On Theosophy
By H. S. Olcott
[Compiled by S. B. Dougherty, from speeches collected in Theosophy,
Religion and Occult Science (1885), and from Theosophical
Siftings, vol. 4, no. 10 (1891).]
[Reprinted from Sunrise (Pasedena, California) February-March 1997 pp. 82-87.]
I had been a student of practical psychology for nearly a quarter
of a century. From boyhood no problem had interested me so much
as the mystery of man, and I had been seeking for light upon it
wherever it could be found.
[On meeting H. P. Blavatsky,] our acquaintance at once ripened
into a friendship. We found ourselves to be congenial in opinion,
and she brought to our intercourse the great resources of a mind
stored with a mass of erudition with regard to the arcane or esoteric
philosophies of the ancient times. I found her the most intellectual
woman I had ever met in my life, a very eccentric personage, but
a person who compelled you to either like her very much or to
be very antagonistic to her.
Besides these extraordinary literary and mental accomplishments
of hers, she also possessed in a very striking degree psychical
powers such as we read about in the accounts of the lives of ancient
sages, and the proof of the reality of which powers was vouchsafed
to many witnesses in America for years before we sailed from New
York for India; so that naturally those of us who knew her in
those times and subsequently, have been unaffected by all the
imputations upon her character that have been so rife during the
later years of her life. She was not perfect, yet conceding all
her imperfections she was greater than her detractors and we loved
her for herself and for her cause.
I now look back to that meeting as the most fortunate event of
my life; for it made light shine in all the dark places, and sent
me out on a mission to help to revive Aryan (1)
Occult science, which grows more absorbingly interesting every
day.
Little by little she opened out to me as much of the truth as
my experiences had fitted me to grasp. Step by step I was forced
to relinquish illusory beliefs, cherished for twenty years. And
as the light gradually dawned on my mind, my reverence for the
unseen teachers who had instructed her grew apace. At the same
time, a deep and insatiable yearning possessed me to seek their
society, or, at least, to take up my residence in a land which
their presence glorified, and incorporate myself with a people
whom their greatness ennobled. The time came when I was blessed
with a visit from one of these Mahatmas in my own room
at New York -- a visit from him, not in the physical body, but
in the "double," or Mayavi-rupa. . . . This
visit and his conversation sent my heart at one leap around the
globe, across oceans and continents, over sea and land, to India,
and from that moment I had a motive to live for, an end to strive
after. That motive was to gain the Aryan wisdom; that end to work
for its dissemination.
During the three years when I was waiting to come to India, I
had other visits from the Mahatmas, and they were not
all Hindus or Cashmeris. I know some fifteen in all, and among
them Copts, Tibetans, Chinese, Japanese, Siamese, a Hungarian,
and a Cypriote. But, whatever they are, however much they may
differ externally as to race, religion and caste, they are in
perfect agreement as to the fundamentals of occult science and
the scientific basis of religion.
The Rishis 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.
Many practical problems which seem insoluble to individual thinkers
can find their solvent only in an altered disposition of mankind.
All religions seek to effect this change of disposition in the
individual consciousness. But nearly all religious systems have
preferred their specific and distinctive tenets to their true
universal basis and inherent tendency, and have thus become the
most discordant of influences in the world they would regenerate.
Therefore it is that the Theosophical Society has no room for
propagandists of any exclusive creed.
Religion is most strictly a personal affair: every man makes his
own religion and his own God: . . . after all, when it comes to
your actual religious experience, it will be your experience,
measured and limited by your own personal, psychical
and theosophical capacity.
[Religion] is also something sacred, something not to be rudely
interfered with and pried into. The true moralist will exert his
influence to make his fellow-men live up to the best features
of their respective faiths; it is the most audacious of experiments
to try and glue together bits of a number of good religions into
a new mosaic.
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.
It is time that we should try to discover the sources of modern
ideas, and compare what we think we know of the laws of Nature
with what the Asiatic people really did know thousands of years
before Europe was inhabited by our barbarian ancestors, or an
European foot was set upon the American continent. Suppose that,
for a change, we approach the Eastern people in a less presumptuous
spirit, and honestly confessing that we know nothing at all of
the beginning or end of natural law, ask them to help us to find
out what their forefathers knew. This has been the policy of the
Theosophical Society, and it has yielded valuable results already
[1880].
It is my happiness to not only help to enlarge the boundaries
of Western science by showing where the secrets of nature and
of man may be experimentally studied, and to give Anglo-Indians
a greater respect for the subject nation they rule over, but also
to aid in kindling in the bosoms of Indian youths a due reverence
for their glorious ancestry, and a desire to imitate them in their
noble achievements in science and philosophy.
As I see it, the young Hindus, outside the reformatory Samajes,
are losing their old religious belief, without gaining, or being
ready to embrace, any other. They are becoming exactly like the
great mass of educated youth in Europe and America. . . . It is
Science which undermined the foundations of Religion; it is Science
which should be compelled to erect the new edifice. As an incomplete
study of Nature has led to materialistic Atheism (2),
so a complete one will lead the eager student back to faith in
his inner and nobler self, and in his spiritual destiny. . . .
We interfere with no man's creed or caste; we preach no dogma;
we offer no article of faith. We point to Nature as the most infallible
of all divine revelations, and to Science as the most competent
teacher of her mysteries.
There is but one truth, and that is to be sought for
in the mystical world of man's interior nature; theosophically,
and by the help of the "Occult Sciences." . . . If physical
facts can be observed by the eye of the body, so can spiritual
laws be discovered by that interior perception of ours which we
call the eye of the spirit. This perceptive power inheres in the
nature of man; it is the godlike quality which makes him superior
to brutes.
Every man who really did penetrate the mysteries of life and death
got the truth in solitude and in a mighty travail of body and
spirit. These were all Theosophists -- that is, original searchers
after spiritual knowledge. What they did, what they achieved,
any other man of equal qualities may attain to. And this is the
lesson taught by the Theosophical Society. As they wrested her
secrets from the bosom of Nature, so would we.
Essentially, a Theosophical Society is one which favours man's
original acquisition of knowledge about the hidden things of the
universe, by the education and perfecting of his own latent powers.
Theosophy differs as widely from philosophy as it does from theology.
. . . [It] professes to exclude all dialectical process, and to
derive its whole knowledge of God from direct intuition and contemplation.
This Theosophy dates from the highest antiquity of which any records
are preserved, and every original founder of a religion was a
seeker after divine wisdom by the theosophic process of self-illumination.
The lusts of the flesh, the pride of life, the prejudices of birth,
race, creed (so far as it creates dogmatism), must all be put
aside. The body must be made the convenience, instead of the despot,
of the higher self. The prison-bars of sense that incarcerate
the man of matter must be unlocked, and while living in and being
a factor in the outer world, the Theosophist must be able to look
into, enter, act in, and return from, the inner world, fraught
with divine truth.
The Theosophist is a man who, whatever be his race, creed, or
condition, aspires to reach this height of wisdom and beatitude
by self-development; and, therefore, you will see that in a Theosophical
Society like that we have founded -- to have one creed for our
members to subscribe to, or one form of prayer for them to adopt,
or any rules that would interfere with their individual relations
to caste, or any other social and external environment not actually
antipathetic to Theosophical research, would be impossible. .
. . we are not preaching a new religion, or founding
a new sect, or a new school of philosophy or occult science.
Now it has been remarked that this movement was floated on phenomena.
To a certain extent that is true, but the fault probably is more
with myself than with [H. P. Blavatsky]. The things she did were
so novel and striking to me, they were so interesting to me as
a veteran student of psychology, they had such an important scientific
bearing upon the problem of the powers of man and the latent forces
of nature, that naturally I urged her to continual displays of
these powers before a variety of witnesses. Reluctantly she complied,
and the result was most unfortunate; it vindicated the wisdom
of that reticence which had been the policy of all the great sages
and adepts in the past.
Neither pessimist nor optimist, I am not satisfied that our race
is doomed to destruction, present or future, nor that the moral
sense of society can be kept undiminished without constant refreshment
from the parent fount. That fount I conceive to be Theosophical
study and personal illumination, and I regard him as a benefactor
to his kind who points out to the sceptical, the despairing, the
world-weary, the heart-hungry, that the vanities of the world
do not satisfy the soul's aspirations, and that true happiness
can only be acquired by interior self-development, purification
and enlightenment.
(From Sunrise magazine, February/March 1997.)
FOOTNOTES:
1. [Olcott always used Aryan in reference
to Hindustan, and especially to its ancient sages; aryan
comes from the Sanskrit word for "noble." -- Ed.] (return to text)
2. Atheism, in the sense of disbelief of even
the Universal Principle. -- HSO. (return to text)
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