1
The wonder of the human soul which, even surrounded
by the depravity and folly of today, can still aspire nobly and think loftily,
would be quite puzzling did we not know the dual nature of the human entity and
the divine nature of the laws which govern it.
2
So long as separate egos exist - separate from the
cosmic ego in their own view, that is - so long will their ignorance produce
what we call evil.
3
The ego, let loose upon the world, uninstructed and
unbridled, cannot in the final reckoning benefit the world. To talk of service,
without wisdom or character, may squander its goodwill in egoistic mire.
4
The evolution of each ego, of each entity conscious
of a personal "I," passes through three stages through immense periods of time.
In the selfhood, acquires more and more consciousness of the personal "I," and
hence divides and isolates itself from other egos. It seeks to differentiate
itself from them. It feels the need to assert itself and its interests. This
leads inevitably to antagonism towards them. Its movement is towards
externality, a movement which must inevitably end in its taking the surface or
appearance of things for reality, that is, in materialism. Here it is
acquisitive. In its second and intermediate stage, it unfolds its mental
selfhood and hence adds cunning to its separative and grasping tendencies, with
intellect expanding to its extremest point. Here it is inquisitive. But midway
in this stage, its descent comes to an end with a turning point where it halts,
turns around, and begins to travel backward to its original source. In the third
and last stage, the return tow ards its divine source continues. Its movement is
now toward internality and - through meditation, investigation, and reflection -
it ultimately achieves knowledge of its true being: its source, the Overself.
And as all egos arise out of the Overself, the end of such a movement is one and
the same for all - a common centre. Conflicts between them cease; mutual
understanding, co-operation, and compassion spread. Hence, this stage is
unitive.
The central point of the entire evolution is about where we now stand. Human attitudes and relations have reached their extreme degree of selfishness, separateness, struggle, and division, have experienced the resulting exhaustion of an unheard-of world crisis, but are beginning to reorient themselves towards an acknowledgment of the fundamental unity of the whole race. Thus, war reaches its most violent and terrible phase in the second stage and then abruptly begins to vanish from human life altogether. The separatist outlook must cease. Most of our troubles have arisen because we have continued it beyond the point where it was either useful or needful.
The unequal state of evolution of all these egos, when thrown together into a conglomerate group on a single planet, is also responsible for the conflicts which have marked mankind's own history. They stand on different steps of the ladder all the way from savagery to maturity. The backward ego naturally attacks or preys on the advanced one. Thus, the purely self-regarding ego, which was once an essential pattern of the evolutionary scheme - a necessary goal in the movement of life - becomes with time a discordant ingredient of that scheme, an obstructive impediment to that movement. If humanity is to travel upward and fulfil its higher destiny, it can do so only by enlarging its area of interest and extending its field of consciousness. It must, in short, seek to realize the Overself on the one hand, to feel its oneness on the other.
5
The ego's misapprehension of its own nature and
misuse of its own capacities, create one form of evil. There are other forms.
6
We need not deny the presence of evil in the world
in order to deny its permanence. It is here, but it is only a transient thing.
Moreover, it exists not as a personified power like Satan, nor as a subtle
unseen opponent of everything divine, but only as a condition of ignorance in
the human mind and as a passing phase of its evolution. In short, it is merely a
way of human thinking and it will disappear when deeper thinking reveals the why
and wherefore of things. It lasts only as long as the dominance of the ego
lasts.
7
The prehistoric animals are now totally gone and the
only monster to be found on earth today is MAN. His history is splashed with war
and hate and crime. There would appear to be little of the angel in him so far.
8
To the extent that man exercises his creative powers
he copies, in his limited way, the World-Mind. But to the extent that he uses
them to bring misery, injury, and perversity to others, or to himself, he copies
the opposing force.
9
Ultimately he must find fault with himself when he
seeks to trace the cause of most of his troubles. But this will require him to
bring great moral courage to the examination of his life's course. For the
personal ego is an inveterate alibi-hunter. If he is to overcome its insidious
suggestions, its slippery arguments, he must see himself in the worst light.
10
It is not necessary that he should be conscious of
his virtues, but it is necessary that he should be conscious of his faults.
11
The ego's interference shows itself in practical
life no less than in mystical life. Under its influence, people create a false
and favourable mental picture of a situation or of a person. They then expect
one or the other to yield results that by their very nature could not be
yielded. This leads to disappointment and unhappiness within themselves. Or the
same people create a false but unfavourable picture and then severely criticize
another for faults which do not exist outside the picture itself. This leads to
disharmony and friction with others. From this simple instance we may see that
the elimination of egotistic interference - a goal that philosophic discipline
sets for itself - is not merely a theoretical affair for dreamers or hermits
with nothing else to do, but is a practical affair promising great practical
benefits for everyone who has to live or work in the world. The charge that
philosophy is useless can only be made by those who have failed to inform
themselves suff iciently about it.
12
Our only enemies are those inside ourselves. They
are our weaknesses and vices, our lower passions and intellectual deformities.
It is better to fight them than to fight other men.
13
When the last word of the last argument against
the realization of the principles has been uttered, it will be found that all
the obstacles lie inside and not outside us. There are mountains of selfishness,
ignorance, and inertia in the human heart, but - as Jesus pointed out - faith
can remove them.
14
All history - recent, medieval, ancient,
Occidental, and Oriental - tells us that we do not have to look very deep into
the hearts of men to find the presence of tigers, demons, savages, and brutes.
15
The struggles and conflicts, within men and
between them, come from the ego's presence.
16
The philosopher has to look very far into human
history and very deep into human nature for the ultimate causes of human errors.
17
The ego is behind each point of resistance in a
man which holds him down from advancing further on this quest.
18
What lies at the root of all these errors in
conduct and defects in character? It is the failure to understand that he is
more than his body. It is, in one word, materialism.(P)
19
It is a man's own internal defects which often
conspire against him and which show their faces in many of the external troubles
that beset him. Yet it is hard for him to accept this truth because his whole
life-habit is to look outwards, to construct defensive alibis rather than to
engage in censorious self-inquisition. Sheikh al Khuttali, a Sufi adept,
addressing a disciple who complained at his circumstances, said: "O my son, be
assured that there is a cause for every decree of Providence. Whatever good or
evil God creates, do not in any place or circumstance quarrel with his action or
be aggrieved in thy heart." Therefore, the aspirant who is really earnest about
the quest should develop the attitude that his personal misfortunes, troubles,
and disappointments must be traced back to his own weaknesses, defects, faults,
deficiencies, and indisciplines. Let him not blame them on other persons or on
fate. In this way he will make the quickest progress whereas by self-defending
or self-justify ing or self-pitying apportionment of blame to causes outside
himself, he will delay or prevent it. For the one means clinging to the ego, the
other means giving it up. Nothing is to be gained by such flattering
self-deception while much may be lost by it. He must bring himself to admit
frankly that he himself is the primary cause of most of his ills, as well as the
secondary cause of some of the ills of others. He must recognize that the
emotions of resentment, anger, self-pity, or despondency are often engendered by
a wounded ego. Instead of reviling fate at each unfortunate event, he should
analyse his moral and mental make-up and look for the weaknesses which led to
it. He will gain more in the end by mercilessly accusing his own stubbornness in
pursuing wrong courses than by taking shelter in alibis that censure other
people. Like a stone in a shoe which he stubbornly refuses to remove, the fault
still remains in his character when he stubbornly insists on bl aming things or
condemning pers ons for its consequences. In this event the chance to eliminate
it is lost, and the same dire consequences may repeat themselves in his life
again.
The faith of the lower ego in itself and the strength with which it clings to its own standpoint are almost terrifying to contemplate. The aspirant is often unconscious of its selfishness. But if he can desert its standpoint, he shall then be in a position to perceive how large an element it has contributed in the making of his own troubles, how heavy is its responsibility for unpleasant events which he has hitherto ascribed to outside sources. He shall see that his miserable fate derives largely from his own miserable faults. He is naturally unwilling to open his eyes to his own deficiencies and faults, his little weaknesses and large maladjustments. So suffering comes to open his eyes for him, to shock and shame him into belated awareness and eventual amendment. But quite apart from its unfortunate results in personal fortunes, whenever the aspirant persists in taking the lower ego's side and justifying its action, he merely displays a stupid resolve to hinder his own spiritual advancement. Behind a self-deceiving facade of pretexts, excuses, alibis, and rationalizations, the ego is forever seeking to gratify its unworthy feelings or to defend them. On the same principle as the pseudo-patriotism which prompted the Italians to follow Mussolini blindly throughout his Ethiopian adventure to its final disaster, the principle of "My country! right or wrong," he follows the ego through all its operations just as blindly and as perversely, justifying its standpoints merely because they happen to be his own. But the higher Self accepts no rivals. The aspirant must choose between denying his ego's aggressiveness or asserting it. The distance to be mentally travelled between these two steps is so long and so painful that it is understandable why few will ever finish it. It is only the exceptional student who will frankly admit his faults and earnestly work to correct them. It is only he whose self-criticizing detachment can gain the upper hand, who can also gain philosophy's highest priz .(P)
20
To live in intellect and passion alone, unguided
and unvivified by higher ideals, is to be unregenerate.
21
How often in history there is a record of fierce,
blind, and fanatic hatred directed against those of marked difference in race,
caste, religion, class, custom, or habit. With time and strength it explodes
into persecution, violence, or war. The root of this evil may be fear,
suspicion, envy, greed, or unbalance; but all these find their roots in the ego,
and can only be radically removed by transcending egoism.
22
The root of all the trouble is not man's
wickedness or animality or cunning greedy mind. It is his very I-ness, for all
those other evils grow out of it. It is his own ego. Here is the extraordinary
and baffling self-contradiction of the human situation. It is man's individual
existence which brings him suffering and yet it is this very existence which he
holds as dear as life to him!(P)
23
Either man does not hear the interior message or
else he does not want to hear it. That which causes him to be so deaf may be
mere heedlessness, but it is more likely to be worldly desire and personal
conceit.
24
What are the blockages which prevent the soul's
light, grace, peace, love, and healing from reaching us? There are many
different kinds, but they are resolvable into the following: first, all
negative; second, all egoistic; and third, all aggressive. By "aggressive" I
mean that we are intruding our personality and imposing our ideas all the time.
If we would stop this endless aggression and be inwardly still for a while, we
would be able to hear and receive what the Soul has to say and to give us.(P)
25
These are some of the negative traits of erring
human character - undesirable for their own sake, as well as for the sake of
their bad effects - hatred, irritability, jealousy, maliciousness, excessive
criticism and suspicion, destructiveness and cruelty.
26
It is not that they lack intelligence, but that
they let their intelligence be guided by their baser qualities.
27
When the results are pleasant for the moment, we
like to deceive ourselves. We like to put a pretty mask on an ugly passion, for
instance, or wear a magnificent cloak around a wretchedly selfish act. But karma
cannot so easily be deceived and works out its own results with time. And these
depend not only on the appearance of what we are and do but also on the real
character and hidden nature behind it.
28
So what are depressions and sadnesses but the ego
pitying itself, shedding silent tears over itself, loving itself, looking at
itself and enwrapped in itself? What is a happy calm but a killing of such
egoism?(P)
29
The complacence with which men view themselves,
the satisfaction with which they fit into their ego, acts as a barrier to the
influx of spiritual influence and understanding.
30
Identically the same facts will be used by
different groups parties and persons to support widely or quite divergently
varying conclusions! The ego, with its prejudices, passions, selfish motives, or
desires, is the real cause of these differences.
31
Everything is used by the ego to affirm itself.
Even the aspirations and practices and experiences of a quester are used to his
own deception and to its profit.
32
Few persons have either the capacity or the wish
to stand back sufficiently far from themselves to see what it is they are really
doing and where it is they are really going. We play different roles in the
cosmic drama at different levels, and this is true of all men. We all have to
rise from the animal to the human, from the human to the divine. The ego is
there, but consciousness can either use it as free being or get stuck in it and
be used by it. When consciousness is free that means it is free of all the
negatives too and especially free of all those identifications with undesirable
conditions of the ego and unworthy manifestations of it.
33
Wide travels among all kinds have shown me more
and more that the endless wars and strifes between races, nations, classes,
tribes, and individual persons must be met on two levels if they are to be
brought to any end. It is not sufficient to meet them on the level of their
outward visible causes; that has to be done, of course, but it is even more
important to get out of the seething cauldron of hates and wraths, resentments
and egotisms and greeds, for here are the unseen causes of the visible ones.
This calls for a leap: the recognition that one's real enemy is not so much the
person outside as the person inside oneself.
34
The inner life is the root of the outer one. What
is created there, is eventually expressed here.
35
Out of the immense and varied past, in previous
births man has transmitted to him and accumulated in him the tendencies which
today obscure his inner light and drive him toward evil acts.
36
Post-war clash, hatred, greed, and tension are
rife, between nations or between different groups in a single nation. At the
bottom of it all lies a selfishness which always places its own gain above
justice or above mercy and sometimes even seeks that gain at the unwarrantable
expense of others. The ego-worship which filled the Nazi with his "I" was only a
monstrously swollen form of the same idolatry as it existed in other people all
over the world. Instead of trying to curtail their inflated ego, deluded groups
and leaders yield to it and enlarge it still more. The meaning of spirituality
has ceased to register with millions of such people.
37
Where the ego rules in the business world, it is
trying to get more than it gives. This is an offense against the law of justice,
an attempt to get what is not its fair due. The dark karma of such an attempt
may be seen in the strife and conflict and clash of interests and lack of
peaceful harmony which sound as discords in politico-economic relationships
today.
38
The ego hates another and sorrows over its
troubles: these are negative feelings.
39
Despite all the tall talk about love and charity,
service and selflessness, it still remains that most people serve others only
because consciously or unconsciously they are serving their own interest.
40
The problems raised in connection with my radio
talk on "Is Hitler a Mystic?" are very pertinent and interesting, but I do not
suppose that any tribunal would take my theories into account seriously. Indeed
it could not afford to do so. Once it entered into the metaphysical and psychic
aspects of crime it would find itself in a deep abyss. For instance there is the
Catholic Christian doctrine that sin is the consequence of yielding to the inner
promptings of Satan. My own view is that, speaking generally and with due
allowance for special cases, the practical responsibility for a man's crime must
lie within himself - even though he be a spiritualist medium who has been led
step by step to perform crimes from which he would have shrunk at the beginning
of his downward path.
41
There are some who are so insane as to proclaim
evil to be their good and Satan to be their worshipped God. But most men have to
justify evil by disguising it as good. They do so either consciously or
unconsciously, either to others or to themselves, or to both.
42
They never hear the voice of conscience, never
feel any sense of what is right or wrong. The only moral code which exists for
them is that of success or failure. Anything that assists them to get what they
want is ethically good; anything that hinders them from doing so is ethically
evil!
43
How can men be saved who are not aware that they
need salvation, not awake to their predicament, not able to come away from the
distraction of personal affairs or the stupefaction of sensual pleasure?
44
Those who are enemies to their own real good, and
so to their own selves, will necessarily be enemies to one another.
45
Man unhelped by the divine, depending on his own
human efforts, must fail.
46
If a man could keep himself out of his thinking
and feeling, he would more easily arrive at truth. If he could believe his
personal views to be nothing, but truth everything, he would sooner receive its
grace.
47
Because of what he is and what he seeks to do, the
quester has special trials, special experiences and temptations, apart from the
ordinary ones which accompany all human activities.(P)
48
Elaborate traps are set at intervals along his
road, made up of a combination of his own weaknesses with persons or events
related to them. He must be wary of relapsing into complacency, must be prepared
for tests and temptations in a variety of forms.(P)
49
It is tantalizingly hard to effect the passage
from the lower to the higher state. For between them lies an intermediate zone
of consciousness which possesses an ensnaring quality and in which the ego makes
its last desperate effort to keep him captive. Hence this zone is the source of
attractive psychic experiences, of spiritual self-aggrandizements, of so-called
messianic personal claims and redemptive missions, of great truths cunningly
coalesced into great deceptions.(P)
50
A man may travel quite a distance on the way
towards this goal of self-conquest and then, as success begins to appear on the
horizon, may fail and fall from it in the last few tests. His very success may
begin to generate vanity, pride, self-importance, ambition, and arrogance. In
this way his ego is once more stimulated instead of being subjugated. Thus he
steps aside from the path although he has already gone so far along it.
51
Certain negative tendencies of his character, by
now controlled and largely suppressed but still lying latent in the
subconscious, may rush up to the surface at intervals if impulsiveness is
present. When he is taken off his guard, they appear in speech or even action
until he recovers himself. The damage is done and although he returns to normal
freedom from these faults, the consequences may remain and make him suffer for a
disproportionate period. The farther he advances, the more important is the
lapse.
52
Deep down in the lowest layers of the subconscious
nature there lurk evil tendencies and evil memories belonging to the far past
and not yet wholly wiped out by the spiritual rebirth. It is these tendencies
which rise to the surface layers and challenge us at crucial moments when we
seek initiation into the Higher Self or when we seek acceptance from a Master.
In their totality they have been named by the Western Rosicrucians as the
"dweller on the threshold." No man can be taken possession of by his Higher Self
or enter into a permanent relation with a Master unless and until he develops
within himself sufficient calm and sufficient strength to meet and overcome
these arisen tendencies, whose character is marked by extreme sensuality or
extreme cunning or extreme brutality, or even by a combination of two or three
of these.
53
They are crude remnants and ugly reminders of the
savage violence which he has inherited from pre-human reincarnations.
54
His failure follows inevitably from his attempt to
serve two masters. The ego is strong and cunning and clamant. The Overself is
silent and patient and remote. In every battle the dice are loaded in the ego's
favour. In every battle high principle runs counter to innate prejudice.(P)
55
If the ego cannot trap him through his vices it
will try to do so through his virtues. When he has made enough progress to
warrant it, he will be led cunningly and insensibly into spiritual pride. Too
quickly and too mistakenly he will believe himself to be set apart from other
men by his attainments. When this belief is strong and sustained, that is, when
his malady of conceit calls for a necessary cure, a pit will be dug
unconsciously for him by other men and his own ego will lead him straight into
it. Out of the suffering which will follow this downfall, he will have a chance
to grow humbler.(P)
56
The risk is greater because a human emissary of
the adverse element in Nature will automatically appear at critical moments and
consciously or unconsciously seek hypnotically or passively to lead him astray
as he or she has gone astray. Our own world-wide experience, embracing the
written reports and spoken confidences of thousands of individual cases of
mystical, yogic, and occult seekers, both Oriental and Occidental, has gravely
taught the need of this warning.(P)
57
Whoever seeks to tread a path such as the one
shown here will sooner or later find that these forces set themselves in
opposition to his interior journey. His way will be blocked by external
circumstances that entangle him in hopeless struggles or heart-breaking
oppressions and enslavements, or by psychical attacks which seek to sweep him
off his spiritual feet and destroy his higher aspirations. Persons in his
immediate environment may be moved by these invisible forces to work against
him, causing uprisings of hatred and misunderstanding; one-time friends may turn
into treacherous enemies more virulent than the poison of a cobra. Public
critics will appear and endeavour to nullify whatever good he is doing for
humanity, or to prevent its continuance. The single aim and object of all these
attempts will be to prevent his alignment with the Overself, to render mental
quiet impossible, or to keep his heart and mind crushed down to earth and
earthly things. He must needs suffer these things. The ir power, scope, and
duration may be diminished, however.(P)
58
The path is beset not only by the pitfalls arising
out of one's own human failings, but at critical times by unconscious or
conscious evil beings in human form who seek to destroy faith through falsehoods
and to undermine reliance on true guidance through sidetracks and traps.(P)
59
The advancing mystic has to undergo a very real
temptation at certain points of his career - a temptation not unlike that of
Jesus by Satan to great worldly honours or that of Buddha by Mara to great
sensual indulgence. It may come through the crafty instigations of his enemies
or through the innocent flatteries of his friends. He must beware especially of
those whose excessive faith would exalt him to the role of a master, or
perchance even glorify him as a new messiah! He must be on guard against being
seduced by the attractions of power or the disguises of sensuality.
60
He may have to suffer the hostility of unseen
malignant force besetting the path at certain stages, especially at advanced
stages.
61
H.P. Blavatsky (in a private talk with W.Q.
Judge): "You force yourself into a Master's presence and you take the
consequences of the immense forces around him playing on yourself. If you are
weak in character anywhere, the Black Ones will use the disturbance by directing
the forces engendered to that spot and may compass your ruin. It is so always.
Pass the boundary that hedges in the occult realm, and quick forces, new ones,
dreadful ones, must be met. Then if you are not strong you may become a wreck
for that life. This is the danger. This is one reason why Masters do not appear
and do not act directly very often, but nearly always by intermediate degrees."
62
As that esteemed Indian yogi and philosopher, the
late Sri Aurobindo, more than once mentioned, those who are working for the
survival of Truth in a truthless world thereby become targets for powerful
forces of hatred wrath and falsehood. Whoever publicly bears a deeply spiritual
message to humanity, has to suffer from evil's opposition.(P)
63
These are warped minds who, fumbling on the lower
levels of human existence, spit venom and spill hatred over the man who declares
the existence of higher ones.
64
These hostile manifestations invariably make their
appearance after the teacher has made an appearance anywhere. Light must
inevitably cast a shadow. Yet on the credit side they served a useful purpose.
They help him and they help his probationers. They remind him that he must not
stake a claim on any part of this earth's surface or in any human heart. They
test the intuition and keenness of the probationers. When these have survived
all the tests, he may accept them and begin their real inner work together;
thereafter God himself cannot prize them apart from their teacher, for then they
know with whom they are dealing.
65
The course of life brings encounters with those
who are either inspired by, or symbolically represent, the adverse powers which
at times beset it.
66
Subconscious evil creeps out of its cage in
moments of temptation.
67
A Kabalist adept: "The neophyte who enters
the portals becomes at once a victim of the malicious attention of Shaitans
(demons) who plague him with a multitude of temptations and work on his mind.
Rare is he who does not succumb."
68
Tests can appear in very ordinary, quite prosaic
situations.
69
The things which hamper the student's progress are
varied, and although they may bring despondency and discouragement, impatience
and rebellion, they need not and should not be permitted to bring the loss of
all hope. Difficulties there must be, but they need not make us cowards. The
times of swift progress are generally followed by times of slow moving; success
alternates with failure as day with night. He must go on with the faith and
trust that obstacles are not for all time, that fluctuations on the path are
inevitable, and that his own inner divine possibilities are the best guarantee
of ultimate attainment. The trials of the path, as indeed the trials of life
itself, are inescapable. He should endure the tribulations with the inner
conviction that a brighter world awaits him; hope and faith will lead him to
it.(P)