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Theosophy
we are pleased to present here an in depth
manual of Theosophical ideas and concepts by Alfred Percy Sinnett
who
was a major contributor to the development of modern Theosophy in the early
years of the Theosophical movement
Esoteric
Buddhism
By
Alfred
Percy Sinnett
Esoteric Teachers
Chapter 1
THE information contained in the
following pages is no collection of inferences deduced from study. I am
bringing to my readers knowledge which I have obtained by favour rather than by
effort. It will not be found the less valuable on that account; I venture, on
the contrary, to declare that it will be found of incalculably greater value,
easily as I have obtained it, than any results in a similar direction which I
could possibly have procured by ordinary methods of research, even had I
possessed, in the highest degree, that which I make no claim to possess at all
- Oriental scholarship.
Every one who has been
concerned with Indian literature, and still more, any one who in India has
taken interest in talking with cultivated Natives on philosophical subjects
will be aware of a general conviction existing in the East that there are men
living who know a great deal more about philosophy in the highest acceptation
of the word - the science, the true knowledge of spiritual things, - than can
be found recorded in any books. In
With quite as much antipathy
at starting as any one could have entertained to the old Oriental policy in
regard to knowledge, I came, nevertheless, to perceive that the old Oriental
knowledge itself was a very real and important possession. It may be excusable
to regard the high grapes as sour so long as they are quite out of reach, but
it would be foolish to persist in that opinion if a tall friend hands down a
bunch and one finds them sweet.
For reasons that will appear
as the present explanations proceed, the very considerable block of hitherto
secret teaching this volume contains, has been conveyed to me, not only without
conditions of the usual kind, but to the express end that I might convey it in
my turn to the world at large.
Without the light of hitherto
secret Oriental knowledge, it is impossible by any study of its published
literature - English or Sanskrit - for students of even the most scholarly
qualifications, to reach a comprehension of the inner doctrines and real
meaning of any Oriental religion. This assertion conveys no reproach to the
sympathetic, learned, and industrious writers of great ability who have studied
Oriental religions generally, and Buddhism especially, in their external
aspects. Buddhism, above all, is a religion which has enjoyed a dual existence
from the very beginning of its introduction to the world. The real inner
meaning of its doctrines has been kept back from uninitiated students, while
the outer teachings have merely presented the multitude with a code of moral
lessons and a veiled, symbolical literature, hinting at the existence of
knowledge in the background.
This secret knowledge, in
reality, long antedated the passage through earth-life of Gautama
Buddha. Brahmin philosophy, in ages before Buddha, embodied the identical
doctrine which may now be described as Esoteric Buddhism. Its outlines had
indeed been blurred; its scientific form partially confused; but the general
body of knowledge was already in possession of a select few before Buddha came
to deal with it. Buddha, however, undertook the task of revising and refreshing
the esoteric science of the inner circle of initiates, as well as the morality
of the outer world. The circumstances under which this work was done, have been
wholly misunderstood, nor would a straightforward explanation thereof be
intelligible without explanations, which must first be furnished by a survey of
the esoteric science itself.
From Buddha’s time till now
the esoteric science referred to has been jealously guarded as a precious
heritage belonging exclusively to regularly initiated members of mysteriously
organized associations. These, so far as Buddhism is concerned, are the Arahats, or more properly Arhats,
referred to in Buddhist literature. They are the initiates who tread the
“fourth path of holiness,” spoken of in esoteric Buddhist writings. Mr Rhys Davids, referring to a multiplicity of original texts and
Sanskrit authorities, says - “One might fill pages with the awe-struck and
ecstatic praise which is lavished in Buddhist writings on this condition of
mind, the fruit of the fourth path, the state of an Arahat,
of a man made perfect according to the Buddhist faith.” And then making a
series of running quotations from Sanskrit authorities, he says - “To him who
has finished the path and passed beyond sorrow, who has freed himself on all
sides, thrown away every fetter, there is no more fever or grief....For such
there are no more births....they are in the enjoyment of Nirvana. Their old
karma is exhausted, no new karma is being produced; their hearts are free from
the longing after future life, and no new yearnings springing up within them,
they, the wise are extinguished like a lamp.” These passages, and all like
them, convey to European readers, at all events, an entirely false idea as to
what sort of person an Arhat really is, as to the
life he leads while on earth, and what he anticipates later on. But the
elucidation of such points may be postponed for the moment. Some further
passages from exoteric treatises may first be selected to show what an Arhat is generally supposed to be.
Mr Rhys Davids,
speaking of Jhana and Samadhi - the
belief that it was possible by intense self-absorption to attain supernatural
faculties and powers - goes on to say - “So far as I am aware, no instance is
recorded of any one, not either a member of the order, or a Brahmin ascetic,
acquiring these powers. A Buddha always possessed them; whether Arahats as such, could work the particular miracles
in question, and whether of mendicants, only Arahats
or only Asekhas could do so, is at present not
clear.” Very little in the sources of information on the subject that have
hitherto been explored will be found clear. But I am now merely endeavouring to show that Buddhist literature teems with
allusions to the greatness and powers of the Arhats.
For more intimate knowledge concerning them, special circumstances must furnish
us with the required explanations.
Mr Arthur Lillie, in “Buddha
and Early Buddhism,” tells us - “Six supernatural faculties were expected of
the ascetic before he could claim the grade of Arhat.
They are constantly alluded to in the Sutras as the six supernatural faculties,
usually without further specification . . . .Man has a body composed of the
four elements . . . . in this transitory body his intelligence is enchained,
the ascetic finding himself thus confused, directs his mind to the creation of
the Manas. He represents to himself, in thought, another body created
from this material body - a body with a form, members, and organs. This body,
in relation to the material body, is like the sword and the scabbard; or a
serpent issuing from a basket in which it is confined. The ascetic then,
purified and perfected, begins to practise
supernatural faculties. He finds himself able to pass through material
obstacles, walls, ramparts &c; he is able to throw his phantasmal
appearance into many places at once . . . . he can leave this world and even
reach the heaven of Brahma himself . . . . He acquires the power of hearing the
sounds of the unseen world as distinctly as those of the phenomenal world -
more distinctly in point of fact. Also by the power of Manas he is able
to read the most secret thoughts of others, and to tell their characters.” And
so on with illustrations. Mr Lillie has not quite accurately divined the nature
of the truth lying behind this popular version of the facts; but it is hardly
necessary to quote more to show that the powers of the Arhats
and their insight into spiritual things are respected by the world of Buddhism
most profoundly, even though the Arhats themselves
have been singularly indisposed to favour the world with autobiographies or
scientific accounts of “the six supernatural powers.”
A few sentences from Mr. Hoey’s recent translation of Dr Oldenberg’s
“Budda: his Life, his Doctrine, his Order,” may fall
conveniently into this place, and then we may pass on. We read: - “Buddhist
proverbial philosophy attributes in innumerable passages the possession of
Nirvana to the saint who still treads the earth: ‘The disciple who has
put off lust and desire, rich in wisdom, has here on earth attained deliverance
from death, the rest, the Nirvana, the eternal state. He who has escaped from
the trackless hard mazes of the Sansara, who has
crossed over and reached the shore, self-absorbed, without stumbling and
without doubt, who has delivered himself from the earthly and attained Nirvana,
him I call a true Brahmin.’ If the saint will even now put an end to his state
of being he can do so, but the majority stand fast until Nature has reached her
goal; of such may those words be said which are put in the mouth of the most
prominent of Buddha’s disciples, ‘I long not for death; I long not for life; I
wait till mine hour come, like a servant who awaiteth
his reward.’ “
A multiplication of such
quotations would merely involve the repetition in various forms of exoteric
conceptions concerning the Arhats. Like every fact or
thought in Buddhism, the Arhat has two aspects, that
in which he is presented to the world at large, and that in which he lives,
moves, and has his being. In the popular estimation he is a saint waiting for a
spiritual reward of the kind the populace can understand - a wonder-worker
meanwhile by favour of supernatural agencies. In reality he is the long-tried
and proved-worthy custodian of the deepest and innermost philosophy of the one
fundamental religion which Buddha refreshed and restored, and a student of
natural science standing in the very foremost front of human knowledge, in
regard not merely to the mysteries of spirit, but to the material constitution
of the world as well.
Arhat
is a Buddhist designation. That which is more familiar in India, where the
attributes of Arhatship are not necessarily
associated with professions of Buddhism, is Mahatma. With stories about the
Mahatmas, India is saturated. The older Mahatmas are generally spoken of as Rishis; but the terms are interchangeable, and I have heard
the title Rishi applied to men now living. All the attributes of the Arhats mentioned in Buddhist writings are described with no
less reverence in Indian literature, as those of the Mahatmas, and this volume
might be readily filled with translations of vernacular books, giving accounts
of miraculous achievements by such of them as are known to history and
tradition by name.
In reality, the Arhats and the Mahatmas are the same men. At that level of
spiritual exaltation, supreme knowledge of the esoteric doctrine blends all
original sectarian distinctions. By whatever name such illuminati may be
called, they are the adepts of occult knowledge, sometimes spoken of in India
now as the Brothers, and the custodians of the spiritual science which has been
handed down to them by their predecessors.
We may search both ancient
and modern literature in vain, however, for any systematic explanation of their
doctrine or science. A good deal of this is dimly set forth in occult writing;
but very little of this is of the least use to readers who take up the subject
without previous knowledge acquired independently of books. It is under favour
of direct instruction from one of their number that I am now enabled to attempt
an outline of the Mahatmas’ teaching, and it is in the same way that I have
picked up what I know concerning the organization to which most of them, and
the greatest, in the present day belong.
All over the world there are
occultists of various degrees of eminence, and occult fraternities even, which
have a great deal in common with the leading fraternity now established in
Tibet. But all my inquiries into the subject have convinced me that the Tibetan
Brotherhood is incomparably the highest of such associations, and regarded as
such by all other associations - worthy of being looked upon themselves as
really “enlightened” in the occult sense of the term. There are, it is true,
many isolated mystics in India who are altogether self-taught and unconnected
with occult bodies. Many of these will explain that they themselves attain to
higher pinnacles of spiritual enlightenment than the Brothers of Tibet, or any
other people on earth. But the examination of such claims in all cases I have
encountered, would, I think, lead any impartial outsider, however little
qualified himself by personal development to be a judge of occult
enlightenment, to the conclusion that they are altogether unfounded. I know one
native of India, for example, a man of European education, holding a high
appointment under Government, of good station in society, most elevated
character, and enjoying unusual respect with such Europeans as are concerned
with him in official life, who will only accord to the Brothers of Tibet a
second place in the world of spiritual enlightenment. The first place he
regards as occupied by one person, now in this world no longer - his own occult
master in life - whom he resolutely asserts to have been in incarnation of the
Supreme Being. His own (my friend’s) inner senses were so awakened by this
Master, that the visions of his entranced state, into which he can still throw himself
at will, are to him the only spiritual region in which he can feel interested.
Convinced that the Supreme Being was his personal instructor from the
beginning, and continues so still in the subjective state, he is naturally
inaccessible to suggestions that his impressions may be distorted by reason of
his own misdirected psychological development. Again, the highly cultivated
devotees, to be met with occasionally in India, who build up a conception of
Nature, the universe, and God, entirely on a metaphysical basis, and who have
evolved their systems by sheer force of transcendental thinking, will take some
established system of philosophy as its groundwork, and amplify on this to an
extent which only an Oriental metaphysician could dream of. They win disciples
who put implicit faith in them, and found their little school which flourishes
for a time within its own limits; but speculative philosophy of such a kind is
rather occupation for the mind than knowledge. Such “Masters,” by comparison
with the organized adepts of the highest brotherhood, are like rowing-boats
compared with ocean steamships - helpful conveyances on their own native lake
or river, but not craft to whose protection you can trust yourself on a
world-wide voyage of exploration over the sea.
Descending lower again in the
scale, we find India dotted all over with Yogis and Fakirs, in all stages of
self-development, from that of dirty savages, but little elevated above the
gipsy fortune-tellers of an English racecourse, to men whose seclusion a
stranger will find it very difficult to penetrate, and whose abnormal faculties
and powers need only be seen or experienced to shatter the incredulity of the
most contented representative of modern Western scepticism.
Careless inquirers are very apt to confound such persons with the great adepts
of whom they may vaguely hear.
Concerning the real adepts,
meanwhile, I cannot at present venture on any account of what the Tibetan
organization is like, as regards its highest ruling authorities. Those Mahatmas
themselves, of whom some more or less adequate conception may, perhaps, be
formed by readers who will follow me patiently to the end, are subordinate by
several degrees to the chief of all. Let us deal rather with the earlier
conditions of occult training, which can more easily be grasped.
The level of elevation which
constitutes a man - what the outer world calls a Mahatma or “Brother” - is only
attained after prolonged and weary probation, and anxious ordeals of really
terrible severity. One may find people who have spent twenty or thirty years or
more, in blameless and arduous devotion to the life-task on which they have
entered, and are still in the earlier degrees of chelaship,
still looking up to the heights of adeptship as far
above their heads. And at whatever age a boy or man dedicates himself to the
occult career, he dedicates himself to it, be it remembered, without any
reservations and for life. The task he undertakes is the development in himself
of a great many faculties and attributes which are so utterly dormant in
ordinary mankind, that their very existence is unsuspected - the possibility of
their development denied. And these faculties and attributes must be developed
by the chela himself, with very little, if any, help,
beyond guidance and direction from his master. “The adept.” says an occult
aphorism, “becomes: he is not made.” One may illustrate this point by reference
to a very common-place physical exercise. Every man living, having the ordinary
use of his limbs, is qualified to swim. But put those who, as the common phrase
goes, cannot swim, into deep water, and they will struggle and be drowned. The
mere way to move the limbs is no mystery; but unless the swimmer in moving them
has a full belief that such movement will produce the required result, the
required result is not produced. In this case, we are dealing with mechanical
forces merely, but the same principle runs up into dealings with subtler
forces. Very much further than people generally imagine will mere “confidence”
carry the occult neophyte. How many European readers, who would be quite
incredulous if told of some results which occult chelas in the most incipient
stages of their training have to accomplish by sheer force of confidence, hear
constantly in church nevertheless, the familiar Biblical assurances of the
power which resides in faith, and let the words pass by like the wind, leaving
no impression.
The great end and purpose of adeptship is the achievement of spiritual development, the
nature of which is only veiled and disguised by the common phrases of exoteric
language. That the adept seeks to unite his soul with God, that he may thereby
pass into Nirvana, is a statement that conveys no definite meaning to the
ordinary reader, and the more he examines it with the help of ordinary books
and methods, the less likely will he be to realize the nature of the process
contemplated, or of the condition desired. It will be necessary to deal first
with the esoteric conception of Nature, and the origin and destinies of Man,
which differ widely from theological conceptions, before an explanation of the
aim which the adept pursues can become intelligible. Meanwhile, however, it is
desirable, at the very outset, to disabuse the reader of one misconception in
regard to the objects of adeptship that he may very
likely have framed.
The development of those
spiritual faculties, whose culture has to do with the highest objects of the
occult life, gives rise, as it progresses, to a great deal of incidental
knowledge, having to do with the physical laws of Nature not yet generally
understood. This knowledge, and the practical art of manipulating certain
obscure forces of Nature, which it brings in its train, invest an adept, and
even an adept’s pupils, at a comparatively early stage of their education, with
very extraordinary powers, the application of which to matters of daily life
will sometimes produce results that seem altogether miraculous; and, from the
ordinary point of view, the acquisition of apparently miraculous power is such
a stupendous achievement, that people are sometimes apt to fancy that the
adept’s object in seeking the knowledge he attains has been to invest himself
with these coveted powers. It would be as reasonable to say of any great
patriot of military history that his object in becoming a soldier had been to
wear a gay uniform and impress the imagination of the nursemaids.
The Oriental method of
cultivating knowledge has always differed diametrically from that pursued in
the West during the growth of modern science. Whilst Europe has investigated
Nature as publicly as possible, every step being discussed with the utmost
freedom, and every fresh fact acquired, circulated at once for the benefit of
all, Asiatic science has been studied secretly and its conquests jealously
guarded. I need not as yet attempt either criticism or defence
of its methods. But at all events these methods have been relaxed to some
extent in my own case, and, as already stated, it is with the full consent of
my teachers that I now follow the bent of my own inclinations as a European,
and communicate what I have learned to all who may be willing to receive it.
Later on it will be seen how the departure from the ordinary rules of occult
study embodied in the concessions now made, falls naturally into its place in
the whole scheme of occult philosophy. The approaches to that philosophy have
always been open, in one sense, to all. Vaguely throughout the world in various
ways has been diffused the idea that some process of study which men
here and there did actually follow, might lead to the acquisition of a higher
kind of knowledge than that taught to mankind at large in books or by public
religious preachers. The East, as pointed out, has always been more than
vaguely impressed with this belief, but even in the West the whole block of
symbolical literature relating to astrology, alchemy, and mysticism generally
has fermented in European society, carrying to some few peculiarly receptive
and qualified minds the conviction that behind all this superficially
meaningless nonsense great truths lay concealed. For such persons eccentric
study has sometimes revealed hidden passages leading to the grandest imaginable
realms of enlightenment. But till now, in all such cases, in accordance with
the law of those schools, the neophyte no sooner forced his way into the region
of mystery than he was bound over to the most inviolable secrecy as to
everything connected with his entrance and further progress there. In Asia in
the same way, the “chela,” or pupil of occultism, no
sooner became a chela than he ceased to be a witness
on behalf of the reality of occult knowledge. I have been astonished to find,
since my own connection with the subject, how numerous such chelas are. But it
is impossible to imagine any human act more improbable than the unauthorized
revelation by any such chela, to persons in the outer
world, that he is one, and so the great esoteric school of philosophy
successfully guards its seclusion.
In a former book, “The Occult
World” I have given a full and straightforward narrative of the circumstances
under which I came in contact with the gifted and deeply instructed men from
whom I have since obtained the teaching this volume contains. I need not repeat
the story. I now come forward prepared to deal with the subject in a new way.
The existence of occult adepts, and the importance of their acquirements, may
be established along two different lines of argument: firstly, by means of
external evidence, - the testimony of qualified witnesses, the manifestation by
or through persons connected with adepts, of abnormal faculties affording more
than a presumption of abnormally enlarged knowledge; secondly, by the
presentation of such a considerable portion of this knowledge as may convey
intrinsic assurances of its own value. My first book proceeded by the former
method; I now approach the more formidable task of working on the latter.
Annotations
The further we advance in
occult study, the more exalted in many ways become our conceptions of the
Mahatmas. The complete comprehension of the manner in which these persons
become differentiated from human kind at large, is not to be achieved by the
help of mere intellectual effort. These are aspects of the adept nature which
have to do with the extraordinary development of the higher principles in man,
which cannot be realized by the application of the lower. But while crude
conceptions in the beginning thus fall very short of reaching the real level of
the facts, a curious complication of the problem arises in this way. Our first
idea of an adept who has achieved the power of penetrating the tremendous
secrets of spiritual nature, is modelled on our
conception of a very highly gifted man of science on our own plane. We are apt
to think of him as once an adept always an adept, - as a very exalted human
being, who must necessarily bring into play in all the relations of his life
the attributes that attach to him as a Mahatma. In this way while - as above
pointed out - we shall certainly fail, do all we can, to do justice in our
thoughts to his attributes as a Mahatma, we may very easily run to the opposite
extreme in our thinking about him in his ordinary human aspect, and thus land
ourselves in many perplexities, as we acquire a partial familiarity with the
characteristics of the occult world. It is just because the highest attributes
of adeptship have to do with principles in human
nature which quite transcend the limits of physical existence, that the adept
or Mahatma can only be such in the highest acceptation of the word, when he is,
as the phrase goes, “out of the body,” or at all events thrown by special
efforts of his will into an abnormal condition. When he is not called upon to
make such efforts or to pass entirely beyond the limitations of this fleshly
prison, he is much more like an ordinary man than experience of him in some of
his aspects would lead his disciples to believe.
A correct appreciation of
this state of things explains the apparent contradiction involved in the position
of the occult pupil towards his masters, as compared with some of the
declarations that the master himself will frequently put forward. For example,
the Mahatmas are persistent in asserting that they are not infallible, that
they are men, like the rest of us, perhaps with a somewhat more enlarged
comprehension of nature than the generality of mankind, but still liable to err
both in the direction of practical business with which they may be concerned,
and in their estimate of the characters of other men, or the capacity of
candidates for occult development. But how are we to reconcile statements of
this nature with the fundamental principle at the bottom of all occult research
which enjoins the neophyte to put his trust in the teaching and guidance of his
master absolutely and without reserve? The solution of the difficulty is found
in the state of things above referred to. While the adept may be a man quite
surprisingly liable to err sometimes in the manipulation of worldly business,
just as with ourselves some of the greatest men of genius are liable to make
mistakes in their daily life that matter-of-fact people would never commit, on
the other hand, directly a Mahatma comes to deal with the higher mysteries of
spiritual science, he does so by virtue of the exercise of his
Mahatma-attributes, and in dealing with these can hardly be recognized as
liable to err.
This consideration enables us
to feel that the trustworthiness of the teachings derived from such a source as
those which have inspired the present volume, is altogether above the reach of
small incidents which in the progress of our experience may seem to claim a
revision of that enthusiastic confidence in the supreme wisdom of the adepts
which the first approaches to occult study will generally evoke.
Not that such enthusiasm or
reverence will really be diminished on the part of any occult chela as his comprehension of the world he is entering
expands. The man who in one of his aspects is a Mahatma, may rather be brought
within the limits of affectionate human regard, than deprived of his claims to
reverence, by the consideration that in his ordinary life he is not so utterly
lifted above the common-place run of human feeling as some of his Nirvanic experiences might lead us to believe that he would
be.
If we keep constantly in mind
that an adept is only truly an adept when exercising adept functions but that
when exercising adept functions, but that when exercising these he may soar
into spiritual rapport with that which is, in regard at all events to
the limitations of our solar system, all that we practically mean by
omniscience, we shall then be guarded from many of the mistakes that the
embarrassments of the subject might create.
Intricacies concerning the
nature of the adept may be noticed here, which will hardly be quite
intelligible without reference to some later chapters of this book, but which
have so important a bearing on all attempts to understand what adeptship is really like that it may be convenient to deal
with them at once. The dual nature of the Mahatma is so complete that some of
his influence or wisdom on the higher planes of nature may actually be drawn
upon by those in peculiar psychic relations with him, without the Mahatma-man
being at the moment even conscious that such an appeal has been made to him. In
this way it becomes open to us to speculate on the possibility that the
relation between the spiritual Mahatma and the Mahatma-man may sometimes be
rather in the nature of what is sometimes spoken of in esoteric writing as an
overshadowing than as an incarnation in the complete sense of the word.
Furthermore as another
independent complication of the matter we reach this fact, that each Mahatma is
not merely a human ego in a very exalted state, but belongs, so to speak, to
some specific department in the great economy of nature. Every adept must
belong to one or other of seven great types of adeptship,
but although we may almost certainly infer that correspondences might be traced
between these various types and the seven principles of man, I should shrink
myself from attempting a complete elucidation of this hypothesis. It will be
enough to apply the idea to what we know vaguely of the occult organization in
its higher regions. For some time past it has been affirmed in esoteric writing
that there are five great Chohans or superior Mahatmas presiding over the whole
body of the adept fraternity. When the foregoing chapter of this book was
written, I was under the impression that one supreme chief on a different level
again exercised authority over these five Chohans, but it now appears to me
that this personage may rather be regarded as a sixth Chohan,
himself the head of the sixth type of Mahatmas, and this conjecture leads at
once to the further inference that there must be a seventh Chohan
to complete the correspondences which we thus discern. But just as the seventh
principle in nature or in man is a conception of the most intangible order
eluding the grasp of any intellectual thinking, and only describable in shadowy
phrases of metaphysical non-significance, so we may be quite sure that the
seventh Chohan is very unapproachable by untrained
imaginations. But even he no doubt plays a part in what may be called the
higher economy of spiritual nature, and that there is such a personage visible
occasionally to some of the other Mahatmas I take to be the case. But
speculation concerning him is valuable chiefly as helping to give consistency
to the idea above thrown out, according to which the Mahatmas may be
comprehended in their true aspect as necessary phenomena of nature without whom
the evolution of humanity could hardly be imagined as advancing, not as merely
the exceptional men who have attained great spiritual exaltation.
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good use of this Website
A
Phase I 1949 Standard Vanguard with sidelights
A Vanguard tested by The Motor magazine in 1949
had a top speed of 78.7 mph
(126.7 km/h) and could accelerate from 0-60 mph
(97 km/h) in 21.5 seconds.
A fuel consumption of 22.9 miles per imperial
gallon
No
Aardvarks were harmed in the
Phase
III Standard Vanguard Early 60s
Within the British Isles, The
Adyar Theosophical Society has Groups in;
Bangor*Basingstoke*Billericay*Birmingham*Blackburn*Bolton*Bournemouth
Bradford*Bristol*Camberley*Cardiff*Chester*Conwy*Coventry*Dundee*Edinburgh
Folkstone*Glasgow*Grimsby*Inverness*Isle
of Man*Lancaster*Leeds*Leicester
Letchworth*London*Manchester*Merseyside*Middlesborough*Newcastle upon Tyne
North Devon*Northampton*Northern Ireland*Norwich*Nottingham
Perth*Republic of Ireland*Sidmouth*Southport*Sussex*Swansea*Torbay
Tunbridge Wells*Wallasey*Warrington*Wembley*Winchester*Worthing
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
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Concerns about the fate of the
wildlife as
Tekels Park is to be Sold to a
Developer
Concerns are raised about the fate of
the wildlife as
The Spiritual Retreat, Tekels Park in
Camberley,
Surrey, England is to be sold to a
developer.
Tekels Park is a 50 acre woodland
park, purchased
for the Adyar
Theosophical Society in England in 1929.
In addition to concern about the
park, many are
worried about the
future of the Tekels Park Deer
as they are not a
protected species.
Anyone planning a “Spiritual” stay at
the
Tekels Park Guest House should be
aware of the sale.
It doesn’t require a Diploma in Finance
and even someone
with a Diploma in
Astral Travel will know that this is a
bad time economically to sell Tekels Park
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A
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D
EFG
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IJ
KL
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WXYZ
Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
Quick
Explanations with Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis
Anthropogenesis
Root Races
Karma
Ascended Masters After Death States
Reincarnation
The Seven Principles of Man Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society Emblem
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
An Outstanding Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
Standard
Vanguard Promotional Literature Late 1940s
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
An Outline of Theosophy
Charles Webster Leadbeater
Theosophy - What it is How is it Known? The Method of Observation
General Principles The Three Great Truths The Deity
Advantage Gained from this
Knowledge The Divine Scheme
The Constitution of Man The True Man Reincarnation
The Wider Outlook Death Man’s Past and Future
Cause and Effect What Theosophy does for us
Standard Vanguard Estate
Circa 1952
Try these if you are looking
for a local
Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Please tell us about your UK Theosophy Group
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into categories and presented according to relevance of
website.
Web Directory
- Add Link - Submit Article - Online Store - Forum
Standard
Vanguard Van Circa 1952
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General pages about Wales, Welsh History
and The History of Theosophy in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom and has an eastern
border with England. The
land area is just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North Wales is
the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is
almost 750 miles long. The population of Wales
as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.
________________
Bangor Conwy
& Swansea Lodges are members
of the Welsh
Regional Association (Formed 1993).
Theosophy Cardiff separated from the
Welsh Regional
Association in March 2008 and became an independent
body within the Theosophical Movement in March 2010
High
Drama & Worldwide Confusion
as Theosophy
Cardiff Separates from the
Welsh
Regional Association (formed 1993)
Theosophy Cardiff cancels its Affiliation
to the Adyar Based Theosophical Society
Cardiff, Wales, UK, CF24 – 1DL