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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
Buddha
Chapter 9
THE historical Buddha, as known to the custodians of the esoteric
doctrine, is a personage whose birth is not invested with the quaint marvels
popular story has crowded round it. Nor was his progress to adeptship traced by
the literal occurrence of the super-natural struggles depicted in symbolic
legend. On the other hand, the incarnation, which may outwardly be described as
the birth of Buddha, is certainly not regarded by occult science as an event
like any other birth, nor the spiritual development through which Buddha passed
during his earth-life a mere process of intellectual evolution, like the mental
history of any other philosopher. The mistake which ordinary European writers
make in dealing with a problem of this sort, lies in their inclinations to treat
exoteric legend either as a record of a miracle about which no more need be
said, or as pure myth, putting merely a fantastic decoration on a remarkable
life. This, it is assumed, however remarkable, must have been lived according
to the theories of Nature at present accepted by the nineteenth century. The
account which has now been given in the foregoing pages may prepare the way for
a statement as to what the esoteric doctrine teaches concerning the real
Buddha, who was born, as modern investigation has quite correctly ascertained,
643 years before the Christian era, at Kapila-Vastu, near Benares.
Exoteric conceptions, knowing nothing of the laws which govern the
operations of Nature in her higher departments, can only explain an abnormal
dignity attaching to some particular birth, by supposing that the physical body
of the person concerned was generated in a miraculous manner. Hence the popular
notion about Buddha, that his incarnation in this world was due to an
immaculate conception. Occult science knows nothing of any process for the
production of a physical human child other than that appointed by physical
laws; but it does know a good deal concerning the limits within which the
progressive “one life,” or “spiritual monad,” or continuous thread of a series
of incarnations may select a definite child-bodies as their human tenements. By
the operation of Karma, in the case of ordinary mankind, this selection is
made, unconsciously as far as the antecedent spiritual Ego emerging from
Devachan is concerned. But in those abnormal cases where the one life has
already forced itself into the sixth principle - that is to say, where a man
has become an adept, and has the power of guiding his own spiritual Ego, in
full consciousness as to what he is about, after he has quitted the body in
which he won adeptship, either temporarily or permanently - it is quite within
his power to select his own next incarnation. During life, even, he gets above
the Devachanic attraction. He becomes one of the conscious directing powers of
the planetary system to which he belongs, and great as this mystery of selected
re-incarnation may be, it is not by any means restricted to its application to
such extraordinary events as the birth of a Buddha. It is a phenomenon
frequently reproduced by the higher adepts to this day; and while a great deal
recounted in popular Oriental mythology is either purely fictitious or entirely
symbolical, the re-incarnations of the Dalai and Teshu Lamas of Tibet, at which
travelers only laugh for want of the knowledge that might enable them to sift
fact from fancy, is a sober, scientific achievement. In such cases the adept
states beforehand in what child, when and where to be born, he is going to
re-incarnate, and he very rarely fails. We say very rarely, because there are
some accidents of physical nature which cannot be entirely guarded against; and
it is not absolutely certain that, with all the foresight even an adept may
bring to bear upon the matter, the child he may choose to become - in his re-incarnated
state - may attain physical maturity successfully. And, meanwhile, in the
body, the adept is relatively helpless. Out of the body he is just what he
has been ever since he became an adept; but as regards the new body he has
chosen to inhabit, he must let it grow up in the ordinary course of Nature, and
educate it by ordinary processes, and initiate it by the regular occult method
into adeptship, before he has got a body fully ready again for occult work on
the physical plane. All these processes are immensely simplified, it is true,
by the peculiar spiritual force working within; but at first, in the child's
body, the adept soul is certainly cramped and embarrassed, and, as ordinary
imagination might suggest, very uncomfortable and ill at ease. The situation
would be very much misunderstood if the reader were to imagine that
re-incarnation of the kind described is a privilege which adepts avail
themselves of with pleasure.
Buddha’s birth was a mystery of the kind described, and by the light of
what has been said, it will be easy to go over the popular story of his
miraculous origin, and trace the symbolic references to the facts of the
situation in some even of the most grotesque fables. None, for example, can
look less promising, as an allusion to anything like a scientific fact, than
the statement that Buddha entered the side of his mother as a young white
elephant. But the while elephant is simply the symbol of adeptship - something
considered to be a rare and beautiful specimen of its kind. So with other
ante-natal legends pointing to the fact that the future child's body had been
chosen as the habitation of a great spirit already endowed with superlative
wisdom and goodness. Indra and Brahma came to do homage to the child at his
birth - that is to say, the powers of Nature were already in submission to the
Spirit within him. The thirty-two signs of a Buddha, which legends describe by
means of a ludicrous physical symbolism, are merely the various powers of
adeptship.
The selection of the body known as Siddhartha, and afterwards as
Gautama, son of Suddhodana, of Kapila-Vastu, as the human tenement of the
enlightened human spirit, who had submitted to incarnation for the sake of
teaching mankind, was not one of those rare failures spoken of above; on
the contrary, it was a signally successful choice in all respects, and nothing
interfered with the accomplishment of adeptship by the Buddha in his new body.
The popular narrative of his ascetic struggles and temptations, and of his
final attainment of Buddhahood under the Bo-tree, is nothing more, of course,
than the exoteric version of his initiation.
From that period onward, his work was of a dual nature; he had to reform
and revive the morals of the populace and the science of the adepts - for
adeptship itself is subject to cyclic changes, and in need of periodical
impulses. The explanation of this branch of the subject, in plain terms, will
not alone be important for its own sake, but will be interesting to all
students of exoteric Buddhism, as elucidating some of the puzzling
complications of the more abstruse “Northern doctrine.”
A Buddha visits the earth for each of the seven races of the great
planetary period. The Buddha with whom we are occupied was the fourth of the
series, and that is why he stands fourth in the list quoted by Mr Rhys Davids,
from Burnouf - quoted as an illustration of the way the Northern doctrine has
been, as Mr Davids supposes, inflated by metaphysical subtleties and
absurdities crowded round the simple morality which sums up Buddhism as
presented to the populace. The fifth, or Maitreya Buddha, will come after the
final disappearance of the fifth race, and when the sixth race will already
have been established on earth for some hundreds of thousands of years. The
sixth will come at the beginning of the seventh race, and the seventh towards
the close of that race.
This arrangement will seem, at the first glance, out of harmony with the
general design of human evolution. Here we are, in the middle of the fifth
race, and yet it is the fourth Buddha who has been identified with this race,
and the fifth will not come till the fifth race is practically extinct. The
explanation is to be found, however, in the great outlines of the esoteric
cosmogony. At the beginning of each great planetary period, when obscuration
comes to an end, and the human tide-wave in its progress round the chain of
worlds arrives at the shore of a globe where no humanity has existed for
milliards of years, a teacher is required from the first for the new crop of
mankind about to spring up. Remember that the preliminary evolution of the
mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms has been accomplished in preparation
for the new round-period. With the first infusion of the life-current into the
“missing link” species, the first race of the new series will begin to evolve.
It is then that the Being, who may be considered the Buddha of the first race,
appears. The Planetary Spirit, or Dhyân Chohan, who is - or, to avoid the
suggestion of an erroneous idea by the use of a singular verb, let us defy
grammar, and say, who are - Buddha in all his or their developments, incarnates
among the young, innocent, teachable fore-runners of the new humanity, and
impresses the first broad principles of right and wrong, and the first truths
of the esoteric doctrine on a sufficient number of receptive minds, to ensure
the continued reverberation of the ideas so implanted through successive
generations of men in the millions of years to come, before the first race
shall have completed its course. It is this advent in the beginning of the
round-period of a Divine Being in human form that starts the ineradicable
conception of the anthropomorphic God in all exoteric religions.
The first Buddha of the series in which Gautama Buddha stands fourth, is
thus the second incarnation of Avaloketiswara - the mystic name of the hosts of
the Dhyân Chohans or Planetary Spirits belonging to our planetary chain - and
though Gautama is thus the fourth incarnation of enlightenment by exoteric
reckoning, he is really the fifth of the true series, and thus properly
belonging to our fifth race.
Avaloketiswara, as just stated, is the mystic name of the hosts of the
Dhyân Chohans; the proper meaning of the word is manifested wisdom, just as
Addi-Buddha and Amitabha both mean abstract wisdom.
The doctrine, as quoted by Mr Davids, that “every earthly mortal Buddha
has his pure and glorious counterpart in the mystic world, free from the
debasing conditions of this material life - or, rather, that the Buddha under
material conditions is only an appearance, the reflection, or emanation, or
type of a Dhyani Buddha” - is perfectly correct; the number of Dhyani Buddhas,
or Dhyân Chohans, or planetary spirits, perfected human spirits of former
world-periods, is infinite, but only five are practically identified in
exoteric, and seven in esoteric, teaching, and this identification, be it
remembered, is a manner of speaking which must not be interpreted too
literally, for there is a unity in the sublime spirit-life in question that
leaves no room for the isolation of individuality. All this will be seen to
harmonize perfectly with the revelations concerning Nature embodied in previous
chapters, and need not, in any way, be attributed to mystic imaginings. The
Dhyani Buddhas, or Dhyân Chohans, are the perfected humanity of previous
manwantaric epochs, and their collective intelligence is described by
the name “Addi Buddha,” which Mr Rhys Davids is mistaken in treating as a
comparatively recent invention of the Northern Buddhists. Addi-Buddha means
primordial wisdom, and is mentioned in the oldest Sanscrit books. For example,
in the philosophical dissertation on the “Mandukya Upanishad,” by Gowdapatha, a
Sanscrit author contemporary with Buddha himself, the expression is freely used
and expounded in exact accordance with the present statement. A friend of mine
in India, a Brahmin pundit of first-rate attainments as a Sanscrit scholar, has
shown me a copy of this book, which has never yet, that he knows of, been
translated into English, and has pointed out a sentence bearing on the present
question, giving me the following translation: “Prakriti itself, in fact, is
Addi-Buddha, and all the Dharmas have been existing from eternity.” Gowdapatha
is a philosophical writer respected by all Hindoo and Buddhist sects alike, and
widely known. He was the guru, or spiritual teacher, of the first
Sankaracharya, of whom I shall have to speak more at length very shortly.
Adeptship, when Buddha incarnated, was not the condensed, compact
hierarchy that it has since become under his influence. There has never been an
age of the world without its adepts; but they have sometimes been scattered
throughout the world, they have sometimes been isolated in separate seclusions,
they have gravitated now to this country, now to that; and finally, be it
remembered, their knowledge and power has not always been inspired with the
elevated and severe morality which Buddha infused into its latest and highest
organization. The reform of the occult world by his instrumentality was, in
fact, the result of his great sacrifice, of the self-denial which induced him
to reject the blessed condition of Nirvana to which, after his earth-life as
Buddha, he was fully entitled, and undertake the burden of renewed incarnations
in order to carry out more thoroughly the task he had taken in hand, and confer
a correspondingly increased benefit on mankind. Buddha re-incarnated himself,
next after his existence as Gautama Buddha, in the person of the great teacher
of whom but little is said in exoteric works on Buddhism, but without a
consideration of whose life it would be impossible to get a correct conception
of the position in the Eastern world of esoteric science - namely,
Sankaracharya. The latter part of this name, it may be explained - acharya -
merely means teacher. The whole name as a title is perpetuated to this day
under curious circumstances, but the modern bearers of it are not in the direct
line of Buddhist spiritual incarnations.
Sankaracharya appeared in India - no attention
being paid to his birth, which appears to have taken place on the
The position was as follows: - Up to the time of Buddha, the Brahmins of
India had jealously reserved occult knowledge as the appanage of their own
caste. Exceptions were occasionally made in favour of Tshatryas, but the rule
was exclusive in a very high degree. This rule Buddha broke down, admitting all
castes equally to the path of adeptship. The change may have been perfectly
right in principle, but it paved the way for a great deal of trouble, and, as
the Brahmins conceived, for the degradation of occult knowledge itself - that
is to say, its transfer to unworthy hands, not unworthy merely because of caste
inferiority, but because of the moral inferiority which they conceived to be
introduced into the occult fraternity together with brothers of low birth. The
Brahmin contention would not by any means be, that because a man should be a
Brahmin, it followed that he was necessarily virtuous and trustworthy; but the
argument would be: It is supremely necessary to keep out all but the virtuous
and trustworthy from the secrets and powers of initiation. To that end it is
necessary not only to set up all the ordeals, probations, and tests we can
think of, but also to take no candidates except from the class which, on the
whole, by reason of its hereditary advantages, is likely to be the best nursery
of fit candidates.
Later experience is held on all hands now to have gone far towards
vindicating the Brahmin apprehension, and the next incarnation of Buddha, after
that in the person of Sankaracharya, was a practical admission of this; but
meanwhile, in the person of Sankaracharya, Buddha was engaged in smoothing
over, beforehand, the sectarian strife in India which he saw impending. The
active opposition of the Brahmins against Buddhism began in Asoka’s time, when
the great efforts made by that ruler to spread Buddhism provoked an
apprehension on their part in reference to their social and political
ascendency. It must be remembered that initiates are not wholly free in all
cases from the prejudices of their own individualities. They possess some
such god-like attributes that outsiders, when they first begin to understand
something of these, are apt to divest them, in imagination, even too completely
of human frailties. Initiation and occult knowledge, held in common, is
certainly a bond of union, among adepts of all nationalities, which is far
stronger than any other bond. But it has been found on more occasions than one
to fail in obliterating all other distinctions. Thus the Buddhist and Brahmin initiates
of the period referred to were by no means of one mind on all questions, and
the Brahmins very decidedly disapproved of the Buddhist reformation in its
exoteric aspects. Chandragupta, Asoka’s grandfather, was an upstart, and the
family were Sudras. This was enough to render his Buddhist policy unattractive
to the representatives of the orthodox Brahmin faith. The struggle assumed a
very embittered form, though ordinary history gives us few or no particulars.
The party of primitive Buddhism was entirely worsted, and the Brahmin
ascendency completely re-established in the time of Vikramaditya, about 80 B.C.
But Sankaracharya had traveled all over India in advance of the great struggle,
and had established various mathams, or schools of philosophy, in several
important centres. He was only engaged in this task for a few years, but the
influence of his teaching has been so stupendous that its very magnitude
disguises the change wrought. He brought exoteric Hinduism into practical
harmony with the esoteric “wisdom religion,” and left the people amusing
themselves still with their ancient mythologies, but leaning on philosophical
guides who were esoteric Buddhists to all intents and purposes, though in
reconciliation with all that was ineradicable in Brahminism. The great fault of
previous exoteric Hinduism lay in its attachment to vain ceremonial, and its
adhesion to idolatrous conceptions of the divinities of the Hindu Pantheon.
Sankaracharya emphasized, by his commentaries on the Upanishads, and by his original
writings, the necessity of pursuing gnyanam in order to obtain moksha
- that is to say, the importance of the secret knowledge, to spiritual
progress and the consummation thereof. He was the founder of the Vedantin
system - the proper meaning of Vedanta being the final end or crown of
knowledge - though the sanctions of that system are derived by him from the
writings of Vyasa, the author of the “Mahabharata,” the “Puranas,” and the
“Brahmasutras.” I make these statements, the reader will understand, not on the
basis of any researches of my own - which I am not Oriental scholar enough to
attempt - but on the authority of a Brahmin initiate who is himself a
first-rate Sanscrit scholar as well as an occultist.
The Vedantin school at present is almost co-extensive with Hinduism,
making allowance, of course, for the existence of some special sects, like the
Sikhs, the Vallabacharyas, or Maharajah sect, of very unfair fame, and may be
divided into three great divisions - the Adwaitees, the Vishishta Adwaitees,
and the Dwaitees. The outline of the Adwaitee doctrine is that brahmum or
purush, the universal spirit, acts only through prakriti, matter,
that everything takes place in this way through the inherent energy of matter.
Brahmum, or Parabrahm, is thus a passive, incomprehensible, unconscious
principle, but the essence, one life, or energy of the universe. In this way
the doctrine is identical with the transcendental materialism of the adept
esoteric Buddhist philosophy. The name Adwaitee signifies not dual, and
has reference partly to the non-duality, or unity of the universal spirit, or
Buddhist one life, as distinguished from the notion of its operation through
anthropomorphic emanations; partly to the unity of the universal and the human
spirit. As a natural consequence of this doctrine, the Adwaitees infer the
Buddhist doctrine of Karma, regarding the future destiny of man, as altogether
depending on the causes he himself engenders.
The Vishishta Adwaitees modify these views by the interpolation of
Vishnu as a conscious deity, the primary emanation of Parabrahm, Vishu being
regarded as a personal god, capable of intervening in the course of human
destiny. They do not regard yog, or spiritual training, as the proper
avenue to spiritual achievement, but conceive this to be possible, chiefly by
means of Bhakti, or devoutness. Roughly stated in the phraseology of
European theology, the Adwaitee may thus be said to believe only in salvation
by works, the Vishishta Adwaitee in salvation by grace. The Dwaitee differs but
little from the Vishishta Adwaitee, merely affirming, by the designation he
assumes, with increased emphasis the duality of the human spirit and the
highest principle of the universe, and including many ceremonial observances as
an essential part of Bhakti.
But all these differences of view, it must be borne in mind, have to do
merely with the exoteric variations on the fundamental idea, introduced by
different teachers with varying impressions as to the capacity of the populace
for assimilating transcendental ideas. All leaders of Vedantin thought look up
to Sankaracharva and the mathams he established with the greatest possible
reverence, and their inner faith runs up in all cases into the one esoteric
doctrine. In fact the initiates of all schools in India interlace with one
another. Except as regards nomenclature, the whole system of cosmogony, as held
by the Buddhist-Arhats, and as set forth in this volume, is equally held by
initiated Brahmins, and has been equally held by them since before Buddha’s
birth. Whence did they obtain it? the reader may ask. Their answer would be
from the Planetary Spirit, or Dhyân Chohan, who first visited this planet at
the dawn of the human race in the present round-period - more millions of years
ago than I like to mention on the basis of conjecture, while the real exact
number is withheld.
Sankaracharya founded four principal mathams, one at Sringari, in
Southern India, which has always remained the most important; one at Juggernath,
in Orissa; one at Dwaraka, in Kathiawar; and one at Gungotri, on the slopes of
the Himalayas in the North. The chief of the Sringari temple has always borne
the designation Sankaracharya, in addition to some individual name. From these
four centres others have been established, and mathams now exist all over
India, exercising the utmost possible influence on Hinduism.
I have said that Buddha, by his third incarnation, recognized the fact
that he had, in the excessive confidence of his loving trust in the
perfectibility of humanity, opened the doors of the occult sanctuary too
widely. His third appearance was in the person of Tsong-ka-pa, the great
Tibetan adept reformer of the fourteenth century. In this personality he was
exclusively concerned with the affairs of the adept fraternity, by that time
collecting chiefly in Tibet.
From time immemorial there had been a certain secret region in Tibet,
which to this day is quite unknown to and unapproachable by any but initiated
persons, and inaccessible to the ordinary people of the country as to any
others, in which adepts have always congregated. But the country generally was
not in Buddha’s time, as it has since become, the chosen habitation of the
great brotherhood. Much more than they are at present, were the Mahatmas in
former times, distributed about the world. The progress of civilization,
engendering the magnetism they find so trying, had, however, by the date with
which we are now dealing - the fourteenth century - already given rise to a
very general movement towards Tibet on the part of the previously dissociated
occultists. Far more widely than was held to be consistent with the safety of
mankind was occult knowledge and power then found to be disseminated. To the
task of putting it under the control of a rigid system of rule and law did
Tsong-ka-pa address himself.
Without re-establishing the system on the previous unreasonable basis of
caste exclusiveness, he elaborated a code of rules for the guidance of the
adepts, the effect of which was to weed out of the occult body all but those
who sought occult knowledge in a spirit of the most sublime devotion to the
highest moral principles.
An article in the Theosophist for March, 1882, on
“Re-incarnations in Tibet,” for the complete trustworthiness of which in all
its mystic bearings I have the highest assurance, gives a great deal of
important information about the branch of the subject with which we are now
engaged, and the relations between esoteric Buddhism and Tibet, which cannot be
examined too closely by any one who desires an exhaustive comprehension of
Buddhism in its real signification.
“The regular system,” we read, “of the Lamaic incarnations of ‘Sangyas’
(or Buddha) began with Tsong-kha-pa. This reformer is not the incarnation of
one of the five celestial Dhyanis or heavenly Buddhas, as is generally
supposed, said to have been created by Sakya Muni after he had risen to
Nirvana, but that of Amita, one of the Chinese names for Buddha. The records
preserved in the Gon-pa (lamasery) of Tda-shi Hlum-po (spelt by the English Teshu
Lumbo) show that Sangyas incarnated himself in Tsong-kha-pa in consequence
of the great degradation his doctrines had fallen into. Until then there had
been no other incarnations than those of the five celestial Buddhas, and of
their Boddhisatvas, each of the former having created (read, overshadowed with
his spiritual wisdom) five of the last named . . . . . It was because, among
many other reforms, Tsong-kha-pa forbade necromancy (which is practiced to this
day with the most disgusting rites by the Bhöns - the aborigines of Tibet, with
whom the Red Caps or Shammars had always fraternized) that the latter resisted
his authority. This act was followed by a split between the two sects.
Separating entirely from the Gyalukpas, the Dugpas (Red Caps), from the first
in a great minority, settled in various parts of Tibet, chiefly its
border-lands, and principally in Nepaul and Bhootan. But, while they retained a
sort of independence at the monastery of Sakia-Djong, the Tibetan residence of
their spiritual (?) chief, Gong-sso Rimbo-chay, the Bhootanese have been from
their beginning the tributaries and vassals of the Dalai Lamas.
“The Tda-shi Lamas were always more powerful and more highly considered
than the Dalai Lamas. The latter are the creation of the Tda-shi Lama,
Nabang-lob-sang, the sixth incarnation of Tsong-kha-pa, himself an incarnation
of Amitabha or Buddha.”
Several writers on Buddhism have entertained a theory, which Mr Clements
Markham formulates very fully in his “Narrative of the Mission of George Bogle
to Tibet,” that whereas the original Scriptures of Buddhism were taken to
Ceylon by the son of Asoka, the Buddhism which found its way into Tibet from
India and China was gradually overlaid with a mass of dogma and metaphysical
speculation. And Professor Max Müller says: - “The most important element in
the Buddhist reform has always been its social and moral code, not its
metaphysical theories. That moral code, taken by itself, is one of the most
perfect which the world has ever known; and it was this blessing that the
introduction of Buddhism brought into Tibet.”
“The blessing,” says the authoritative article in the Theosophist,
from which I have just been quoting, “has remained and spread all over the
country, there being no kinder, purer-minded, more simple, or sin-fearing
nation than the Tibetans. But for all that, the popular lamaism, when compared
with the real esoteric, or Arahat, Buddhism of Tibet, offers a contrast as
great at the snow trodden along a road in the valley to the pure and undefiled
mass which glitters on the top of a high mountain peak.”
The fact is, that Ceylon is saturated with exoteric, and Tibet with
esoteric, Buddhism. Ceylon concerns itself merely or mainly with the morals,
Tibet, or rather the adepts of Tibet, with the science, of Buddhism.
These explanations constitute but a sketch of the whole position. I do
not possess the arguments nor the literary leisure which would be required for
its amplification into a finished picture of the relations which really subsist
between the inner principles of Hinduism and those of Buddhism. And I am quite
alive to the possibility that many learned and painstaking students of the
subject will have formed, as the consequences of prolonged and erudite
research, conclusions with which the explanations I am now enabled to give, may
seem at first sight to conflict. But none the less are these explanations
directly gathered from authorities to whom the subject is no less familiar in
its scholarly than in its esoteric aspect. And their inner knowledge throws a
light upon the whole position which wholly exempts them from the danger of
misconstruing texts and mistaking the bearings of obscure symbology. To know
when Gautama Buddha was born, what is recorded of his teaching, and what
popular legends have gathered round his biography, is to know next to nothing
of the real Buddha, so much greater than either the historical moral teacher,
or the fantastic demigod of tradition. And it is only when we have comprehended
the link between Buddhism and Brahaminism that the greatness of the esoteric
doctrine rises into its true proportions.
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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
_____________________
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.
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
Anyone planning a
“Spiritual” stay at the
Tekels Park Guest
House should be aware of the sale.
____________________
A B C D EFG H IJ KL M N OP QR S T UV 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
___________________
into
categories and presented according to relevance of website.
Web
Directory - Add Link - Submit Article - Online Store - Forum
Standard Vanguard Van Circa 1952
______________________
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