A Textbook of Theosophy eBook

Charles Webster Leadbeater
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 157 pages of information about A Textbook of Theosophy.

A Textbook of Theosophy eBook

Charles Webster Leadbeater
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 157 pages of information about A Textbook of Theosophy.

The ordinary man is not capable of any great activity in this mental world; his condition is chiefly receptive, and his vision of anything outside his own shell of thought is of the most limited character.  He is surrounded by living forces, mighty angelic inhabitants of this glorious world, and many of their orders are very sensitive to certain aspirations of man and readily respond to them.  But a man can take advantage of these only in so far as he has already prepared himself to profit by them, for his thoughts and aspirations are only along certain lines, and he cannot suddenly form new lines.  There are many directions which the higher thought may take—­some of them personal and some impersonal.  Among the latter are art, music and philosophy; and a man whose interest lay along any one of these lines finds both measureless enjoyment and unlimited instruction waiting for him—­that is, the amount of enjoyment and instruction is limited only by his power of perception.

We find a large number of people whose only higher thoughts are those connected with affection and devotion.  If a man loves another deeply or if he feels strong devotion to a personal deity, he makes a strong mental image of that friend or of the deity, and the object of his feeling is often present in his mind.  Inevitably he takes that mental image into the heaven-world with him, because it is to that level of matter that it naturally belongs.

Take first the case of affection.  The love which forms and retains such an image is a very powerful force—­a force which is strong enough to reach and to act upon the ego of his friend in the higher part of the mental world.  It is that ego that is the real man whom he loves—­not the physical body which is so partial a representation of him.  The ego of the friend, feeling this vibration, at once and eagerly responds to it, and pours himself into the thought-form, which has been made for him; so that the man’s friend is truly present with him more vividly than ever before.  To this result it makes no difference whatever whether the friend is what we call living or dead; the appeal is made not to the fragment of the friend which is sometimes imprisoned in a physical body, but to the man himself on his own true level; and he always responds.  A man who has a hundred friends can simultaneously and fully respond to the affection of every one of them, for no number of representations on a lower level can exhaust the infinity of the ego.

Thus every man in his heaven-life has around him all the friends for whose company he wishes, and they are for him always at their best, because he himself makes for them the thought-form through which they manifest to him.  In our limited physical world we are so accustomed to thinking of our friend as only the limited manifestation which we know in the physical world, that it is at first difficult for us to realize the grandeur of the conception; when we can realize it, we shall see how much nearer we are in truth to our friends in the heaven-life than we ever were on earth.  The same is true in the case of devotion.  The man in the heaven-world is two great stages nearer to the object of his devotion than he was during physical life, and so his experiences are of a far more transcendent character.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Textbook of Theosophy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.