itself indelibly upon
the memory. How is this? And if this utter forgetfulness of the majority of our
life-incidents is no proof that we did not exist consciously at those times,
then our oblivion of the entire experiences in previous births is no argument
against the fact of such previous births. Nor, let me hasten to add, are the
alleged remembrances of previous births, affirmed by the modern school of
Reincarnationists, valid proofs of such births; they may be - I do not say they
are mere tricks of the imagination, cerebral pictures suggested by chance
external influences. The only question with us is whether in science and logic
it is necessary for us to postulate for ourselves a series of births, somewhere,
at various times. And this I think must be answered in the
affirmative.
So then
conceding the plurality of births, and coming back to our argument, we see that
even though anyone of us may not have the capacity for acquiring adeptship in
this birth, it is still a possibility to acquire it in a succeeding one. If we
make the beginning we create a cause which will, in due time and in proportion
to its original energy, sooner or later give us adeptship, and with it the
knowledge of the hidden laws of being, and of the way to break the shackles of
matter and obtain Mukti - Emancipation. And the first step in this beginning is
to cleanse ourselves from vicious desires and habits, to do away with
unreasoning prejudices, dogmatism and intolerance, to try to discover what is
essentially fundamental and what is non-essential in the religion one professes,
and to live up to the highest ideal of goodness, intelligence, and
spiritual-mindedness that one can extract from that religion and from the
intuitions of one’s own nature. I regard that man as a mad iconoclast who would
strike down any religion - especially one of the world’s ancient religions -
without examining it and giving it credit for its intrinsic truth. I call him a
vain enthusiast who would patch up a new Faith out of the ancient Faiths, merely
to have his name in the mouths of men. I call him a foolish zealot who would
expect to make all men see truth as he sees it, since no two men can even see
alike a simple tree or shrub, let alone grasp metaphysical propositions with the
same clearness. As for those who go about the world to propagate their peculiar
religious belief, without the ability to show its superiority to other beliefs
which they would supplant, or to answer without equivocation the fair questions
of critics - they are either well-meaning visionaries or presumptuous fools. But
mad, or vain, or stupid, as either of these may be, if they are sincere they are
personally entitled to the respect that sincerity always commands. Unless the
whole world is ready to accept one infallible chief and blindly adopt one creed,
the wisest, the only rule must ever be to tolerate in our fellow man that
infirmity of judgment which we are ourselves always liable to, and never wholly
free from. And that is the declared policy and platform of the Theosophical
Society - as you may see by reading this pamphlet containing its Rules and
By-Laws. It is the broad platform of mutual tolerance and universal
brotherhood.
There
must be elementary stages leading up towards adeptship, you will say; there are,
and modern science has laid out some of them. I told you that psychology is the
most difficult of sciences to get to the bottom of, but still Western research
has cleared many obstacles from the path. Mesmerism is by far the most necessary
branch of study to take up first. It gives you (1) proof of the separability of
mind from conscious physical existence; a mesmerized subject may show an active
intellectual consciousness and discrimination while his body is not only asleep
but buried in so profound a trance as to more resemble a livid corpse than a
living man; (2) it gives you proof of the actual transmissibility of thought
from one mind to another; the mesmeric operator can, without uttering a word or
giving a perceptible signal, transmit to his subject the thought in his own
mind; (3) it easily proves the reality of a power to hear sounds and see things
occurring at great distances, to communicate with the thought of distant
persons, to look through walls, down into the bowels of the earth, into the
depths of the ocean and through all other obstructions to corporeal vision; (4)
of a power to look into the human body, detect the seat and causes of disease,
and prescribe suitable remedies, as also a power to impart health and restore
physical and mental vigour by the laying on of the mesmerist’s hands, or by his
imparting his robust vital force to a glass of water for the patient to drink,
or to a cloth for him to wear; (5) of a power to see the past and even
prognosticate the future. These and many more things Mesmeric Science enables a
person, not an Adept of the higher Asiatic Psychology, to prove completely to
himself and others. I say this on the authority of a Committee of the Academy of
France. And then, besides Mesmerism, there are the highly important branches of
Psychometry, Odyle, Mediumism, and others that to barely mention would be beyond
the scope of my present lecture. Each and all help the inquirer towards the
acquisition of “Divine” wisdom, towards an intelligent and scientific conception
of the laws of that “Eternal Something,” as Herbert Spencer calls it, which you
may call God or by any other name you like. Whatever name you may choose for it,
the knowledge of it is the highest goal for human thought, and to be in a state
of harmony with it the noblest, first and most necessary aspiration of
intelligent man. The pursuit of this knowledge is, in one word, THEOSOPHY, and the proper
method of research constitute Theosophical Science.
And thus
in a single sentence I have answered a thousand questions as to what Theosophy
is, and what the object of Theosophical research. Most of you, like the great
mass of Hindûs, have until this moment been imagining to yourselves that we were
come to preach some new religion, to propagate some new conceit, to set up some
“New Dispensation”. You see now how far you have been from the mark, and what
popular injustice has been done to us. Instead of preaching a new religion we
are preaching the superior claims of the oldest religions in the world to the
confidence of the present generation. It is not our poor ignorant selves that we
offer to you as guides and gurus, but the venerable Rshis of the archaic ages.
It is not an American or a Russian, but a hoary Hindû Philosophy that we claim
your allegiance for. We come not to pull down or destroy, but to rebuild the
strong fabric of Asiatic religion. We ask you to help us to set it up again, not
on the shifting and treacherous sands of blind faith, but upon the rocky base of
truth, and to cement its separate stones together with the strong cement of
Modern Science. Hindûism proper has nothing whatever to fear from the
researches of Science. Whatever of falsehood may have come down to you from
previous generations, we may well dispense with, and when the time comes for us
to see through our present mâyâ (illusions) we will cheerfully do so.
“The world was not made in a day,” and we are not such ignorant enthusiasts as
to dream that in a day, or a year, or a generation, long-established errors can
be detected and done away with. Let us but always desire to know the truth, and
hold ourselves ready to speak for it, act for it, die for it, if necessary, when
we may discover it.
People
ask us what in our religion, and how it is possible for us to be on equal terms
of friendliness with people of such antagonistic Faiths. I answer that what may
be our personal preferences among the world’s religions has nothing to do with
the general question of Theosophy. We are advocating Theosophy as the only
method by which one may discover that Eternal Something, not asking people of
another creed than ours to take our creed and throw aside their own. We two
Founders profess a religion of tolerance, charity, kindness, altruism, or love
of one’s fellows; a religion that does not try to discover all that is bad in
our neighbour’s creed, but all that is good, and to make him live up to the best
code of morals and piety he can find in it. We profess, in a word, the religion
that is embodied in the Golden Rule of Confucius, of Gautama, and of the
Founders of nearly all the great religions; and that is preserved for the
admiration and reverence of posterity in the Edicts of the good king Asoka on
the monoliths and rocks of Hindustan. Following this simple creed, we find no
difficulty whatever in living upon terms of perfect peace with the adherent of
any creed who will meet us in a reciprocal spirit. If we have been at war with
the pretended Christians, it is because they have belied the teachings of Him
whom they pretend to call Master, and by every vile and unworthy subterfuge have
tried to oppose the growth of our influence. It is they who war upon us, for
defending Hindûism and the other Asiatic religions, not we who war upon them. If
they would practice their own precepts we would never use voice or pen against
them, for then they would respect the religious feelings of the Hindû, the
Pârsî, the Jain, the Jew, the Buddhist and the Musalmân, and deserve our respect
in return. But they began with calumny instead of argument, and calumny, I fear,
will be the favorite weapon to the bitter end. In comparison with the unmanly
conduct of my brawling countryman who lectured here the other day, denouncing
the Vedas as filthy abomination and the Theosophists as disreputable
adventurers, how sweet and noble was the behaviour of that Muhammadan lawyer who
defended Raymond Lully when a Musalmân tribunal was disposed to punish him for
trying to propagate his religion in their city. “If you think it a meritorious
act, O Muslims, for a Musalmân to try to preach Islâm among the heretics, why
should we be uncharitable to this Christian whose motive is identical?” I cannot
remember the exact words, but that is the sense. The tender voice of Charity
spoke by that lawyer’s lips, and his words were the echo of the Spirit of
truth.
Come
then, ye old men and young men of Madras, if ye call yourselves lovers of India,
and would make yourselves worthy of the blessings of the Rshis, join hands and
hearts with us to carry on this great work. We ask you for no honours, no
worldly benefits or rewards for ourselves. We do not seek you for followers;
choose your proper leaders from among your wisest and purest men, and we will
follow them. We do not offer ourselves as your teachers, for all we can teach is
what we have learnt from this Asia; the Gospel we circulate is derived from the
recluses of the Indian mountains, not from the professors of the West. It is for
India we plead, for the restoration of her ancient religion, the vindication of
her ancient glory, the maintenance of her greatness in science, the arts and
philosophy. If any selfish consideration of sect or caste or local prejudice
bars the way, put it aside, at least until you have done something for the land
of your birth, the renown of your noble race. In this great crowd I see painted
upon your foreheads the vertical sect-marks of the Dwaitas and the
Visishtâdvaitis, and the horizontal stripes of the Sivas. These are the surface
indications of religious differences that have often burst out in bitter words
and bitter deeds. But with another sense than the eye of the body I see another
set of sect-marks indicative of far greater peril to Indian nationality and
Indian spirituality than those. These marks are branded deep upon the brains and
hearts of some - though, happily, not all - of your most promising young men,
the choicest children of the sorrowing Mother India, and they are eating away
the sense of pride that they belong to this race and have inherited this noble
religion. These are the B.A., B.L. and M.A. brands that the University over
yonder has marked you with. After three years of intercourse with the Hindû
nation and of identification with its thought, I almost feel a shudder when some
noble-browed youth is presented to me as a titled graduate. Not that I
undervalue the importance of college culture, nor the honourable distinction one
earns by acquiring University degrees; but I say that, if such distinctions
can only be had at the cost of one’s national honour and one’s spiritual
intuitions, they are a curse to the graduate and a calamity to his country.
I would rather see a dirty Bairâgee who has his ancestors’ intuitive
belief in man’s spiritual capabilities, than the most brilliant graduate ever
turned out of the University, who has lost that belief. Let me companion with
the naked hermit of the jungle rather than with a graduate who, though loaded
with degrees, has by a course of false history and false science, been made to
lose all faith in anything greater in the Universe than a Haeckel or a Comte, or
in any powers in himself higher than those of procreation, thought or digestion.
Call me a Conservative, if you will; I am Conservative to this extent that,
until our modern professors can show me a Philosophy that is unassailable; a
science that is self-demonstrative, that is, axiomatic; a psychology that takes
in all psychic phenomena; a new religion that is all truth and without a flaw -
- I shall proclaim that which I feel, I know, to be the fact, viz., that
the Rshis knew the secrets of Nature and of Man, that there is but one common
platform of all religions, and that upon it ever stood and now stand in
fraternal concord and amity the Hierophants and esoteric Initiates of the
world’s great Faiths. That platform is THEOSOPHY. May the blessing of its ancient Masters be upon our
poor stricken India!
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