III The Source
of Life: The Unseen World
Related
References
Brotherhood - The Underlying Unity of Life
(HPB, Secret Doctrine, Vol. I p. 120)
"Lift thy head, oh Lanoo; dost thou see one, or countless
lights above thee, burning in the dark midnight sky?"
"I sense one Flame, oh Gurudeva, I see countless undetached
sparks shining in it."
"Thou sayest well. And now look around and into thyself.
That light which burns inside thee, dost thou feel it different
in anywise from the light that shines in thy Brother-men?"
"It is in no way different, though the prisoner is held
in bondage by Karma, and though its outer garments delude the
ignorant into saying, 'Thy Soul and My Soul.' "
The radical unity of the ultimate essence of each constituent
part of compounds in Nature-from Star to mineral Atom, from the
highest Dhyan Chohan to the smallest infusoria, in the fullest
acceptation of the term, and whether applied to the spiritual,
intellectual, or physical worlds-this is the one fundamental
law in Occult Science.
(HPB, Isis Unveiled, Vol. I p. 258)
. . . "All that that is upon and within the earth, all
vegetable forms and all animal forms, our bodies, our brains,
are formed of materials which have been drawn in from those depths
of space surrounding us on all sides." The Hermetists and
the later Rosicrucians held that all things visible and invisible
were produced by the contention of light with darkness, and that
every particle of matter contains within itself a spark of the
divine essence - or light, spirit - which, through its tendency
to free itself from its entanglement and return to the central
source, produced motion in the particles, and from motion forms
were born.
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles Vol. I "Three Great Ideas",
p. 242)
The first idea is, that there is a great Cause - in the sense
of an enterprise - called the Cause of Sublime Perfection and
Human Brotherhood. This rests upon the essential unity of the
whole human family, and is a possibility because sublimity in
perfectness and actual realization of brotherhood on every plane
of being are one and the same thing.
(Mahatma Letters To A.P. Sinnett p. 17)
The term "Universal Brotherhood" is no idle phrase.
Humanity in the mass has a paramount claim upon us
It is
the only secure foundation for universal morality. If it be a
dream, it is at least a noble one for mankind: and it is the
aspiration of the true adept.
(HPB, Key To Theosophy p. 39)
ENQ. What are the objects of the "Theosophical Society"?
THEO. They are three, and have been so from the beginning.
(1.) To form the nucleus of a Universal Brotherhood of Humanity
without distinction of race, color, or creed.
(HPB, Key To Theosophy p. 18)
"How little this principle of Universal Brotherhood is understood
by the masses of mankind, how seldom its transcendent importance
is recognized, may be seen in the diversity of opinion and fictitious
interpretations regarding the Theosophical Society. This society
was organized on this one principle, the essential Brotherhood
of Man, as herein briefly outlined and imperfectly set forth.
(HPB, Key To Theosophy p. 41)
THE COMMON ORIGIN OF MAN
ENQ. How?
THEOSOPHIST. Simply by demonstrating on logical, philosophical,
metaphysical, and even scientific grounds that: -- (a) All men
have spiritually and physically the same origin, which is the
fundamental teaching of Theosophy. (b) As mankind is essentially
of one and the same essence, and that essence is one -- infinite,
uncreate, and eternal, whether we call it God or Nature -- nothing,
therefore, can affect one nation or one man without affecting
all other nations and all other men. This is as certain and as
obvious as that a stone thrown into a pond will, sooner or later,
set in motion every single drop of water therein.
(HPB, Key To Theosophy p. 45)
THEOSOPHIST.
-- "The principle of the Brotherhood
of Humanity is one of the eternal truths that govern the world's
progress on lines which distinguish human nature from brute nature."
What can be more Theosophical than this? But it is not enough.
What is also needed is to impress men with the idea that, if
the root of mankind is one, then there must also be one truth
which finds expression in all the various religions.
ENQUIRER. This refers to the common origin of religions, and
you may be right there. But how does it apply to practical brotherhood
on the physical plane?
THEOSOPHIST. First, because that which is true on the metaphysical
plane must be also true on the physical. Secondly, because there
is no more fertile source of hatred and strife than religious
differences. When one party or another thinks himself the sole
possessor of absolute truth, it becomes only natural that he
should think his neighbor absolutely in the clutches of Error
or the Devil. But once get a man to see that none of them has
the whole truth, but that they are mutually complementary, that
the complete truth can be found only in the combined views of
all, after that which is false in each of them has been sifted
out -- then true brotherhood in religion will be established.
(Wm. Q. Judge, Vol. II "Theosophy and the Theosophical
Society" - extracts)
Underlying the Doctrines of Theosophy is one fundamental proposition,
namely, "the essential Unity of all life and being."
Manifestation of life is differentiation of this unity, the purpose
of differentiation is evolution, and the destiny of evolution
is the return of all manifestation into its source and original
unity
On another plane of existence, a plane which partakes
of a wider field of consciousness and which lies within the capability
of development in every individual, that on that higher plane
there is a spiritual unity, a universal brotherhood of mankind,
and on that plane of being there is no separateness from homogeneous
existence; and further that no permanent progress is possible
through fostering the illusion of separateness, and that man's
true duty at all times and in all circumstances is the love of
his kind and the preservation of harmony around him. This essential
unity of all being, however, becomes only realizable in the ratio
in which consciousness on a higher plane is awakened, and this
superior consciousness regards our present conception of all
separateness apart from the whole as an illusion, because there
is no separation in reality; it only appears so to us on our
present plane of consciousness. Therefore this tenet, although
it is a fact in nature, is not so easily demonstrable on physical
lines, because the problem itself transcends perception on this
lower physical plane; in other words, it cannot be seen or heard,
felt, smelt, or tasted, nor sensed with any physical instrument;
still it is a fact which is at once plausible by conceding to
the human being spiritual life at all, and perfectly realizable
to those who have penetrated beyond the veil which surrounds
gross matter.
Additional Related References of Interest
1) HPB Articles, Volume I "The Tidal Wave"
2) Wm. Q. Judge, Articles Volume I "Universal Brotherhood
A Fact In Nature"
3) Wm. Q. Judge, Articles Volume II "Theosophy And The
Theosophical Society"
Bibliography
(HPB Article, "The Tidal Wave")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Ocean of Theosophy, p. 23, 53)
(Wm. Q. Judge, Echoes From The Orient)
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "Three Great Ideas")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "The Synthesis of Occult Science")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "The Sheaths of the Soul")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "The Earth Chain of Globes")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "Universal Brotherhood A Fact
In Nature")
(Wm. Q. Judge, Articles, "Theosophy And The Theosophical
Society")
(Mahatma Letters To A.P. Sinnett p. 17)
(Theosophical University Press, Occult Glossary)
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