The One Rejected

by Minor Lile

Originally printed in the"Winter 2011 issue of Quest magazine."
Citation: Minor, Lile. "The One Rejected." Quest" 99."1 (Winter 2011): 19-20.

The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner.

—Psalm 118:22

The Theosophical Society was chosen as the corner stone,

the foundation of the future religion of humanity.

—The Maha Chohan

Theosophical Society - Minor Lile served as executive director and resident manager at Camp Indralaya for nearly twenty years, and serves on the national board of directors. His interests include looking for the often hidden presence of the wisdom tradition in contemporary culture.The allegory of the "stone which the builder refused" points to the value hidden in the things that we are inclined to reject. The theme lends itself to both individual and collective interpretations. We are all the builders of our own destinies. Yet as individuals we often find ourselves rejecting potentialities within ourselves and instead making choices in life that steer us away from the goals that we aspire to reach. In a collective sense, "the builder" might be seen as a metaphor for the established order, which frequently tends to overlook emerging ideas that will eventually be accepted as the established order of some future time.

The allegory of the stone that the builders rejected is well-known in the Judeo-Christian tradition and is found in both the Old and the New Testaments. It first occurs in Psalm 118, which was written approximately 2700 years ago. It also appears in three of the Gospels of the New Testament (Matthew, Mark, and Luke) as well as in the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas. In each instance it follows the parable of the vineyard, in which the son of a vineyard owner is killed by tenants who refuse to rightfully honor their leasehold agreement. The parable suggests that the Son (Jesus) is killed by those who refuse to honor either the Father (God) or the Son. Thus the Son is refused as the cornerstone who points the way to the blessings and salvation of the Father.

The continuing resonance of this idea is suggested by the story of a stone that the Swiss psychiatrist C. G. Jung carved and placed in the walled garden of his retreat at Bollingen on Lake Zurich. In his autobiography, Jung wrote that the stone was one of many that had come from a quarry that lay directly across the lake. During the unloading of the barge, the mason who had placed the order noticed a large cubic stone that had not been ordered. Angrily, the mason told the men working for him that the stone must be returned to the quarry. Jung arrived upon the scene at this moment and observed the stone that had been rejected. "No, that is my stone. I must have it!" he said. "It struck my fancy and I leapt upon it, with the decision not only to keep it but to carve its face." Jung eventually carved on three of its faces. On one face, the first that he worked on, is chiseled a verse from the works of the thirteenth-century alchemist Arnaldus de Villanova: "Here stands the mean, uncomely stone, 'Tis very cheap in price! The more it is despised by fools, the more loved by the wise." Jung once wrote that if properly understood, this stone contained the whole of his philosophy.

In his works The Archetypes of the Collective Unconscious and Aeon, Jung describes the linkage between alchemy and the medieval understanding of the teachings of Christ through the concept of the lapis philosophorum or Philosophers' Stone. In the alchemical tradition, the lapis is often conflated with the Christ. Both are referred to as "sacred rocks" or cornerstones, which are said to be uncomely, hidden, and of small account, but wonderful to look upon when revealed.

In The Secret Doctrine, the commentary to the Stanzas of Dzyan also refers to "one rejected" (The Secret Doctrine, I, 99). In this case it is the sun. The commentary goes on to tell the story from the Rig Veda of Aditi, the Mother of the Gods, and her eight children. Aditi represents the cosmic matrix out of which the sun and the planets known to antiquity were born. Of these children, one, the sun, was cast away and separated from the others because of its primacy. By being cast away, the sun becomes the cornerstone of our solar system and the pivot around which the planets revolve. It is a primary star, as the ancients perceived it, that provides light and love and is the indispensable ingredient for life as we know it on this earthly plane.

On a more mundane level, the Theosophical Society might be seen as a rejected one of our time, an organization that is neglected by the mainstream and generally held to be a curiosity from the past—if it is thought of at all. Yet like other seemingly rejected cornerstones, its ideas and influence have shaped the ways of custom and understanding in the contemporary world. One can readily find the influence of the TS in the ideas that inform our culture's understanding of the meaning and purpose of life. There would seem to be a measure of truth, then, in the statement attributed to the Maha Chohan, the head of the inner order with which the Society is aligned, that the TS "was chosen as the corner stone, the foundation of the future religion of humanity" (The Mahatma Letters, chronological edition, 478).

H. P. Blavatsky stated more than once that Theosophy is not a religion per se; rather it is the essence of religion. By "religion," she did not mean the term in the somewhat constrained and dogmatic way that it was commonly understood in her time. She meant it in the fullness of its original meaning, which is perhaps more along the lines of how the term "spirituality" is used today.

In this wider sense, there clearly are new religious or spiritual developments, emerging in the world, which can often be traced back to the influence of the Theosophical Society and its offshoots. These include the establishment of various Buddhist traditions in the West, the emergence of feminine spirituality, and the establishment of concepts such as reincarnation and karma in the common vernacular. In the generation or so after its founding in 1875, the Theosophical Society played a significant role in introducing the world to a deeper awareness to the spiritual riches of the East. It was Theosophists in England, for example, who awakened a young student, Mohandas K. Gandhi, to the religious wealth of his own Indian heritage through their English translations of the Bhagavad Gita and Mahabharata.

The emergence of a renewed spirituality can also be observed in today's religious eclecticism, as expressed by such concepts as inter- or transtraditional spirituality, which attempt to characterize the many people who are drawing meaning and practices from various traditions in forming a unique and individual approach to spiritual practice. This eclecticism is reflected in the Society's Second Object, which encourages the comparative study of religion, science, and philosophy as a path to better understanding the ideas that influence spiritual perceptions and practices.

The deepening awareness of Buddhism in the West can be seen as one of the most significant religious developments of the last quarter of the twentieth century, and it is one in which the Theosophical Society played a prominent part. Both Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott were practicing Buddhists. Olcott played a significant and honored role in helping to restore the place of Buddhism in the culture of Sri Lanka. Blavatsky's esteem for and close ties to the Buddhist practices of Tibet are well documented. Since then, Theosophists have been continuously involved in helping dislocated Tibetans settle in India, Europe, and America. The Theosophical Society hosted the Dalai Lama at Adyar in 1975, and later at the national center in Wheaton during his first visit to North America. (Plans are afoot to sponsor another presentation by him, probably in 2012.) The Theosophical Publishing House also issued The Opening of the Wisdom-Eye, the first of the Dalai Lama's books to be published for a Western readership, in 1966.

While the TS is typically assigned something of an Eastern orientation, there is no denying that the Egyptian, Hermetic, and alchemical traditions also provided essential source material for the works of Blavatsky and those who have followed in her footsteps. The influence of the Theosophical Society can also be found in the reawakened awareness of esoteric Christianity that was central to the life work of Rudolf Steiner. Steiner was a prominent member of the TS in Germany before breaking off in 1912 to form the Anthroposophical Society as a container for his own work. Another early Theosophist, G. R. S. Mead, was a translator of significant Gnostic texts that reintroduced, modernized, and helped make practical the esoteric threads of Western spirituality.

Notwithstanding these accomplishments, the essential work for which the Society was formed is far from done. As expressed in the Theosophical World View, the central concern of the Society is "to promote understanding and brotherhood among people of all races, nationalities, philosophies, and religions." Even as a shared sense of global community is slowly forming in the world, enhanced by developments in transportation and communications, the great environmental, economic, and sectarian challenges that we face continuously divide us. We are still called on to strive, as is also said in the Maha Chohan's letter, "to achieve the proposed object, a greater, wiser, and especially a more benevolent intermingling of the high and the low, of the Alpha and the Omega of society" (Mahatma Letters, chronological edition, 478).

It may be useful to recall that the core spiritual teachings embodied in the Theosophical tradition are rooted in love and compassion. This call to live for the well-being of others is exemplified by the virtues of the Bodhisattva and the commandment of Jesus Christ to "love one another." From this perspective, the great exemplars of humanity are those who devote their lives to helping reduce and eliminate suffering in the world.

In other words, Theosophy recognizes that while one's spiritual quest might appear to be individual and unique, and self-realization an individual attainment, that endeavor can only be undertaken in the context of a relational and inextricably interconnected world. In this sense, spiritual awakening is essentially a work of learning to live in harmony with and in service to one another and the world around us.

There can be little doubt that these teachings about our shared human bonds are underappreciated and largely disregarded. It seems likely that awakening a true awareness of interconnectedness and shared responsibility for the well-being of others is the work not of a lifetime or a century but of an eon. It may be that the forms of religious practice that call to us from the future will be rooted in an emerging relational spirituality that honors both the individual and the communal, thereby healing the mistrust and fear that dualistic perceptions seem to engender.

We're not there yet. From our current vantage point, it appears that there are lifetimes to be lived and much to be done before the realized Objects of the Theosophical tradition might shine forth as luminously as the light of the sun. When that day does finally come, as the teachings say it inevitably must, all those who have toiled on its behalf will be able to share a measure of satisfaction at having helped to nurture the work of this one rejected, this cornerstone of that endeavor.


"Minor Lile is a spiritual director and has been a resident manager at Indralaya, the Theosophical center in the Pacific Northwest, for over eleven years. He leads workshops on relationship and community and has served on the board of directors of the Theosophical Society in America.


The Theosophical Path of Meditation

 by Pablo D. Sender

Originally printed in the Winter 2011 issue of Quest magazine. 
Citation: Sender, Pablo D. “The Theosophical Path of Meditaiton.” Quest  99. 1 (Winter 2011): 15-18.

Theosophical Society - Pablo Sender became a member of the Theosophical Society in his native Argentina and has presented Theosophical lectures, seminars, and classes around the world.The Theosophical Society was arguably the first organization in modern times to widely promote meditation in the West. Today more and more people are aware of meditation as an important aspect of the spiritual life, and when they get in touch with Theosophy they want to know what the recommended practice is. Although the Theosophical approach refrains from promoting any particular system of meditation for all people to follow, a wealth of teachings about meditation can be found in the Theosophical literature. In this article we will explore some of the methods recommended. 

The Aim

People come to meditation for a wide variety of reasons. Many of them see in it a relaxation technique, or a method to reduce the stress caused by daily living. Others look at it as a way to generate pleasant emotional or psychological states, like peace, harmony, and joy. Others meditate in order to experience visions or to develop psychic powers. But from a Theosophical point of view, meditation has a more transcendental aim. Although its practice may produce some of the effects described above, its real purpose is, as I. K. Taimni says, “to bring the lower personality in conscious touch with the Higher Self, thus making it increasingly aware of its divine origin, destiny, and nature” (Taimni, 320). Once that aim is accomplished, its practice can take the aspirant even further. Geoffrey Hodson says: “The second objective [of meditation] is to realise that the Spiritual Self of man is forever an integral part of the Spiritual Self of the Universe” (Hodson, 3).

If one comes to meditation simply to derive physical or psychological benefits, a fairly simple practice can bring the desired results. This kind of practice is frequently suitable for people beginning to explore meditation. Nevertheless, while it may build the foundation for a deeper approach, in and of itself it may not be enough to enable the aspirant to get in touch with his or her true spiritual Self. In order to attain such a high aim, the practice of meditation has to fulfill certain conditions, as will be presently discussed. In addition, the whole life of the aspirant has to be gradually brought in tune with this lofty purpose. This is why the Theosophical tradition sees meditation as only a part of spiritual practice, which must be accompanied by study, service, self-knowledge, and a general effort towards self-transformation.

 Foundations 

The first thing that most people ask when approaching this subject is what technique of meditation they should practice. This may not be the best place to begin. Before starting to walk, one should make sure that one is heading in the right direction. Hugh Shearman wrote: “The question, then, is not what technique of meditation is being used, but who is using it, what motivating selfhood has activated this process” (Shearman, 143). As has already been said, Theosophical meditation aims at transcending the personal self. If it is used as a means for personal aggrandizement, it may produce some results at this level, but it is unlikely to have any transcendent effect. It is important to give some thought to this question because spirituality is frequently approached like mundane life—as a process of acquiring. One may not be accumulating objects, but all the same one is trying to acquire virtues, peace, happiness, etc., as personal possessions. While it is true that the development of virtues is necessary at a certain stage of our spiritual growth, virtues can flower only when they are pursued not for our personal enjoyment but because they are doors through which our real spiritual nature can express itself. Most people do not realize that the personal self is the real source of conflict. Letting go of it and discovering the true Self is the only way to real happiness. In fact, spiritual meditation begins when one is able to leave the personal self behind. Techniques are merely preliminary means to get to this point. One will never be able to reach that point if one comes to meditation trying to acquire something. As Annie Besant said: “Meditation means this opening out of the soul to the Divine and letting the Divine shine in without obstruction from the personal self. Therefore it means renunciation. It means throwing away everything that one has, and waiting empty for the light to come in” (Besant, The Building of the Kosmos, 119). Thus, in the Theosophical approach, the practice of meditation aims at leading the aspirant to a state where he or she must leave behind the personal self and all mental processes to get in touch with his or her spiritual nature.

All serious spiritual traditions talk about the need for physical, moral, and mental preparation in order to be able to meditate effectively. The Theosophical tradition also emphasizes as part of spiritual practice the gradual adoption of a pure and healthy lifestyle; the development of emotional maturity, which comes from moral living and lessening our attachments, passions, and lower desires; the cultivation of an understanding of oneself and the universe; and the development of an unselfish attitude. This, of course, does not mean that one cannot meditate starting right from where one is at this moment. On the contrary, when the approach is holistic, the practice of meditation will aid the efforts in these areas, and vice versa. 

Methods 

Meditation on Spiritual Concepts

In this approach, the practitioner chooses a relevant spiritual subject and employs all his or her mental powers to deeply ponder, inquire, and reflect on it. When a process of inquiry takes place with a very focused and calm mind, there is the possibility of awakening spiritual intuition. But for this to happen, there has to be an effort to grasp the truth of the subject in its more universal aspect. C. Jinarajadasa said: “As the mind contemplates the facts which have been brought into a framework of unity, there dawns on the mind the new faculty of intuition. Consciousness then understands the true and inner nature of all that is present before the mind” (Jinarajadasa, The New Humanity of Intuition, 23).

This is a good method for beginners. This deep inquiry stimulates the higher or abstract mind, which perceives spiritual realities and receives the flashes of intuition. Thus meditation on spiritual concepts provides insights into the reality of life and into oneself, gradually producing wisdom.

Some central Theosophical themes to meditate on are the unity of all life, the law of karma, spiritual evolution as the purpose of life, the power of thought, and the real Self beyond the temporary vehicles of consciousness. One can also meditate on spiritual aphorisms. A collection of them may be found in books like Thoughts for Aspirants, Gifts of the Lotus, among others. There are also inspirational books like At the Feet of the Master, Light on the Path, and The Voice of the Silence that can be used for this purpose. 

Meditation on Virtues

Theosophical literature explains that every thought and feeling one entertains attracts subtle matter that builds one’s emotional and mental bodies. Through these bodies one thinks, feels, perceives the world, and reacts to it. Meditation on a virtue will gradually purify the subtle bodies and enable them to vibrate in response to higher and more refined emotions and aspirations. In addition, this type of meditation helps expand consciousness through insights into the nature of the virtues. Remember, however, that when we meditate on a virtue, we should do it with humility—out of love of, and devotion to, that particular expression of Truth, and not out of greed to acquire it.

For this type of meditation, you may choose any virtue that attracts you—a quality that you believe a spiritual aspirant should have. Alternatively, you may examine your character to identify a distinct shortcoming you want to be free of. In this case, you should not meditate on the weakness itself but on its opposite virtue. Thus, if you are irritable, you may meditate on patience. But you must examine yourself and try to go to the root of the problem. For example, if you are not truthful, you would naturally think you should meditate on truth. But if you are not truthful because you are anxious about being accepted by others, you may want to meditate on courage or on self-confidence.

Once you choose the virtue, you can meditate, first, by trying to realize its essence. Then try to perceive this virtue inside of you as well as the inner obstacles that are hindering its expression. Finally, you can meditate on how this virtue would express itself in your life, in general or in specific situations.

In addition to the above technique, there is a different approach that involves the use of imagination. Here, you visualize yourself as the embodiment of the virtue. Annie Besant describes this process: “One favourite way of mine—for I was very irritable in my younger days— . . . was making myself an embodiment of patience; you never saw such a saint as I was in my meditation; whatever I might have been outside of it during the day, I was absolutely, completely, and perfectly patient in it! Then I brought up round me mentally all the most unpleasant and provoking people that I knew, and I heightened their power of provocation as much as I increased my own power of patience; and so I made a little mental drama, in which they provoked me in every possible way, and I answered as a modern Griselda” (Besant, Mans Life in This and Other Worlds, 61).

As Besant indicates, this technique requires that one strive to express that virtue as much as possible in daily life, so that the process of building the subtle bodies is not undone during the rest of the day. 

Meditation on the One Life

One of the central concepts in Theosophy is that ultimately there is only one life and one Self animating everything in the universe. Although consciousness in most people is constrained to work through what they call “me,” this limit is not intrinsic to consciousness itself. It is perfectly possible to perceive the one life as it manifests in any creature because there is no real boundary to consciousness, as many mystics have said.

At the beginning of the practice, the perception of unity may be mainly at an intellectual level, or at the level of the imagination. Gradually, this perception becomes more and more intuitive until an actual expansion of consciousness may be experienced.

A typical approach to this meditation involves an expansion of mind, in imagination, in all space, embracing larger and larger areas. As the mind expands, one tries to conceive and feel the unity with all, including every manifestation of the divine life.

You may start by imagining that you are looking at your house from above while trying to feel unity with all people that live there—whether you feel affinity for them or not. You can then include those who frequently visit the house, as well as other forms of life there, such as pets, birds, insects, and plants. Do not focus on the forms, but think of the divine life that is animating them all. Take your time in this step until you feel ready to go further. Then, as if zooming out, go higher, above the town you are in. Try to feel unity with everything that is there; with good people as well as with the ignorant, the unhappy, and the criminal; with both beautiful and ugly places. Again, disregard the outward appearances and try to identify with the one life that is struggling to express itself through all these different forms. As C. W. Leadbeater wrote: “During meditation one may try to think of the Supreme Self in everything, and everything in it. Try to understand how the Self is endeavouring to express itself through the form” (Leadbeater, 142). Remember that the universal Self is always perfect, pure, and divine, even if the form obstructs and distorts its manifestation.

In this same way, go higher until you include your country, then the whole world, then the solar system, and finally the entire universe. But remember not to hurry through the different steps. You do not need to go through them all. It is more important to do your best to realize the unity at each step, including in your consciousness all the different elements that belong to each stage.

Meditation on a Divine Being

During this meditation the aspirant puts before his or her mental eye an ideal of perfection, embodied in the form of a holy or divine being. In the Theosophical tradition the object of meditation is usually a Master of Wisdom, or the Higher Self. But aspirants can also meditate on any deity, sage, or holy person toward whom they feel devotion.

For this meditation to be effective, it is necessary to be careful not to project one’s own limitations, such as feelings of jealousy, partisanship, anger, or selfishness, onto the divine being. Otherwise it will not be possible to get in rapport with the divine. Mahatma Morya warns about “the magnetism and invisible results proceeding from erroneous and sincere beliefs.” Thoughts are living things, and when an aspirant holds a wrong belief, it “attracts millions of foreign influences, living entities and powerful agents around them” that block spiritual influences (Barker and Chin, 95).

Theosophists were the first in the West to talk clearly and openly about the Masters of Wisdom, more than a century ago. Today there are all kinds of incompatible ideas about them. For example, the New Age idea of “Ascended Masters” has features that differ in very important aspects from the Theosophical one. While this is a complex subject, basically the New Age treats the Master as if he were an acquaintance of ours, but endowed with supernatural powers so that one can ask him things for one’s personal needs. Thus, in this view one can summon him, visit him whenever one wants, and so on, as if the Masters were just hanging out on the inner planes. HPB once wrote a letter to certain members who had begun to conceive of them in this way, saying that they were desecrating the Masters by doing this. She contended that the Masters regard this physical plane as an illusion and do not care much about the personality. Their work is mainly at the level of the developing Higher Ego, and they engage with the physical plane in a very limited way, and only if it is really necessary. Consequently, in the Theosophical view their personalities (bodies, names, etc.) are not as important as they are in the New Age. The external attributes are taken just as the shadow of that magnificent state of consciousness that the Master really is.

To use the Master of Wisdom as the object of meditation, it is first recommended that one study about their nature as described in Theosophical literature. The first chapters of the book The Way of the Disciple by Clara Codd can be a good place to start.

For this meditation you can proceed in two ways:

Visualize the holy figure in front of you and concentrate your mind on the image with a feeling of love or devotion, or try to feel one with this being. If the feeling of devotion is not particularly strong, you may deeply ponder on the real nature of the divine being, while contemplating its image. If you are unable to form a clear and stable image, there are two additional options: either concentrate on the feeling of the holy presence before you, or meditate with your eyes open while looking at a picture, statuette, or symbol of the object of meditation.

Alternatively, the holy figure may be visualized in the region of the heart. Mahatma Koot Hoomi is reported to have said: “Your best method is to concentrate on the Master as a Living Man within you. Make His image in your heart, and a focus of concentration, so as to lose all sense of bodily existence in the one thought” (quoted in Blavatsky, 12:696). The heart is highly regarded in most spiritual traditions. Blavatsky wrote: “The Heart is the organ of the Spiritual Consciousness . . . [It] is the abode of the Spiritual Man, whereas the Psycho-Intellectual Man dwells in the Head” (Blavatsky, 12:694). It is important to understand, however, that here the heart does not mean the physical muscle. It refers to a nonphysical center situated in that region of the body through which we can contact spiritual consciousness. The figure can be visualized either in the cavity of the heart or just outside the body, at the level of the physical organ, where the subtler etheric center is found.

 Meditation on the Subtle Bodies and Beyond

The last method that will be explored is based on the Theosophical teaching of the subtle bodies. Therefore, a fairly good grasp of this subject will greatly help the process of meditation. According to Theosophy, besides the physical body human beings possess several subtle bodies: the emotional, mental, and causal. The physical, emotional, and mental bodies compose the personal—or lower—ego. Beyond the personality there is the causal body, which is the vehicle of the individual soul, also called the Higher Ego. Even beyond the causal body there is the spirit or Monad, the divine spark in each person that is one with the universe. In his Meditation on Life, N. Sri Ram wrote:

The first object in meditation is to discover one's own Spiritual Selfhood as distinct from the personal vehicle, physical, emotional, mental, and the consciousness active within them. So we begin with an exercise in dissociation seeking both to realize the distinction between the Immortal Spiritual Self and the mortal changing personality. We then come to realize that the Spiritual Self of man is forever an integral part of the Spiritual Self of the universe, the All-Pervading Supreme Lord. Man is One with God and through that with All that lives.

There are two general approaches to this type of meditation, which can be called “positive” and “negative.” The positive approach seeks to generate the highest possible vibration in each body so as to progressively raise the level of consciousness. For example, first try to generate a sense of health and harmony at the physical level; next go to the emotional level and feel peace and love; and then go to the mental level and think of any spiritual concept that is appealing. Now go even further and picture yourself as being the Higher Ego in the causal body. Feel that your real Identity is beyond the body, emotions, and mind. Finally, try to realize that you are an inseparable spark of the divine fire, and dwell on the feeling of unity.

The negative approach, as its name suggests, is based on a process of negation. With this practice, try to realize that you are not the lower principles, leaving behind one body after the other. Realize that, since the physical body is not eternal, this cannot be your real Self. Do the same with your emotional and mental bodies, leaving behind emotions and thoughts. Finally, stay in the highest possible state without picturing anything, but waiting for the higher consciousness to arrive.

This meditation helps generate the habit of identifying yourself with the higher. This should be complemented in daily life with an effort to perceive things beyond the personal point of view.

This article offers just an overview of a few methods of meditation recommended in the Theosophical literature. For further information and material you can visit the Web site www.dzyantheosophy.org.


 

References

Barker, A. T., and Vicente Hao Chin Jr., eds. The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett from the Mahatmas M. and K. H. in Chronological Sequence. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 1998.

Beechey, Katherine. Daily Meditations. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 1990.

Besant, Annie. The Building of the Kosmos and Other Lectures. London: Theosophical Publishing House, 1918.

———. Mans Life in This and Other Worlds. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 1913.

———. Meditations on the Path and Its Qualifications. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 2008.

Blavatsky, H. P. Collected Writings. 15 vols. Wheaton: Theosophical Publishing House, 1977-91.

Codd, Clara. The Way of the Disciple. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 2000.

Hanson, Virginia. Gifts of the Lotus. Wheaton: Quest, 1974.

Hodson, Geoffrey. A Yoga of Light. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 2003.

Jinarajadasa, C. Fragments. Wheaton: Quest, 1980.

———. The New Humanity of Intuition. Adyar: Theosophical Publishing House, 1938.

Leadbeater, C. W. The Inner Life. Wheaton: Quest, 1996.

 http://www.theosophicalsociety.gr/aikya/Meditation.htm (This link is no longer valid)

———. Thoughts for Aspirants. Wheaton: Quest, 1989.

Shearman, Hugh. “Meditation.” The Theosophist 102, no. 4 (Jan. 1981).

Taimni, I. K. “Some Interesting Aspects of Meditation.” The American Theosophist 58, no. 11 (Nov. 1970).


Pablo D. Sender has given Theosophical lectures, seminars, and classes in the India, Spain, the U.S., and different countries of Latin America. He has published articles in Spanish and English in several Theosophical journals, which can be found on his Web site, http://www.pablosender.com/.


Kids These Days

by Christopher Richards

Originally printed in the Winter 2011 issue of Quest magazine under the name Christopher Richardson. 
Citation: Richardson, Christopher. "Kids These Days." Quest  99. 1 (Winter 2011): 10-14.

I don"t understand kids these days. What with their Nosebook and Tweeter and iBones and all those crazy interwebs. Back when I was a kid, which was last century, we didn't have all this crazy technology. Our video games had only two dimensions, and computers were still visible to the naked eye. Cell phones were for talking, not flying airplanes or elective surgery, and you sure as heck couldn't accidentally swallow one. Yes, folks, times sure were simpler last millennium.

If I really felt like this, I'd no doubt be in good company. My mom's, for instance. We were at a cafe when she uttered, without irony, the classic phrase "kids these days," followed by a short but exasperated litany of behaviors that clearly presaged the end times. If you"re burdened with enough knowledge of history, it's difficult to hear such prognostications without smiling. Not only have elders been shaking their heads at the younger generation for as long as humans have lived, such writings actually constitute their own genre. One early example, found on clay tablets, called "A Father and His Perverse Son," dates to 1700 bc, although it may have originally been composed centuries earlier. In it, a Sumerian father counsels his son to pay attention in school, respect his elders, and not to hang out in the streets. The son is rebuked for not following in his father's professional footsteps and for taking for granted how easy his life is. Any cursory search will yield similar treasures from Egyptian, Greek, and Roman cultures. One of my personal favorites from a more recent era complains that the abundance of entertainment options is making it impossible for "kids these days" to learn, or even properly think. This was written in 1915.

Theosophists are trained to think in terms of cycles. That, combined with a sense of temporality that dwarfs even geological time, should act as a bulwark against lapses into intergenerational paranoia. Instead, with an eye towards what is fundamentally human, we see perennial structures underlying, undergirding, and making understandable the patterns on the ever-changing surface.

Such cycles can present themselves like a glass containing contents that approximate half of its capacity—a simple Rorschach test for your attitude. Recognizing your experience as a variant of a larger pattern allows for a sense of either comfort or futility.

Years ago, while working at the Quest Book Shop at the National Center, I was cleaning out a storage area and came across an ancient and mysterious crate. Despite my delirious hopes, it did not turn out to be a long-lost cache of esoteric instructions ferreted away by the Masters to await their destined recipient. It was something both more mundane and more revelatory. It was filled with carbon copies of letters from the 1940s, written by Joy Mills when she was the head of the Young Theosophists. I had myself recently become the leader of the Young Theosophists and was struggling with a host of issues for which I had no guide. These letters revealed a young Joy Mills grappling with the very same issues. Which texts to study. How to balance the needs of visitors attending meetings for the first time with those of young people already advanced in their studies. How to integrate with the wider TSA, and whether even having a separate group was nurturing the next generation or segregating them. Joy is one of the Theosophists whom I revere. Her profoundly sharp mind and intellectual restlessness combined with a consistent warmth towards and embrace of young people elevated her to a unique position within the Young Theosophists of my generation; we held her up as a model to aspire towards. Reading her words from when she was my age, and receiving the consequent revelation of how long her path had been, provided me with a sense of place within a wider cycle.

While this wider view of time may protect us against rash judgments about kids these days, it does not mean that very real and profound changes don't occur. One generation of women was shocked and appalled when another generation began wearing pants. Such a move wasn't merely a shift in fashion. It was a sign of an irrevocable change in direction for women and their place in society. Many of today"s complaints focus on technology, and rightfully so. Today's cell phones are not just distracting new toys; they are instantiations of an entirely new and emergent consciousness, flashing beacons from a shore whose banks we are fast approaching. It is just as likely that we will arrive in a strange and foreign and promising new land as it is that we will be dashed upon the rocks or devoured by the inhabitants whose language we do not speak.

Marshall McLuhan argued that all media are extensions of human capacities. The bike and car extend the foot, the radio the mouth and ear. Each extension, however, results in a simultaneous amputation. With automated transportation comes a loss of neighborhoods and the other environments that walking creates. With any new technology, we have a responsibility to critically assess such extensions and amputations. To do so, we have to look past the content of any given medium to the ways in which the medium alters the form, scale, and speed of human relations and activities. Western culture has long been so hypnotized by the content of print that the effect of print is rarely questioned. Most of us know the story of Europe's emergence out of the Dark Ages. In this story, the printing press is the hero. With access to the Bible and increased literacy, people were no longer beholden to ecclesiastical authority. There is a straight line from Gutenberg through the French Revolution and on to both Barack Obama and Sarah Palin.

The ubiquity of print had another, invisible consequence. It led an entire civilization to fall under the spell of a medium that surreptitiously homogenized structures of consciousness. Whereas most of the population had been participating in a primarily oral culture, with was locally variegated and dynamic, print was visual, ordered, sequential, and static. As a result, the culture became inundated with these values. We became a typographical culture, one in which thinking equaled reading. A similar shift had occurred on a smaller scale in Greece almost two millennia earlier. The values of Homeric Greece, shaped by the oral tradition reflected in the Iliad, were replaced by those of Attic Greek culture. Socrates may have been skeptical of the written word, but Plato was already fully under its spell. The idea of the Ideas is unimaginable prior to the unchanging written word, and it is no accident that the Renaissance harks back to classical Greece.

Like a flash of lightning in the night sky, electricity dramatically reveals an entirely new vision, and, once harnessed, irrevocably changes every aspect of human existence. I live near Chicago, but am writing these words from a cafe in the mountains of Virginia. I have just had a video chat with a friend in Mexico and have received pictures from another in Prague. Experiences are now instantaneous, always accessible, field like phenomena. Just as the printing press accelerated and amplified its consequent consciousness, so the confluence of personal computers, smart phones, and the Internet are bringing to a mass scale the inevitable result of forays into new media.

One inevitable risk of such emergence is that just as one generation is reactively frightened by the extensions created by new media, another generation blindly embraces the amputation. Kids these days are the forward crest of a wave, but the effects of the technology are not age-specific. And again Theosophists seem, in general, more immune to generational cliches. Just as Joy Mills consistently shames me with the breadth of her studies, John Kern likewise consistently outpaces me with his embrace of technology. A short time ago I was discussing an open source database and constituent resource management platform with John when I suddenly realized that the man in front of me fought in World War II. I"ve met many older Theosophists who have no fear whatsoever of new technology, even if they are overwhelmed by the variety and pace of its developments. As such, we are in a good position to navigate the new environments created. Furthermore, as stewards of an ageless wisdom that must always find new timely expressions, we have a responsibility to examine which aspects of Theosophy are a result of the disappearing environment created by print, and which can made newly relevant in the emerging environment.

I have always felt that the Theosophical Society offers two things: information and community. If these are indeed our products, we have to recognize when the marketplace fundamentally shifts. Two general and two specifically Theosophical examples may serve as starting points for discussion: online dating, Web surfing, discipleship, and the seven bodies model.

The structure of intimate human partnerships are always governed by their social context. Marriage can serve any number of functions, from ensuring a continuity of property to cementing strategic alliances to providing the necessary foundation for emerging capitalist culture. Even within the modern understanding of marriage as a partnership based on love, the pool of potential partners has largely been dictated by geography and class. Internet dating is causing a radical upheaval in these structures. Information that previously may not have been learned until many years into a relationship is now broadcast before meeting. People are expected to know themselves and what they want and share what they know. With an overabundance of choice comes a need for filtering.

Only a context that ensures that marriages don't dissolve, whether through legality or simple communal shame, can allow partnerships to be based on general and simple criteria. Devoid of such structure, younger generations seek to avoid the complex psychological causes of their parents' separations by seeking sophisticated psychological compatibility and specific mutual interests from the outset. Whether this will reduce the divorce rate remains to be seen, but there is no doubt that the phenomenon indicates a fundamental shift in the nature of human partnering. (According to the online dating site E-harmony, one in five relationships now begin online, although this claim is unsubstantiated.)

Just as Internet dating reveals a change in the way community is formed, Web surfing exemplifies a new approach to information, made necessary by overabundance. One of the foundations of modern culture has been the relationship between knowledge and power. Authority has long depended upon information. What happens when a teenager in a small rural town has access to more information through her cell phone than an Oxford don has in the Bodleian? We don't know the answer yet, because the shift is just beginning, but we can already see that the need for information acquisition is being displaced by the need for pattern recognition. Surfing is the appropriate metaphor for navigating the Web. In order to get anywhere, the surfers needs to be able to quickly identify patterns in the water, to know when and where a wave is going to crest. Once on the wave, they have to remain always engaged, because the wave is a dynamic phenomenon. We"re truly in a pulsing ocean of information, and those who don't know how to catch the wave will be pounded by it.

Discipleship, as described in Theosophical literature, particularly the works of Annie Besant and C. W. Leadbeater, is consistent with the essential qualities of the outgoing typographical structure of consciousness. It is linear, sequential, ordered, uniform. As such, I would be skeptical of its continued relevance. This is not to say that discipleship doesn't occur, but rather that the way in which we understand it may no longer be accurate. It could be argued that the texts support the current view of discipleship, but a little research and reflection reveals that our understanding of Eastern sources is really the interpretation of nineteenth-century European scholars who projected their own conditioned structure of consciousness on to the seething variety of religious experiences of non-Western cultures.

Any clean, ordered description of phenomena should be suspect. This is precisely why the visionary thinker and author William Irwin Thompson, the true heir of Marshall McLuhan, is so dismissive of Ken Wilber. Although Wilber trumpets a new worldview, the highly linear maps of consciousness that illustrate his books only serve to reinforce the old one. To read Wilber is to court the danger of falling under the spell of a dying worldview. By contrast, if philosophers like Martin Heidegger and Jean Gebser are so difficult to read, it is in part because they"re provoking the mind to escape the bonds of the written word they are still forced to use.

On the other hand, the Theosophical concept of multiple, interpenetrating bodies is uncannily amenable to a new electric consciousness. If we look past the content of the Internet to its form, what do we behold? An always available, instantaneous means of accessing information, entertainment, and social networks, a field through which no path is given, a collapse of time and space. Is there anything about the Theosophical model of the human constitution that is put under threat by such a worldview? As incarnate beings, we encounter ourselves as multiplicities, as momentary convergences of dynamic fields, occupying physical, energetic, emotional, mental, and spiritual spaces simultaneously. There is no obvious hierarchy; effects cascade from one field to another. Our hormones shape our emotions, our attitudes inform our health. Each field, or window, accesses a given world with its own particular patterns, or types of karma.

On a macro scale, a similar shift in the perception of structures has long been documented. Ecology recognizes that the complexity of the natural world does not allow for linear, ordered explanations. Quantum physics" displacement of the Newtonian order may be an intellectual cliche, but with the advance of technology now apparently disrupting the structures of human relations, we can now expect to see this paradigm emerge into our everyday lives. Even the attempt to identify the structure of new media is fraught when we look with eyes trained by the old. The content of a book is simple to identify, but what is the content of Facebook? We need to constantly ask ourselves, how am I relating to others in a new way? What do I do now that I didn"t do before? Where do I see the consequences of such action? What do I no longer do? What am I now unable to do?

Personally, I"m a big fan of Twitter. This environment, which is accessible through the Internet or a smart phone, allows for broadcasting in short bursts to anyone listening. Unlike in Facebook, the identities involved are formed by these "tweets" rather than pictures or relationships to other entities. It is extraordinarily ephemeral, as each new utterance displaces previous ones. It does allow for conversation, but it"s more akin to walking through a crowded village square with very good ears. As such, it creates a village square where there was none. I live in a town called Oak Park, just outside of downtown Chicago. Through Twitter, I met other people who live in Oak Park. We all began listening to each other, sharing news and opinions, and eventually began getting together in person. We were already a geographic community, but other technological developments (such as rapid transportation and television) had effectively amputated the social community. This new medium renewed the social aspect but allowed it to structure itself around mutual interest rather than the necessity of commerce.

On the other hand, the technology excludes from the same social sphere those who are not participating in it. When my mom complains about kids always being on their cell phones, she"s not seeing that they're actually participating in a new social environment. She isn't complaining because she does not have access to that space. Rather, what she is suffering is the realization that the old environment, which existed before geographical and social community diverged, has been lost.

Kids these days do live in a new world. That world is created by the technology we all use, whether we"re conscious of it or not. That world is invisible to anyone who doesn"t reflect on it. In order for Theosophy to find a place in this new world, it will need people who can articulate it in the language of this new environment. These articulations may be profoundly unsettling to those attached to the old forms. Here a bit of faith may help. The cycle will continue, we"ll pass away, and in some future lifetime we will again be the "kids these days."


Christopher Richardson holds a degree in philosophy from Shimer College, has studied in Kyoto and Oxford, and is former national coordinator of the Young Theosophists. Having served two terms on the Theosophical Society in America"s board of directors and lecturing and leading workshops at several Theosophical centers, Chris currently manages the contemporary music ensemble Eighth Blackbird and is president of New Music Chicago.


The Tao of It

From an interpretation of the Tao Te Ching

by S.J. "Peaceman" McGuire

Originally printed in the Fall 2010 issue of Quest magazine. 
Citation: McGuire,S.J.. "The Tao of It." Quest  98. 4 (Fall 2010): 147-150.

1. it is

how can i explain it?

it goes beyond saying

it just is

it has been here all along

it is now

this is it

here is it

it is all around us

it is everywhere

it is everything

it is all there is

it is all it

it cannot be named

it is the name

consider it

it is even that which is not

it was even that which was not

it makes you wonder

that's about it

 

2. it is both

it is more than that

it is this and that

it is now and then

it is here and after

it is more or less

it is all or nothing

it is off and on

it is neither and both

it is either or

it rises and sets

it becomes what it is not

it knows what it needs to do

it is doing it

it comes and goes

it follows itself

it is one to the other

it is over when it's over

now you see it now you don't

it is not for us to say

it is as it does

it keeps on doing it

here it comes again

 

3. it's self

it's proof

it is self-evident

it is self-actuating

it happens all the time

there it is 'cause here it is

now it is this

keep it in perspective

think it over

let it go

it is not of us

it is us

we are not it

we are of it

let it be

it will come

it knows itself

it works itself out

 

4. it's all it ever was

same as it ever was

all it could ever be

as much as it needs

it's even where it's not

it's endless

it's beginningless

it's timeless

it doesn't matter where it comes from

don't dwell on it

it dwells in you

count on it

 

8. let it

it flows

it settles

it's self-leveling

it's happy where it is

it knows where to go

keep it connected

keep close with it

be fair about it

be generous with it

don't try to possess it

don't try to control it

don't try to own it

it's not for you to decide

it's for you to see

enjoy it

be good with it

be happy with it

it is working out for you

revel in it

it rests at your feet

 

10. as it may

can you do it?

will you do it?

how will it be for you?

will you allow it?

remember to remember it

let it happen

it's happening

go along with it

lift yourself up by it

take care of it

take care with it

watch and see how it goes

do it just because

don't take credit for it

 

18. it's like it knows what it's doing

is it any wonder?

it takes itself

it takes what it needs

it provides for itself

it has a way about it

it was so that it can be

it is so that it will be

it prepares for itself

it's self perpetuating

it's on purpose

it's self fulfilling

it pauses so it may resume

 

22. let it come to you

go through it

make way for it

have room for it

give in to it

be still for it

do it

save space for it

it's not for display

it's nothing to brag about

it shines

it speaks

it reveals itsself

how does it work?

it works its way

it validates itself

give it and it's yours

live it and you've got it

be it and it's you

 

25. it's the force behind the force

Jesus talked about it

Mohammad referred to it

in the beginning there was it

it was here before

it always was forever

it's calm and quiet

it's not

it begat it

it has been referred to as tao

it's not its real name

it flows throughout itself

it penetrates us

it binds us together

we are about it

it's great

its song is great

its word is great

it comes around to it

it is the gravity

it follows that it leads

it comes to this

it's before us

we ride upon it

 

26. rest in its might

it is where it comes from

we are from it

it's always the way

you must put it down to pick it up

you must step over it to get to it

why look for it beyond it

admire it from here

you have to let go of it to reach for it

don't you get it?

it's instinctual

you know it right now

 

33. it's all there within you

it's not about who or what

it's how

know it yourself

you master it as it masters you

having it is everything

with it there is you everlasting

it is to be embraced

it's enough is enough

it's to your heart's desire

it's what you've always wanted

it's from now on

 

37. all by itself

i didn't start it

it just got that way

it was already like that

if only we would do it

we could do it

it happens

it's all because of it

who feels it knows it

it is what's happening

it's how things get done

if we could just get it through our thick skulls

it's nothing to worry about

just like it is

 

46. there's no fear in it

take it to the limit

it's that we are safe

it's only scary without it

it's got your back

it's great when you've got it

it's a shame when we forget

danger has a way with it

it is nothing to be afraid of

try not to freak out over it

it's like being some kind of super hero

it's full on

live it

see through to it

it's the real deal

 

47. it doesn't take much

it's where it's at

to see it you need only to look at it

it's what you need for now

it's all you need to do it

it's effortless

it's where you find it

its less is more

it's where you put it

it's more already

it's there with you

it's a done deal

it's whether or not

it is anyway

as well it should be


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