(Clement Acton Griscom, Jr. was members
of the Theosophical Society in America and editor of The Theosophical Quarterly revue, and in this article he summarizes
the theosophical information that was given about these special humans.)
Disciples of the Great
Brotherhood of Masters divide them selves into two general grades: those who
know themselves to be such and those who do not. The latter class is naturally
very much the more numerous, for it includes all devout and religious minded
people who are trying consciously to live a higher life, who believe in one of
the many recognized religions, but who, as yet, do not have conscious knowledge
of the Lodge.
Such persons may follow a Master,
just as the Christian follows Jesus of Nazareth, and they may reach a very
considerable degree of attainment before acquiring knowledge of the actual
constitution of the spiritual world, its hierarchical character, their status
therein, and the relation of their master thereto. This, after all, is
unimportant until the point is reached where lack of such knowledge would be a
barrier to further progress.
The first class of disciples, — those
who know themselves to be such, — rank all the way from the ordinary man, who
becomes a member of The Theosophical Society, who learns about the Masters, and
about disciple ship, and who enters upon the Path in sincerity and earnestness,
to spiritual beings of the greatest moral elevation and of tremendous power, who
are but little short of the full stature of the Masters themselves. Of these
latter all that need be said is that we do not know enough to distinguish
between them and the full Masters. They are so far beyond us in development, in
exalted character, in knowledge and in power, that they melt into the great
mass of spiritual life that we can contact, but cannot segregate and classify.
There are presumably seven great
divisions of these disciples, each with its appropriate powers and functions,
each marked by some noteworthy achievement in self-conquest and attainment. We
shall have to be content with the statement that the utmost limit of
development that we can really understand anything about at all, would refer to
the two, or at most, the three lower stages.
To give some idea of what
perfection means, there is a tradition that at a certain point along the Path
there is an initiation in which the candidate sinks into a deep and prolonged meditation,
during which all outer functions cease. If there remain anywhere in his entire
nature a single atom of selfishness, self-interest, or self-will, he passes on
to other planes of existence and never awakes in, or can again come back to, this
world. It is not a question of conflict, or of will; he has no choice; the Law
works automatically. Fortunately this test is not undergone until the disciple
is a very great person indeed; so it need not trouble us.
Real discipleship, or what in the
East is called chelaship, begins when a man enters into conscious communication
with his Master. Previous to that he is a lay-chela, or a probationary chela,
or, to use Western terms, he is a “would-be" disciple. A Christian Saint
may or may not be a real disciple in this technical sense. It depends upon
whether or not he actually has acquired the powers or faculties which enable
conscious communion with a Master to take place. It is a question of fact, not
a question of judgment or opinion, and people cannot judge of it unless they too
have the same faculty. Until then they may have beliefs or opinions about the
status of others, but they cannot have knowledge. This theme must be
elaborated, for it is the essence of discipleship.
First of all it should be
distinctly understood that, while I have spoken of the faculty or power that enables
one to communicate with the Masters, the question is one of character, or of
moral elevation, rather than one of acquiring a faculty or power. The faculty
or power is the result of spiritual attainment, the reward of self-conquest,
the first great goal of the religious life. It would be a great mistake not to
keep this basic idea in mind in all that is said about the mechanics or
descriptive side of discipleship. Discipleship is a life, a state of being or
becoming something which we were not before, and the means used in this “becoming"
is the conquest of the lower self. The lower self, the natural man, the old
Adam, cannot be a disciple. We have got to get rid of this lower self and
become, to some extent, our inner, real self, before discipleship is a
possibility. It is, in other words, the inner self which is the disciple.
Now the lower self and the inner
self can, and always do, at this stage, exist simultaneously. That is what
makes the struggle with which we are all so familiar, and the “peace which
passes understanding,” is the surcease from this struggle, which can only come
when the lower self is entirely eliminated as such, and we are our inner selves
alone. This contest for mastery lasts a long time, for it covers the period
from when the first awakening of spiritual life takes place, through all the
stages of disciple ship, until the lower self is entirely dominated, purified
and transmuted, or, in a word, until it has ceased to exist as such, although
the forces and powers which were in it have become a valuable and essential
part of the inner self.
It is said that the complete
process takes at least seven incarnations as a minimum; but in order that this
should not be discouraging to aspirants, it can be pointed out that anyone
sincerely in earnest at the present time has probably already spent several
lives in the effort and is reaping the benefit now of previous attainment. The
time element is not fixed; each plane of consciousness has its own time standard;
there is no limit to the possible shortening of the period required.
Another important point to bear
in mind is the relation between the lower self and the inner self or soul. In
previous articles in this series it was suggested that the general object of
evolution, at this point in the cosmic scale, and that means during this
Manvantara, or the manifestation of the worlds of this chain, was the
acquirement of self-consciousness. In order to become self-conscious the soul
had to see itself reflected in a mirror — its personality — in which it could
observe and study its own powers and gifts and qualities as they functioned in
all the departments of human life. It therefore, slowly and painfully created
the personality and trained and developed and “worked it up," until it was
capable of manifesting something at least of every power the soul itself
possessed, consciousness, will, desire, mind, emotions, and so forth.
With all these possessions, and
many others, it endowed the personality out of its own stock; and in order to
make this copy of itself complete, it also gave the personality freedom to
choose between good and evil, or free-will. The creative, formative process
takes half of an entire period of manifestation, and as it developed, the soul
gradually learned to see itself as it really was, to see itself as others would
see it, to see its powers and functions operating normally and also — alas — operating
perversely and abnormally. For the personality, endowed with consciousness, a part
of the consciousness of the soul, — possessing powers and abilities to do many
things, and also possessing free-will, soon went off the track, as it were, and
began to violate and disobey the laws of life.
I do not know whether it was necessary
for this to happen or not. It is quite possible that the soul could not have
acquired full self-consciousness without a personal and direct experience and
therefore knowledge of evil; or it may be that disobedience was not a necessary
experience. There is no doubt, how ever, that the rebellion of the personality
went much further than necessary, much further than the universal plan
contemplated, and that, there fore, evolution on earth is many hundreds of
thousands of years behind the schedule.
To go back to the soul,
therefore, it gradually gained the object of the whole evolutionary process,
self-consciousness. Then the outward tide of expansion stopped and began to
recede. This portion of the universe reached its uttermost outer or
"lower" expression and began to in draw; the path began to lead back
home; the souls of men, having gained self-consciousness, turned toward their
divine source, enriched by their newly acquired gift. They had to undo what
they had done; they had to reabsorb the forces and powers with which they had
endowed their personalities, had to get back into themselves this personality
which each had created for its use.
Discipleship as we know it is only
a stage on this journey, and is of special interest to us because it is the
stage we have reached and the next thing we have to do. I have said that it can
be done in seven lives, but that does not really give a true picture of the
general process, for the great mass of mankind will take hundreds, if not
thousands of lives to complete this stage, and some may never do it at all. By
this I mean that some personalities become so bad, so thoroughly wicked, so
destitute of any redeeming virtue or grace, that the souls which are
responsible for them are forced to give up the task and to cut themselves off
definitely and forever. These souls have failed to accomplish the task of this
Manvantara, and have to try it all over again at the next period of universal
manifestation.
The personalities which are so
abandoned by their souls, are the recruits of the Black Lodge, and live for a
longer or shorter time according to the accumulated force and vitality which
was stored up in them at the time of separation. They will gradually
disintegrate in the course of a few incarnations, or they may last as powers of
darkness and evil until the very end of the Manvantara; then, however, they
will cease to be, for the planes of existence upon which they can function,
themselves will cease. Immortality, therefore, when we are talking of it from
the standpoint of the personality is not a certain thing at all. It has to be
gained or earned by effort, by sacrifice, by obedience.
There are many soulless men and women
in the world, particularly at a time like this, when materialism is rampant,
and when selfishness and self-indulgence and self-seeking are the only
mainsprings of action in so many people. It is said, however, that the soul
never gives up the effort to save its personality so long as there remain in
the personality a single spark of unselfishness or of aspiration or of good,
which, by careful fanning, can be developed into a flame that will consume the
evil.
The Soul issues forth from the
Divine; it is a ray from the Oversoul, and its ultimate destiny is to be
absorbed back into the Divine. Its path thither is through the Master who is at
the head of its ray. Therefore, union with one’s Master is the goal of every
soul, of every disciple. For discipleship is only a name given to that part of
this great agelong journey of the soul back to its divine source, which
immediately concerns us. It does not immediately concern most human beings;
they are not ready for it. That is one of the facts of life which it is wise
for the beginner to understand, as it will save him much misguided effort, much
disappointment, much discouragement.
Most people do not want to be
disciples, do not want to try to be disciples. Only a few do. It is they who
concern us and for whom this article is written, for whom this magazine is
published, for whom The Theosophical Society was founded, for whom the Theosophical
Movement is continued from century to century. I do not mean that the general
mass of mankind do not concern us. They do. They must be our perpetual concern
until they too become disciples and successful disciples; but that is remote,
and there is comparatively little we can do for them until we gain power and
wisdom by becoming successful disciples ourselves. The only effective way to
help others is to complete our own regeneration as fast as possible.
That is another fact to be borne
in mind. I do not mean that there is nothing we can do for others until we are
successful disciples; that would be going much too far. Every one can and must
help those who are below him in the evolutionary scale; this sort of service is
a law of life, one of the basic rules of discipleship itself; but, none the
less, effective service means knowing how to serve and having the power to
serve; therefore a chief duty of the disciple is to acquire this necessary
knowledge and power.
Previous to this, while our intentions
are excellent and the law takes them into account, our actual performance is
just as likely to do harm as good, and the beneficent and compassionate law
must come in to correct and readjust the harm, and prevent our well-intentioned
stupidities from doing real injury to those we try to serve. There is a period
when it is inevitable that we lose all self-confidence and are afraid to do
anything at all in the direction of helping others.
As an analogy, take the up-to-date,
thoroughly modern settlement workers, full of a genuine and altruistic desire
to help others, and also absolutely certain of just how to do it; for have they
not taken courses in philanthropy and economics and social science! They are
full of theories and preconceptions. Therefore the first thing they need to learn
is that they really know nothing and that many of the things they spend their
lives doing are positively harmful to those they are so earnestly trying to
benefit. It is impossible to make 999 out of a 1,000 understand this. They see
hungry people, and it is difficult for them to conceive of its ever being
unwise to feed them. They quote the precepts: Feed the hungry, Visit the sick.
Comfort the sorrowing. It is a complicated point, and perhaps I can explain it
best by another analogy of an opposite implication.
Take farming; it is one of the
oldest, and is the largest profession in the world. It is also one in which
habit, custom, and hereditary and antiquated methods have had their freest
sway. Until quite recent years a remarkably small amount of intelligence was
spent upon the problem. The attitude of the practical farmer was that what had
been was good enough. Now we have agricultural schools and colleges teaching
scientific farming, many good books on the subject, and a rapidly growing mass
of knowledge which is at the disposal of those willing to learn.
Most farmers are still content to
continue their old methods and they scoff at the new knowledge and the book-taught
tiller of the soil. An occasional one, however, realizes his ignorance and
begins to investigate. He soon finds that he is doing nearly everything wrong.
If possible, the sensible thing for him is to stop work and to go to school
until he learns how to work effectively, for otherwise he may continue to rob his
soil of necessary elements that it will take years of expensive work to replace.
He corresponds to the newly awakened, would-be disciple. He knows enough to
know that he does not know enough to do good work: therefore for a time, until
he learns more, he confines his energies to the acquisition of knowledge; and,
as he begins to understand the few fundamental principles, he tentatively and with
care and prayers, makes his first timid experiments, gaining confidence with
growing experience.
Now because all this is true and
a right procedure for the exceptional farmer, we cannot make the general remark
that all farming ought to stop until all farmers have mastered their subject.
It is much better for the great mass of farmers to continue doing their best,
with their ignorant and wasteful old methods, than to do nothing at all. So
with the social workers.
The exceptional one capable of acquiring
better methods should be told the truth and be made to realize his ignorance,
and the harm he is doing, and that he should cease active work until he has had
his training. But at the same time it is quite right and proper, and in
accordance with Divine Law, that the majority of such workers should continue
to do their best and to carry out their ideals, even if those ideals are
limited and their methods are faulty.
Both things are true and right,
and they are not contradictory, as at first sight would appear to be the case.
The spiritual life is full of just such paradoxes, for we are dealing
constantly with successive depths of knowledge which make things which are
right and true for one man, not right and true for another. The only final criterion
is that each should be true to his vision of what is right. That is all the
Universe and all the Spiritual Powers thereof, expect or require of anyone.
The sign of discipleship is
ability to communicate with one's master. It must not be thought, however, that
the problem is solved when this power is attained. It marks only the beginning
of discipleship. There is a very long and arduous road to travel after that
point is reached.
Fortunately for all of us we reach
that point, not by any merit of our own, but by the divine com passion of the
masters themselves, long before we are really purified, long before we have
really mastered our lower selves, long before we have completed our
self-conquest.
The masters are much more anxious
to reach us than we are to reach them, and when they see a human being making
even an initial effort, beginning to try to live according to his ideals,
incorrect as those ideals may be and usually are, they at once differentiate
that person from the general mass, and begin to give him individual treatment,
care, and help.
They guide his life and his circumstances
so as to nourish and water the little shoot of spiritual growth which is so
precious. This does not mean that that person will have an easy, sheltered life
from then on. It often means just the contrary. The masters are more interested
in our Souls, than in our personalities. This point cannot be stated too often;
we need to repeat it, in different terms, until it becomes a fixed part of our
consciousness. A real belief in it, a full realization of it and of its implications,
will save us much needless confusion, rebellion, and pain.
We resent suffering; we resent
unpleasant circumstances; we resent hardships and discomforts; and we are very
likely to discharge this resentment against Providence, against the divine
powers which we believe to be guiding our lives — unless we have a very clear
understanding of the fact that it is we, not the divine powers, who are
responsible for all our troubles, and for the complications of life, and that
they do their very best to help straighten out these complications as quickly
and as smoothly as possible. Resentment and rebellion on our part are as
foolish as they would be on the part of a man who swallowed a lot of typhoid
fever germs, and then blamed the doctor who came to tend him, for his fever,
disabilities, and pain. The doctor could give morphine until the patient would
not suffer, but he does not do so because he knows it would retard the recovery,
which he wants.
So the masters can manipulate events
and even control our reactions to them, so as to prevent our suffering, but it
would be harmful and not helpful, so they do not do it. But just as the doctor
will give a man in intense pain a hypodermic injection, to tide him over a
crisis, so the masters will, at times, give us help long before we deserve, or
have earned it, in order to help our poor struggling Soul in its ceaseless
conflict with the lower self.
Thus, long before we have reached
the actual spiritual stage of discipleship, long before we have the true gift
of inner vision, long before we have built up that portion of our inner self
which is the normal means of communication, the masters will use their powers
to come down to our own level and render us some aid of which we stand in need.
This type of communication, which
takes a great variety of forms, while frequent in fact and perfectly genuine as
a spiritual experience, is essentially different from the true and normal
communication which exists between master and disciple; and it is governed by
the very complicated law of reactions which must be carefully noted and guarded
against by the master who gives the help.
Very often, no matter how desirous
he may be, our condition is such that he cannot safely do anything of which we can
be conscious. It is said that it is a constant crucifixion for the masters to
be so infinitely desirous of helping us, and to have to stand by and see our misunderstanding,
our confusion, our ignorance, our pain, and yet not be able to respond to our
prayers in any way that we can understand — because to do so would actually make
things worse instead of better.
The two or three lower stages of
real discipleship are the only ones of which we can now get even a glimmer of
comprehension; we have not entered upon them as yet; they are what we are
working towards, but have not reached. Still, just because we are working
towards them, we are intensely interested in them, and wish to know all we can
about them and the rules and laws which govern those fortunate and rare
individuals who have reached them.
The devotional books of all
religions are efforts to set forth the Way towards true discipleship, but we
are told that there is no essential difference between these rules and the
rules of discipleship itself save in the degree of perfection in which they
must be lived. Take one example; — meditation. The neophyte is told he must
meditate; as he progresses, the length of time he must devote to this necessary
spiritual exercise is lengthened and lengthened; the actual disciple, of the
higher grades at any rate, must be in a state of constant meditation, whatever that
may mean. So too with Recollection.
We must practice recollection, at
first at our prayer time, then more often; then as often as we can; but the
disciple must maintain an attitude of continuous recollection that has no
breaks, not only from morning until night, but day and night, forever. Needless
to say that he does not do either of these two things with our ordinary human
faculties, for that would be impossible; he does them with parts of his nature,
or with latent faculties, which his manner of life has aroused, and with which
the ordinary man has such slight acquaintance that he frequently denies their
existence altogether.
Discipleship, as has been often said,
is becoming something, and one of the things we become is a being capable of
doing more perfectly those things we are all trying to do. As Pope Boniface
said: Holiness consists not in doing heroic things, but in doing common things heroically
well. The Rule of Life of a disciple, therefore, is not essentially different
in kind from the Rule of Life of a would-be disciple; it differs only in
degree; in the perfection in which it is lived. That is very fortunate, for it
means that every effort we make now is training us in the most direct and
positive manner, in just those qualities and virtues which we must have to reach
our ultimate goal. Nothing is wasted, no effort, no self-conquest, no
sacrifice, however small.
Those who have read the earlier
articles in this series will remember what was said about the hierarchical
system; that each individual is "on the ray” of a master. That means,
among other things, that they have — the master and the disciple-certain common
possessions. Each also has other possessions which both do not share. The
master has an infinite range of powers and qualities which the disciple cannot
reach, and the disciple has a lower nature, with its powers and qualities, which
is his own creation and for the making of which he alone is responsible.
The point where the two natures
merge is above the plane of the personality, is in fact in the manasic
principle. This is not easy to explain, for various reasons, one of which is
that we have no English words for these things, and another, that we are
talking about states of consciousness, or activities of the Soul itself, which
are outside of the range of ordinary experience. Put in another way, it is said
that the manas of the disciple is merged into the manas of the master; the master
therefore knows instantly everything the disciple says or does or thinks. The
converse, however, is not true.
The manas of the master is not
merged into the manas of the disciple; the disciple contacts only so much of
the manas of the master as can be contained in his type and character of
vehicle. His general purity and progress determines this. He therefore knows
very little of what the master does, says and thinks. But he does know that
little; there is a very real identification of consciousness, which becomes
increasingly widened in scale as the disciples advance along the Path.
True communication with one’s
master, therefore, only becomes possible after this identification of manas has
begun, and it can only begin when the disciple has equipped himself in many
different ways. One of the things he must have accomplished is such
purification of his mind that he no longer thinks thoughts, he is no longer capable
of thinking thoughts, that would be in dissonance with the master's nature, for
any thought he thinks will instantly be in the master’s consciousness also.
Another thing, — he must have so
trained himself in obedience that he is no longer capable of disobedience, for
disobedience would mean a rending of the nature, a house divided against
itself. Of course he must have acquired such control of his lower nature, — no,
that is not it, — he must have so changed and transmuted his lower nature, that
in one sense he no longer has any lower nature left; in other words, he must be
so good and pure that he is incapable of the lower desires and passions. He must
be safe in all those respects. Of course there are whole ranges of less base
but still ignoble activities which are no longer possible for him; they will be
evident if we simply catalogue the list of human faults.
It must not be understood that
the disciple, in these lower stages, has already made a complete conquest of
his lower nature, and is no longer capable of sin; but it does mean that very
real and substantial progress must have been made in that direction. The
disciple can fall from his high estate so long as he has any personality left
at all, and when he has none left, he is no longer a disciple, but has
“attained,” and enters a new cycle of progress beyond our ken. Even the very
highest disciple can fall back, and so very terrible are the consequences of
such a fall that the utmost precautions of divine wisdom are used to prevent it.
One rule often referred to is
that a disciple must have shown, by actual practical experience, his ability to
live according to the rules of a higher degree before he is endowed with the
rank, prerogatives and powers of that degree. That means that until life has
tested and tempted him in all fundamental ways, he cannot be trusted; — not
because the masters are unwilling to take the risk, but because they are
unwilling that he should take the risk.
It stands to reason that if a
disciple reaches the point where his consciousness is merged with the consciousness
of the master, even in the smallest degree, there comes to him a great influx
of power, of force, of knowledge, which is really the master’s and not his own.
But he and the master are both responsible for the use which is made of
increases of power. The master cannot afford to have his force degraded or misused,
while the disciple now has a double responsibility, his innate responsibility
for his own spiritual welfare, and his newly acquired, his hardly earned
privilege, of being responsible for some of his master's spiritual essence,
which has been poured into him.
Woe to the disciple who fails under
this glorious burden. He has proved himself unworthy of his divine heritage,
and Karma wreaks a terrible vengeance. He falls to depths which correspond to
the heights from which he fell, and it takes him long ages of suffering and
effort to struggle back to the point-he had reached before. Therefore discipleship,
with its responsibilities, is a very serious thing and not to be lightly
undertaken. There must be no turning back, once the hand has been set to the
plow, and the first furrow turned.
The Eastern books are full of descriptions
of the “powers” which are the concomitant of discipleship, and those who are
curious about this phase of the subject can read about them in such a book as Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. Not so much
stress is laid on this side of the subject in Christian literature, and the
Western scholars have not studied the psychology of discipleship as has been done
so thoroughly in the East. But still, Christian records are full of accounts of
the “miraculous" powers of the saints, and when analyzed it will be seen
that these powers do not differ from those treated of from such a different
point of view and called by such different names, in the books of the East.
Clairaudience and clairvoyance
are common, and normal marks of discipleship. When the soul of man is no longer
“cribbed, cabined, and confined" by its personality, it simply cannot help
having these powers on the higher planes of consciousness, for they are part of
its very nature, but they may find expression farther down. You do not have to
cultivate these powers, and you should not try to do so. They are innate,
natural functions of the Soul, and when the time is ripe they cannot help
coming into activity.
It will not be a healthy and
normal activity if they are developed, as they can be, before the rest of the
nature has also been developed to the corresponding degree. The moral nature in
particular should have reached the proper level, for otherwise these powers,
which can function on several planes, will awaken to a dangerous and pernicious
activity
Anyone who cares to do so can
find examples among Christian Saints and mystics of any, or of all the
phenomena described by Eastern psychologists. The laws of the universe are
quite the same whether in India or in Europe.
The really important thing about
these “powers” is that their development increases one’s ability to help others.
For the first time in the aspirant's career, he is beginning to acquire the
ability really to render effective and intelligent service. He commences to
understand himself, and through that understanding to understand others. His
sympathy is aroused. I do not mean his emotions, or his pity; I mean the real
quality of sympathy, — the ability to put himself in another’s place and to
under stand what that other is experiencing, and therefore what he needs. His power
truly to love also awakes.
He gradually acquires real knowledge
of human nature and of the constitution of man. He sees life, for the first
time, in proper perspective; he can give circumstances and events their true
place in the table of values, and be free himself from the glamour of worldly
possessions. In a word, he begins to accumulate a little fund of wisdom, and so
is equipped to handle life and people with growing hope that he will not do
more harm than good. He acquires the “gift of tongues” and the “healing
fire," which does not mean the ability to speak all languages and to cure
diseases, but the ability to discern what is really the matter with a sick
soul, and to announce the remedy, to speak to its condition, and to bind and
heal its wounds. The disciple’s privilege is the privilege of service, there fore
his gifts are those powers which enable him to render more and more effective
service.
(Theosophical Quarterly, 1916,
vol. 14, pp. 64-69, 186-190)
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