XIX
The Aims &
Means of Adepthood
By G. H. Frater N.O.M. (Dr. W.W. Westcott)
Among the objects for which you have joined the Second
Order some are specially named by the Obligation which you have taken, and
others are indicated by the documents which you have received on loan.
Speaking generally however, we may say that the main object is what is called
the Higher Magic or the development of the Spiritual sides of our natures in
contradistinction to the purely intellectual.
As regards Spiritual Development you promised in the Obligation to use every
effort to purify and exalt the Spiritual Nature so that you may be able to unity
yourselves with what the Hermetist calls his ‘Higher Genius'.
A second aim we may say is the extension of our powers of perception so that we
can perceive entities, events and forces upon the super-sensuous planes.
Thirdly, and in connection with the other two, you are encouraged to practice
the system of divination of which there are several but which are only aids to
your intuition and methods by which the intuition may be developed and
encouraged.
Fourthly, there is what may be called the procuring of the influence of Divine
Powers through the peculiar modes taught in our Order and Vibrating of Divine
Names.
There are then these four aims—Spiritual Development— extension of the powers of
perception; learning the modes of Divination and becoming familiar with the
vibratory mode of pronouncing Divine Names. To these may be added the practical
study of the particular influences of colour and' thus we are called Lords of
the Path of the Chameleon.
Now as regards this Spiritual Development in the first place we mean by it that
you perform or endeavour to perform the transmutation of the vital forces of
life into higher currents of life or rather their transmutation out of the lower
into the higher so that you can use them for the purposes of Theurgia.
Transmutation of physical force is what is discussed in many of the old
alchemical books. A large proportion of these books which have come down to us
refer to purely physical processes. But there was an opposite pole of thought of
which the language referred entirely to man and by transmutation was meant the
directing of physical life and force into the channels of spiritual perception
and the higher magical powers generally.
Secondly, as to the extension of our powers of perception beyond the plane of
matter into the super—sensuous world, you must remember that the Theosophical
view is the correct one and that our Thinking Personalities are incarnated into
these material bodies and are acting therefore under the consequent
disadvantages. It is because the mind is immersed in matter that its powers are
so limited, and we can readily understand that a mind freed from constraints of
the body would enjoy vastly enlarged powers. Thus, although our senses are the
means by which we perceive; yet at the same time they necessarily limit the
extent of our perception. It is therefore our material bodily organs which
circumscribe as well as bestow. All of our five senses are capable of
enlargement and development. It is however the sense of sight which we most
commonly seek thus to develop. Having intellectually learned the laws which
relate to sight and colour we are encouraged to practice Clairvoyance and to
seek to see beyond material things into the plane most adjacent to us—the
Astral, and then we seek to travel in the Spirit Vision through the confusions
and the uncertainties of the Astral into the planes beyond.
One of the first of your experiences when practising in the Vault in the dark
will be the appreciation of the minuter graduations of light and darkness.
You will find it very difficult to get perfect darkness, but you will often find
that there are certain days when you can get the Vault quite dark.
The cultivation of your sight will enable you to perceive the variations of
colour and especially to note, observe, and fix in your minds, the contrasts of
colour on which our Rituals place so much importance, and the flashing colours.
Allied to this is the cultivation of View in the Mirror.
The ears also require to be cultivated until you obtain some success in what is
called Clairaudience. This is sometimes easier than Clairvoyance but development
in either direction implies great perseverance and must be carried out with
energy and enthusiasm.
Among Theosophists the phenomenon which you hear most commonly mentioned in
connection with Clairaudience is that known as the Astral Bell. This is almost
entirely Eastern: if you find a Hermetist who can hear sounds that others cannot
hear, they very rarely take the form of a bell.
Those who get a certain amount of Clairvoyance also often get the power of
hearing sounds which the world cannot hear and it is often a definite sound sent
for a definite purpose. Touch, also is a sense which should be cultivated. I
will mention some examples of the way in which this sense may be trained, and by
touch I do not mean simply the touch which comes through the fingers. One of the
most elementary methods is the perception of magnetism. You will find that, with
closed eyes, you can detect the presence of a magnet held near the skin, and
that with continued practice you will be able to appreciate the difference
between the North and South Poles of the Magnet.
You will find that the forehead is the best point upon which to experiment. We
need not dwell upon the senses of taste and smell, but these can also be
developed.
Theosophy tells us that corresponding with all other Septenaries in Nature
there are also two more senses. I may say that the sixth can be called that of
Astral perception, or the power of perceiving forces and entities on the plane
next to the earth; and the seventh, of which, no doubt, some of you will get
glimpses in due time is the faculty of receiving Knowledge from spiritual
sources. There is no organ corresponding to these senses, so that, where
necessary, we must utilise the organs which we already possess. Now by what
means do the Adepts suggest that these powers may be obtained? It has been urged
against us that, as a society, we do not preach the necessity for such strict
purity of life as do the Theosophists. It may be true that we are not always
preaching it, and as we do not hold public meetings, the same opportunities for
doing so do not exist. If, however, there is one thing more than another which I
would impress upon you as a social sin, it is that of hypocrisy. As to
asceticism, the Hermetists have always taught that this necessary purity of mind
should and can be combined with the absence of all ostentatious morality and of
un-natural habits of life.
The Western Teachers have always recognised the fact that for so long human life
has been so painful, that to most people these studies would be denied if they
were to insist upon asceticism, and they have found by experience that a very
considerable amount of success without attendant danger may be obtained by those
who are willing to make strenuous efforts, without the aid of positive
asceticism. It seems to me that the chief danger of asceticism in a city like
this and at the present time is that even if we succeed, the extra advantage
which we shall derive from totally abstaining from these things of the sense,
will be counterweighed by a distinct and added danger of falling, on the other
hand, into the Scylla of hypocrisy which I have mentioned. What is apt to happen
is this,—that a man is liable to compare himself with his neighbours, and' say
how much better he is than others. Now self congratulation is second only to
open hypocrisy, and we hold that it is just as harmful to spiritual progress. On
the other hand if you make strenuous efforts to lead a moral life, if you do
this while leading a pure life in the city, if you succeed in doing these things,
you may depend upon it that your reward will be greater than his who removes
himself from his fellows and shuts himself up in a forest. The reward of a man
who can remain pure and yet live in the midst of a crowded city is greater than
his who avoids the responsibilities of life by burying himself in a wilderness.
It is possible even there to commit many sins which you would not like to
confess!
The next principle which we formulate is the necessity for studying and doing
all Hermetic exercises from a positive point of view. We look upon the negative
attitude of simple abstinence from sin and exertion and effort, in which are
comprised to a great extent the methods of the East, and we think that this is
an error of judgment and of practice.
I am sure that any attempt at a negative attitude is a mistake. Many persons
are, I am sure, deterred from taking up Theosophical studies more closely by
the sense of coldness, and an apparent want of human sympathy, which is
sometimes exhibited and felt in Theosophical Lodges. Theosophy itself teaches
that we should give ourselves up to humanity, and yet their private lodges are
often marked by the absence of that enthusiasm for their work which should
distinguish them.
The Hermetists have always been noted for their social relations, and this is, I
believe, in every way compatible with the strictest purity of life. We believe
that a harmonious whole is thereby produced and one likely to lead to success in
practical magic.
The next point of importance which is insisted upon in our Obligation and
Rituals and put forward with great solemnity in the Vault itself is the extreme
necessity for refraining from judging other people. This does not mean that you
are not to condemn sin, but it means that you are not to go out of your way in
condemning the sinner. It does not imply that you are to condone faults, but it
does imply that you are not to endeavour to seek grievances against your fellows,
or seek to rule or supervise them, unless you happen to be in authority over
them. Very few people are in this position of being rulers. Such have to bear
the Karma of occasionally judging their fellow members. It is at any rate a duty
which falls upon some of us. You must however, avoid the opportunity of thus
judging others until the obligation is thrust upon you.
The opportunity and the act should both be avoided as far as possible. Thus the
Ritual says ‘therefore art though inexcusable, whoever thou art, who judgest
another'.
Let me now say a word about the risks of negativity. It seems to me that the
negative attitude and the negative constitution required to be checked and
controlled. Firstly because we do not progress under these conditions, and
secondly because they carry with them definite risks to ourselves are those from
elemental forces which may attack us.
So long as you lead an ordinary life you are safe from the assaults of
influences beyond the material world of your brother men; but as soon as you get
outside of that world and put yourself in a position to seek out occult
mysteries, you bring yourself under the action of forces of which you know very
little or nothing. The only way to avoid being controlled by such forces, to
which you have rendered yourself liable, is to preserve what we call the
positive attitude, which is the extreme contrast to what is called mediumship. A
medium is one who cultivates negativity and such a person is therefore one to be
avoided. The condition we want you to cultivate is that of positivity. I could
give you a very good example of a person who is negative and who has got into
trouble almost entirely through that.
The next thing which we are taught and enabled to practice is Divination. There
are at least three distinct systems suggested to you, but they are all of them
methods whose routine may be superseded, when you get on far enough. The first
of these systems is that of Geomancy and there is also that of Astrology. It
will be noticed that the lectures of the First Order give brief outlines of
these systems, but there is no direct encouragement to perfect yourself in them.
The third system which is virtually introduced and taught in the Second Order is
that of the Tarot.
This goes very much deeper than either of the other two and gives results which
are more true because its points of contact with the world, with man, and the
influences which surround him, are more numerous. The fact that this is more
complicated gives you more of such points of contact than either of the other
two systems. With a properly conducted Tarot process and with a cultivated
intuition you can obtain almost anything you wish for, but as the process is so
complex it is a most difficult system to learn, but having once grasped it you
can get results which are most amazing. When you have mastered the first six
manuscripts of the Order and are familiar with the Rituals of the Pentagram and
Hexagram, and have made your Implements, the Tarot is then suggested to you as a
desirable system to learn. Moreover its study is so enticing that you would
Be apt to neglect those things which should precede its practice. By these
systems of divination you are really inducing and cultivating the intuitive
power. Now in order to get success in Divination it is necessary to cultivate
the Will. First you want an intellectual knowledge of the subject. Then a
cultivation of the intuitive power is necessary, and finally you must develop
the Will. You must have a steady will or else your intuition will be of little
avail. Now this cultivation of the Will should be a process which is continually
going on. There are fallacies which exist in connection with the Will. A person
may say to you, I am extremely interested in all these studies and I am always
willing and endeavouring to succeed in them, and he will say to you that he is
thinking of the Tree of Life or of some other occult subject while he is doing
his accounts or interviewing his wife. Now I am sorry to say that I have to tell
such a person that he is on the wrong tack. If you want success you must will
only one thing at a time. The habit of doing two or three things at once is
fatal to the Occultist. The Will which is necessary is an undivided Will and its
cultivation must be continued at all times.
It is therefore necessary to get into the habit of never Willing more than one
thing at a time. Never allow your Will to be mixed up with any desire. The Will
which is divided is not the Will which can be of any use to you. It is quite
impossible to Will strongly to see an elemental, for instance, unless you are
able to think only for that moment.
A fixed concentration of mind must be encouraged if you want to have success. We
often get strange demonstrations of the strength of the Will. I will give you an
example. We continually find that if we turn round in the street to look after
someone whom we have just passed, that person is also turning round to look
after us. If however, you deliberately try to do this you will probably fail,
and the point is that in this latter case your mind is divided between the will
to succeed, and the desire to show your power, and the Will is thereby weakened.
The other two principal items are the Vibration of the Divine Names and the
properties of colour, but as these ought to be demonstrated in the Vault, I will
not go into them today.