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Theosophy
Wales Vanguard isn’t just about classic cars,
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
Devachan
Chapter 5
IT was not possible to
approach a consideration of the states into which the higher human principles
pass at death, without first indicating the general framework of the whole
design worked out in the course of the evolution of man. That much of my task,
however, having now been accomplished, we may pass on to consider the natural
destinies of each human Ego in the interval which elapses between the close of
one objective life and the commencement of another. At the commencement of
another, the Karma of the previous objective life determines the state of life
into which the individual shall be born. This doctrine of Karma is one of the
most interesting features of Buddhist philosophy. There has been no secret
about it at any time, though for want of a proper comprehension of elements in
the philosophy, which have been strictly esoteric, it may sometimes have been
misunderstood.
Karma is a collective
expression applied to that complicated group of affinities for good and evil
generated by a human being during life, and the character of which inheres in
his fifth principle all through the interval which elapses between his death
out of one objective life and his birth into the next. As stated sometimes, the
doctrine seems to be one which exacts the notion of a superior spiritual
authority summing up the acts of a man’s life at its close, taking into
consideration his good deeds and his bad, and giving judgment about him on the
whole aspect of the case. But a comprehension of the way in which the human
principles divide up at death, will afford a clue to the comprehension of the
way in which Karma operates, and also of the great subject we may better take
up first - the immediate spiritual condition of man after death.
At death the three lower
principles - the body, its mere physical vitality, and its astral counterpart -
are finally abandoned by that which really is the Man himself, and the four
higher principles escape into that world immediately above our own; above our
own, that is, in the order of spirituality - not above it at all, but in it and
of it, as regards real locality - the astral plane or kâma loca, according to a
very familiar Sanskrit expression. Here a division takes place between the two
duads, which the four higher principles include. The explanation already given
concerning the imperfect extent to which the upper principles of man are as yet
developed, will show that this estimation of the process, as in the nature of a
mechanical separation of the principles, is a rough way of dealing with the
matter. It must be modified in the reader’s mind by the light of what has been
already said. It may be otherwise described as a trial of the extent to which
the fifth principle has been developed. Regarded in the light of the former
idea, however, we must conceive the sixth and seventh principles, on the one
hand, drawing the fifth, the human soul, in one direction, while the fourth
draws it back earthwards in the other. Now, the fifth principle is a very
complex entity, separable itself into superior and inferior elements. In the
struggle which takes place between its late companion principles, its best,
purest, most elevated and spiritual portions cling to the sixth, its lower
instincts, impulses and recollections adhere to the fourth, and it is in a
measure torn asunder. The lower remnant, associating itself with the fourth,
floats off in the earth’s atmosphere, while the best elements, those, be it
understood, which really constitute the Ego of the late earthly personality,
the individuality, the consciousness thereof, follow the sixth and seventh into
a spiritual condition, the nature of which we are about to examine.
Rejecting the popular English
name for this spiritual condition, as encrusted with too many misconceptions to
be convenient, let us keep to the Oriental designation of that region or state
into which the higher principles of human creatures pass at death. This is
additionally desirable because, although the Devachan of Buddhist philosophy
corresponds in some respects to the modern European idea of heaven, it differs
from heaven in others which are even more important.
Firstly, however, in
Devachan, that which survives is not merely the individual monad, which
survives through all the changes of the whole evolutionary scheme, and flits
from body to body, from planet to planet, and so forth - that which survives in
Devachan is the man’s own self-conscious personality, under some restrictions
indeed, which we will come to directly, but still it is the same personality as
regards its higher feelings, aspirations, affections, and even tastes, as it
was on earth. Perhaps it would be better to say the essence of the late
self-conscious personality.
It may be worth the reader’s
while to learn what Colonel H S. Olcott has to say in his “Buddhist Catechism”
(14th thousand) of the intrinsic difference between “individuality”
and “personality.” Since he wrote not only under the approval of the High
Priest of the Sripada and Galle, Sumangala, but also under the direct
instruction of his Adept Guru, his words will have weight for the student of
occultism. This is what he says in his appendix: -
“Upon reflection I have
submitted ‘personality’ for ‘individuality,’ as written in the first edition.
The successive appearances upon one or many earths, or ‘descents into
generation’ of the tanhaically coherent parts (Skandas) of a certain
being, are a succession of personalities. In each birth the personality
differs from that of the previous or next succeeding birth. Karma, the deus
ex machinâ, masks (or shall we say, reflects?) itself now in the
personality of a sage, again as an artisan, and so on throughout the string of
births. But though personalities ever shift, the one line of life along which
they are strung like beads runs unbroken.
“It is ever that
particular line, never any other. It is therefore individual, an individual
vital undulation which began in Nirvana or the subjective side of Nature, as
the light or heat undulation through æther began at its dynamic source; is
careering through the objective side of Nature, under the impulse of Karma and
the creative direction of Tanha; and tends through many cyclic changes back to
Nirvana. Mr Rhys Davids calls that which passes from personality to personality
along the individual chain ‘character’ or ‘doing.’ Since ‘character’ is not a
mere metaphysical abstraction, but the sum of one’s mental qualities and moral
propensities, would it not help to dispel what Mr Rhys Davids calls ‘the
desperate expedient of a mystery,’ if we regarded the life undulation as
individuality, and each of its series of natal manifestations as a separate
personality?
“The denial of ‘soul’ by
Buddha (see ‘Sanyutto Nikaya,’ the Sutta Pitaka) points to the prevalent
delusive belief in an independent transmissible personality; and entity that
could move from birth to birth unchanged, or go to a place or state where, as
such perfect entity, it could eternally enjoy or suffer. And what he shows is
that the ‘I am I’ consciousness is, as regards permanency, logically impossible,
since its elementary constituents constantly change, and the ‘I’ of one birth
differs from the ‘I’ of every other birth. But everything that I have found in
Buddhism accords with the theory of a gradual evolution of the perfect man -
viz. A Buddha through numberless natal experiences. And in the consciousness of
that person who at the end of a given chain of beings attains Buddha-hood, or
who succeeds in attaining the fourth stage of Dhyâna, or mystic
self-development, in any one of his births anterior to the final one, the
scenes of all these serial births are perceptible. In the ‘Jatakattahavannana,’
so well translated by Mr Rhys Davids, an expression continually recurs which I
think rather supports such an idea - viz. ‘Then the blessed one made manifest
an occurrence hidden by change of birth,’ or ‘that which had been hidden
by, &c.’ Early Buddhism, then, clearly held to a permanency of records in
the Akâsa, and the potential capacity of man to read the same when he has
evoluted to the stage of true individual enlightenment.”
The purely sensual feelings
and tastes of the late personality will drop off from it in Devachan, but it
does not follow that nothing is preservable in that state, except feelings and
thoughts having a direct reference to religion or spiritual philosophy. On the
contrary, all the superior phases, even of sensuous emotion, find their
appropriate sphere of development in Devachan. To suggest a whole range of
ideas by means of one illustration, a soul in Devachan, if the soul of a man
who was passionately devoted to music, would be continuously enraptured by the
sensations music produces. The person whose happiness of the higher sort on
earth had been entirely centered in the exercise of the affections will miss
none in Devachan of those whom he or she loved. But, at once it will be asked,
if some of these are not themselves fit for Devachan, how then? The answer is,
that does not matter. For the person who loved them they will be there.
It is not necessary to say much more to give a clue to the position. Devachan
is a subjective state. It will seem, as real as the chairs and tables round us;
and remember that, above all things, to the profound philosophy of occultism
are the chairs and tables, and the whole objective scenery of the world, unreal
and merely transitory delusions of sense. As real as the realities of this
world to us, and even more so, will be the realities of Devachan to those who
go into that state.
From this it ensues that the
subjective isolation of Devachan, as it will perhaps be conceived at
first, is not real isolation at all, as the word is understood on the physical
plane of existence; it is companionship with all that the true soul craves for,
whether persons, things, or knowledge. An a patient consideration of the place
in Nature which Devachan occupies will show that this subjective isolation of
each human unit is the only condition which renders possible anything which can
be described as a felicitous spiritual existence after death for mankind at
large, and Devachan is as much a purely and absolutely felicitous condition for
all who attain it, as Avitchi is the reverse of it. There is no inequality or
injustice in the system; Devachan is by no means the same thing for the good
and the indifferent alike, but it is not a life of responsibility, and
therefore there is no logical place for it for suffering, any more than in
Avitchi there is any room for enjoyment or repentance. It is a life of effects,
not of causes; a life of being paid your earnings, not of labouring for
them. Therefore it is impossible to be during that life cognizant of what is
going on on earth. Under the operation of such cognition there would be no true
happiness possible in the state after death. A heaven which constituted a
watch-tower, from which the occupants could still survey the miseries of the
earth, would really be a place of acute mental suffering for its most
sympathetic, unselfish, and meritorious inhabitants. If we invest them in
imagination with such a very limited range of sympathy that they could be
imagined as not caring about the spectacle of suffering after the few persons
to whom they were immediately attached had died and joined them, still they
would have a very unhappy period of waiting to go through before survivors reached
the end of an often long and toilsome existence below. And even this hypothesis
would be further vitiated by making heaven most painful for occupants who were
most unselfish and sympathetic, whose reflected distress would thus continue on
behalf of the afflicted race of mankind generally, even after their personal
kindred had been rescued by the lapse of time. The only escape from this
dilemma lies in the supposition that heaven is not yet opened for business, so
to speak, and that all people who have ever lived from Adam downwards are still
lying in a death-like trance, waiting for the resurrection at the end of the
world. This hypothesis also has its embarrassments, but we are concerned at
present with the scientific harmony of esoteric Buddhism, not with the theories
of other creeds.
Readers, however, who may
grant that a purview of earthly life from heaven would render happiness in
heaven impossible, may still doubt whether true happiness is possible in the
state, as it may be objected, of monotonous isolation now described. The
objection is merely raised from the point of view of an imagination that cannot
escape from its present surroundings. To begin with, about monotony. No one
will complain of having experienced monotony during the minute, or moment, or
half-hour, as it may have been of the greatest happiness he may have enjoyed in
life. Most people have had some happy moments, at all events, to look back to
for the purpose of this comparison; and let us take even one such minute or
moment, too short to be open to the least suspicion of monotony, and imagine
its sensations immensely prolonged without any external events in progress to
mark the lapse of time. There is no room, in such a condition of things, for
the conception of weariness. The unalloyed, unchangeable sensation of intense
happiness goes on and on, not for ever, because the causes which have produced
it are not infinite themselves, but for very long periods of time, until the
efficient impulse has exhausted itself.
Nor must it be supposed that
there is, so to speak, no change of occupation for souls in Devachan - that any
one moment of earthly sensation is selected for exclusive perpetuation. As a
teacher of the highest authority on this subject writes: -
“There are two fields of
causal manifestations - the objective and subjective. The grosser energies -
those which operate in the denser condition of matter - manifest objectively in
the next physical life, their outcome being the new personality of each birth
marshaling within the grand cycle of the evolving individuality. It is but the
moral and spiritual activities that find their sphere of effects in Devachan.
And, thought and fancy being limitless, how can it be argued for one moment
that there is anything like monotony in the state of Devachan? Few are the men
whose lives were so utterly destitute of feeling, love, or of a more or less
intense predilection for some one line of thought as to be made unfit for a
proportionate period of Devachanic experience beyond their earthly life. So,
for instance, while the vices, physical and sensual attractions, say, of a
great philosopher, but a bad friend and a selfish man, may result in the birth
of a new and still greater intellect, but at the same time a most miserable
man, reaping the Karmic effects of all the causes produced by the ‘old’ being,
and whose make-up was inevitable from the pre-ponderating proclivities of that
being in the preceding birth, the intermedial period between the two physical
births cannot be, in Nature’s exquisitely well-adjusted laws, but a hiatus
of unconsciousness. There can be no such dreary blank as kindly promised, or
rather implied, by Christian Protestant theology, to the ‘departed souls,’
which, between death and ‘resurrection,’ have to hang on in space, in mental
catalepsy, awaiting the ‘Day of Judgment.’ Causes produced by mental and
spiritual energy being far greater and more important than those that are
created by physical impulses, their effects have to be, for weal or woe,
proportionately as great. Lives on this earth, or other earths, affording no
proper field for such effects, and every labourer being entitled to his own
harvest, they have to expand in either Devachan or Avitchi. [The lowest states
of Devachan interchain with those of Avitchi.] Bacon for instance, whom a poet
called
‘The brightest, wisest, meanest
of mankind,’might reappear in his next incarnation as a greedy money-getter,
with extraordinary intellectual capacities. But, however great the latter, they
would find no proper field in which that particular line of thought, pursued
during his previous lifetime by the founder of modern philosophy, could reap
all its dues. It would be but the astute lawyer, the corrupt Attorney-General,
the ungrateful friend, and the dishonest Lord Chancellor, who might find, led
on by his Karma, a congenial new soil in the body of the money-lender,
and reappear as a new Shylock. But where would Bacon, the incomparable thinker,
with whom philosophical inquiry upon the most profound problems of Nature was his
‘first and last and only love,’ where would this ‘intellectual giant of his
race,’ once disrobed of his lower nature, go to? Have all the effects of that
magnificent intellect to vanish and disappear? Certainly not. Thus his moral
and spiritual qualities would also have to find a field in which their energies
could expand themselves. Devachan is such a field. Hence all the great plans of
moral reform, of intellectual research into abstract principles of Nature - all
the divine, spiritual aspirations that had so filled the brightest part of his
life would, in Devachan, come to fruition; and the abstract entity, known in
the preceding birth as Francis Bacon, and that maybe known in its
subsequent re-incarnation as a despised usurer - that Bacon’s own creation, his
Frankenstein, the son of his Karma - shall in the meanwhile occupy itself in
this inner world, also of its own preparation, in enjoying the effects of the
grand beneficial spiritual causes sown in life. It would live a purely and
spiritually conscious existence - a dream of realistic vividness - until Karma,
being satisfied in that direction, and the ripple of force reaching the edge of
its sub-cycle basin, the being should move into its next area of causes, either
in this same world or another, according to his stage of progression . . . .
Therefore, there is’ a change of occupation,’ a continual change, in
Devachan. For that dreamlife is but the fruition, the harvest-time, of those
psychic seed-germs dropped from the tree of physical existence in our moments
of dream and hope - fancy-glimpses of bliss and happiness, stifled in an
ungrateful social soil, blooming in the rosy dawn of Devachan, and ripening
under its ever-fructifying sky. If man had but one single moment of ideal
experience, not even then could it be, as erroneously supposed, the indefinite
prolongation of that ‘single moment.’ That one note, struck from the lyre of
life, would form the key-note of the being’s subjective state, and work out
into numberless harmonic tones and semitones of psychic phantasmagoria. There,
all unrealized hopes, aspirations, dreams, become fully realized, and the
dreams of the objective become the realities of the subjective existence. And
there, behind the curtain of Maya, its vaporous and deceptive appearances are
perceived by the Initiate, who has learned the great secret how to penetrate
thus deep into the Arcana of Being . . . .”
As physical existence has its
cumulative intensity from infancy to prime, and its diminishing energy
thenceforward to dotage and death, so the dream-life of Devachan is lived
correspondentially. There is the first flutter of psychic life, the attainment
of prime, the gradual exhaustion of force passing into conscious lethargy,
semi-unconsciousness, oblivion and - not death, but birth! - birth into another
personality and the resumption of action which daily begets new congeries of
causes that must be worked out in another term of Devachan.
“It is not a reality then, it
is a mere dream,” objectors will urge; “the soul so bathed in a delusive
sensation of enjoyment, which has no reality all the while, is being cheated by
Nature, and must encounter a terrible shock when it wakes to its mistake.” But,
in the nature of things, it never does or can wake. The waking from Devachan is
its next birth into objective life, and the draught of Lethe has then been
taken. Nor as regards the isolation of each soul is there any consciousness of
isolation whatever; nor is there ever possibly a parting from its chosen
associates. Those associates are not in the nature of companions who may wish
to go away, of friends who may tire of the friend that loves them, even if he
or she does not tire of them. Love, the creating force, has placed their living
image before the personal soul which craves for their presence, and that image
will never fly away.
On this aspect of the subject
I may again avail myself of the language of my teacher:-
“Objectors of that kind will
be simply postulating an incongruity, an intercourse of entities in Devachan, which
applies only to the mutual relationship of physical existence! Two sympathetic
souls, both disembodied, will each work out its own Devachanic sensations,
making the other a sharer in its subjective bliss. This will be as real to
them, naturally, as though both were yet on this earth. Nevertheless, each is
dissociated from the other as regards personal or corporeal association. While
the latter is the only one of its kind that is recognized by our earth
experience as an actual intercourse, for the Devachanee it would be not
only something unreal, but could have no existence for it in any sense,
not even as a delusion: a physical body or even a Mâyâvi-rûpa remaining to its
spiritual senses as invisible as it is itself to the physical senses of those
who loved it best on earth. Thus even though one of the ‘sharers’ were alive
and utterly unconscious of that intercourse in his waking state, still every
dealing with him would be to the Devachanee an absolute reality, And
what actual companionship could there ever be other than the purely
idealistic one, as above described, between two subjective entities
which are not even as material as that ethereal body-shadow - the Mâyâvi-rûpa?
To object to this on the ground that one is thus ‘cheated by Nature,’ and to call
it ‘ a delusive sensation of enjoyment which has no reality,’ is to show
oneself utterly unfit to comprehend the conditions of life and being outside of
our material existence. For how can the same distinction be made in Devachan -
i.e. outside of the conditions of earth-life - between what we call a reality
and a factitious or an artificial counterfeit of the same, in this, our world?
The same principle cannot apply to the two sets of conditions. It is
conceivable that what we call a reality in our embodied physical state will
exist under the same conditions as an actuality for a disembodied entity? On
earth, man is dual - in the sense of being a thing of matter and a thing of
spirit; hence the natural distinction made by his mind - the analyst of his physical
sensations and spiritual perceptions - between an actuality and a fiction;
though, even in this life, the two groups of faculties are constantly
equilibrating each other, each group when dominant seeing as fiction or
delusion what the other believes to be most real. But in Devachan our Ego has
ceased to be dualistic, in the above sense, and becomes a spiritual, mental
entity. That which was a fiction, a dream in life, and which had its being but
in the region of ‘fancy,’ becomes, under the new conditions of existence, the
only possible reality. Thus, for us to postulate the possibility of any
other reality for a Devachanee is to maintain an absurdity, a monstrous
fallacy, an idea unphilosophical to the last degree. The actual is that which
is acted or performed de facto: ‘the reality of a thing is proved by its
actuality.’ And the suppositions and artificial having no possible existence in
that Devachanic state, the logical sequence is that everything in it is actual
and real. For, again, whether overshadowing the five principles during the life
of the personality, or entirely separated from the grosser principles by the
dissolution of the body - the sixth principle, or our ‘Spiritual Soul,’ has no
substance - it is ever Arupa; nor is it confined to one place with a limited
horizon of perceptions around it. Therefore, whether in or out of
its mortal body it is ever distinct, and free from its limitations; and if we
call its Devachanic experiences ‘a cheating of Nature,’ then we should never be
allowed to call ‘reality’ any of those purely abstract feelings that belong
entirely to, and are reflected and assimilated by, our higher soul -
such, for instance, as an ideal perception of the beautiful, profound
philanthropy, love, &c., as well as every other purely spiritual sensation
that during life fills our inner being with either immense joy or pain.”
We must remember that by the
very nature of the system described there are infinite varieties of well-being
in Devachan, suited to the infinite varieties of merit in mankind. If “the next
world” really were the objective heaven which ordinary theology preaches, there
would be endless injustice and inaccuracy in its operation. People, to begin
with, would be either admitted or excluded, and the differences of favour shown
to different guests within the all-favoured region would not sufficiently
provide for differences of merit in this life. But the real heaven of our earth
adjusts itself to the needs and merits of each new arrival with unfailing
certainty. Not merely as regards the duration of the blissful state, which is
determined by the causes engendered during objective life, but as regards the
intensity and amplitude of the emotions which constitute that blissful state,
the heaven of each person who attains the really existent heaven is precisely
fitted to his capacity for enjoying it. It is the creation of his own
aspirations and faculties. More than this it may be impossible for the
uninitiated comprehension to realize. But this indication of its character is
enough to show how perfectly it falls into its appointed place in the whole
scheme of evolution.
“Devachan,” to resume my
direct quotations, “is, of course, a state, not a locality, as much as
Avitchi, its antithesis (which please not to confound with hell).
Esoteric Buddhist philosophy has three principal lokas so-called -
namely, 1. Kâma loka; 2. Rûpa loka; and 3. Arûpa loka; or
in their literal translation and meaning - 1. world of desires or passions, of
unsatisfied earthly cravings - the abode of ‘Shells’ and Victims, of
Elementaries and Suicides; 2. the world of forms - i.e., of shadows more
spiritual, having form and objectivity, but no substance; and 3. the formless
world, or rather the world of no form, the incorporeal, since its denizens can
have neither body, shape, nor colour for us mortals, and in the sense that we
give to these terms. These are the three spheres of ascending spirituality in
which the several groups of subjective and semi-subjective entities find their
attractions. All but the suicides and the victims of premature violent deaths
go, according to their attractions and powers, either into the Devachanic or
the Avitchi state, which two states form the numberless subdivisions of Rûpa
and Arûpa lokas - that is to say, that such states not only vary in degree, or
in their presentation to the subject entity as regards form, colour, &c.,
but that there is an infinite scale of such states, in their progressive
spirituality and intensity of feeling, from the lowest in the Rûpa, up to the
highest and the most exalted in the Arûpa-loka. The student must bear in mind
that personality is the synonym for limitation; and that the more
selfish, the more contracted the person’s ideas, the closer will he cling to the
lower spheres of being, the longer loiter on the plane of selfish social
intercourse.”
Devachan being a condition of
mere subjective enjoyment, the duration and intensity of which is determined by
the merit and spirituality of the earth-life last past, there is no
opportunity, while the soul inhabits it, for the punctual requital of evil
deeds. But Nature does not content herself with either forgiving sins in a free
and easy way, or damning sinners outright, like a lazy master too indolent,
rather than too good-natured, to govern his household justly. The Karma of
evil, be it great or small, is at certainly operative at the appointed time as
the Karma of good. But the place of its operation is not Devachan, but either a
new rebirth, or Avitchi - a state to be reached only in exceptional cases and
by exceptional natures. In other words, while the common-place sinner will reap
the fruits of his evil deeds in a following re-incarnation, the exceptional
criminal, the aristocrat of sin, has Avitchi in prospect - that is to say, the
condition of subjective spiritual misery which is the reverse side of Devachan.
“Avitchi is a state of the
most ideal spiritual wickedness, something akin to the state of Lucifer,
so superbly described by Milton. Not many, though, are there who can reach it,
as the thoughtful reader will perceive. And if it is urged that since there is
Devachan for nearly all, for the good, the bad, and the indifferent, the ends
of harmony and equilibrium are frustrated, and the law of retribution and of
impartial, implacable justice, hardly met and satisfied by such a comparative
scarcity, if not absence of its antithesis, then the answer will show that
it is not so. ‘Evil is the dark son of Earth (matter), and Good -
the fair daughter of Heaven’ (or Spirit), says the Chinese philosopher;
hence the place of punishment for most of our sins is the earth - its
birth-place and play-ground. There is more apparent and relative than actual
evil even on earth, and it is not given to the hoi polloi to reach the
fatal grandeur and eminence of a ‘Satan’ every day.”
Generally the re-birth into
objective existence is the event for which the Karma of evil patiently waits;
and then it irresistibly asserts itself, not that the Karma of good exhausts
itself in Devachan, leaving the unhappy monad to develop a new consciousness
with no material beyond the evil deeds of its last personality. The re-birth
will be qualified by the merit as well as the demerit of the previous life, but
the Devachan existence is a rosy sleep - a peaceful night, with dreams more
vivid than day, and imperishable for many centuries.
It will be seen that the
Devachan state is only one of the conditions of existence which go to make up
the whole spiritual or relatively spiritual complement of our earth life.
Observers of spiritualistic phenomena would never have been perplexed, as they
have been, if there were no other but the Devachan state to be dealt with. For
once in Devachan there is very little opportunity for communication between a
spirit, then wholly absorbed in its own sensations and practically oblivious of
the earth left behind, and its former friends still living. Whether gone before
or yet remaining on earth, those friends, if the bond of affection has been
sufficiently strong, will be with the happy spirit still, to all intents and
purposes for him, and as happy, blissful, innocent, as the disembodied dreamer
himself. It is possible, however, for yet living persons to have visions
of Devachan, though such visions are rare, and only one-sided, the entities in
Devachan, sighted by the earthly clairvoyant, being quite unconscious
themselves of undergoing such observation. The spirit of the clairvoyant
ascends into the condition of Devachan in such rare visions, and thus becomes
subject to the vivid delusions of that existence. It is under the impression
that the spirits, with which it is in Devachanic bonds of sympathy, have come
down to visit earth and itself, while the converse operation has really taken
place. The clairvoyant’s spirit has been raised towards those in Devachan. Thus
many of the subjective spiritual communications - most of them when the
sensitives are pure-minded - are real, though it is most difficult for the
uninitiated medium to fix in his mind the true and correct pictures of what he
sees and hears. In the same way some of the phenomena called psychography
(though more rarely) are also real. The spirit of the sensitive, getting
odylized, so to say, by the aura of the spirit in the Devachan, becomes
for a few minutes that departed personality, and writes in the handwriting of
the latter, in his language and in his thoughts, as they were during his
lifetime. The two spirits become blended in one, and the preponderance of one
over the other during such phenomena determines the preponderance of
personality in the characteristic exhibited. Thus it may incidentally be
observed, what is called rapport, is, in plain fact, an identity of
molecular vibration between the astral part of the incarnate medium and the
astral part of the disincarnate personality.
As already indicated, and as
the common sense of the mater would show, there are great varieties of states
in Devachan, and each personality drops into its befitting place there. Thence,
consequently he emerges in his befitting place in the world of causes, this
earth or another, as the case may be, when his time for re-birth comes. Coupled
with survival of the affinities, comprehensively described as Karma, the
affinities both for good and evil engendered by the previous life, this process
will be seen to accomplish nothing less than an explanation of the problem
which has always been regarded as so incomprehensible - the inequalities of
life. The conditions on which we enter life are the consequences of the use we
have made of our last set of conditions. They do not impede the development of
fresh Karma, whatever they may be, for this will be generated by the use we
make of them in turn. Nor is it to be supposed that every event of a
current life which bestows joy or sorrow is old Karma bearing fruit. Many may
be the immediate consequences of acts in the life to which they belong -
ready-money transactions with Nature, so to speak, of which it may be hardly
necessary to make any entry in her books. But the great inequalities of life,
as regards the start in it which different human beings make, is a manifest
consequence of old Karma, the infinite varieties of which always keep up a
constant supply of recruits for all the manifold varieties of human condition.
It must not be supposed that
the real Ego slips instantaneously at death from the earth life and its
entanglements, into the Devachanic condition. When the division of, or
purification of the fifth principle has been accomplished in Kâma loca by the
contending attractions of the fourth and sixth principles, the real Ego passes
into a period of unconscious gestation. I have spoken already of the way in
which the Devachanic life is in itself a process of growth, maturity, and
decline; but the analogies of earth are even more closely preserved. There is a
spiritual ante-natal state at the entrance to spiritual life, as there is a
similar and equally unconscious physical state at the entrance to objective
life. And this period, in different cases, may be of very different duration -
from a few moments to immense periods of years. When a man dies, his soul or
fifth principle becomes unconscious and loses all remembrance of things
internal as wall as external. Whether his stay in Kâma loca has to last but a
few moments, hours, days, weeks, months or years, whether he dies a natural or
a violent death, whether this occurs in youth or age, and whether the Ego has
been good, bad, or indifferent, his consciousness leaves him as suddenly as the
flame leaves a wick when it is blown out. When life has retired from the last
particle of the brain matter, his perceptive faculties become extinct for ever,
and his spiritual powers of cognition and volition become for the time being as
extinct as the others. His Mâyâvi-rûpa may be thrown into objectivity, as in
the case of apparitions after death, but unless it is projected by a conscious
or intense desire to see or appear to some one shooting through the dying
brain, the apparition will be simply automatic. The revival of consciousness in
Kâma loca is obviously, from what has been said, a phenomenon that depends on
the characteristic of the principles passing, unconsciously at the moment, out
of the dying body. It may become tolerably complete under circumstances by no
means to be desired, or it may be obliterated by a rapid passage into the
gestation state leading to Devachan. This gestation state may be of very long
duration in proportion to the Ego’s spiritual stamina, and Devachan accounts
for the remainder of the period between death and the next physical re-birth.
The whole period is, of course, of very varying length in the case of different
persons, but re-birth in less than fifteen hundred years is spoken of as almost
impossible, while the stay in Devachan, which rewards a very rich Karma is sometimes
said to extend to enormous periods.
ANNOTATIONS
The comments I have to make
on the doctrine embodied in the foregoing chapter will be postponed most
conveniently to the end of the next, and offered in connection with those
applying to the conditions of Kâma loca.

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More Theosophy Stuff
with these links
Cardiff Theosophical
Society meetings are informal
and there’s always a
cup of tea afterwards
The
Cardiff Theosophical Society Website

1948
Standard Vanguard
The
National Wales Theosophy Website
Bangor,
Cardiff, Conwy & Swansea
If you
run a Theosophy Group, please feel free
to use
any of the material on this site

1953
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Theosophy Cardiff’s Instant Guide

Phase
II Standard Vanguard 1953 -55
Theosophical Movement in Wales
as it separates into independent
groups that run do their own show
One liners and quick explanations
H P
Blavatsky is usually the only
Theosophist
that most people have ever
heard
of. Let’s put that right
The Voice of the Silence Website

Phase
III Standard Vanguard Circa 1959
An
Independent Theosophical Republic
Links
to Free Online Theosophy
Study
Resources; Courses, Writings,
The main criteria for the inclusion of
links on this site is that they have some
relationship (however tenuous) to Theosophy
and are lightweight, amusing or entertaining.
Topics include Quantum Theory and Socks,
Dick Dastardly and Legendary Blues Singers.
A selection of articles on Reincarnation
Provided in response to the large
number of enquiries we receive at
Cardiff Theosophical Society on this subject

Phase
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The Voice of the Silence Website
This is for
everyone, you don’t have to live
in Wales to
make 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
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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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Complete Theosophical Glossary in Plain Text Format
1.22MB
Quick
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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
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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
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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 is
now a stand alone group affiliated to
the Adyar Theosophical Society.
High
Drama & Worldwide Confusion
as
Theosophy Cardiff Separates from the
Welsh
Regional Association (formed 1993)