1
The wheel of life does not stop for long - soon it
will turn again and pass from the point of death to the point of life.
2
The thought of the body, of being identified with it,
guarantees that a dying person will come back here again.
3
Nature has taken a long time to prepare him for this
moment - longer than he knows - and used many different forms to do so.
4
Man eagerly seeks a fleshly tenement through
reincarnation or is drawn into it by his desires - describe it as you wish.
5
Tied to the great wheel of birth and rebirth as they
are by desires and longings, there is in them still no wish for release.
6
The old people who walk with melancholy face, feeling
condemned to die relatively soon, will do better to recognize the inexorable
fatality which makes death always follow birth, but which then makes rebirth
follow death.
7
The mental wavelength on which we tune in helps to
determine the kind of life we have, the kind of environment we get.
8
Both the things we desire and those we dread bring us
into incarnation again.
9
Better than being born to wealthy parents is being
born to wise ones, for then the child will not only be taught spiritual values
but will see them demonstrated before his eyes.
10
To be born and brought up in an atmosphere of high
thinking and wide searching - this is the chance which reincarnation gives.
11
A child is born into a family not by mere chance
but as the resultant of forces set agoing in the previous births both by the
newly born and by its parents.
12
Parents may do what they wish to encourage the good
and discourage the evil in the characters of their offspring, but in bringing
them into the world they took a chance. For the children brought their own
characters with them from previous incarnations.
13
When a child is born or a man dies, the new world
of his experience cannot be said to be either a ready-made one or an entirely
personal one. The truth lies in a combination of both. The mystery of existence
lies in the wonderful way in which such a combination is brought about.
14
None of us is thrown into this world against his
will. All of us are here because we want to be here.
15
We reincarnate in part through the pressure of
accumulated karma and in part through the pressure of habitual tendencies.
16
Some are eager to descend into a body again, but
others are reluctant and are half-dragged down.
17
All men come back to bodily life again if they
leave a residue of karma. All karma that is not brought to an end by bringing
the mind's bondage to the ego-thought to an end, makes reincarnation
inescapable.
18
The tendencies brought over from past births, the
experiences and contacts made then as well as in the present one, explain his
acting as he does, and his being what he is.
19
He excuses his weaknesses by complaining against
nature, which has provided him with instincts and passions leading to them. But
that which he calls nature is really the inheritance of his own tendencies from
former lives.
20
At any given moment, a man thinks and acts
according to, and as a result of, his whole mental and physical experience of
life and his whole character and nature. These cannot be limited to the single
short life on earth he now knows, for that will not explain many of his
tendencies and traits. They must include all his previous lives.
21
All things contribute to the making of man - the
history of his past and the climate of his land, the people among whom he is
born, and his own particular tendencies. The most important is his karma.
22
The modern world is a crucible, into which is
thrown all the ideas so far recovered from the past, together with those born in
the present.
23
He finds himself within the frame of the tendencies
he has brought over from earlier births, modified or corrected or supplemented
by the conditions of his present birth.
24
Whether or not the advance of age and the
accumulation of experience has caused new ideas to supersede his older ones, the
unconscious mind keeps its own register of every occasion and situation.
25
The past puts itself into every thought, every act,
every perception even.
26
The materialists stretch the tenet of heredity to
an irrational degree. No man merely reproduces the characteristics of his
parents or of his distant forefathers. The differences exist and are plain in
most cases. On the contrary, there is always some variation which separates him
from his ancestry, always something original to himself. And this is explicable
only on a basis of reincarnation.
27
Theoretical acceptance of the doctrine of
reincarnation leads us to cancel out part of the claim of the materialists that
the influence of environment makes the whole of man. For as a spiritual being,
the man's essential self is already there even from birth, and is really
unfolding himself into a material environment. The latter provides him with
conditions which enable him to express himself, or by failing to provide those
conditions hinder that expression. But the environment cannot wholly change a
man or cannot wholly eliminate his true character. What he really is will sooner
or later come out and show itself, with or without the help of environment. It
is true, however, that a part of him might be unable to express itself
altogether owing to a completely adverse environment or set of conditions.
Nevertheless, the unexpressed part would still remain latently existent within
his character and even if it never expressed itself at all throughout the whole
of his lifetime it would reappear and express itself in a later reincarnation.
28
We are as much the victims of our own tendencies as
of our environment. They shape happenings, deeds, reactions, decisions,
aspirations, and grovelings.
29
The belief is common in Europe and America that we
start life as babes with a blank character or with one inherited partially or
totally from parents and ancestors.
30
The complexes and tendencies pre-existing the
present birth and hidden deep in his subconscious mind, must sooner or later
come through to the surface mind.
31
In the final accounting it is less what a man
receives from education than what he receives from former lives that matters
most. His education may help to bring it out and round it out but his innate
stock will largely be the measure of his assets.
32
Ancestry may bring a man's body: it does not bring
his genius.
33
The traits and tendencies which a man receives from
the preceding births constitute in their totality the personal self which he
knows as "I."
34
What a man brings over from former births are the
fixed ideas in his consciousness, the habitual direction of his feelings and the
innate impulses of his will.
35
The habits of thought, feeling, and conduct which
settle upon a man really constitute the man. For it is those which are brought
over from the experiences of earlier births, which sprout up in his youth and
ripen in his maturity, and thus express themselves through his particular
personality.
36
What a man is, needs, or has done puts him just
where he is.
37
That character is shaped by circumstance and
environment only spiritual dreamers may deny, but that it is wholly shaped by
them only materialist dreamers may affirm. A keen, subtle, and sensitive
intelligence can trace by logic, imagination, or intuition the fact of its own
previous existence and hence accept the necessity of its development through
reincarnation.
38
The ego inherits the tendencies, the affinities,
and the antagonisms which have shaped themselves in a long series of births
behind the present one.
39
The innate tendencies of his mental life give rise
to the natural compulsions of his active life. He cannot behave differently from
the way he does - that is, if he is not on the quest and therefore not
struggling to rise beyond himself. His own past - and it stretches back farther
than he knows - created the thoughts, the acts, and the conditions of the
present.
40
There is a definite relation between a man's
character, capacity, and talent in combination and his fortunes, opportunities,
and frustrations.
41
The future of any individual is partly foreseeable
to the extent that his character, past history, and his capacities give a clue.
42
We are hit in the face by our own sins.
43
These thoughts have become, by constant repetition,
long-standing and deep-rooted. That is to say, they have become inherent
tendencies and governing complexes of the man's character. He himself seldom
realizes how much and how often he is at their mercy.
44
There is a sagacity which comes from ripened
experience and another which comes from deepened experience.
45
The more I reflect about my global travels,
observations, and studies, the more I hold firmly to this truth: "Character is
fate."
46
The imperfections in our character measure
accordingly the unpleasantnesses in our experience.
47
Men are not separated from each other by the yards
between their bodies alone, but even more by the inequality of their characters
and the discord between their attitudes. Men do not become neighbours merely
because their bodies live near to each other, but because there is affinity
between their characters and harmony between their attitudes. Two loving friends
are near each other even though their bodies are in separate continents; two
hating enemies are far from each other even though their bodies are in the same
room.
48
A complete knowledge of what men are ought to lead
to a complete foreknowledge of how they will act. But actually there is always a
margin of unpredictability.
49
It is true that the whole of what man experiences
is not wholly of his own direct making and that only a part of it is so. But
that is the largest part. It is true that his nation's life affects and is
responsible for some of the colour which his own takes on. But why was he born
in that particular nation during that particular period? The answer must again
be that he is getting the recompense of his own past making. For his nation may
lie defeated and wounded, or it may stride triumphant and prosperous.
50
We automatically try to repeat the old patterns of
behaviour created in former lives whether they are beneficial or injurious to
us. This happens because we can hardly help doing so.
51
The recurrence of these old situations will go on
lifetime after lifetime until the lesson is learnt.
52
We are victims of our own past: it creates a groove
of impetus and momentum along which we move. This leaves no room for the new,
the creative, to enter in.
53
We may have forgotten the early and original source
of a present belief, an inveterate attitude, or an intense feeling, but yet it
may have a powerful hold upon us and exert a powerful influence on our acts.
54
An aspirant may resolve to drop the past from
memory after he has absorbed its lessons, to let it go because it still belongs
to the illusion of time. Nevertheless its consequences are still there. They are
present in him in what he is now.
55
Tendencies, habits, and desires inherited from past
lives may be worth following. But they may also be harmful, or negative and not
easily dislodged.
56
It is neither feasible nor desirable to eliminate
all traces of the past from his mind.
57
What we were in the past is not important. What we
are now is important. What we intend to make of ourselves in the future is
vitally important.(P)
58
A man can respond to events or to prophets, to
demands or to experiences, only on the level of his own capacity and mentality.
We have no right to ask that he shall be better or wiser.
59
Character and culture are to be graded by the inner
attributes which former lives have developed but which may not yet, in the
present life, be fully unfolded.
60
The pathetic thoughts of what might have been
torment him. But are they futile? If they show how actions could have been
improved and decisions bettered, they sow seeds for the next birth.
61
This clinging to habits stands in the way of our
health and even of our salvation.
62
We come into birth as distinct persons - even
babies begin to show their individual differences with characters formed already
in previous existences. This is one reason why some amount of tolerance, some
acceptance of one another as we are, is necessary if we are to live peaceably
together.
63
Wisdom happens. It may be found among the rich or
respectable, or it may take a playful turn and dismay snobs by being born among
the poor or pariahs. Only fools try to tie class, race, or nationalist labels
onto the soul.
64
The essence of countless experiences and states
through which he has passed is here and now with him as the degree of character,
intelligence, and power which he possesses.
65
He who has taken many births has a great wealth of
total experience behind him. This manifests itself naturally in wiser decisions
and better self-control.
66
Memory is a spiritual faculty inasmuch as it gives
us the chance and means to extract teaching wisdom and guidance from the past.
It enables us to visualize past experience and make it either a guide or a
warning in dealing with present problems.
67
That a truth which is so clear to their own minds
could be so obscure to other minds, is easily explicable by the grading
processes of reincarnation. Each man's present state and views are the outcome
of his past experiences in past lives.
68
Some spend a whole lifetime trying to get
enlightenment, others get it in a few years. The difference is accounted for by
the difference in readiness, in growth, and in balance.
69
In reactions and desires, in needs and mental
patterns, in tastes and interests we may search the planet's millions but find
no two individuals absolutely alike. Difference and variety are imprinted upon
the human race.
70
Wild animals are merciless but human animals are a
mixed lot. Some are kindly, others cruel. The difference between the wild and
human varieties is simply a difference in evolution. The distance between them
is filled with births, experience, the resultant lessons absorbed leading to
traits developed.
71
The same situation which leads to one man's
development leads to another man's degradation. This is so because their
capacities to draw right lessons from experience are unequal.
72
Just as each man has a separate identity, so all
men have distinctive traits and marks, form and appearances. Nature does not
indulge in the monotony of uniformity.
73
Whenever there is a choice to be made between the
truth of the philosophic view and the falsity of the materialistic view, the
man's spiritual age will reveal itself.
74
Where experience of life is limited to a small
area, knowledge may be just as small. The result really depends on what a man
does with his mind, if we assume that he has had a lot of experience in previous
incarnations, even though he may have had little in this present incarnation.
75
The notion that wisdom comes with age is ridiculed
by the young people of today. They see senile fools or middle-aged failures or
leaders whose people fall into newer and more numerous difficulties and conclude
that they themselves not only know better but can do better. Yet the notion is
not to be dismissed so lightly. There is a deep ground for its truth, too deep
perhaps for common sight, and hence only for those of insight. The age which is
grown into after many births, rather than many years, is mellow with
wisdom quite naturally.
76
We ought not to ask men to express qualities of
character and mind which neither experience nor birth enable them to express.
77
Men actually defend themselves against the Truth,
so attached are they to their ancient thought-forms and beliefs.
78
The advanced mystic reaches a point in his life
where he finds it necessary to overcome the pull of those past periods, when he
was able to live in a more congenial atmosphere than present-day civilization
provides. Because of the world crisis which dominates every aspect of life, he
knows it is necessary to look forward and not backward. And he knows, too, that
this is why he feels immensely attracted to a particular place - Egypt and India
are common examples.
79
We are all biased and blinded by the past. We need
to force ourselves to face the present by the light of the future, as a man
forces himself to bear the burden of prolonged hard work wherefrom he hopes to
reap his high reward.
80
This incarnation will be worthwhile if only it is
used to rectify some of the mistakes of earlier incarnations.
81
The man who finds his mind suddenly illuminated,
but does not know why it came about, may find his answer in the doctrine of
"tendencies" - prenatal and karmic - reappearing from former lives and held
hitherto in the deeper mental levels.
82
It is easy to despise as stupid those of obvious
inferior intelligence, but it would be well to remember that we were once at the
same level. The notion of rebirth teaches tolerance.
83
Of what use is it to quote the need for following
tradition and obeying authority or for joining in protest and rebellion? Men
move into action of the one or the other kind as their tendencies dictate, in
accordance with the pressures from their previous births. This is what Buddha
saw when he penetrated and analysed human nature and why he insisted on the
emancipation of oneself from oneself.
84
Why do some take to the True Doctrine at first
glance whereas others - and they are the majority - spurn it? The answer is to
be found in the internal age or prenatal experience or reincarnated tendencies.
85
When intuitive recognitions of truth, swift flashes
of understanding, come on hearing or reading these inspired statements, this is
a sign of having been engaged in its quest during former reincarnations.
86
We are in bondage to our own past. Who can deliver
us, save ourselves?
87
That men are at varying stages of mental capacity,
different degrees of spiritual response, and unequal in character, manners,
self-control, or reactions, is a matter of everyday observation. The theory of
reincarnation in mentalism offers a logical explanation of these differences,
and a deeper one than materialism's.
88
The truth about the universe cannot be had unless
at the same time we get outside the limited views and emotional prejudices of
the personal life. Nor can we get at the truth about ourselves so long as we
think in terms of a single earthly lifetime. To do so leads to mental
short-sightedness and gives an incorrect visual image of human life. All this
shows why we need both the quest's discipline and philosophy's knowledge.
89
There is no direct and incontrovertible proof of
reincarnation, but there is logical evidence for it. Why should there be certain
abilities almost without previous training? Why should I be possessed at an
early age of the mental abilities of a writer, or someone else of a musician?
Heredity alone cannot account for it. But it is perfectly accounted for if we
consider them to a subconscious memory. I am unwittingly remembering and using
again my own capabilities from a former birth. This is possible only because I
am mind. Mind alone can continue itself. Capacities in any field cannot
appear out of nothing. The individual who shows them forth is repeating them out
of his own deeper memory. There is the evidence of Nature. When I wake up in the
morning, I pick up all that I had the day before. I remember my own
individuality and use the same literary talents as before. Otherwise, I could
never write again, or someone else could never sing. The basis of this
reminiscence is not a physical occurrence, but a mental one.(P)
90
It is necessary to know how men think in
order to understand why they think as they do. The structure of the mind
in human beings explains why they arrive at particular conclusions or accept
certain beliefs in each particular case. But without the idea of rebirth this
explanation remains incomplete.
91
The views which anyone holds intellectually are
relative to his experience and status, his innate character and reincarnatory
history.
92
Is it true that soon or late after death we
emigrate to another physical body? Can such a doctrine be part of a reasonable
man's views? The answer is yes. Nor need reason alone guide us in this matter,
for the varied evidences have been collected and stated by a very few authors.
Psychical sensitivity to invisible records of the past offers, for what it is
worth, some confirmations.
93
The capacity to commune with the Overself exists in
all men; it is a universal one. But it does not exist to an equal degree. For
those who can accept the doctrine of rebirth, the explanation of this inequality
lies there.
94
Whether we have lived on this earth before and
shall live on it again is a matter susceptible only of metaphysical and not of
physical proof.
95
The very nature of reincarnation prevents anyone
from completely proving it. But there is no other theory that is so reasonable
to help us understand our evolution, history, capacity, genius, character, and
inequality; no other so useful to help us solve the great problem of why we are
here on earth at all. This doctrine, that the ego repeatedly visits our plane in
fresh physical forms, is demanded by reason, supplied by intuition, and verified
by revelation.
96
Any man is free to use his memories and experiences
either destructively or constructively: it is up to him which use he makes of
them. That environment, circumstances, heredity, and other well-known factors
may influence what he does with them is true enough; but what he is, what
character and tendencies he expresses, were transmitted from former births, were
present before he acquired the attributes mentioned.
97
All his experiences during the ages upon ages of
his existence as a finite centre of life and consciousness have left their
record in the mysterious and measureless seed-atom of his body.
98
Freud's postulate of the Unconscious mind as a
structure of forgotten unrecoverable memories is a precursor of the rebirth
theory. It prepares the way for scientific acceptance of the latter and should
inevitably lead to it. In turn, it throws light on the doctrine of karma. For
the ego which revives out of apparent nothingness is the conscious mind which
reappears out of the unconscious. When the production of these idea-energies
(that is, tendencies, samskaras) is brought to rest, then they can never
again objectify into a physical environment, a fresh rebirth, and thus man
becomes karma-free and enters Nirvana. As long as he believes that he is the
body he must reincarnate in the body.(P)
99
The reincarnations which precede the present one
contribute to its characteristics and help to shape its happenings. But this
does not mean they give all its characteristics and happenings. Some develop out
of the outer facts and inner reactions of this present birth.
100
The strange feeling of having lived before and
therefore of having been someone else may flash briefly through consciousness.
101
His conduct while alive will contribute to the
kind of body and environment he gets next time, his thought and feelings too. We
earn from life and pass up higher or go down lower like pupils in graded school.
102
One who knows something of his past lives has
something to throw light in some way on his present one.
103
Where is any man's biography which is more than
fragmentary, opinionated, and biased? For without the background picture of
earlier lives in other bodies the materials are thinner than the compiler
believes them to be.
104
The common complaint against the idea of a human
re-embodiment is that we have no remembered knowledge of what happened and,
therefore, of the causes of present troubles for which we are personally
responsible. It is forgotten that such knowledge could only be had at the cost
of re-suffering all the horrors and miseries of the past as well as its joys.
105
The benevolent shield of Nature protects us from
the unhappy past; otherwise we would suffer futilely, as Taylor Caldwell, famed
American novelist, suffered when she had recurrent nightmares of living in a
dungeon during the Middle Ages.
106
If thousands of prenatal memories were to come
crowding in together, the mind's life would be horrible, crazy. Worse, one's own
personal identity would be lost, merged in all the others.
107
It is not at all necessary to learn how we lived
in past lives in order to know how best to live in this one. Such knowledge
might be useful but it also might be quite dangerous. It could lead to attempts
to evade what is coming to us as a consequence of what we have done before. Such
evasion could rob us of a chance to learn the lessons of that experience, while
the attempts to gain this knowledge could itself lead to psychism. A sufficient
practical guide can be found in Philosophy's moral wisdom, together with one's
own conscience.
108
Speculations on former births can develop into
hallucinations. It is wise to keep off these useless imaginations and attend to
the here and now.
109
Whether a man's life be governed by a morality
based upon religion or an ethics inculcated by breeding, or upon neither, there
is a subconscious conscience always present which is a hidden underground factor
in his outlook and decisions. It comes from former births.
110
One may experience a sense of loss if he has not
recovered the degree of awareness achieved in previous incarnations.
111
What we know from past births does not have to be
learned again from experiences of the same kind in the present birth, unless we
do not know it or feel it strongly enough.
112
If he must seek to remember previous existences
now lost to consciousness, let him seek only those wherein he rose to his
spiritual best, wherein he came closer to God than in the others.
113
The unenjoyable lesson may be assimilated but the
past has been recorded. Memory cannot change it, cannot remove its
unpleasantness. So the blankness of the newly reincarnate blots out such morbid
souvenirs.
114
This feeling that we have seen this place before,
passed through that situation, comes from a former personality. The soul is the
same, but the outer man is not.
115
Reincarnation. We tell our children
strange tales that bring a yearning wonder into their eyes, for out of the far
past their simple and unstained souls remember lands peopled with fairies and
gods.
116
Is it so foolish a thought to say to oneself, "I
sometimes identify with the Indians so closely, so sympathetically, that this
belief that I was once one of them is quite acceptable" ? When I first heard of
it the idea of reincarnation seemed in harmony with Nature and needed no further
argument in its favour.
117
There are some who feel a special affinity with
the Orient, or rather with a particular Oriental country. This feeling has
significance about their past pre-natal history, and should be valued for what
it is. But to let the present lifetime be wholly overshadowed by the dead past
is unwise.
118
If the physical memories of earlier lives are
lost, the mental capacities and emotional trends persist.
119
A man may sit alone in his solitary room and stir
but little from it, yet the wisdom of strange lands and stranger ages will float
into his mind. Such a one has received a high inheritance down through the
turnings of Time, a goodly power that is the testament to his strenuous efforts
in search of knowledge in former lives. Some men are such natural mystics that
they are born, as it were, with the thaumaturge's wand in their hands.
120
It is common enough to hear of people who want a
place in the reincarnatory sun, compensating for their present obscurity by the
discovery that they were formerly Cleopatra or Julius Caesar or the like in
their previous reincarnation. We laugh at such weakness and vanity but we might
ask such persons why should the presence of remembrance stop with the last
birth. What about the birth before that? What about the dozens of births before
that ultimate one? What about the births during the prehistoric period? Why pick
on only the first and not on the hundredth birth from the present one?
121
The same forces which bring us into the
experience of a new reincarnation also deprive us of the memory of previous
reincarnations.
122
We may feel the pull or the repulsion generated
by events or by persons met with in other lifetimes. The meaning of such
meetings should be sought, although it may take some time and experience before
it is found. If a place or a person seems strangely, even eerily, familiar, so
that one enters into a relationship whether as friend or as enemy very quickly,
this can often be taken as a strong confirmation of a pre-natal relationship.
123
What we learned in previous lives comes back
again in the present one, but it may not come early, it may come later. Much
depends on the environment as to when these old qualities can reappear. It also
depends upon the events and the history of the individual.
124
Each new birth is neither a total replay of past
ones nor totally different from them. The relation to each other is not only
there, but also to the World-Idea, hence to the far goal.
125
The human being does not reach full physical
development until the skeletal structure, particularly the wisdom teeth, reaches
it. This happens between the ages of twenty-five and thirty. With the new body
fully ready, recapitulation of the old one's experience soon ceases.
126
The conditions which surround a man are no
accident. They are there because he is what he is and his past is what it was.
If anyone ignores the Law of Recompense and limits his past to the present known
lifetime, ignoring previous appearances on this planet, those conditions will
many times be inexplicable.
127
His experiences in this life were largely decided
for him in a previous life on earth.
128
Just as in the playing of billiards the impact of
a ball hitting a second one gives the latter an impetus and a direction, so the
karma of one birth is brought over to the next birth. This is not the
same as a particular entity, a thing called ego, being carried over.
129
The feeling of familiarity with someone met for
the first time, of vague indistinct recognition which we sometimes get, may have
varying significances. But one of them is an echo of remembrance of previous
contact in a past birth.
130
Imagine how much inconvenience would be caused if
scenes and occurrences from previous lives kept on intruding into the affairs of
the present one.
131
Some find it fascinating to speculate about whom
they are the reincarnation of, but they ought to keep clear in mind that this is
imagination given free play. In other cases, however, there is genuine
remembrance, which may appear in either waking or dream states.
132
The saints were martyrs. They accepted all their
suffering as coming from God and even embraced it. The Philosophic way is to
realize that it is often karma, self-earned and brought upon oneself; hence one
should analyse it and try to understand why it has come so that the lesson won't
have to be repeated. The Christian, Muhammedan, and Jewish religions must accept
the doctrines of reincarnation and karma if they want to establish a reasonable
place for suffering in the scheme of things.
133
There are people whom, at a single glance and in
a single second, one feels one has known well before. With them one may drop the
conventional preliminaries, the tedious circumlocutory play of more words and
further meeting as being unnecessary.
134
Whatever he learned in the past years and births
was a step - not always a forward one - to be regarded as a source of further
instruction, experience, understanding, and practice.
135
When the balance is struck at the end of each
re-embodiment, whatever he has achieved falls to the credit of his advancement:
its value will show itself in his next births. But it is up to him to earn it,
just as he is free to a limited extent to diminish what he had already. The
Egyptian Book of the Dead refers to a "Day of Judgement." This is it.
136
Since it is not from the animal but from the
human state that the Essence of Being can be realized (because the animal does
not possess the necessary faculties), the processes of rebirth must fill the gap
between lowest animal to highest human.
137
When the energies have run out, and the advance
of years must be measured sadly; when a man knows at last what he ought to have
done, it is too late. This is why another chance, another birth on earth is
needed.
138
Something does get distilled from these repeated
existences, however slowly. That men learn little or nothing from history seems
true to many moralistic critics; they have a good case, but its truth is only on
the surface of things.
139
Only when the desire for perpetuation of personal
existence finally leaves him is a man really near the point where even a little
effort produces large results on this quest. But getting tired of the wheel of
rebirth's turnings does not come easily.
140
Why should that which is perfect need to be born
again and again? The tenet of reincarnation is true only from the point of view
of the ego and its senses. It is not true from the ultimate point of view. It
explains all the inequities and some of the sufferings of life within the
world-dream, but it is meaningless when we awake to the real world.
141
But who can count the number of times a living
being must incarnate in the plant world before it is ready to enter the animal
kingdom? Nearly a half of the average life is spent in recapitulating the
previous incarnational development so that the work of a new incarnation does
not really begin until then.
142
It would seem that the experience of a whole
lifetime is wasted when people exist in such spiritual torpor, merely keeping
their animal bodies alive. But of course it is not really so; for however slight
and outwardly unrecognizable inward growth may be, it must be there, or Nature's
process of reincarnation would be meaningless and useless mechanical repetition.
143
If a new birth is a new opportunity to gain
spiritual experience, it is also a new opportunity to commit errors and acquire
vices.
144
Looking at the monstrous wickedness and folly in
the world today, it would seem a stupid and hopeless effort to believe that
human character will become any better than it was and still is. But the fact of
reincarnation, with its tremendous possibilities, restores this hope.
145
We change a little in appearance with each
incarnation; we have to. But sometimes we change altogether.
146
We are incarnated to be educated. Experience
provides the lessons, and necessity gives the disciplines.
147
His reappearance on earth would be justified by
two results alone - that it gives a man a chance to start life anew and to mend
character.
148
It would be absurd to regard every fresh rebirth
as a fresh advance in wisdom and virtue. The human entity is not a mechanical
entity. There are lapses, regressions, failures, and stagnations in its long
journey.
149
Just as the impetus of one wave causes another to
come into being, so the impetus of one human reincarnation causes another to
follow it in succession. And just as the second wave may be similar to but not
identical with the first one, so the later ego may be similar to, but is not
identical with, the earlier one.
150
All the reincarnations which are necessary to the
unfoldment of his character and capacities must be lived through.
151
The prospect of an endless existence, however
cyclical and intermittent it may be, keeping on and on and on is not attractive
to everyone and certainly not to those who have weighed well the measures of joy
and suffering in earthly life. All desires are melting down into a single desire
for non-existence, but they have done so only partially.
152
Living entities come here from less-evolved
planets just as we go on to higher ones. But, in both cases, this must be
accomplished within certain limited periods. After that the possibility of entry
ceases.
153
The notion that we humans return to earth for a
renewed life thrills some persons with pleasure but others with dismay. This
reaction depends on the personal history, and on the physical-mental condition.
154
It is hard to understand why Adam and Eve needed
angels with flaming swords to drive them out of the Garden of Eden. Surely the
boredom of such a place was enough inducement for them to leave voluntarily,
even eagerly? Men pass through heaven during the period between earthly
embodiments, yet they do not remain there but must return to "this vale of
misery." Why? Do they come to a time when unalloyed happiness, without a flaw
and without an opposition, can be sustained no longer and a change from this
Eden-like state, any change, seems more preferable?
155
There would be little advantage in gathering more
experience only to repeat every mistake every time. Although this seems to
happen quite often, it cannot be a permanent pattern.
156
Why do we have to learn these simple basic truths
through so many reincarnations and at so high a cost? This is a complaint some
people make.
157
In another body, born in another land, life's
persistence brings us here again. The old game intermittently recurs, bringing
its joys and griefs.
158
The development of these faculties, the
unfoldment of these capacities, and the expansion of this consciousness are also
incipiently present even in the animal reincarnation of the entity.
159
Reincarnation accounts for the predisposing
factors, the specific urges, the particular additions, and the natural qualities
of each ego.
160
When he looks back upon the long series of earth
lives which belongs to his past, he is struck afresh by the supreme wisdom of
Nature and by the supreme necessity of this principle of recurring embodiment.
If there had been only one single continuous earth life, his progress would have
been brought to an end, he would have been cluttered up by his own past, and he
could not have advanced in new directions. This past would have surrounded him
like a circular wall. How unerring the wisdom and how infinite the mercy which,
by breaking this circle of necessity, gives him the chance of a fresh start
again and again, sets him free to make new beginnings! Without these breaks in
his life-sequences, without the advantages of fresh surroundings, different
circumstances, and new contacts, he could not have lifted himself to ever higher
levels, but would only have stagnated or fallen to lower ones.(P)
161
The law which pushes us into, or out of, physical
bodies is a cosmic law. There is no blind chance about it.
162
(a) Not until the fourth century when one
Christian party became successful enough to be armed with worldly power did the
persecution of Gnostics begin.
(b) In the attempt to eliminate unpalatable tenets, no less than seven Councils were held in those early centuries. Here such tenets were branded as heresies and arrangements made to exterminate them thoroughly. Especially at the Council of Nicea (325 a.d.) and the great Council of Constantinople (381 a.d.), rebirth was pronounced a heresy, all the books teaching it were ferreted out and destroyed, and its advocates threatened with severe punishment.
(c) Yet not only had several Christian sects believed in reincarnation but some of the early Christian Fathers, too. The Fathers who held metempsychosis to be true included Origen, who flourished about 230 a.d., Justin Martyr, 140 a.d., Clement of Alexandria, 194 a.d., Tertullian of Carthage, 202 a.d. The sects who held it included Basilidians, the second-century Marcionites of Pontus, the Valentiniens of Egypt, also second century, and the Simonians. Moreover, all Gnostic sects held it and they were once more numerous than any other group of Christians. This is important, that most of the early Christians believed in this doctrine.
(d) The Manichaeans also taught rebirth and, together with the Gnostics and Samaneans, formed a considerable part of the early Christian world.
(e) Where the literature was not destroyed it was so adulterated or interpolated as to make it appear either quite ridiculous or utterly erroneous. The historians among the later Fathers even accused the Gnostics of eating children!
(f) The early Gnostics came closer to the truth, but the later cults which sprang up among them departed from it by intermixing it with nonsense and corrupting it with falsehoods.
(g) Philo, himself a Jew, explicitly states that the Essenes got their knowledge from Indian Brahmins. Everyone knows that rebirth was an essential feature of the Brahmins' faith, so it is fair to assume that it was taken up by the Essenes, too.
163
We are given one life, one day, one present time,
one conscious space-time level to concentrate on so that Nature's business in us
shall not be interfered with. Yet other lives, other days, other times, other
levels of consciousness already exist just as much at this very moment, even
though we do not apprehend them, and await our meeting and experience by a fated
necessity.(P)
164
I was not surprised when Jung told me that he
could not accept the idea of reincarnation but could accept the idea of karma.
165
We repeat these appearances on earth in a
constant process and a long cycle of time. But contrast it with the
beginninglessness and endlessness of life itself. What is this but a fraction of
a fraction of a moment?
166
Can the invisible inner being migrate at death,
after a suitable interval, from one body to another?
167
Reincarnation is now one of the most romantic and
abused of the Orient's commonplace ideas. It is like a servant strutting in the
elegant clothes of a Countess.
168
If we believe that our personal life has no more
significance than a ripple on the surface of the ocean, it is either because we
are blinded by materialism or because we are blind to the ultimate secrets of
human personality.
169
The belief in reincarnation is not so foolish as
it seems to some people: there is reasonable foundation for it.
170
To descend into the body, to reincarnate in the
flesh is itself a kind of crucifixion. Note that the head and trunk are
right-angled by the right and left arms forming a cross. This is symbolic partly
of the loss of higher consciousness which this descent entails and partly of the
pains and miseries which appear intermittently during embodiment.
171
From my understanding of the teachings of the
Buddha, the man who has annihilated the illusion of a personal self and who has
brought his mind under complete control will not be reborn against his will,
even though he should indulge in such non-Buddhistic practices as wearing
leather shoes and eating cheese.
172
When a man has established himself in the
Universal self, in the awareness of its oneness, the series of earthly
reincarnations of his personal self comes to an end. For himself, they would
serve no further purpose.
173
Bringing rebirth to an end has two esoteric
meanings: (a) The Arhat is free from ignorance. (b) Even though he is
reborn physically in order to help others, still, as he enjoys the awareness of
Atman, which he knows to be deathless and unborn, he does not look at
himself as being reborn.
174
It is well to realize that belief in
reincarnation, or rebirth, is not the sole determining consideration of our
activities, as it is among many institutionalized approaches to Truth in the
Orient.
175
The Christian Church wanted to emphasize its
doctrine that the newly disincarnated soul went straight to heaven or hell. This
is one reason why the belief in rebirth was later stamped with the mark of
heresy. Another is that it contradicted the teaching of the resurrection of the
body.
176
I often wondered in the past why it is that the
land of Britain which, nearly two thousand years earlier, accepted and valued
the doctrine of reincarnation and therefore looked on death as an interval
between two earth-lives, should have so far forgotten its former allegiance as
to dwell in the dusk between the narrow limitations of single-embodiment belief
and the hopeless outlook of agnosticism or atheism. It is pleasant to welcome
the contemporary revival of interest, in many cases, and acceptance in others,
where rebirth is discussed.
177
Somewhere in Shakespeare there is that phrase
about our human "exits and entrances" which, with its reversal of the natural
order of birth and death, I take to mean our reincarnation.
178
In 1938 Somerset Maugham wrote, in The Summing
Up, a fair reference to the theory of reincarnation but ended it by saying
he found it incredible. In 1944 he referred again to the same theory and found
it "the only plausible explanation for the existence of evil," although beyond
human verification.
179
If all those prominent persons who hold this
belief in rebirth were to come forward and boldly proclaim it, and if all those
Protestant ministers of religion and Catholic priests or bishops who hold it
secretly were to confess, the world would be astonished.
180
We glibly use the term reincarnation when, under
certain conditions, the term metamorphosis is more pertinent.
181
If a sharp intellect shuts the door on all
authorities except one, it has only its own foolishness to thank when it shuts
truth out with its action. So keen, witty, and logical a mind as Saint
Augustine's brusquely rejected the doctrine of the human entity's successive
reincarnations on earth. Yet, in the same book, The City of God, he
unhesitatingly accepts the computation that the age of the human race is less
than six thousand years. He bases his reckoning on nothing more than the petty
tribal histories contained in the Old Testament. He rejects, too, the grand
conception of the pagan thinkers who preceded him, that the world has passed
through countless cycles and consists of an infinite number of worlds.
182
Another result of a full comprehension of
mentalism is that it makes possible a change of attitude towards the doctrine of
reincarnation. Those who reject this doctrine because they are not interested in
any past or future person who is not completely identical with their present
person, do not perceive that this lack of interest arises out of their total
self-identification with the physical body. They regard it to be the real "I."
But this is utter materialism. For they do not see that the mental "I" is more
really their self than the fleshly one. Mentalism can help greatly to rectify
their error.
183
The doctrine of transmigration of souls into
animal forms was given out for, and led to the same effects as, the doctrine of
after-death punishment in hell. Timaeus Locrius, the teacher of Plato, said as
much and observed that "if the mind will not be led by true reasoning, we
restrain it by false." The Buddhist and Christian picture of the souls of
murderers being burnt in the fires of the underworld serves the same warning and
disciplinary purpose as the Hindu picture of those souls incarnating into the
bodies of wild beasts. Transmigration of this kind is not to be taken literally.
Brahmin priests who teach it publicly do not, if they are also initiates in
philosophy, believe it privately. It is the exception, not the rule, and opposed
to the evolutionary course of Nature.
184
If the doctrine did nothing more in its practical
effects than inspire its believers with a sense of life's continuity and impress
them with a warning of personal responsibility for their fortunes, it would have
done enough.
185
We may be surprised that so many intelligent
people refuse to believe in reincarnation and karma, even though they cannot
explain God's justice without them. The truth is that they are defective in
intuition and dependent on intellect and emotion. But emotion and intellect
alone are too limited as instruments for finding truth.
186
Whatever we constantly concentrate on provides
one of the factors in reincarnation. If we love a race or an individual strongly
enough, we shall sooner or later necessarily be drawn into their orbit when
reincarnating. It is equally true, however, that if we hate a race or an
individual strongly enough we shall have the same experience. Both love and hate
are forms of concentrated thought. The nature of concentration, whether it be
that of like or dislike, attraction or repulsion, does not alter its strength.
187
The transmigration of souls from human to animal
bodies is a fiction. The individual consciousness which has one or more
specifically human attributes, cannot be brought naturally into the brain and
nervous system of any creature which has only animal attributes. That millions
of people still believe in its possibility merely shows how widespread is
superstition.
188
The popular Hindu theory of the transmigration of
souls is not quite the same as the philosophic theory of the evolution of souls.
According to the first, a man may once again become an animal or a tree;
according to the second, this is not part of the ordinary processes of Nature.
Many superstitions, however, hide some truth among their nonsense, and this is
one of them. Just as every biologist knows that Nature sometimes produces
freaks, and every physician knows that monstrosities are sometimes born into the
human race, so there are cases where a deranged mind frantically thirsting for a
physical body after the loss of its present one may succeed in driving out the
inner being of an animal form and taking possession of it. If this mind is also
very evil as well as deranged, it will utilize that form to terrorize a human
community. But such happenings are breakaways from the ordinary processes of
Nature and, therefore, uncommon. The penalty for such unnatural transmigration
is insanity, which is the price which will have to be paid in the next human
birth. The ego will then be tied to a body which it will be unable to use, yet
unable to escape from.
189
Whatever the worldly and physical experiences of
a man may be, however materialistic his mental attitude and personal feelings
may become, his essence-being remains untouched and unpolluted. But his link
with it is another matter. If he falls too low this link may be so thinned that
he is thrown back into an animal body in his next birth, to make another attempt
at normal progression into the human condition.
190
It is something rare, abnormal, and exceptional,
but not impossible, for a human being to be put back in an animal body. Then it
becomes an imprisonment for one lifetime, and as such a punishment.
191
Had the tenet of rebirth not been rejected from
official Christian doctrine but incorporated into it, European and American
history would have moved to a slower tempo and Western material achievement
would have reached a lower height.
192
Several of the early Church Fathers taught the
doctrine of reincarnation. Origen even calls it a "general opinion." Justin
Martyr declares that the soul inhabits a human body more than once, and Clement
of Alexandria asserts it was sanctioned by Paul in Romans 5:12, 14, and 19.
Despite this, the Council of Nicea pronounced it a heresy in 325 a.d., the
Council of Chalcedon condemned it in the same century, and finally in the reign
of Justinian at the Council of Constantinople in 553 a.d., it was again
repudiated and its supporters anathematized. There was no room for it along with
the rest of Catholic theology and especially with the teachings on redemption
and purgatory. There is no room for both the doctrine of reincarnation and the
doctrine of everlasting torment in purgatory; one or the other must go. So the
first was branded a heresy and its believers were excommunicated or persecuted.
The second reason for opposing it was that, the doctrine of Atonement was
brought in little by little until it displaced the doctrine of metempsychosis,
as it was intended to do. These two also could not exist side by side, for one
contradicted the truth of the other. The third reason was that in the
contentions for supremacy among the various Christian sects, those which later
arose in Greek and Roman peoples triumphed over those which existed earlier
among Oriental ones who believed in reincarnation, as most Orientals do even
today.
193
The common interpretation of the Biblical
sentence, "Dust thou art, and to dust thou shalt return," was interpreted by the
Jewish medieval Kabbalists and by initiated Rabbis of antiquity as referring to
reincarnation.
194
Greeks who believed strongly in the idea of
rebirth were not only the initiates of the Orphic Mysteries, but also among the
most celebrated thinkers, especially Plato.
195
Some upper-rank members of the Catholic hierarchy
who privately believed but publicly rejected the tenet of reincarnation gave me,
as the principal objection among a few others, that it allowed too long a time
for people either to work for salvation or receive punishment for sins.
196
There is something awesome in the thought that
birth and death within the human species have been going on for millions and
millions of years. Today we see the outcome of all this vast line of experience.
197
Buddha tried to get his followers to abandon the
will to live, but he did not try to get them to commit suicide of the physical
body - rather to kill out the cravings and desires which tied them to
reincarnation and led to their return to that body.
198
If death is so much a feature of the divine
arrangements in the universe, we must accept that the divine wisdom is not
faulted here and that, like the phoenix, out of the death of every creature
shall arise a new one, a new form, apparently a new life.
199
To carry the burdens of existence in one body
after another through a long series may seem an unpleasant prospect to some
minds, as it did to Gautama in India and Schopenhauer in Germany.
200
Certain religious beliefs have come quite close
to the idea of rebirth but at the crucial point have gone off at a wide tangent
and missed the truth altogether. One belief leads to the expectation of a
physical resurrection of the dead; the other to the practice of a physical
preservation of the dead, as in mummification.
201
To assert that time does not return on itself,
that history does not repeat its story, is to show an ignorance of the fact of
human re-embodiments.
202
It is not often worth all the troubles and pains
of being born and enduring all its consequences, even allowing for the pleasant
interludes. Buddha would certainly not agree with any optimist about this
matter.
203
In the lengthy writings of the fathers of the
early Christian Church, we can find approval of belief in the doctrine of
reincarnation expressed by Saint Methodius, Origen, Synesius, and Pamphilius.
204
Each comes to the front of the stage, plays out
his allotted role, and moves away. Shakespeare's picturesque statement of the
human predicament comes to larger meaning when interpreted in terms of rebirth
in series. All mankind become a company of actors, appearing in play after play,
each story different, each part acted in a new body.
205
The periodic return to earth-life was a belief
shared by poets like Goethe, Shelley, and Browning, by thinkers like Plato,
Schopenhauer, and Swedenborg.
206
Has the celebrated thinker, the Very Rev. Dr. W.
R. Inge, become an adherent of the Hindu doctrine of the reincarnation? This is
the question asked following his confession in a London newspaper article in
March, 1944, that he believes there is an "element of truth" in this theory of
personality common to the Indian masses and mystics of all countries.
Declaring that the error of Western civilization in crisis lies in a wrong idea of the human personality, he says that the truth is expressed in the "most famous Indian poem" which says, "Never the spirit was born; the spirit shall never cease to be; birthless and changeless and deathless, the spirit abideth for ever; death cannot touch it at all, death though the house of it seems."
This means, he says, that immortality is not a string with only one end, which is difficult to believe. Within the time series, that which has no end can have had no beginning. "The Indians and Greeks, both convinced of survival and pre-existence, stand or fall together."
Dr. Inge considers the absence of memory no fatal objection for there may be unconscious memory. "Who taught the chicken to get out of its egg? I cannot tell, but there is no mystery about all this.
Defending himself against the criticism that a dignitary of the Anglican Church has no business to dabble in such "heathen beliefs," Dr. Inge declares that rebirth is not alien to Christian thought and asserts that it is implied in many texts."
Coming from one of the intellectual leaders of the English Church and a former Dean of Saint Paul's Cathedral, the foregoing admission is of outstanding historical importance. The doctrine must now be considered worth serious discussion by all Western educated persons and no longer left to a few queer dreamers as something bizarre and exotic. Its increasing acceptance will also be a triumph over materialism. Rebirth identifies a man more with his mind than with his body. It thus accords perfectly with mentalism.
207
Gurdjieff and his one-time disciple Ouspensky
revived the doctrine of Eternal Recurrence and put it forward as a better
alternative to the doctrine of Reincarnation. If we examine the historic Tibetan
Buddhist symbol called "The Wheel of Life," we see pictures of human beings
being moved through contrasting phases of experience as the wheel turns round.
But after it comes full circle they are subjected to exactly the same
conditions, the same phases as before. It is pertinent to remember that
Gurdjieff learnt about Eternal Recurrence in a Buddhist monastery in Central
Asia, where the same version of Buddhism prevails as in Tibet. It is also
pertinent to remember the monotonous movement of life for the somewhat primitive
inhabitants of that wild region for centuries until very lately. The pattern of
their existence recurred again and again in the same way. What more fitting in
their beliefs than that their rebirths would be similar too?
208
By different turns in the course of his mental
existence he takes different bodies. Widespread in Asia from the earliest times,
accepted by many of the thinkers in ancient Greece and Rome, by the Druid
priests of Britain and the Dacian priests of the Balkans, the theory of
reincarnation has been both known and favoured.
209
In the Buddhist symbolism the wheel of life rolls
on, dragging man with each complete turn through another reincarnation. Again
and again he goes through the same experiences until he gets worn out and tires
of them and seeks release from being tied to the wheel, the release which is
called Nirvana.
210
We have to become in actuality what we are in
potentiality; all our rebirths are engaged in this process.
211
Whether we confront the mystery called death or
the equal mystery called life, the revelation must come in one or the other
state: there is a connection with HE WHO IS. For this are we born and our
oscillation between the two happens at the Mind of the World's behest. As, so
sleepily and unwittingly, we shape and light up these fragments of being that we
are, quite simply the connection gets uncovered more and more.
212
Until he finds his Overself, no man can escape
this coming back to the earthly life. And this remains true whether he loves the
world or is disgusted by it.
213
The lotus-flower of the soul unfolds but slowly
through many births, yet it is certain and sure. This is indeed better than the
mere stuffing of the brain with learned lumber that has to be abandoned with
each death.
214
We come back to this earth of ours and not to
some other earth because it is here that we sow the seeds of thought, of
feeling, and of action, and therefore it is here that we must reap their
harvest. Nature is orderly and just, consistent and continuous.(P)
215
Patience, little men, there is no possibility of
your missing salvation. What if you have to wait through a number of
reincarnations! You cannot lose this wide-stretched game, played all over the
planet, for you cannot lose your innermost being. The Covenant with your Creator
has been made and must be fulfilled in the end, however dubious the prospect
seems today.
216
We need more lifetimes and plenty of them - even
half a hundred would not be enough - to do the work upon self which has been
assigned us as our highest duty. This is why reincarnation is a fact, and not a
fable.
217
Hope comes to him from this benevolent source,
evil departs from him as he draws on these higher energies for defense, and
ethereal purpose surrounds his entire life like an aura. He knows that his
history did not begin in the country where he was born. He knows that it will
not end in the body in which he dies.
218
The passage from quest to conquest would be
impossible for most humans if they had only one life to live, one body for the
start and the finish.
219
There can be no Second Coming of Christ - the
Consciousness - for it never went away. There can be a return of Jesus - the man
embodying and reflecting that Consciousness - for the person may be born and
reborn as God wills.
220
The Long Path idea of reincarnation is illusory.
The Short Path idea of it is that it is an undulatory wave, a ripple, a movement
upward onward and downward. Since there is no ego in reality, there can be no
rebirth of it. But we do have the appearance of a rebirth. Note
that this applies to both the mind and body part of ego: they are like a bubble
floating on a stream and then vanishing or like a knot which is untied and then
vanishes too. We have to accept the presence of this pseudo-entity, the ego -
this mental thing born of many many earth-lives - so long as we have to dwell in
that other mental thing, the body. But we do not have to accept its dominance;
we do not have to perpetuate its rule, for all is in the Mind. Where then are
the reincarnatory experiences? Appearances which were like cinema shows. They
happened in a time and space which were in the mind. The individual who emerged
lost the individuality and merged in the timelessness of eternity. This is the
unchanging indestructible Consciousness, the Overself.
221
Are all the varied joys and sufferings undergone
only to come to a complete end in death? Is all the vast intelligence of this
universe which gave birth to our own minute fragment to be forever separated
from us? No! We shall live again, die again, and return again unless and until
we have fulfilled the divine purpose which brought us here.
222
If it had been possible to attain salvation in
the non-physical worlds, we would not have been born in this one. We are here
because nowhere else could we, in our present state of progress, find the right
environment to ripen those qualities which will lead us further toward this
ultimate goal.
223
The eventual trend of evolution is through and
away from personality, as we now know it. We shall find ourselves afresh in a
higher individuality, the soul. To achieve this, the lower characteristics have
slowly to be shed. In this sense, we do die to the earthly self and are born
again in the higher self. That is the only real death awaiting us.
224
The possession of moral values, metaphysical
capacities, and spiritually intuitive qualities which distinguish more evolved
from less evolved men takes time to acquire - so much time that reincarnation
must be a continuous process.
225
If it were true that a bad man must always remain
bad, where would the hope be for mankind? But in the perfect wisdom of the
Infinite Mind, human lives are so arranged that the bad man will go on garnering
the untoward results of his deeds until his mind, first subconsciously but later
consciously, perceives the logical and causal connection between his act and his
suffering and begins the attempt to control his evil tendencies. Both this
education and this effort will continue through many births for a single one
would be too short in time, too poor in opportunity, for such a total
reformation to be achieved.
226
Even those who are well-intentioned and
spiritually minded make many mistakes in life simply because they cannot see the
unfortunate results to which their wrong decisions and actions must necessarily
lead. Only experience can lead to their correction and only reincarnation can
give enough experience.
227
Life in the flesh is a gift if we are using it
rightly but it becomes a curse if we are not. Every incarnation should be used
to help one get somewhat farther in doing this job of achieving an
Overself-inspired existence.
228
What is happening to his characteristics, what he
is learning from experience lies in more or less degree below the threshold of
consciousness. Only time, with its repetitions, and thought, with its
conclusions, will shift the lesson or ability into visible manifestation above
the threshold.
229
The difference between savage and sage may be
only two letters in spelled words but it may be two thousand incarnations in
historic meaning.
230
Whatever mistakes the aspirant has committed in
the past and whatever results from them he is suffering in the present, he
should look to the future with some hope and never let it desert him, for even
if that hope cannot be realized in the present incarnation it may be in the
next. Time is passing, we come and we go, and in the end time is illusory, but
we remain: the best in us remains, the rest will go.
231
The changes of personal identity under the
process of reincarnation alone show that the little ego's immortality is a
religious illusion. Only by finding its higher individuality is there any chance
of preserving any identity at all, before Nature re-absorbs what it has spawned.
232
Plant, animal, and human bodies pass through this
cycle of growth, maturity, decay and death. All this means being exposed to
different forces, different experiences, resulting in the development of
consciousness.
233
To become Man as evolution intends him to be, he
must draw out all his latent resources, fill out a wide experience. This is why
so many reincarnations on earth are needed. Until then, his realization as Man
will be an incomplete one.
234
In the strictest meaning of the term, no man can
give up himself, for no man can give up his innermost being. But what is really
meant by the term and what every man could give up is the false sense of self
which makes him think that he is only the ego or only the body.
235
There, in this necessity of developing,
balancing, and coordinating all the parts of one's being, is a further argument
for the necessity of reincarnation. A single lifetime is too short a period in
which to fulfil such a task.
236
The ripe wisdom of a sage could not possibly be
the fruit of a single lifetime, but only of many lifetimes.
237
The experiences of life will in the end overcome
these inner resistances. The silent instruction multiplied during the
re-embodiments will defeat the psychological defense mechanisms set up against
unpalatable truths or new ideas. It is the repetition and deepening of all these
lessons through the accumulating rebirths that enables wisdom to penetrate
consciousness completely and effectively.