Classic Audiobook Collection - Invisible Helpers by C. W. Leadbeater ~ Full Audiobook [religion]
Episode Date: February 21, 2024Invisible Helpers by C. W. Leadbeater audiobook. Genre: religion Invisible Helpers is C. W. Leadbeater's classic theosophical exploration of the unseen aid that, he argues, surrounds ordinary life. B...lending anecdote with instruction, Leadbeater opens a door onto a hidden world where help can arrive at the edge of danger, illness, grief, or sudden crisis - sometimes perceived as angels, guides, or providential strangers, and sometimes as living people working outside the physical body while it sleeps. Through vivid accounts of timely rescues and quiet interventions, he sketches what he calls a 'band of helpers' and describes how such assistance might operate on the astral plane and in the borderlands between life and death. The second half turns practical and reflective: Leadbeater outlines the mental discipline, emotional steadiness, and ethical motives he believes are required to recognize this work, communicate intelligently, and avoid self-deception. Qualities like calmness, self-control, unselfishness, and focused intent become not just spiritual ideals but tools for service. Part metaphysical casebook and part handbook for aspiring seekers, Invisible Helpers asks what responsibility comes with expanded perception - and whether compassion can act even when no one is watching. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:06:33) Chapter 02 (00:19:32) Chapter 03 (00:30:05) Chapter 04 (00:45:33) Chapter 05 (00:51:54) Chapter 06 (00:57:25) Chapter 07 (01:08:26) Chapter 08 (01:15:20) Chapter 09 (01:22:40) Chapter 10 (01:33:06) Chapter 11 (01:43:45) Chapter 12 (02:07:24) Chapter 13 (02:14:02) Chapter 14 (02:30:05) Chapter 15 (02:40:26) Chapter 16 (02:52:25) Chapter 17 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater.
Chapter 1. The Universal Belief in Them
It is one of the most beautiful characteristics of theosophy
that it gives back to people in a more rational form
everything which was really useful and helpful to them
in the religions which they have outgrown.
Many who have broken through the chrysalis of blind faith
and mounted on the wings of reason and intuition
to the freer, nobler mental life of more exalted levels,
nevertheless feel that in the process of this glorious gain,
a something has been lost,
that in giving up the beliefs of their childhood,
they have also cast aside much of the beauty and the poetry of life.
If, however, their lives in the past have been sufficiently good
to earn for them the opportunity of coming under the benign influence of
Theosophy, they very soon discover that even in this particular, there has been no loss at all,
but an exceeding great gain, that the glory and the beauty and the poetry are there in fuller measure
than they had ever hoped before, and no longer as a mere pleasant dream from which the cold light
of common sense may at any time rudely awaken them, but as truths of nature which will bear investigation,
which will become only brighter, fuller, and more perfect, as they are more accurately understood.
A marked instance of this beneficent action of theosophy is the way in which the invisible world,
which before the great wave of materialism engulfed us, used to be regarded as the source of all living help,
has been restored by it to modern life.
All the charming folklore of the elf, the brownie and the gnome, of the spirits of air and water,
of the forest, the mountain, and the mine, is shown by it to be no more meaningless superstition,
but to have a basis of actual and scientific fact behind it.
Its answer to the great fundamental question,
If a man die, shall he live again, is equally definite and significant,
scientific, and its teaching on the nature and conditions of the life after death
throws a flood of light upon much that, for the Western world at least, was previously
wrapped in impenetrable darkness. It cannot be too often repeated that in this teaching
as to the immortality of the soul and the life after death, theosophy stands in a position
totally different from that of ordinary religion. It does
not put forward these great truths merely on the authority of some sacred book of long ago. In
speaking of these subjects, it is not dealing with pious opinions or metaphysical speculations,
but with solid, definite facts, as real and as close to us as the air we breathe or the
houses we live in. Facts of which many among us have constant experience, facts among which
lies the daily work of some of our students, as will presently be seen.
Among the beautiful conceptions which Theosophy has restored to us stands preeminent that of the
great helpful agencies of nature. The belief in these has been worldwide from the earliest dawn of
history, and is universal even now outside the narrow domains of Protestantism, which has emptied
and darkened the world for its votaries by its attempt to do away with the natural and perfectly true
idea of intermediate agents, and reduce everything to the two factors of man and deity,
a device whereby the conception of deity has been infinitely degraded, and man has remained unhelped.
A moment's thought will show that the ordinary view of providence, the conception of an erratic,
interference by the central power of the universe with the result of his own decrees would imply the
introduction of partiality into the scheme, and therefore of the whole train of evils which must
necessarily follow upon its heels. The theosophical teaching, that a man can be thus specially
helped only when his past actions have been such as to deserve this assistance, and that even then
the help will be given through those who are comparatively near his own level,
is free from this serious objection.
And it furthermore brings back to us the older and far grander conception
of an unbroken ladder of living beings extending down from the logos himself
to the very dust beneath our feet.
In the east, the existence of the invisible helpers has always been recognized,
though the names given and the characteristics attributed to them naturally vary in different countries.
And even in Europe, we have had the old Greek stories of the constant interference of the gods in human affairs,
and the Roman legend that Castor and Pollux led the legions of the Infant Republic in the Battle of Lake Regulus,
nor did such a conception die out when the classical period ended.
for these stories have their legitimate successors in medieval tales of saints who appeared at critical moments
and turned the fortune of war in favor of the Christian hosts, or of guardian angels,
who sometimes stepped in and saved a pious traveler from what would otherwise have been certain destruction.
End of Chapter 1
Chapter 2 of Invisible Helpers
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Read by Connor Hill.
Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeer.
Chapter 2. Some Modern Instances.
Even in this incredulous age, and amidst the full whirl of our 19th century civilization,
in spite of the dogmatism of our science and the deadly dullness of our Protestant,
instances of intervention inexplicable from the materialistic standpoint may still be found by anyone who
will take the trouble to look for them. And in order to demonstrate this to the reader, I will briefly
epitomize a few of the examples given in one or other of the recent collections of such stories,
adding thereto one or two that have come within my own notice.
One very remarkable feature of these more recent examples is that the intervention seems nearly always to have been directed towards the helping or saving of children.
An interesting case which occurred in London only a few years ago was connected with the preservation of a child's life in the midst of a terrible fire,
which broke out in a street near Holborn and entirely destroyed two of the houses there.
The flames had obtained such hold before they were discovered that the firemen were unable to save the houses,
but they succeeded in rescuing all the inmates except two,
an old woman who was suffocated by the smoke before they could reach her,
and a child about five years old, whose presence in the house had been forgotten in the hurry and excitement of the moment.
The mother of the child, it seems, was a friend or relative of the life,
landlady of the house, and had left the little creature in her charge for the night, because she
was herself obliged to go down to Colchester on business. It was not until everyone else had been
rescued, and the whole house was wrapped in flame, that the landlady remembered with a terrible
pang the trust that had been confided to her. It seemed hopeless then to attempt to get at
the garret where the child had been put to bed, but one of the firemen,
heroically resolved to make the desperate effort, and after receiving minute directions as to the exact
situation of the room, plunged in among the smoke and flame. He found the child and brought him
forth entirely unharmed, but when he rejoined his comrades he had a very singular story to tell.
He declared that when he reached the room, he found it in flames, and most of the floor are already
fallen. But the fire had curved round the room towards the window in an unnatural and unaccountable
manner, the like of which in all his experience he had never seen before, so that the corner in which
the child lay was wholly untouched, although the very rafters of the fragment of floor on which
his little crib stood were half burnt away. The child was naturally very much terrified, but the fireman
distinctly and repeatedly declared that as at great risk, he made his way towards him. He saw a form like
an angel. Here his exact words are given, a something all gloriously white and silvery, bending over the
bed and smoothing down the counterpane. He could not possibly have been mistaken about it, he said,
for it was visible in a glare of light for some moments, and in fact disappeared only.
when he was within a few feet of it.
Another curious feature of this story is that the child's mother found herself unable to sleep
that night down at Colchester, but was constantly harassed by a strong feeling that something
was wrong with her child, insomuch that at last she was compelled to rise and spend some
time in earnest prayer that the little one might be protected from the danger which she
instinctively felt to be hanging over him.
The intervention was thus evidently what a Christian would call an answer to prayer.
A theosophist, putting the same idea in more scientific phraseology,
would say that her intense outpouring of love constituted a force which one of our invisible helpers
was able to use for the rescue of her child from a terrible death.
A remarkable case in which children were abnormally protected occurred on the banks of the Thames,
near Maidenhead, a few years earlier than our last example.
This time the danger from which they were saved arose not from fire but from water.
Three little ones, who lived, if I recollect rightly, in or near the village of Schatzbrook,
were taken out for a walk along the towing path by their nurse.
They rushed suddenly round a corner upon a horse which was drawing a barge,
and in the confusion two of them got on the wrong side of the tow rope and were thrown into the water.
The boatmen, who saw the accident, sprang forward to try to save them,
and he noticed that they were floating high in the water in quite an unnatural way, like, as he said,
and moving quietly towards the bank.
This was all that he and the nurse saw, but the children each declared that a beautiful person,
all white and shining, stood beside them in the water, held them up and guided them to the shore.
Nor was their story without corroboration, for the bargeman's little daughter, who ran up from the cabin
when she heard the screams of the nurse, also affirmed that she saw a lovely lady in the water
dragging the two children to the bank. Without fuller particulars than the story gives us,
It is impossible to say with certainty from what class of helpers this angel was drawn,
but the probabilities are in favor of its having been a developed human being functioning in the astral body,
as will be seen when later on we deal with this subject from the other side,
as it were, from the point of view of the helpers rather than the helped.
A case in which the agency is somewhat more definitely distinguishable is related by the
well-known clergyman, Dr. John Mason Neal. He states that a man who had recently lost his wife was on a
visit with his little children at the country house of a friend. It was an old rambling mansion,
and in the lower part of it there were long, dark passages in which the children played about
with great delight. But presently they came upstairs very gravely, and two of them related that
as they were running down one of these passages, they were met by their mother, who told them
to go back again, and then disappeared. Investigation revealed the fact that if the children had
run but a few steps farther, they would have fallen down a deep uncovered well, which
yawned full in their path, so that the apparition of their mother had saved them from almost
certain death. In this instance, there seems to be no reason to doubt.
that the mother herself was still keeping a loving watch over her children from the astral plane,
and that, as has happened in some other cases,
her intense desire to warn them of the danger into which they were so heedlessly rushing,
gave her the power to make herself visible and audible to them for the moment,
or perhaps merely to impress their minds with the idea that they saw and heard her.
It is possible, of course, that the helper may make her,
They have been someone else who took the familiar form of the mother in order not to alarm
the children, but the simplest hypothesis is to attribute the intervention to the action
of the ever-wakeful mother-love itself, undimmed by the passage through the gates of death.
This mother-love, being one of the holiest and most unselfish of human feelings, is also one
of the most persistent on higher planes. Not only does the mother who finds herself upon the lower
levels of the astral plane, and consequently still within touch of the earth, maintain her interest
in and her care for her children as long as she is able to see them, even after her entry
into the heaven world, these little ones are still the most prominent objects in her thought,
and the wealth of love that she lavishes upon the images which she there makes of them
is a great outpouring of spiritual force which flows down upon her offspring
who are still struggling in this lower world
and surrounds them with living centers of beneficent energy
which may not inaptly be described as veritable guardian angels.
An illustration of this will be found in the sixth of our theosophical manuals,
page 38. Not long ago, the little daughter of one of our English bishops was out walking with
her mother in the town where they lived, and in running heedlessly across the street, the child was
knocked down by the horses of a carriage, which came quickly upon her round a corner. Seeing her among the
horse's feet, the mother rushed forward, expecting to find her very badly injured, but she sprang up
quite merrily, saying, oh, mama, I'm not heard at all, for something all in white kept the
horses from treading upon me and told me not to be afraid. A case which occurred in Buckinghamshire,
somewhere in the neighborhood of Burnham Beaches, is remarkable on account of the length of time
through which the physical manifestation of the succoring agency seems to have maintained itself.
It will have been seen that in the instances,
is hitherto given, the intervention was a matter of but a few moments, whereas in this a phenomenon
was produced which appears to have persisted for more than half an hour. Two of the little children
of a small farmer were left to amuse themselves by their parents and their entire household
were engaged in the work of harvesting. The little one started for a walk in the woods,
wandered far from home, and then managed to lose their way. When the weary parents returned,
at dusk it was discovered that the children were missing and after inquiring at some of the
neighbor's houses the father sent servants and laborers in various directions to seek for them
their efforts were however unsuccessful and their shouts unanswered and they had
reassembled at the farm in a somewhat despondent frame of mind when they all saw a curious
light some distance away moving slowly across some fields towards the road
It was described as a large globular mass of rich golden glow, quite unlike ordinary lamplight.
And as it drew nearer, it was seen that the two missing children were walking steadily along in the midst of it.
The father and some others immediately set off running towards it.
The appearance persisted until they were close to it, but just as they grasped the children, it vanished, leaving them in the darkness.
The children's story was that after night came on, they had wandered about crying in the woods for some time,
and had at last lain down under a tree to sleep.
They had been roused, they said, by a beautiful lady with a lamp,
who took them by the hand and led them home.
When they questioned her, she smiled at them, but never spoke a word.
To this strange tale they both steadily adhered, nor was it possible in any way.
way to shake their faith in what they had seen. It is noteworthy, however, that though all present
saw the light and noticed that it lit up the trees and hedges which came within its sphere,
precisely as an ordinary light would, yet the form of the lady was visible to none but the
children. End of Chapter 2. Chapter 3 of Invisible Helpers
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater
Chapter 3. A Personal Experience
All the above stories are comparatively well known
and may be found in some of the books which contain collections of such accounts.
in Dr. Lee's more glimpses of the world unseen. But the two instances which I am now about to give
have never been in print before, and both occurred within the last ten years, one to myself,
and the others a very dear friend of mine, a prominent member of the Theosophical Society,
whose accuracy of observation is beyond all shadow of doubt. My own story is a simple one enough,
though not unimportant to me, since the interposition undoubtedly saved my life.
I was walking one exceedingly wet and stormy night down a quiet back street near Westbourne Grove,
struggling with scant success to hold up an umbrella against the savage gusts of wind
that threatened every moment to tear it from my grasp,
and trying as I labored along to think out the details of some work upon which I was just then engaged.
with startling suddenness, a voice which I know well, the voice of an Indian teacher,
cried in my ear, spring back!
And in mechanical obedience I started violently backwards almost before I had time to think.
As I did so, my umbrella, which had swung forward with the sudden movement,
was struck from my hand, and a huge metal chimney pot crashed upon the pavement,
blessed in a yard in front of my face.
The great weight of this article,
and the tremendous force with which it fell,
make it absolutely certain that,
but for the warning voice,
I should have been killed on the spot.
Yet the street was empty,
and the voice was that of one
whom I knew to be 7,000 miles away from me,
as far as the physical body was concerned.
Nor was this the only occasion
upon which I received a sister,
of this supernormal time. For an early life, long before the foundation of the
Theosophical Society, the apparition of a dear one who had recently died prevented me from
committing what I now see would have been a serious crime. Although by the light of such knowledge
as I then had, it appeared not only a just defiable, but even a laudable act of retaliation.
again, at a later date, though still before the foundation of this society, a warning conveyed to me from a higher plane amid most impressive surroundings, enabled me to prevent another man from entering upon a course which I now know would have ended disastrously, though I had no reason to suppose so the time.
So it will be seen that I have a certain amount of personal experience to strengthen my belief in the doctor.
of invisible helpers, even apart from my knowledge of the help that is constantly being given
at the present time. The other case is a very much more striking one. One of our members,
who gives me permission to publish her story, but does not wish her name mentioned, once found
herself in very serious physical peril. Owing the circumstances which need not be detailed here,
she was in the very center of a dangerous street fracas, and seeing several men struck down
and evidently badly hurt close to her, was in momentary expectation of a similar fate,
since escape from the crush seemed quite impossible.
Suddenly, she experienced a curious sensation of being rolled out of the crowd,
and found herself standing quite uninjured and entirely alone in a small biastry
parallel with the one in which the disturbance had taken place.
She still heard the noise of the struggle,
and while she stood wondering what on earth had happened to her,
two or three men who had escaped from the crowd
came running round the corner of the street,
and on seeing her expressed great astonishment and pleasure,
saying that when the brave lady so suddenly disappeared from the midst of the fight,
they had felt certain that she had been struck down.
At the time, no sort of explanation was forthcoming, and she returned home in a very mystified condition.
But when at a later period she mentioned this strange occurrence to Madame Blavatsky,
she was informed that, her karma being such as to enable her to be saved from her exceedingly dangerous position,
one of the masters had specially sent someone to protect her in view of the fact that her life was needed for the work.
Nevertheless, the case remains a very extraordinary one, both with regard to the great amount of power exercised and the unusually public nature of its manifestation.
It is not difficult to imagine the modest operandi. She must have been lifted bodily over the intervening block of houses and simply set down in the next street.
But since her physical body was not visible floating in the air, it is also evident that a veil of some sort,
probably of aetheric matter, must have been thrown round her while in transit.
If it be objected that whatever can hide physical matter must itself be physical, and therefore visible,
it may be replied that by a process familiar to all occult students,
it is possible to bend rays of light, which, under all conditions at present known to science,
travel only in straight lines unless refracted,
so that after passing round an object they may resume exactly,
their former course. And it will at once be seen that if this were done, such an object would,
to all physical eyes, be absolutely invisible until the rays were allowed to resume their normal course.
I am fully aware that this one statement alone is sufficient to brand my remarks as nonsense in the eyes
of the scientist of the present day. But I cannot help that. I am merely stating a possibility
in nature, which the science of the future will no doubt one day discover, and for those who are
not students of occultism, the remark must wait until then for its justification. The process,
as I say, is comprehensible enough to anyone who understands a little about the more occult
forces of nature, but the phenomenon still remains an exceedingly dramatic one, while the name of the
heroine of the story, or I permitted to give it, would be a guarantee of its accuracy to all my
readers. Another recent instance of interposition, less striking, perhaps, but entirely successful,
has been reported to me since the publication of the first edition of this book. A lady, being obliged
to undertake a long railway journey alone, had taken the precaution to secure an empty compartment,
But just as the train was leaving the station, a man of forbidding and villainous appearance
sprang in and seated himself at the other end of the carriage.
The lady was much alarred, thus to be left alone with so doubtful looking a character,
but it was too late to call for help, so she sat still and commended herself earnestly to the care of her patron saint.
Soon her fears were redoubled, for the man arose and turned toward her with her.
an evil grin, but he had hardly taken one step when he started back with a look of the most
intense astonishment and terror. Following the direction of his glance, she was startled to see a
gentleman seated directly opposite to her, gazing quietly, but firmly at the baffled robber,
a gentleman who certainly could not have entered the carriage by any ordinary means.
Too much odd to speak. She watched him as though fascinated for a
full half-hour. He uttered no word and did not even look at her, but kept his eyes steadily upon
the villain, who cowered trembling in the furthest corner of the compartment. The moment that the train
reached the next station, and even before it came to a standstill, the would-be thief tore open
the door and sprang hurriedly out. The lady, deeply thankful to be rid of him, turned to express her
gratitude to the gentleman, but found only an empty seat, though it would have been impossible
for any physical body to have left the carriage in the time. The materialization was in this case
maintained for a longer period than usual, but on the other hand it expended no force in action
of any kind, nor indeed was it necessary that it should do so, as its mere appearance was sufficient
to affect its purpose.
But these stories, all referring as they do
to what would commonly be called angelic intervention,
illustrate only one small part of the activities of our invisible helpers.
Before, however, we can profitably consider the other departments of their work,
it will be well that we should have clearly in our minds
the various classes of entities to which it is possible
that these helpers may belong.
Let that, then, be the portion of our subject to be next treated.
End of Chapter 3.
Read by Maria Angela R. Aragon,
Cazin City, 14th of October, 2023.
Chapter 4 of Invisible Helpers.
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Ledbetter
Chapter 4
The Helpers
Help then may be given by several of the many classes of inhabitants of the astral plane.
It may come from devas, from nature spirits, or from those whom we call dead, as well as
as from those who functioned consciously upon the astral plane during life, chiefly the adepts and
their pupils. But if we examine the matter a little more closely, we shall see that though all the
classes mentioned may, and sometimes do, take part in this work, yet their shares in it are so
and equal, that it is practically left almost entirely to one class. The very fact that so much
of this work of helping has to be done, either upon or from the astral plane, goes far in itself
towards explaining this. To anyone who has even a faint idea of what the powers at the command
of an adept really are, it will be at once obvious that for him to work,
upon the astral plane would be a far greater waste of energy than for our leading physicians
or scientists to spend their time in breaking stones upon the road. The work of the adept lies
in higher regions, chiefly upon the Arupah levels of the Devachanic Plain or Heaven world,
where he may direct his energies to the influencing of the true individuality of men.
and not the mere personality which is all that can be reached in the astral or physical world the strength which he puts forth in that more exalted realm produces results greater more far-reaching and more lasting
than any which can be attained by the expenditure of even ten times the force down here and the work up there is such as he alone can fully accomplish
while that on lower plains may be at any rate to some extent achieved by those whose feet are yet upon the earlier steps of the great stairway which will one day lead them to the position where he stands
the same remarks apply also in the case of the devas belonging as they do to a higher kingdom of nature than ours their work seems for the most part entirely unconnected with humanity and even those of their orders
and there are some such which do sometimes respond to our higher yearnings or appeals do so on the mental plane rather than on the physical or asher
and more frequently in the periods between our incarnations than during our earthly lives.
It may be remembered that some instances of such help were observed in the course of investigations
into the subdivisions of the Davachanic Plain, which were undertaken when the the philosophical
manual on this subject was in preparation. In one case, a Deva was found teaching the most
wonderful celestial music to a chorister, and in another one of a different class who is giving
instruction and guidance to an astronomer who is seeking to comprehend the form and structure
of the universe. These two were but examples of many instances in which the greater Davic kingdom
was found to be helping onward the evolution and responding to the higher aspirations of man
after death. And there are methods by which, even during earth life, these great ones may be
approached, and an infinity of knowledge acquired from them, though even then such intercourse is
gained rather by rising to their plane than by invoking them to descend to ours. In the ordinary
events of our physical life, the Deva very rarely interferes. Indeed, he is so fully occupied
with the far grander work of his own plane,
that he is probably scarcely conscious of this,
and though it may occasionally happen
that he becomes aware of some human sorrow or difficulty,
which excites his pity,
and moves him to endeavor to help in some way,
his wider vision undoubtedly recognizes
that, at the present stage of evolution,
such interposition would, in the vast majority,
of cases be productive of infinitely more harm than good.
There was indubitably a period in the past, in the infancy of the human race, when it was much more
largely assisted from outside than is at the present the case.
At the time when all its Buddhas and Manus, and even its more ordinary leaders and teachers,
were drawn either from the ranks of the Deva evolution, or,
or from the perfected humanity of a more advanced planet, any such assistance as we are
considering in this treatise must also have been given by these exalted beings. But as a man progresses,
he becomes himself qualified to act as a helper, first on the physical plane and then on higher
levels, and we now have reached a stage at which humanity ought to be able to provide, and to some
slight extent does provide, invisible helpers for itself, thus setting free for still more useful
and elevated work those beings who are capable of it. It becomes obvious, then, that such
assistance as that to which we are here referring may most fitly begin to the way.
given by men and women at a particular stage of their evolution, not by the adepts,
since they are capable of doing far grander and more widely useful work,
and not by the ordinary person of no special spiritual development,
for he would be unable to be of any use.
Just as these considerations would lead us to expect,
we find that this work of helping on the astral and low,
mental planes is chiefly in the hands of the pupils of the masters, men who, though yet far from
the attainment of adept-ship, have evolved themselves to the extent of being able to function
consciously on the planes in question. Some of these have taken the further step of completing
the links between the physical consciousness and that of the higher levels, and they therefore
have the undoubted advantage of recollecting in waking life what they have done and what they
have learnt in those other worlds. But there are many others who, though as yet unable to carry their
consciousness through unbroken, are nevertheless by no means wasting the hours when they think
they are asleep, but spending them in noble and unselfish labor for their fellow men.
What this labor is we will proceed to consider.
But before we enter upon that part of the subject, we will first refer to an objection
which is very frequently brought forward with regard to such work.
And we will also dispose of the comparatively rare cases in which the agents are either nature spirits
or men who have cast off the physical body.
people who grasp of theosophical ideas is as yet imperfect are often in doubt as to whether it is allowable
for them to try to help someone whom they find in sorrow or difficulty, lest they should interfere
with the fate which has been decreed for him by the absolute justice of the eternal law of karma.
The man is in his present condition, they say in effect, because he has disdrews.
it. He is now working out the perfectly natural result of some evil which he has committed
in the past. What right have I to interfere with the action of the great cosmic law by trying
to ameliorate his condition, either on the astral plane or the physical? Now the good people
who make such suggestions are really, however unconsciously to themselves, exhibiting the most
colossal conceit, for their position implies two astounding assumptions.
First, that they know exactly what another man's karma has been, and how long it has been
decreed that his sufferings shall last, and secondly, that they, the insects of the day,
could absolutely override the cosmic law and prevent the due working out of karma by any action of
theirs. We may well be assured that the great
karmic deities are perfectly well able to manage their business
without our assistance. And we need have no fear that any steps we may take
can by any possibility cause them the slightest difficulty or uneasiness. If a man's
karma is such that he cannot be helped, then all our well-meant efforts in that direction
will fail, though we shall nevertheless have gained good karma for ourselves by making them.
What the man's karma has been is no business of ours. Our duty is to give help to the utmost of our
power, and our right is only to the act. The result is in other and higher hands. How can we tell
how a man's account stands? For all we know, he may just
have exhausted his evil karma, and be at this moment at the very point where a helping hand is
needed to give relief, and raise him out of his trouble or depression. Why should not we have
the pleasure and privilege of doing that good deed as well as another? If we can help him,
then that fact of itself shows that he has deserved to be helped. But we can never know unless
we try. In any case, the law of karma will take care of itself, and we need not trouble ourselves
about it. The cases in which assistance is given to mankind by nature spirits are few. The majority
of such creatures shun the haunts of man, and retire before him, disliking his emanations,
and the perceptual bustle and unrest which he creates all around him. Also,
except some of their higher orders, they are generally inconsequent and thoughtless,
more like happy children at play under exceedingly favorable physical conditions
than like grave and responsible entities.
Still, it sometimes happens that one of them will become attached to a human being
and do him a good turn.
But at the present stage of its evolution, this Department of Nature cannot be relied upon
for anything like steady cooperation in the work of invisible helpers.
For a fuller account of nature spirits, the reader is referred to the fifth of our
theosophical manuals. Again, help is sometimes given by those recently departed, those who are
still lingering on the astral plain, and still in close touch with earthly affairs, as,
probably in the above-mentioned case of the mother who saved her children from falling down a well.
But it will readily be seen that the amount of such help available must naturally be exceedingly limited.
The more unselfish and helpful a person is, the less likely is he to be found after death,
lingering in full consciousness on the lower levels of the astral plane,
from which the earth is most readily accessible.
in any case unless he were an exceptionally bad man his stay within the realm whence alone any interference would be possible
would be comparatively short and although from the heaven world he may still shed benign influence upon them who he has loved on earth it will usually be rather of the nature of a general benediction than a force capable of bringing about definite results
in a specific case, such as those which we have been considering.
Again, many of the departed who wish to help those whom they left behind
find themselves quite unable to influence them in some way,
since to work from one plane upon an entity of another
requires either very great sensitiveness on the part of that entity
or a certain amount of knowledge and skill on the part of the operator.
Therefore, although instances of apparitions shortly after death are by no means uncommon,
it is rare to find one in which the departed person has really done anything useful or succeeded
in impressing what he wished upon the friend or relation whom he visited.
There are such cases, of course, a good many of them when we come to put them all together,
but they are not numerous compared to the great number of ghosts who have succeeded,
in showing themselves. So that but little help is usually given by the dead. Indeed, as will
presently be explained, it is far more common for them to be themselves in need of assistance
than to be able to accord it to others. At present, therefore, the main bulk of the work,
which has to be done along these lines, falls to the share of those living persons who are able
to function consciously on the astral plane.
end of chapter four.
Read by Jason Anderson, Nashville, August 4th,
2023.
Chapter 5 of Invisible Helpers.
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read by Stacey M.
Invisible Helpers by C.W. Ledbetter.
The reality of superphysical life, it seems difficult for those who are accustomed only to the ordinary and somewhat materialistic lines of thought of the 19th century to believe in and realize fully a condition of perfect consciousness apart from the physical body.
Every Christian at any rate is bound by the very foundations of his creed to believe that he possesses a soul, that if you suggest to him the possibility,
that that soul may be a sufficiently real thing
to become visible under certain conditions
apart from the body, either during life or after death.
The chances are 10 to 1
that he will scornfully tell you
that he does not believe in ghosts,
and that such an idea is nothing but an anachronistic survival
of an exploded medieval superstition.
If, therefore, we are at all to comprehend
the work of the band of invisible helpers
and perchance ourselves to learn to assist in it,
we must shake ourselves free from the trammels of contemporary thought on these subjects
and endeavor to grasp the great truth.
Now a demonstrated fact to many among us,
that the physical body is in simple truth,
nothing but a vehicle or vesture of the real man.
It is put off permanently at death,
but it is also put off temporarily every night when we go to sleep.
Indeed, the process of falling asleep,
consists in this very action of the real man in his astral vehicle slipping out of the physical
body. Again, I repeat, this is no mere hypothesis or ingenious supposition. There are many among us
who are able to perform and do perform every day of their lives, this elementary act of magic
and full consciousness who pass from one plane to the other at will, and if that is clearly
realized, it will become apparent how grotesquely absurd to them must appear the ordinary
unreasoning assertion that such a thing is utterly impossible.
It is like telling a man that it is impossible for him to fall asleep and that if he thinks
he has ever done so, he is under a hallucination.
Now, the man who's not yet developed, the link between the astral and physical consciousness,
is unable to leave his denser body at will, or to recollect most of what happens to
him while away from it, but the fact, nevertheless, remains that he leaves it every time he
sleeps, and may be seen by any trained clairvoyant, either hovering over it or wandering about
at a greater or less distance from it, as the case may be. The entirely undeveloped person
usually floats close above his physical body, scarcely less asleep than it is, and comparatively
shapeless and inchoate. And it is found that he cannot be drawn away from the
immediate neighborhood of that physical body without causing serious discomfort which
would in fact awaken it.
As the man evolves however, his astral body grows more definite and more conscious and so
becomes a fitter vehicle for him.
In the case of the majority of intelligent and cultured people, the degree of consciousness
is already very considerable and a man who is at all spiritually developed is as fully
himself in that vehicle as in this denser body.
But though he may be fully conscious on the astro plane during sleep and able to move about on it freely if he wishes to do so,
it does not yet follow that he is ready to join the band of helpers.
Most people at the stage are so wrapped up in their own train of thought,
usually a continuation of some line taken up in waking hours,
that they are like a man in a brown study,
so much absorbed as to be practically entirely heedless of all that is going on about them.
And in many ways, it is well that this is so, for there is much upon the astral plane,
which might be unnerving, and terrifying to one who had not the courage,
born of full knowledge, as to the real nature of all that he would see.
Sometimes a man gradually rouses himself out of this condition,
wakes up to the astral world around him, as it were.
But more often he remains in that state until someone who is already active there,
takes him in hand, and wakens him.
This is, however, not a responsibility to be lightly undertaken.
For while it is comparatively easy thus to wake a man up on the astroplane,
it is practically impossible, except by a most undesirable exercise of mesmeric influence,
to put him to sleep again, so that before a member of the band of workers will thus awake in a dreamer,
he must fully satisfy himself that the man's disposition is such that he will make good use of the additional powers.
that will then be put into his hands,
and also that his knowledge and his courage are sufficient
to make it reasonably certain that no harm will come to him.
As a result of the action,
such awakening so performed will put a man in a position to join
if he will the band of those who help mankind.
But it must be clearly understood that this does not necessarily or even usually
bring with it the power of remembering and the waking consciousness
anything which has been done. That capacity has to be attained by the man for himself,
and in most cases it does not come for years afterwards, perhaps not even in the same life,
but happily this lack of memory in the body in no way impedes the work out of the body,
so that except for the satisfaction to a man of knowing during his waking hours,
upon what work he has been engaged during his sleep, it is not a matter of importance.
What really matters is that the work should be done, not that we should remember who did it.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of Invisible Helpers.
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Read by Rob E. Brom.
Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater. A timely intervention. Varyed as is this work on the
astral plane, it is all directed to one great end, the furtherance in however humble a degree of the processes
of evolution. Occasionally it is connected with the development of the lower kingdoms,
which it is possible slightly to accelerate under certain conditions.
A duty toward these lower kingdoms,
elemental as well as animal and vegetable,
is distinctly recognized by our adept leaders,
since it is in some cases only through connection with or use by man
that their progress takes place.
But, naturally by far the largest and most,
important part of the work is connected with humanity in some way or other. The services rendered
are of many and various kinds, but chiefly concerned with man's spiritual development. Such
physical interventions as are recounted in the earlier part of this book being exceedingly rare.
They do, however, occasionally take place, and though it is my wish to emphasize rather the possibility of
extending mental and moral help to our fellow men. It will perhaps be well to give two or three
instances in which friends personally known to me have rendered physical assistance to those in sore
need of it, in order that it may be seen how these examples from the experience of the helpers
gear in with the accounts given by those who have received the supernormal aid. Such
stories I mean as those which are to be found in the literature of so-called supernatural
occurrences. In the course of the recent rebellion in Matabella land, one of our members was sent
upon an errand of mercy which may serve as an illustration of the way in which help upon this
lower plain has occasionally been given. It seems that one night, a certain farmer and his family in
that country were sleeping tranquilly in fancied security quite unaware that only a few miles away relentless hordes of savage foes were lying in ambush maturing fiendish plots of murder and rapine our members business was in some way or other to arouse the sleeping family to a sense of the terrible danger which so unexpectedly menaced them and she found this
by no means and easy matter.
An attempt to impress the idea of imminent peril
upon the brain of the farmer failed utterly.
And as the urgency of the case seemed to demand strong measures,
our friend decided to materialize herself sufficiently
to shake the housewife by the shoulder
and adjure her to get up and look about her.
The moment she saw that she had been successful
in attracting attention, she vanished.
and the farmer's wife has never from that day to this been able to find out which of her neighbors it was who roused her so opportunely and thus saved the lives of the entire family who but for this mysterious intervention would undoubtedly have been massacred in their beds half an hour later
nor can she even now understand how this friend in need contrived to make her way in when all the windows and doors were found so securely barred
Being thus abruptly awakened, the housewife was half inclined to consider the warning as a mere dream.
However, she arose and looked round just to see that all was right, and fortunate it was that she did so,
for though she found nothing amiss indoors, she had no sooner thrown open a shudder than she saw the sky red with a distant conflagration.
She at once roused her husband and the rest of her family, and owing to this timely notice,
they were able to escape to a place of concealment near at hand, just before the arrival of the
horde of savages who destroyed the house and ravaged the fields, indeed, but were disappointed
of the human prey which they had expected. The feelings of the rescuer may be imagined when she
read in the newspaper sometime afterwards an account of the providential deliverance of this family.
End of Section 6.
Chapter 7 of Invisible Helpers.
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Letbetter.
Chapter 7 The Angel Story
Another instance of intervention on the physical plane, which occurred a short time ago,
makes a very beautiful little story, though this time only one life was saved.
It needs, however, a few words of preliminary explanation.
Among our band of helpers here in Europe,
a two who were brothers long ago in ancient Egypt,
and are still warmly attached to one another.
In this present incarnation, there is a wide different in age between them,
one being advanced in middle life,
while the other was at that time a mere child in the physical body,
though an ego of considerable advancement and promise.
Naturally, it falls to the lot of the elder
to train and guide the younger in the occult work
to which they are so heartily devoted,
and as both are fully conscious and active on the astral plane,
they spend most of the time, during which their grosser bodies are asleep,
in laboring together under the direction of their common master,
and giving to both living and dead such help as is within their power.
I will quote the story of the particular incident which I wish to relate
from a letter written by the elder of the two helpers,
immediately after its occurrence, as the description they're given is more vivid and picturesque
than any account in the third person could possibly be.
We were going about quite other business, when Cyril suddenly cried,
What's that?
For we heard a terrible scream of pain or fright.
In a moment, we were on the spot and found that a boy of about 11 or 12 had fallen over a cliff
onto some rocks below and was very badly hurt.
He had broken a leg and an arm, poor fellow,
but what was still worse was a dreadful cut in the thigh
from which blood was pouring in a torrent.
Cyril cried,
Let us help him quick, or he'll die.
In emergencies of this kind, one has to think quickly.
There were clearly two things to be done.
That bleeding must be stopped,
and physical help must be procured.
I was obliged to materialize either Cyril or myself, for we wanted physical hands at once to tie a bandage.
And besides, it seemed better that the poor boy should see someone standing by him in his trouble.
I felt that while undoubtedly he would be more at home with Cyril than with me,
I should probably be more readily able to procure help than Cyril would,
so the division of labour was obvious.
The plan worked capitally.
I materialized Cyril instantly, he does not know yet how to do it for himself,
and told him to take the boy's negative and tie it round the thigh and twist the stick through it.
Won't it hurt him terribly? said Cyril, but he did it, and the blood stopped flowing.
The injured boy seemed half unconscious and could scarcely speak,
but he looked up at the shining little form bending so anxiously over him and asked,
be you an angel master cyro smiled so prettily and replied no i'm only a boy but i've come to help you and then i left him to comfort the sufferer while i rushed off for the boy's mother who lived a mile away
the trouble i had to force into that woman's head the conviction that something was wrong and that she must go and see about it you would never believe but at last she threw down the
the pen she was cleaning, I said aloud,
Well, I don't know what's come over me,
but I must go and find the boy.
When she once started, I was able to guide her without much difficulty,
though all the time I was holding Cyril together by willpower,
lest the poor child's angel should suddenly vanish from before his eyes.
You see, when you materialize a form,
you are changing matter from its natural state into another.
temporarily opposing the cosmic will, as it were, and if you take your mind of it for one half-second,
Beckett flies into its original condition, like a flash of lightning,
so I could not give more than half my attention to that woman, but still I got her along somehow,
and as soon as she came round the corner of the cliff, I let Cyril disappear,
but she had seen him, and now that village has one of the best attested stories of angelic intervention,
on record. The accident happened in the early morning, and the same evening I looked in,
astrali, upon the family, to see how matters were going on. The poor boy's leg and arm had
been set, and the great cut bandaged, and he lay in bed looking very pale and weak,
with evidently going to recover in time. The mother had a couple of neighbours in,
and was telling them the story, and the curious tale it sounded to one who knew.
the real facts. She explained, in very many words, how she couldn't tell what it was,
but something came over her all in a minute like, making her feel something had happened to the boy,
and she must go out and see after him, how at first she thought it was nonsense, and tried to
throw off the feeling, but it wasn't no use, she just had to go. She told how she didn't
know what made her go round about that cliff more than any other way, but it was a little way,
it just happened so, and as she turned round the corner, there she saw him lying propped up against
the rock, and kneeling beside him was the beautifulest child ever she saw, dressed all in white
and shining, with rosy cheeks and lovely brown eyes, and how he smiled at her so heavenly
like, and then all in a moment he was not there, and at first she was so startled, she didn't
know what to think, and then all at once she felt what it was, and then all at once she felt what it was,
and fell on her knees and thank God for sending one of his angels to help her poor boy.
Then she told how when she lifted him to carry him home,
she wanted to take off the handkerchief that was cutting into his poor leg so,
but he would not let her,
because he said the angel had tied it and said he was not to touch it.
And how when she told the doctor this afterwards,
he explained to her that if she had unfastened it,
the boy would certainly have died.
Then she repeated the boy's part of the tale.
How the moment after he fell, this lovely little angel came to him.
He knew it was an angel, because he knew there had been nobody in sight for half a mile round
when he was at the top of the cliff just before.
Only, he could not understand why it hadn't any wings,
and why it said it was only a boy,
how it lifted him against the rock,
and tied up his leg, and then began to talk to him, and tell him he need not be frightened,
because somebody was gone to fetch mother, and she would be there directly, how it kissed him
and tried to make him comfortable, and how it soft, warm, little hand held his all the time.
While it told him strange, beautiful stories, which he could not clearly remember,
but he knew they were very good, because he had almost forgotten he was hurt,
until his whole mother coming, and how then it assured him he would soon be well again
and smiled and squeezed his hand, and then somehow it was gone.
Since then there has been quite a religious revival in that village.
The minister has told them that so signal and interposition of divine providence
must have been meant as a sign to them, to rebuke scoffers and to prove the truth of
Holy Scripture and of the Christian religion, and nobody seems to see the colossal conceit
involved in such an astonishing proposition. But the effect on the boy has been undoubtedly good,
morally as well as physically. By all accounts, he was a careless enough young scamp before,
but now he feels his angel may be near him at any time, and he will never do or say anything
rough or coarse or angry, lest it should see or hear. The one great desire of his life is that
someday he may see it again, and he knows that when he dies, its lovely face will be the first
to greet him on the other side. A beautiful and pathetic little story. Truly, the moral drawn
from the occurrence by the village, and its minister, is perhaps somewhat of a non-secretor,
yet the testimony to the existence of at least something beyond this material plane
must surely do the people more good than harm,
and after all the mother's conclusion from what she saw was a perfectly correct one,
though more accurate knowledge would probably have letter to express it a little differently.
An interesting fact afterwards discovered by the investigations of the writer of the letter
throws a curious sightlight upon the reasons underlying such incident.
It was found that the two boys had met before,
and that some thousands of years ago,
the one who fell from the cliff, had been the slave of the other,
and had once saved his young master's life at the risk of his own,
and had been liberated in consequence,
and now, long afterwards,
the master not only repays the debt in kind,
but also gives his former slave,
a high ideal and an inducement to morality of life,
which will probably change the whole course of his future evolution.
So true is it that no good deed ever goes unrewarded by karma,
however tardy it may seem in its action,
that, though the males of God grind slowly, yet they grind exceeding small,
though with patience stands he waiting, with exactness grinds he all.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Invisible Helpers
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Read by KBHZ
Invisible Helpers by WC Lead Beta
Chapter 8
The Story of a Fire
Another piece of work done by the same boy Cyril
furnishes an almost exact parallel
to some of the stories from the books which I have given in earlier pages.
He and his older friend it seems
were passing along in the prosecution of their usual work one night,
when they noticed the fierce glare of a big fire below them
and promptly dive down to see if they could be of any use.
It was a great hotel which was in flames,
a huge caravancery on the edge of a great lake.
The house, many stories in height,
form three sides of a square,
round a sort of garden planted with trees and flowers,
while the lake formed the fourth side.
The two wings ran right down to the lake,
the big bay windows which terminated them,
was projecting over the water, so as to leave only quite a narrow passageway under them at the two sides.
The front and wings were built round inside wells, which contained also the lattice workshops of the lifts,
so that when once the fire broke out, it spread with almost incredible rapidity,
and before our friends saw it on their astral journey, all the middle floors in each of the three great blocks were in flames.
Fortunately, the inmates, except one little boy, had already been rescued, though some of them had sustained very serious burns,
and other injuries.
This little fellow had been forgotten in one of the upper rooms of the left wing,
for his parents were out at a ball and knew nothing of the fire.
While naturally enough, no one else thought of the lad till it was far too late.
The fire had gained such a hold on the middle floors of that wing
that nothing could have been done, even if anyone had remembered him,
as his room faced onto the inner garden, which has been mentioned,
so that he was completely cut off from all outside help.
Besides, he was not even aware of his danger, for the dense, suffocating smoke had so gradually
filled the room that his sleep had grown deeper and deeper until he was all but stupefied.
In this state, he was discovered by Cyril, who seems to be specially attracted towards children
in need or danger. He first tried to make some of the people remember the boy, but in vain,
and in any case it seems scarcely possible that they could have helped them
so that it was soon evident that this was merely a waste of time.
The older helper then materialized Cyril, as before, in the room, and set him to work to awaken and rouse up the more than half-storpefied child.
After a good deal of difficulty, this was accomplished to some extent.
But the boy remained in a half-dazed, semi-conscious condition through all that followed,
so that he needed to be pushed and pulled about, guided and helped at every turn.
The two boys first crept out of the room into the central passage, which ran through the wing,
and then, finding that the smoke and the flames beginning to come through the floor made it impossible for a physical body,
Cyril got the other boy back into the room again and out of the window, onto a stone ledge about a foot wide,
which ran right along the block just below the windows.
Along this, he managed to guide his companion, half balancing himself on the extreme edge of the ledge,
and half floating on air, but always placing himself outside of the other,
so as to keep him from dizziness and prevent him from feeling afraid of a fall.
Towards the end of the block nearest the lake, in which direction the fire seemed less developed.
They climbed in through an open window and again reached the passage, hoping to find the staircase at that end still possible,
but it too was full of flame and smoke, so they crawled back along the passage, Cyril, advising his companion to keep his mouth close to the ground,
till they reached the lattice cage of the lift, running down the long well in the centre of the block.
The lift, of course, was at the bottom, but they managed to clamber down the latticework inside the cage until they stood on the roof of the lift,
the elevator itself. Here, they found themselves blocked, but luckily Cyril discovered a doorway
opening from the cage of the lift onto a sort of intress hall just above the ground floor. Through this,
they reached the passage which they crossed, the little boy being half stifled by the smoke. Then they
made their way through one of the rooms opposite, and finally, clambering out of the window,
found themselves on top of the veranda, which ran along in front of the grand floor, between it and the
garden. Thence it was easy enough to swarm down one of the pillars and reach the garden itself.
But even there, the heat was intense and the danger when the walls should fall, very considerable.
So Cyril tried to conduct his charge round the end first of one, then of the other wing,
but in both cases the flames had burst through, and the narrow overhung passages were quite
impossible. Finally, they took refuge in one of the pleasure boats, which were moved to the steps
of the quay at the side of the garden, next the lake, and casting loose.
roared out onto the water. Cyril intended to row around past the burning wing and land the boy whom he had saved,
but when they got some little way out, they fell in with a passing lake steamer and was seen,
for the whole scene was lit up by the glare of the burning hotel, so everything was plain as in broad daylight.
The steamer came alongside the boat to take them off, but instead of the two boys they had seen, the crew found only one,
for his older friend had promptly allowed Cyril to slip back into his astral form,
dissipating the denser matter which he had made for the time a material body,
and he was therefore now invisible.
A careful search was made, of course, but no trace of the second boy could be found,
and so it was concluded that he must have fallen overboard,
and been drowned just as they came alongside.
The child who had been rescued fell into a dead faint as soon as he was safe on board,
so they could get no information from him,
and when he did recover, all he could say was that he had seen the other boy the moment before they came alongside and then knew nothing more.
The steamer was bound down the lake to a place some two days sailed distant, and it was a week or so before the rescued boy could be restored to his parents, who of course thought that he had perished in the flames.
For though an effort was made to impress on their minds the fact that their son had been saved, it was found impossible to convey the idea to them, so it may be imagined how great was the joy of the meeting.
The boy is still well and happy, and is never wary of relating his wonderful adventure.
Many a time he has regretted that the kind friend who saved him should have perished so mysteriously
at the very moment when all the danger seemed over at last.
Indeed, he has even ventured to suggest that perhaps he didn't perish at all.
That perhaps he was a fairy prince.
But of course, this idea elicicicicic between him and his preserver has not yet been traced.
But no doubt there must be one somewhere.
End of Chapter 8, read by KBHC.
Chapter 9 of Invisible Helpers.
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Read by KBHC. Invisible Helpers by CW Lead Beta.
Chapter 9. Materialization and Re percussion.
On meeting with a story such as this, students often inquire whether the invisible helper is perfectly safe amidst these scenes.
amidst these scenes of deadly peril, whether, for example, this boy who was materialized in order
to save another from a burning house, was not himself in some danger, whether his physical body
would not have suffered in any way by repercussion if his materialized form had passed through the
flames or fallen from the high ledge on the edge of which he walked so unconcernedly.
In fact, since we know that in many cases the connection between materialized form and the physical
body is sufficiently close to produce repercussion, might it not have occurred in this case?
Now this subject of repercussion is an exceedingly abstruse and difficult one, and we are by no means yet in a position fully to explain its very remarkable phenomena.
Indeed, in order to understand the matter perfectly, it would probably be necessary to comprehend the laws of sympathetic vibration on more planes than one.
Still, we do know about observation some of the conditions which permit its action and some which definitely exclude it,
and I think we are warranted in saying that it was absolutely impossible here.
To see why this is so, we must first remember that there are at least three well,
defined varieties of materialization, as anyone who has at all an extended experience of spiritualism
will be aware. I'm not concerned at the moment to enter upon any explanation as to how these three
varieties are respectively produced, but I'm merely stating the indubitable fact of their existence.
One, there's materialization which, though tangible, is not visible to ordinary physical sight.
Of this nature, the unseen hands which so often clasp one's arm or stroke one's face at a
seance, which sometimes carry physical objects through the air or make wraps upon the table,
though of course both these latter phenomena may easily be produced without a materialized hand
at all.
2.
There is materialization which, though visible, is not tangible.
The spirit form through which one's hand passes as through empty air.
In some cases, this variety is obviously misty and impalpable, but in others its appearance
is so entirely normal that its solidity is never doubted until someone endeavors to grasp it.
3.
There is perfect materialisation which is both visible and tangible, which not only bears the
outward semblance of your departed friend, but shakes you cordially by the hand with the very
clasp that you know so well.
Now while there is a good deal of evidence to show that repercussion takes place under certain
conditions in the case of this third kind of materialisation, it is by no means so certain
that it can occur with the first or second class.
In the case of the boy helper, it's probable that the materialisation would not be of the third
type, since the greatest care is always taken not to expend more force than is absolutely necessary
to produce whatever result may be required. And it is obvious that less energy would be used in the
production of the more partial forms which we have called the first and second classes. The probability
is that only the arm with which the boy held his little companion would be solid to the touch,
and that the rest of his body, though looking perfectly natural, would have proved far less palpable
if it had been tested. But apart from this probability, there's another point to be considered.
When a full materialisation takes place, whether the subject be living or dead, physical matter of some sort has to be gathered together for the purpose.
At a spiritualistic seance, this matter is obtained by drawing largely upon the atheric double of the medium,
and sometimes even upon his physical body also, since cases are on record in which his weight has been very considerably decreased while manifestations of this character were taking place.
This method is employed by the directing entities of the seance, simply because when an available medium is within reach, it is very much the way.
easiest way in which a materialisation can be brought about. And the consequence is that the very
closest connection is thus set up between that medium and the materialised body, so that the
phenomenon, which although very imperfectly understanding it, we call repercussion, occurs in its
clara's form. If, for example, the hands of the materialised body be rubbed with chalk, that chalk
will afterwards be found on the hands with the medium, even though he may have been all the time
carefully locked up in a cabinet under circumstances which absolutely preclude any suspicion of fraud.
If any injury be inflicted upon the materialized form, that injury will be accurately reproduced upon the corresponding part of the medium's body, while sometimes food of which the spirit form has partaken will be found to have passed into the body of the medium.
At least that happened in one case at any rate within my own experience.
It would be far otherwise, however, in the case which we have been describing.
Cyril was thousands of miles from his sleeping physical body, and it would therefore be
quite impossible for his friend to draw a theric matter from it, while the regulations under which
all pupils of the great masters of wisdom perform their work of helping man would assuredly prevent him,
even for the noblest of purpose, from putting such a strain upon anyone else's body.
Besides, it would be quite unnecessary, for the far less dangerous method invariably employed by the
helpers, when materialisation seems desirable, would be ready to his hand, the condensation of the
circambient ether, or even from the physical air, of such an amount of matter as may be
requisite. This feat, though no doubt beyond the power of the average entity manifesting at a
seance, presents no difficulty to a student of occult chemistry. But mark the difference in the
result obtained. In the case of the medium, we have a materialized form in the closest possible
connection with the physical body, made out of its very substance and therefore capable of producing
all the phenomena of repercussion. In the case of the helper, we have indeed an exact reproduction of the
physical body, but it is created by a mental effort out of matter entirely foreign to that body,
and is no more capable of acting upon it by repercussion than an ordinary marble statue of a man
would be. Thus, it is that a passage through the flames or a fall from a high window ledge would have
had no terrors for the boy helper, and that on another occasion a member of a member of a man would be. A man
of the band, though materialized, was able without any inconvenience to the physical body
to go down into a sinking vessel. In both the incidents of his work that have been described above,
it will have been noticed that the boy Cyril was unable to materialize himself, and that the
operation had to be performed for him by an older friend. One more of his experiences is worth
relating, for it gives us a case in which intensity of pity and determination of will, he was
able to show himself, a case somewhat parallel to that previously related of the mother who's
love enabled her somehow to manifest herself in order to save her children's lives.
Inexplicable, as it may seem, there is no doubt whatever of the existence and nature of the
stupendous power of will of a matter of all planes, so that if only the power be great enough,
practically any result may be produced by its direct action, without any knowledge or even
thought on the part of the man exercising that will as to how it is to do its work. We have had
plenty of evidence that this power holds good in the case of materialization, although ordinarily
it's an art which must be learned just like any other. Assuredly, an average man on the astral plane
could no more materialize himself without having previously learned how to do it than the average
man on this plane could play the violin without having previously learnt it. But there are exceptional
cases, as will be seen from the following narrative. End of Chapter 9, read by KBHC. Chapter 10 of Invisible
Helpers. This is a Librivox recording. All LibriVox recordings are in the public domain. For more
information or to volunteer, please visit LibriVox.org. Read by KBHZ. Invisible Helpers by C.W. Led
Beta. Chapter 10. The Two Brothers
This story has been told by a pen of far greater dramatic capability than mine, and with a wealth
of detail for which I have here in no space in the Theosophical Review of November 1897, page 229.
To that account I would refer the reader, since my own description of the case will be a mere outline as brief as is consistent with clearness.
The names given are of course fictitious, but the incidences are related with scrupulous accuracy.
Our Drametes Pesenaire are two brothers, the sons of a country gentleman,
Lancelot, aged 14, and Walter, aged 11, very good boys of the ordinary, healthy, manly type, like hundreds of others in this fair realm,
with no obvious psychic qualifications of any sort, except the position of a good deal of Celtic blood.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature about them was the intensity of the affection that existed between them,
for they were simply inseparable, neither would go anywhere without the other,
and the younger idolized the elder as only a younger boy can.
One unlucky day, Lancelot was thrown from his pony and killed,
and for Walter the world became empty.
The child's grief was so real and terrible that he could neither eat nor sleep,
and his mother and nurse were at their wits' end as to what to do for him.
He seemed deaf alike to persuasion and blame,
when they told him that grief was wicked and that his brother was in heaven.
He simply answered that he could not be certain of that,
and that even if it were true,
he knew that Lancelot could no more be happy in heaven without him
than he could on earth without Lancelot.
Incredible as it may sound, the poor child was actually dying of grief.
And what made the case even more pathetic was the fact that,
all unknown to him, his brother stood at his side all the time,
fully conscious of his misery, and himself half distracted at the failure of his repeated attempts
to touch him or speak to him. Affairs were still in this most pitiable condition on the third
evening after the accident. When Cyril's attention was drawn to the two brothers, he cannot tell
how. He just happened to be passing, he says. Yet surely the will of the lords of compassion
guided him to the scene. Poor Walter lay exhausted yet seepless, alone in his desolation,
so far as he knew, though all the time his sorrowing brother stood beside him.
Lancelot, free from the chains of flesh, could see and hear Cyril, so obviously the first thing to do was to soothe his pain with a promise of friendship and help in communicating with his brother.
As soon as the dead boy's mind was thus cheered with hope, Cyril turned to the living one and tried with all his strength to impress upon his brain the knowledge that his brother stood beside him, not dead, but living and loving as of yore.
But all his efforts were in vain.
The dull apathy of grief so filled poor Walter's mind that no suggestion from without could enter,
and Cyril knew not what to do.
Yet so deeply was he moved by the sad sight,
so intense was his sympathy and so firm his determination
to help in some way or the other,
at any cost of strength to himself,
that somehow, even to this day he cannot tell how,
he found himself able to touch
and speak to the heart-broken child.
Putting aside Walter's questions
as to who he was and how he came there,
he went straight to the point,
telling him that his brother stood beside him,
trying hard to make him hear his constant repeated assurance,
that he was not dead, but living and yearning to help and comfort him.
Little Walter longed to believe, yet hardly he dared to hope,
but Cyril's eager insistence vanquished his doubts at last, and he said,
Oh, I do believe you, because you are so kind, but if I could only see him, then I should know,
then I should be quite sure, and if I could only hear his voice telling me he was happy,
I shouldn't mind a bit his going away again afterwards.
Young though he was at work, Cyril knew enough to be aware that Walter's wish was not one
ordinarily granted, and was beginning regretfully to tell him so, when suddenly he felt a presence
that all the helpers know, and though no word was spoken, it was born upon in his mind that instead
of what he had meant to say, he was to promise Walter the Boone his heart desired. Wait till I come
back, he said, and you shall see him then, and then he vanished. That one touch from the master
had shown him what to do and how to do it, and he rushed to fetch the older friend who had
so often helped him before. This older man had not yet retired for the night, but on hearing Cyril's
hurried summons, he lost no time in accompanying him, and in a few minutes they were back at
Walter's bedside. The poor child was just beginning to believe it was all a lovely dream,
and his delight and relief when Cyril reappeared were beautiful to see. Yet how much more beautiful
was the scene a moment later, when in obedience to a word from the master, the elder man
materialised the eager Lancelot, and the living and the dead stood hand in hand once more.
Now in very truth for both the brothers had sorrow been turned into joy unspeakable, and again and again they both declared that now they should never feel sad anymore, because they knew that death had no power to part them, nor was their gladness dampened even when Cyril explained carefully to them, at his older friend's suggestion, that his strange physical reunion would not be repeated, but that all day long Lancelot would be near Walter, even though the latter could not see him, and every night Walter would slip out of his body and be consciously with his brother,
once more. Hearing this, poor Wery Walter sank to sleep at once and proved its truth,
and was amazed to find with what hitherto unknown rapidity he and his brother could fly together
from one to another of their old familiar haunts. Cyril thoughtfully warned him that he would
probably forget most of his freer life when he awoke next day, but by rare good fortune,
he did not forget, as so many of us do. Perhaps the shock of the great joy had somewhat aroused
the latent psychic faculty which belongs to the Celtic blood. At any rate, he forgot
no single detail of all that had happened, and next morning he burst upon the house of mourning
with a wondrous tale which suited it, but ill. His parents thought that grief had turned his
brain, and since he has now the air, they have been watching long and anxiously for further
symptoms of insanity, which happily they have not found. They still think him a monomaniac on this
point, though they fully recognise that this delusion has saved his life. But his old nurse,
who is a Catholic, is firm in her belief that all he says is true, that the Lord Jesus,
who is once a child himself, took pity on that.
other child as he lay dying of grief and sent one of his angels to bring his brother back to him
from the dead as a reward for a love which is stronger than death. Sometimes popular superstition
gets a good deal nearer to the heart of things than does educator scepticism. Nor does the story end here,
for the good work begun that night is still progressing, and none can say how far the influence
of that one act may ramify. Walter's astral consciousness, once having been thus thoroughly awakened,
remains in activity. Every morning he brings back into his physical brain the memory of
his night's adventures with his brother. Every night they meet their dear friend Cyril,
from whom they have learned so much about the wonderful new world that is open before them
and the other worlds to come that lie higher yet. Under Cyril's guidance, they also,
the living and the dead alike, have become eager and earnest members of the band of helpers
and probably for years to come, until Lancelot's vigorous young astral body disintegrates.
Many a dying child will have cause to be grateful to these three who are trying to pass
unto others something of the joy that they have themselves received.
Nor is it to the dead alone that these new converts have been of use,
for they have sought and found some other living children who show consciousness on the astral
plane doing sleep.
And one at least of those whom they have thus brought to Cyril has already proved a valuable
little recruit to the children's band, as well as a very kind little friend down here
on the physical plane.
Those to whom all these ideas are new sometimes find it very difficult to understand how
children can be of any use in the astral world, seeing they would say,
that the astral body of a child must be undeveloped and the ego thus limited by childhood on the astral as well as the physical plane.
In what way could such an ego be of use or be able to help towards the spiritual, mental and moral evolution of humanity,
which we are told is the chief concern of the helpers.
When first such a question was asked, shortly after the publication of one of these stories in our magazine,
I sent it to Cyril himself to see what he would say to it, and his answer was this.
It is quite true as the writer says, that I'm only a boy.
and know very little yet, and that I shall be much more useful when I have learned more,
but I'm able to do a little even now, because there are so many people who have learned
nothing about theosophy yet, though they may know very much more than I do about everything else.
And you see, when you want to get to a certain place, a little boy who knows the way can do
more for you than a hundred wise men who don't know it. It may be added that when even a child
had been awakened upon the astral plane, the development of the astral body would proceed
so rapidly that he would very soon be in a position upon that
plane, but little inferior to that of the awakened adult, and would of course be much in advance,
so far as usefulness is concerned, of the wisest man who was yet unawakened.
But unless the ego expressing himself through that child body possessed the necessary qualification
of a determined yet loving disposition, and had clearly manifested it in his previous lives,
no occultus would take the very serious responsibility of awakening him upon the astral plane.
When, however, their karma is such that it is possible for them to thus be aroused, children often
prove most efficient helpers, and throw themselves into their work with a whole soul devotion,
which is very beautiful to see, and so it is fulfilled once more the ancient prophecy,
A little child shall lead them.
Another question that suggests itself to one's mind in reading this last story of the two brothers
is this.
Since Cyril was somehow able to materialize himself by sheer force of love and pity and strength
of will, is it not strange?
that Lancelot, who had been trying so much longer to communicate, had not succeeded in doing the
same thing? Well, there is of course no difficulty in seeing why poor Lancelot was unable
to communicate with his brother, for that inability is simply the normal condition of affairs.
The wonder is that Cyril was able to materialize himself, not that Lancelot was not.
Not only, however, was the feeling probably stronger in Cyril's case, but he also knew exactly
what he wanted to do, knew that such a thing as materialization was a possibility, and had some
general idea as to how it was done. Well, Lancelot naturally knew nothing of all this then,
though he does now. End of Chapter 10, read by KBHC. Chapter 11 of Invisible Helpers.
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Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater. W. Recks and Catastrophies. Sometimes it is possible for members of the
band of helpers to avert impending catastrophes of a somewhat larger order. In more than one case when
the captain of a vessel has been carried unsuspecting far out of his course by some unknown current
or through some mistaken reckoning, and has thereby run into serious danger,
it has been possible to prevent shipwreck by repeatedly impressing upon his mind a feeling that
something was wrong. And although this generally comes through into the captain's brain
merely as a vaguely warning intuition, yet if it occurs again and again, he is almost certain
to give it some attention and take such precautions as suggest themselves to him.
In one case, for example, in which the master of a bark was much nearer in to the land than he
supposed, he was again and again pressed to heave the lead, and though he resisted this
suggestion for some time as being unnecessary and absurd, he at last gave the order in a somewhat
hesitating way. The result astounded him, and he at once put his vessel about and stood off from the coast,
though it was not until morning came that he realized how very close he had been to an appalling disaster.
Often, however, a catastrophe is carmic in its nature, and consequently cannot be averted.
but it must not therefore be supposed that in such cases no help can be given.
It may be that the people concerned are destined to die
and therefore cannot be saved from death.
But in many cases they may still be to some extent prepared for it
and may certainly be helped upon the other side after it is over.
Indeed, it may be definitely stated that wherever,
a great catastrophe of any kind takes place, there is also a special sending of help.
Two recent cases in which such help was given were the sinking of the Drummond Castle
of Cape Ushant and the terrible cyclone which devastated the city of St. Louis in America.
On both these occasions, a few minutes' notice was given, and the helpers did their best to calm
and raise men's minds, so that when the shock came upon them, it would be less disturbing than it
might otherwise have been. Naturally, however, the greater part of the work done with the victims in
both these calamities was done upon the astral plane after they had left their physical bodies.
But of this we shall speak later. It is sad to relate how often we often we are.
When some catastrophe is impending, the helpers are hindered in their kindly offices by wild panic
among those whom the danger threatens, or sometimes, worse still, by a mad outburst of drunkenness
among those whom they are trying to assist.
Many a ship has gone to her doom with almost every soul on board mad with drink,
and therefore utterly incapable of profiting by any assistance offered either before death or for a very long time afterwards.
If it should ever happen to any of us to find ourselves in a position of imminent danger which we can do nothing to avert,
we should try to remember that help is certainly near us, and that it rests entirely with ourselves to make the helpers work
easy or difficult. If we face the danger calmly and bravely, recognizing that the true ego can in no way
be affected by it, our minds will then be open to receive the guidance which the helpers are trying to
give, and this cannot but be best for us, whether it's object be to save us from death or,
when that is impossible, to conduct us safely through it.
Assistance of this latter kind has not infrequently been given in cases of accidents to individuals,
as well as of more general catastrophes.
It will be sufficient to mention one example as an illustration of what is meant.
In one of the great storms which did so much damage around our coasts a few years ago,
It happened that a fishing boat was capsized far out at sea.
The only people on board were an old fisherman and a boy,
and the former contrived to cling for a few minutes to the overturned boat.
There was no physical help at hand,
and even if there had been in such a raging storm,
it would have been impossible for anything to be done,
so that the fishermen knew well enough that there,
there was no hope of escape, and that death could only be a question of a few moments.
He felt great terror at the prospect, being especially impressed by the awful loneliness of that
vast waste of waters, and he was also much troubled with thoughts of his wife and family,
and the difficulties in which they would be left by his sudden disease.
A passing helper seeing all this endeavored to comfort him,
but finding his mind too much disturbed to be impressionable,
she thought it advisable to show herself to him in order to assist him the better.
In relating the story afterwards, she said that the change which came over the fisherman's face
at sight of her was wonderful and beautiful to see.
With the shining form standing upon the boat above him,
he could not but think that an angel had been sent to comfort him in his trouble,
and therefore he felt that not only would he himself be carried safely through the gates of death,
but his family would assuredly be looked after also.
So when death came to him a few moments later,
he was in a frame of mind very different from the terror and purpose.
which had previously overcome him. And naturally, when he recovered consciousness upon the astral
plane and found the angel still beside him, he felt himself at home with her, and was prepared to accept
her advice as regards the new life upon which he had entered. Some time later, the same helper was
engaged in another piece of work of very similar character, the story of which she
has since told as follows. You remember that steamer that went down in the cyclone at the end of last
November? I betook myself to the cabin where about a dozen women had been shut in, and found them
wailing in the most pitiful manner, sobbing and moaning with fear. The ship had to founder, no aid
was possible, and to go out of the world in this state of frantic terror is the worst possible way
to enter the next. So in order to calm them, I materialized myself, and of course they thought
I was an angel, poor souls. They all fell on their knees and prayed me to save them, and one poor
mother pushed her baby into my arms, imploring me to save that, at least. They soon grew quiet
and composed as we talked, and the wee baby went to sleep smiling, and presently they all fell asleep
peacefully, and I filled their minds with thoughts of the heaven world, so that they did not wake
up when the ship made her final plunge downwards. I went down with them to ensure their sleeping
through the last moments, and they never stirred as their sleep became death. Evidently, in this case,
2. Those who were thus helped had not only the enormous advantage of being enabled to meet death
calmly and reasonably, but also the still greater one of being received on its farther shore
by one whom they were already disposed to love and trust, one who sorrowly understood the new
world in which they found themselves, and could not only reassure them as to their safety,
but advise them how to order their lives under these much altered circumstances.
And this brings us to the consideration of one of the largest and most important departments
of the work of Invisible Helpers, the guidance and assistance which they are able to give to the death.
End of Chapter 11.
Read by Maria Angela R. Oregon.
Cazin City, Metro Manila, 25 November, 2023.
Chapter 12 of Invisible Helpers
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Read by Helen K.
Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater.
Work Among the Dead
It is one of the many evils resulting from the absurdly erroneous teaching
as to conditions after death which is unfortunately current in our Western world
that those who have recently shaken off this mortal coil are usually much puzzled
and often very seriously frightened at finding everything so different
from what their religion had led them to expect.
The mental attitude of a large number of such people was pithily voiced the other day by an English general,
who three days after his death met one of the band of helpers whom he had known in physical life.
After expressing his great relief that he had at last found someone with whom he was able to communicate,
his first remark was,
But if I am dead, where am I?
for if this is heaven, I don't think much of it, and if it is hell, it is better than I expected.
But unfortunately, a far greater number take things less philosophically.
They have been taught that all men are destined to eternal flames,
except a favoured few who are superhumanly good,
and since a very small amount of self-examination convinces them that they do not belong to that,
they are but too often in a condition of panic, terror, dreading every moment that the new world in which they find themselves may dissolve and drop them into the clutches of the devil, in whom they have been sedulously taught to believe. In many cases they spend long periods of acute mental suffering before they can free themselves from the fatal influence of this blasphemous doctrine of everlasting punishment.
before they can realize that the world is governed, not according to the caprice of a hideous demon who gloats over human anguish,
but according to a benevolent and wonderfully patient law of evolution, which is absolutely just indeed.
But yet again and again offers to man opportunities of progress, if he will but take them at every stage of his career.
It ought, in fairness, to be mentioned, that it is only among what are called Protestant communities
that this terrible evil assumes its most aggravated form.
The great Roman Catholic Church, with its doctrine of purgatory,
approaches much more nearly to a conception of the astral plain,
and its devout members, at any rate, realize that the state in which they find themselves, shortly after death,
is merrily a temporary one,
and that it is their business to endeavour
to raise themselves out of it
as soon as may be,
by intense spiritual aspiration,
while they accept any suffering
which may come to them as necessary
for the wearing away of the imperfections
in their character
before they can pass
to higher and brighter regions.
It will thus be seen
that there is plenty of work for the helpers
to do among the newly dead.
For in the vast majority of cases, they need to be calmed and reassured, to be comforted and
instructed.
In the astral, just as in the physical world, there are many who are but little disposed
to take advice from those who know better than there.
Yet the very strangeness of the conditions surrounding them renders many of the dead
willing to accept the guidance of those to who,
whom these conditions are obviously familiar. A many-a-man's stay on that plane has been considerably
shortened by the earnest efforts of this band of energetic workers. Not, be it understood,
that the karma of the dead man can in any way be interfered with. He has built for himself during
life an astral body of a certain degree of density, and until that body is sufficiently
dissolved, he cannot pass into the heaven world beyond, but he need not lengthen the period
necessary for that process by adopting an improper attitude.
All students ought clearly to grasp the truth that the length of a man's astral life after he
has put off his physical body depends mainly upon two factors. The nature of his past physical
life and his attitude of mind after what we call death. During his earth life, he is constantly
influencing the building of matter into his astral body. He affects it directly by the passions,
emotions and desires which he allows to hold sway over him. He affects it indirectly by the action
upon it of his thoughts from above, and of the details of his physical life,
his continence or his debauchery, his cleanliness or his uncleanliness, his food and his drink from below.
If, by persistence in perversity, along any of these lines, he is so stupid as to build for himself a coarse and gross astral vehicle,
habituated to responding only to the lower vibrations of the plane, he will find himself for himself,
after death bound to that plane during a long and slow process of that body's disintegration.
On the other hand, if by decent and careful living he gives himself a vehicle mainly composed of finer material,
he will have very much less post-mortem trouble and discomfort,
and his evolution will proceed much more rapidly and easily.
This much is generally understood, but the second great factor, his attitude of mind after death, seems often to be forgotten.
The desirable thing is for him to realise his position on this particular little arc of his evolution,
to learn that he is at this stage withdrawing steadily inward towards the plane of the true ego,
and that consequently it is his business to disengage his third.
thoughts as far as may be from things physical, and to fix his attention more and more upon those
spiritual matters which will occupy him during his life in the heaven world. By doing this,
he will greatly facilitate the natural astral disintegration and will avoid the sadly common
mistake of unnecessarily delaying himself upon the lower levels of what should be so temporary
a residence. But many of the dead very considerably retard the process of dissolution by clinging
passionately to the earth which they have left. They simply will not turn their thoughts and desires
upward, but spend their time in struggling with all their might to keep in full touch with the
physical plane, thus causing great trouble to anyone who may be trying to help them.
Earthly matters are the only ones in which they have ever had any living interest,
and they cling to them with desperate tenacity even after death.
Naturally, as time passes on, they find it increasingly difficult to keep hold of things down here,
but instead of welcoming and encouraging this process of gradual refinement and spiritualisation,
they resist it vigorously by every means in their power.
Of course, the mighty force of evolution is eventually too strong for them,
and they are swept on in its beneficent current.
Yet they fight every step of the way,
thereby not only causing themselves a vast amount of entirely unnecessary pain and sorrow,
but also very seriously delaying their upward progress
and prolonging their stay in astral regions to an almost indefinite extent.
In convincing them that this ignorant and disastrous opposition to the cosmic will
is contrary to the laws of nature, and persuading them to adopt an attitude of mind,
which is the exact reversal of it, lies a great part of the work of those who are trying to help.
It happens occasionally that the dead are earthbound by anxiety.
anxiety. Anxiety sometimes about duties unperformed or debts undischarged, but more often on account of wife or children left
unprovided for. In such cases as this, it has more than once been necessary before the dead man
was satisfied to pursue his upward path in peace, that the helper should to some extent act as his
representative upon the physical plane and attend on his behalf to the settlement of the business
which was troubling him. An illustration taken from our recent experience will perhaps make this clearer.
One of the band of pupils was trying to assist a poor man who had died in one of our western cities,
but found it impossible to withdraw his mind from earthly things because of his anxiety about two
young children whom his death had left without means of support. He had been a working man
of some sort and had been unable to lay by any money for them. His wife had died some two years
previously and his landlady, though exceedingly kind-hearted and very willing to do anything
in her power for them, was herself far too poor to be able to adopt them, and very reluctantly
came to the conclusion that she would be obliged to hand them over to the parish authorities.
This was a great grief to the dead father, though he could not blame the landlady,
and was himself unable to suggest any other course. Our friend asked him whether he had no relative
to whom he could entrust them, but the father knew of none. He had a younger brother,
he said, who would certainly have done something for him in this extremity,
but he had lost sight of him for fifteen years and did not even know whether he was living or dead when last heard of he had been apprenticed to a carpenter in the north and he was then described as a steady young fellow who if he lived would surely get on
the clues at hand were certainly very slight but since there seemed no other prospect of help for the children our friend thought it worth while to make a special effort
to follow them up. Taking the dead man with him, he commenced a patient search after the brother
in the town indicated, and after a great deal of trouble, they were actually successful in finding
him. He was now a master carpenter, in a fairly flourishing way of business, married but without
children, though earnestly desiring them, and therefore apparently just the man for the emergency.
The question now was how the information could best be conveyed to this brother.
Fortunately, he was found to be so far impressionable that the circumstances of his brother's death
and the destitution of his children could be put vividly before him in a dream.
And this was repeated three times, the place and even the name of the landlady being clearly indicated to him.
He was immensely impressed by this recurring vision,
and discussed it earnestly with his wife, who advised him to write to the address given.
This he did not like to do, but was strongly inclined to travel down into the West Country,
find out whether there was such a house as that which he had seen, and if so, make some excuse to call there.
He was a busy man, however, and he finally decided that he could not afford to lose a day's work,
for what, after all, might well prove to be not.
nothing but the baseless fabric of a dream.
The attempt along these lines, having apparently failed,
it was determined to try another method.
So one of the helpers wrote a letter to the man
detailing the circumstances of his brother's death
and the position of the children,
exactly as he had seen them in his dream.
On receipt of this confirmation,
he no longer hesitated,
but set off the very next day for the town indicated.
and was received with open arms by the kind-hearted landlady it had been easy enough for the helpers to persuade her good soul that she was to keep the children with her for a few days on the chance that something or other would turn up for them
but she has ever since congratulated herself that she did so the carpenter of course took the children back with him and provided them with a happy home and the dead father now no longer anxious
passed rejoicing on his upward way.
Since some theosophical writers have felt it their duty to insist in vigorous terms upon the evils
so frequently attendant upon the holding of spiritualistic seances,
it is only fair to admit that on several occasions good work, similar to that of the helper
in the case just described, has been done through the agency of a medium or of someone present at
circle. Thus, though spiritualism has too often detained souls who put for it would have attained
speedier liberation, it must be set to the credit of its account that it has also furnished the means
of escape to others, and thus opened up the path of advancement for them. There have been instances
in which the defunct has been able to appear unassisted to his relatives or friends
and explain his wishes to them.
But these are naturally rare,
and most souls who are earthbound by anxieties of the kind indicated
can satisfy themselves only by the means of the services of the medium or the conscious helper.
Another case very frequently encountered on the astral plane
is that of the man who cannot believe that he is dead at all.
Indeed, most people consider the very fact that they are still conscious to be an absolute
proof that they have not passed through the portals of death.
Somewhat of a satire this, if one thinks of it, on the practical value of our much-vunted
belief in the immortality of the soul.
However they may have labelled themselves during life, the great majority of those who die
in this country at any rate, show themselves by their subsequent attitude to have been to all
intents and purposes, materialists at heart. And those who on earth have honestly called themselves so
are often no more difficult to deal with than others who would have been shocked at the very name.
A very recent instance was that of a scientific man who, finding himself fully conscious and yet under-conditioned,
differing radically from any that he had ever experienced before,
had persuaded himself that he was still alive,
and merrily the victim of a prolonged and unpleasant dream.
Fortunately for him, there happened to be among the band
of those able to function upon the astral plane,
a son of an old friend of his,
a young man whose father had commissioned him to search for the departed scientist,
and endeavour to render him some assistance.
when after some trouble the youth found and accosted him,
he frankly admitted that he was in a condition of great bewilderment and discomfort,
but still clung desperately to his dream hypothesis,
as on the whole the most probable explanation of what he saw,
and even went so far as to suggest that his visitor was nothing but a dream figure himself.
At last, however,
he so far gave way as to propose a kind of test and said to the young man if you are as you assert a living person and the son of my old friend bring me from him some message that shall prove to me your objective reality
now although under all ordinary conditions of the physical plane the giving of any kind of phenomenal proof is strictly forbidden to the pupils of the masters it's
seemed as though a case of this kind hardly came under the rules, and therefore when it had been
ascertained that there was no objection on the part of higher authorities, an application was made
to the father, who at once sent a message referring to a series of events which had occurred
before the son's birth. This convinced the dead man of the real existence of his young friend,
and therefore of the plain upon which they were.
were both functioning. And as soon as he felt this established, his scientific training at once
reasserted itself, and he became exceedingly eager to acquire all possible information about this
new region. Of course, the message which he so readily accepted as evidence was in reality
no proof at all, since the facts to which it referred might have been read from his own mind
or from the records of the past
by any creature possessed of astral senses.
But his ignorance of these possibilities
enabled this definite impression to be made upon him,
and the theological instruction
which his young friend is now knightly giving to him
will undoubtedly have a stupendous effect upon his future.
For it cannot but greatly modify
not only the heaven's state,
which lies immediately before him,
but also his next incarnation upon earth.
The main work, then, done for the newly dead by our helpers,
is that of soothing and comforting them,
of delivering them when possible from the terrible, though unreasoning fear
which but too often seizes them,
and not only causes them much unnecessary suffering,
but retards their progress to higher spheres,
and of enabling them as far as may be,
to comprehend the future that lies before them.
Others who have been longer on the astral plane
may also receive much help,
if they will but accept it,
from explanations and advice as to their course
through its different stages.
They may, for example,
be warned of the danger and delay
caused by attempting to communicate
with the living through a medium.
And sometimes, though rarely,
an entity already drawn into a spiritualistic circle may be guided into higher and healthier life.
Teaching thus given to persons on this plane is by no means lost, for though the memory of it
cannot of course be directly carried over to the next incarnation, there always remains the real
inner knowledge, and therefore the strong predisposition to accept it immediately when heard again
in the new life.
A rather remarkable instance of service rendered to the dead
was the first achievement of a very recent recruit
to the band of helpers,
one who is hardly as yet a fully-fledged member.
This young aspirant had not long before lost an aged relative,
for whom he had felt an especially warm affection,
and his earliest request was to be taken by a,
more experienced friend to visit her in the hope that he might be of some service to her.
This was done, and the effect of the meeting of the living and the dead was very beautiful and
touching. The older person's astral life was already approaching its end,
but a condition of apathy, dullness and uncertainty prevented her from making any
immediate progress. But when the boy, who had been so much to her in earth life, stood once
more before her and dissolved by the sunlight of his love the grey mist of depression which had
gathered around her, she was aroused from her stupor, and she soon understood that he had come
in order to explain to her her situation, and to tell her of the glories of the higher life
toward which her thoughts and aspirations ought now to be directed.
But when this was fully realised,
there was such an awakening of dormant feeling in her
and such an outrush of devoted affection towards her earnest young helper,
that the last fetters which bound her to the astral life were broken,
and that one great outburst of love and gratitude
swept her forthwith into the higher consciousness of the heaven world.
truly there is no greater a more beneficent power in the universe than that of pure, unselfish love.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of Invisible Helpers.
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Invisible Helpers by C. W. Ledbetter
Chapter 13
Other Branches of the Work
The Turning Back again now
from the all-important work
among the dead
to the consideration of the work
among the living,
we must briefly indicate a great branch of it,
without a notice of which
our account of the labors of our invisible
helpers would indeed be incomplete,
and that is the immense amount
which is done by suggestion,
by simply putting good thoughts into the minds of those who are ready to receive them.
Let there be no mistake as to what is meant here.
It would be perfectly easy, easy to a degree which would be quite incredible
to those who do not understand the subject practically,
for a helper to dominate the mind of any average man,
and make him think just as he pleased,
and that, without arousing the faintest suspicion of any outside influence,
in the mind of the subject.
But however admirable the result might be,
such a proceeding would be entirely inadmissible.
All that may be done is to throw the good thought
into the person's mind
as one among the hundreds that are constantly sweeping through it.
Whether the man takes it up, makes it his own,
and acts upon it, depends entirely upon himself.
Where it otherwise, it is obvious
that all the good karma of the action
would accrue to the helper only,
for the subject would have been a mere tool
and not an actor,
which is not what is desired.
The assistance given in this way
is exceedingly varied in character.
The consolation of those who are suffering
or in sorrow at once suggest itself,
as does also the endeavor to guide toward the truth
those who are earnestly seeking it.
When a person is
spending much anxious thought upon some spiritual or metaphysical problem, it is often possible
to put the solution into his mind without his being at all aware that it comes from external
agency. A pupil, too, may often be employed as an agent in what can hardly be described otherwise
than as the answering of prayer. For though it is true that any earnest spiritual desire,
such as might be supposed to find its expression in prayer,
is itself a force which automatically brings about certain results.
It is also a fact that such a spiritual effort
offers an opportunity of influence to the powers of good,
of which they are not slow to take advantage,
and it is sometimes the privilege of a willing helper
to be made the channel through which their energy is poured forth.
What is said of prayers is true to an even great,
greater extent of meditation, for those to whom this higher exercise is a possibility.
Besides these more general methods of help, there are also special lines open only to a few.
Again and again, such pupils as are fitted for the work have been employed to suggest true
and beautiful thoughts to authors, poets, artists, and musicians, but obviously it is not
every helper who is capable of being used in this way.
Sometimes, though more rarely, it is possible to warn persons of the danger to their moral
development of some course which they are pursuing, to clear away evil influences from about
some person or place, or to counteract the machinations of black magicians.
It is not often that direct instruction in the great truths of nature can be
given to people outside the circle of occult students, but occasionally it is possible to do something
in that way of putting before the minds of preachers and teachers a wider range of thought
or a more liberal view of some question than they would otherwise have taken. Naturally, as an
occult student progresses on the path, he attains a wider sphere of usefulness. Instead of assisting
individuals only, he learns how classes, nations, and races are dealt with, and he is entrusted
with a gradually increasing share of the higher and more important work done by the adepts
themselves. As he acquires the requisite power and knowledge, he begins to wield the greater
forces of the mental and the astral planes, and is shown how to make the utmost possible use
of each favorable cyclic influence.
He is brought into relation with those great Nermanakaias,
who are sometimes symbolized as the stones of the guardian wall,
and he becomes, at first, of course, in the very humblest capacity,
one of the band of their almaners,
and learns how those forces are dispersed,
which are the fruit of their sublime self-sacrifice.
Thus he rises gradually, higher and higher,
until blossoming at length into adeptship he is able to take his full share of the responsibility which lies upon the masters of wisdom and to help others along the road which he has trodden
on the mental plane the work differs somewhat since teaching can be both given and received in a much more direct rapid and perfect manner while the influences set in motion are infinitely more powerful
because acting on so much higher a level.
But, though it is useless to speak of it in detail at present,
since so few of us are yet able to function consciously upon this plane during life,
here also, and even higher still,
there is always plenty of work to be done,
as soon as ever we can make ourselves capable of doing it.
And there is certainly no fear that for countless eons we shall ever
find ourselves without a career of unselfish usefulness open before us.
End of Chapter 13.
Chapter 14 of Invisible Helpers.
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Ledbetter, the qualifications required.
How, it may be asked, are we to make ourselves capable of sharing in this great work?
Well, there is no mystery as to the qualifications which are needed by one who aspires to be a helper.
The difficulty is not in learning what they are, but in developing them in oneself.
To some extent, they have been already incidentally described,
but it is nevertheless as well that they should be set out fully and categorically.
First, single-mindedness.
The first requisite is that we shall have recognized the great work which the masters would have us do,
and that it shall be for us the one great interest of our lives.
We must learn to distinguish not only between useful and useless work,
but between the different kinds of useful work,
so that we may each devote ourselves to the very highest of which we are capable,
and not fritter away our time in laboring at something which,
however good it may be for the man who cannot yet do anything better,
is unworthy of the knowledge and capacity which should be ours as theosophists.
A man who wishes to be considered eligible for employment on higher planes
must begin by doing the utmost that lies in his power
in the way of definite work for theosophy down here.
Of course I do not mean for a moment that we are to negate,
the ordinary duties of life. We should certainly do well to undertake no new worldly duties of
any sort, but those which we have already bound upon our shoulders have become a karmic
obligation, which we have no right to neglect. Unless we have done to the full the duties which
karma has laid upon us, we are not free for the higher work. But this higher work must
nevertheless be to us the one thing really worth living for, the constant background of a
which is consecrated to the service of the masters of compassion.
Second, perfect self-control.
Before we can be safely trusted with the wider powers of the astral life,
we must have ourselves perfectly in hand.
Our temper, for example, must be thoroughly under control,
so that nothing that we may see or hear can cause real irritation in us,
for the consequences of such irritation,
would be far more serious on that,
plane than on this. The force of thought is always an enormous power, but down here it is
reduced and deadened by the heavy physical brain particles which it has to set in motion.
In the astral world it is far freer and more potent, and for a man with fully awakened faculty
to feel anger against a person, there would be to do him serious and perhaps even fatal injury.
not only do we need control of temper, but control of nerve, so that none of the fantastic or terrible
sights that we may encounter may be able to shake our dauntless courage. It must be remembered that the
pupil who awakens a man upon the astral plane encouraged thereby a certain amount of responsibility
for his actions and for his safety, so that unless his neophyte had courage to stand alone,
the whole of the older workers' time
would be wasted in hovering around to protect him,
which would be manifestly unreasonable to expect.
It is to make sure of this control of nerve
and to fit them for the work that has to be done
that candidates are always made,
now as in the days of old,
to pass what are called the tests of earth,
water, air, and fire.
In other words, they have to learn
with that absolute certainty
that comes not by theory but by practical experience,
that in their astral bodies,
none of these elements can, by any possibility, be hurtful to them,
that none can oppose any obstacle in the way of the work, which they have to do.
In this physical body, we are fully convinced that fire will burn us,
that water will drown us,
that the solid rock forms an impassable barrier to our progress,
that we cannot with safety launch ourselves unsupported into the ambient air.
So deeply is this conviction ingrained in us
that it costs most men a good deal of effort to overcome the instinctive action
which follows from it, and to realize that in the astral body
the densest rock offers no impediment to their freedom of motion,
that they may leap with impunity from the highest cliff,
and plunge with the most absolute confidence into the heart of the raging volcano or the deepest abysses of the fathomless ocean.
Yet until a man knows this, knows it sufficiently to act upon his knowledge instinctively and confidently,
he is comparatively useless for astral work, since in emergencies that are constantly arising,
he would be perpetually paralyzed by imaginary disabilities.
So he has to go through his tests, and through many another strange experience, to meet face-to-face with calm courage the most terrifying apparitions amid the most loathsome surroundings, to show in fact that his nerve may be thoroughly trusted under any and all of the varied groups of circumstances in which he may at any moment find himself.
Further, we need control of mind and of desire.
Of mind, because without the power of concentration,
it would be impossible to do good work
amid all the distracting currents of the astral plane.
Of desire, because in that strange world,
to desire is very often to have.
And unless this part of our nature were well controlled,
we might, perchance, find ourselves face to face with creed,
of our own, of which we should be heartily ashamed.
Third, calmness.
This is another most important point,
the absence of all worry and depression.
Much of the work consists in soothing those who are disturbed
and cheering those who are in sorrow.
And how can a helper do that work
if his own aura is vibrating with constant fuss and worry
or gray with the deadly gloom
that comes from perpetual depression?
Nothing is more hopelessly fatal to occult progress or usefulness than our 19th century
habit of ceaselessly worrying over trifles, of eternally making mountains out of molehills.
Many of us simply spend our lives in magnifying the most absurd trivialities,
insolomely and elaborately, going to work to make ourselves miserable about nothing.
Surely we who are theosophists ought, at any rate,
to have got beyond this stage of irrational worry and ceaseless depression.
Surely we, who are trying to acquire some definite knowledge of the cosmic order,
ought by this time to have realized that the optimistic view of everything
is always nearest to the divine view,
and therefore to the truth,
because only that in any person which is good and beautiful,
can by any possibility be permanent,
while the evil must, by its very nature, be temporary.
In fact, as Browning said,
the evil is null, is not,
is silence implying sound.
While above and beyond it all,
the soul of things is sweet,
the heart of being is celestial rest.
So, they who know,
maintain unruffled calm,
and, with their perfect sympathy, combine the joyous serenity, which comes from the certainty
that all will at last be well, and those who wish to help must learn to follow their example.
Fourth, knowledge. To be of use, the man must at least have some knowledge of the nature
of the plane on which he has to work, and the more knowledge he has in any and every direction,
the more useful he will be. He must fit him to be. He must fit him to the nature of the plain. He must fit him,
for this task by carefully studying the theosophical literature, for he cannot expect that
those whose time is already so fully occupied to waste some of it in explaining to him
what he might have learnt down here by taking the trouble to read the books. No one who is not
already as earnest a student as his capabilities and opportunities permit need begin to
think of himself as a candidate for astral work.
Fifth, unselfishness.
It would seem scarcely needful to insist upon this as a qualification,
for surely everyone who has made the least study of theosophy,
must know that while the slightest taint of selfishness remains in a man,
he is not yet fit to be entrusted with the higher powers,
not yet fit to enter upon a work of whose very essence it is
that the worker should forget himself,
but to remember the good of others.
He who is still capable of selfish thought, whose personality is still so strong in him,
that he can allow himself to be turned aside from his work,
by feelings of petty pride or suggestions of wounded dignity,
that man is not yet ready to show the selfless devotion of the helper.
Sixth, love.
This, the last and greatest of the qualifications,
is also the most misunderstood.
Most emphatically, it is not the cheap, namby-pamby, backboneless sentimentalism,
which is always overflowing into vague platitudes and gushing generalities,
yet fears to stand firm for the right, lest it should be branded by the ignorant as unbrotherly.
What is wanted is the love which is strong enough, not to boast itself,
but to act without talking about it.
the intense desire for service which is ever on the watch for an opportunity to render it,
even though it prefers to do so anonymously.
The feeling which springs up in the heart of him, who has realized the great work of the Lagos,
and having once seen it, knows that for him there can be in the three words no other course
but to identify himself with it to the utmost limit of his power, to become, in however,
humble away, and at however great a distance, a tiny channel of that wondrous love of God,
which, like the peace of God, passes man's understanding. These are the qualities toward the
possession of which the helper must ceaselessly strive, and of which some considerable measure,
at least, must be his before he can hope that the great ones who stand behind will deem him
fit for a full awakening. The ideal is, in truth, a high one.
yet none need therefore turn away disheartened, nor think that while he is still but struggling
toward it, he must necessarily remain entirely useless on the astral plain. For short of the
responsibilities and dangers of that full awakening, there is much that may safely and
usefully be done. There is hardly one among us who would not be capable of performing at
least one definite act of mercy and goodwill each night while we are away from our bodies.
Our condition when asleep is usually one of absorption in thought, be it remembered, a carrying
on of the thoughts that have principally occupied us during the day, and especially of the last
thought in the mind when sinking into sleep. Now, if we make that last thought a strong intention
to go and give help to someone whom we know to be in need of it, the soul when free
read from the body will undoubtedly carry out that intention, and the help will be given.
There are several cases on record in which, when this attempt has been made, the person thought
of, has been fully conscious of the effort of the would-be helper, and has even seen his
astral body in the act of carrying out the instructions impressed upon it. Indeed, no one needs
sadden himself with the thought that he can have no part nor lot in this glorious work.
Such a feeling would be entirely untrue, for everyone who can think can help, nor need such
useful action be confined to our hours asleep. If you know, and who does not, of someone who is
in sorrow or suffering, though you may not be able consciously to stand in astral form by their
bedside, you can, nevertheless, send them loving thoughts and earnest good wishes, and be well
assured that such thoughts and wishes are real and living and strong, that when you so send them,
they do actually go and work your will in proportion to the strength which you have put into them.
Thoughts are things, intensely real things, visible enough to those whose eyes have been open to
see, and by their means, the poorest man may bear his part in the good work of the world
as fully as the richest. In this way, at least,
whether we can yet function consciously upon the astral plane or not,
we all can join, and we all ought to join,
the army of invisible helpers.
But the aspirant, who definitely desires to become one of the band of astral helpers
who are working under the direction of the great masters of wisdom,
will make his preparation part of a far wider scheme of development.
Instead of merely endeavoring to fit himself for the particular branch of their service,
he will undertake with high resolution the far greater task of training himself to follow in their footsteps,
of bending all the energies of his soul to attain even as they have attained,
so that his power of helping the world may not be confined to the astral plane,
but may extend to those higher levels which are the true home of the divine self of man.
For him, the path has been marked out long ago, by the way,
wisdom of those who have trodden it in days of old, a path of self-development which, sooner or later,
all must follow, whether they choose to adopt it of their own free will, or wait until, after many
lives and an infinity of suffering, the slow, resistless force of evolution drives them along
it among the laggards of the human family. But the wise man is he who eagerly enters upon it
immediately, setting his face resolutely toward the goal of adepthip. In order that, being safe
forever from all doubt and fear and sorrow himself, he may help others into safety and happiness also.
What are the steps of this path of holiness, as the Buddhists call it, and in what order are they
arranged? Let us see in our next chapter. End of chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of Invisible Helpers. This is a little.
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Led Vita.
Chapter 15. The probationary path.
Eastern books tell us that there are four means by which a man may be brought to the beginning
of the path of spiritual advancement.
1. By the companionship of those who have already entered upon it.
2. By the hearing or reading of definite teaching on occult philosophy.
3. By enlightened reflection.
that is to say that by sheer force of hard thinking and closed reasoning, he may arrive at the truth or some portion of it for himself.
For, by the practice of virtue, which means that a long series of virtuous lives, though it does not necessarily involve any increase of intellectuality, does eventually develop in a man's sufficient intuition to enable him to grasp the necessity of entering upon the path, and show him in what direction it lies.
When by one or another of these means he has arrived at this point, the way to the highest adeptship lies straight before him, if he chooses to take it,
In writing for students of occultism, it is hardly necessary to say that at our present stage of development we cannot expect to learn all, or nearly all, about any but the lowest steps of this path, whilst of the highest we know little but the names, though we may get occasional glimpses of the indescribable glory which surrounds them.
According to esoteric teachings, these steps are grounded in three great divisions.
One, the probationary period, before any definite pledges are taken or initiations in the full sense of the word are given.
This carries a man to the level necessary to pass successfully through what.
what in theosophical books is usually called the critical period of the fifth round.
Two, the period of pledged discipleship, or the path proper, whose four stages are often spoken
of in Oriental books as the four parts of holiness. At the end of this, the pupil obtains
adepthip, the level which humanity should reach at the close of the seventh round.
Three, what we may venture to call the official period in which the adept takes a definite
part under the great cosmic law in the government of the world, and holds a special
office connected therewith. Of course, every adept, every pupil even, when once a
definitely accepted, as we've seen in the earlier chapters, takes a part in the great work of
helping forward the evolution of man. With those standing on the higher levels take charge of
special departments and correspond in the cosmic scheme to the ministers of the Crown in a well-ordered
and earthly state. It is not proposed to make any attempt in this book to treat of this official
period. No information about it has ever been made public and the whole subject is too above
our comprehension to be profitably dealt with in print. We will confine ourselves, therefore, to the
two earlier divisions. Before going into details of the probationary period, it is well to mention that
in most of the Eastern Sacred Books, the stage is regarded as merely preliminary and scarcely as a part
of the path at all, for they consider that the latter is really entered upon only when definite pledges
have been given. Considerable confusion has been created by the fact that the numbering of the
stages occasionally commences at this point, though more often at the beginning of the second great
division. Sometimes the stages themselves are counted, and sometimes the initiations leading into or
out of them, so that in studying the books one has to be perpetually on guard to avoid
misunderstanding.
This probationary period, however, differs considerably in character from the others.
The divisions between its stages are less decidedly marked than are those of the higher
groups and the requirements are not so definite or exacting, but it will be easier to explain
this last point after giving a list of the five stages of this period with their respective
qualifications.
The first four were very ably described by Mr. Mohini Mohan Chateji in the first transaction
of the London launch, to which readers may be referred for fuller definitions of them than can be
given here. Much exceedingly valuable information about them is also given by Mrs. Bessand,
in her books, The Path of Discipleship, and In the Outer Court. The names given to the stages
will differ somewhat, for in those books, the Hindu-Sanskrit terminology was employed, whereas
the Pali nomenclature used here is that of the Buddhist system. But although the subject is thus
approach from a different side, as it were, the qualifications exacted will be found to be
precisely the same, in effect, even when the outward form varies. In the case of each word,
the mere dictionary meaning will first be given in parenthesis, and the explanation of it, which is
usually given by the teacher, will follow. The first stage then is called among the Buddhists.
1. Mano Daravajana, the opening of the doors of the mind, or perhaps escaping by the door
of the mind. And in it, the candidate acquires a firm intellectual conviction of the impermanence
and worthlessness of mere earthly aims. This is often described as learning the difference between
the real and the unreal, and to learn it often takes a long time and many hard lessons.
Yet it is obvious that it must be the first step towards anything like real progress,
for no man can enter wholeheartedly upon the path until he has definitely decided to set
his affection upon things above, not on things on the earth, and that decision comes from
the certainty that nothing on earth has any value as compared with the higher life.
This step is called by the Hindus the acquirement of Viveka, or discrimination, and Mr. Sinat
speaks of it as the giving allegiance to the higher self. 2. Parikama, preparation for action.
The stage in which the candidate learns to do the right merely because it is right,
without considering his own gain or loss, either in this world or the future,
and acquires, as the Eastern books put it, perfect indifference to the enjoyment of the fruit of his
own actions. This indifference is the natural result of the previous step. For when the
neophyte has once grasped the unreal and impermanent character of all earthly rewards,
he ceases to crave for them, when once the radiance,
of the real has shone upon the soul. Nothing below that can any longer be an object of desire.
This higher indifference is called by the Hindus, Vayaagya. 3. Uphasharo.
Attention or conduct. The stage in which what are called the sixth qualification,
the shathe of the Hindus must be acquired. These are called in Pali, A, samu, quietude,
that purity and calmness of thought which comes from the perfect control of the mind,
a qualification exceedingly difficult of attainment, and yet most necessary, for unless the
mind moves only in obedience to the guidance of the will it cannot be a perfect instrument for the
master's work in the future this qualification is a comprehensive one and includes within itself
both the self-control and the calmness which were described in chapter 14 as necessary for astral
work b damo subjugation a similar mastery over and therefore purity in one's actions and words
a quality which again follows necessarily from its predecessor cuparati cessation explained a secession from
bigotry or from belief in the necessity of any act or ceremony prescribed by a particular religion,
so leading the aspirant to independence of thought and to a wide and generous tolerance.
D. Titiqa, endurance or forbearance.
By which is meant the readiness to bear with cheerfulness, whatever one's karma may bring upon one,
and depart with anything and everything worldly whenever it may be necessary.
It also includes the idea of complete absence of resentment for wrong,
the man knowing that those who do him wrong are but the instruments of his own.
karma. E. Samadana. Intentness. One poignantness involving the incapability of being turned aside from one's path
by temptation. This corresponds very closely with the single-mindedness spoken of in the previous chapter.
F. Sadha. Faith. Confident in one's master and oneself. Confidence, that is, that the master is a
competent teacher, and that however diffident the pupil may feel, as to his own powers, he has yet
within him that divine spark, which when fanned into a flame, will one day enable him to achieve.
even as his master has done.
4. Anuloma, direct order or succession,
signifying that its attainment follows as a natural consequence from the other three,
the stage in which is acquired that intense desire for liberation from earthly life,
and for union with the highest, which is called by the Hindus Mumushatva.
5. Kotrabu, the condition of fitness for initiation.
In this stage, the candidate gathers up, as it were, his previous acquisitions,
and strengthens them to the degree necessary for the next great step,
which will set his feet upon the path proper as an accepted pupil.
The attainment of this level is followed very rapidly by initiation into the next grade.
In answer to the question, who is Gotrabu, Buddha says,
the man who is in possession of those conditions,
upon which the commencement of sanctification immediately ensues.
He is the Gottrabu.
The wisdom necessary for the reception of the path of holiness is called Gotrabul Ghana.
Now that we have hastily glanced at the steps of the probationary period,
we must emphasise the point to which reference was made at the commencement,
that the perfect attainment of these accomplishments and qualifications
is not expected at this early stage.
As Mr. Mihini says,
if all these are equally strung,
adeptship is attained in the same incarnation.
But such a result is, of course, extremely rare.
It is in the direction of these requirements
that the candidate must easily strive,
but it would be an error to suppose that no one has been admitted to the next step
without possessing all of them in the fullest possible degree,
nor do they necessary follow one another in the same definite order
as the later steps. In fact, in many cases a man would be developing the various qualifications
all at the same time, rather side by side than in regular succession. It is obvious that a man
might easily be working along a great part of this path, even though he was quite unaware of its
very existence. And no doubt, many are good Christian, many owners, free thinker, is already
far on the road that will eventually lead him to initiation, though he may never have heard the
world occultism in his life. I mention these two classes, especially because in every other religion
occult development is recognised as a possibility, and would certainly, therefore, be intentionally
sought by those who felt yearnings for something more satisfactory than the exoteric faith.
We must also note that the steps of this probationary period are not separated by initiations
in the full sense of the word, though they will certainly be studied with tests and trials of all sorts
and on all planes, and may be relieved by encouraging experiences and by hints and help whenever these
may safely be given. We are apt sometimes to use the word initiation somewhat loosely, as, for example,
when it is applied to such tests as have just been mentioned.
Properly speaking, it refers only to the solemn ceremony
at which a pupil is formally admitted to a higher grade
by an appointed official who, in the name of the one initiator,
receives his plighted vow and puts into his hands the new key of knowledge,
which he is to use on the level to which he has now attained.
Such an initiation is taken at the entrance to the division which we shall next consider,
and also at each passage from any one of its steps to the next.
End of Chapter 15, read by KBHC.
Chapter 16 of Invisible Helpers
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Invisible Helpers by CW Lead Beta.
Chapter 16.
The Path Proper
It is in the four stages of this division of the path
that the 10 Samyosan, or fetus which bind man to the circle of rebirth,
and hold him back from Nirvana must be.
cast off. And here comes the difference between this period of pledged discipleship and the previous
probation. No partial success in getting rid of these fetters is sufficient now. Before a candidate can
pass from one of these steps to the next, he must be entirely free from certain of these clubs.
And when they are enumerated, it will be seen how far reaching this requirement is, and there will
be little cause to wonder at the statement made in the sacred books that seven inclinations
are sometimes required to pass through this division of the path. Each of these four
steps or stages is again divided into four. For each has one, it's Mago, or Wei, during which the student
is striving to cast off the fetters. Two, is pala, result of fruit, when he finds the results of
his actions in doing so showing themselves more and more. Three, is bavaga or consummation. The period
when the result having culminated, he is able to fulfill satisfactorily the work belonging to the step
on which he now firmly stands. And four is Gortabu, meaning as before, the time when he
he arrives at a fifth state to receive the next initiation.
The first stage is one, Sotapati or Sohan.
The people who has attained this level is spoken of as a Sawani or Sotapana,
he who has entered the stream.
Because from this period, though he may linger,
though he may succumb to more refined temptations
and turn aside from his course for a long time,
he can no longer fall back altogether from spirituality
and become a mere worldling.
He has entered upon the stream of definite higher human evolution,
upon which all humanity must enter by the middle of the next
round unless they are to be left behind as temporary failures by the great life wave to wait for
further progress until the next chain of worlds. The people who is able to take this initiation
has therefore already outstripped the majority of humanity to the extent of an entire round
of all our seven planets and in doing so has definitely secured himself against the possibility
of falling out of the stream in the fifth round. He is consequently sometimes spoken of as the
saved or the safe one. It is from a misunderstanding of this idea that there arises the curious theory
of salvation promulgulated by a certain section of the Christian community.
The Ionian salvation of which some of its documents speak is not, as has been blasphemously
supposed by the ignorant, from eternal torture, but simply from wasting the rest of its ion
or dispensation by falling out of its line of progress. This is also the meaning, naturally,
of the celebrated clause of the Athanasian creed. Whoever will be saved before all things
it is necessary that he hold the Catholic faith, the fetters which he must cast off before he can
passed into the next stage are 1. Sakayaditi, the delusion of self. Two, Vichikichita,
doubt or uncertainty. Three, Silibata paramaasa, superstition. The first of these is the
I am eye consciousness, which as connected with the personality is nothing but of an illusion,
and must be got rid of at the very first step of the real upward path. But to cast off this
fetter completely means even more than this, for it involves the realization of the fact that
individuality also is in its very truth, one with the all, that it can therefore never have any
interest opposed to those of its brethren, and that it is most truly progressing when it most
assist the progress of others. For the very sign and seal of the attainment of the Satapati level
is the first entrance of the pupil into the plain next above the mantle, that which we
usually call the buddic. It may be, nay it will be, the merest touch of the lowest sub-plane
of that stupendously exalted condition that the pupil can experience as yet. Even with his
master's help, but even that touch is something that can never be forgotten, something that
opens a new world before him and entirely revolutionizes his feelings and conceptions.
Then, for the first time, by means of the extended consciousness of that plane, he truly
realizes the underlying unity of all, not as an intellectual conception merely, but as a definite
fact that is patent to his opened eyes. Then first, he really knows something of the world in
which he lives. Then first, he gets some slight glimpse of what the love and compassion of the great
masters must be. As to the second letter, a word of caution is necessary. We who have been trained in
European habits of thought are unhappily so familiar with the idea that a blind unreasoning
adhesion to certain dogmas may be claimed from a disciple, that on hearing that occultism
considers doubt as an obstacle to progress, we are likely to suppose that it also requires
the same unquestioning faith from its followers as modern superstitions do. No idea could be more
entirely false. It is true that doubt, or rather uncertainty on certain questions, is a bar to
spiritual progress, but the antidote to that doubt is not blind faith, which is itself considered
as a fetter, as will presently be seen, but the certainty of conviction founded on individual
experiment or mathematical reasoning. While a child doubted the accuracy of the multiplication table,
he would hardly acquire proficiency in the high mathematics, but his doubts could be satisfactorily
cleared up only by his attaining of comprehension, founded on reasoning or experiment, that the statements
contained in the table are true. He believes that twice two or four, not merely because he has been
told so, but because it has become to him a self-evident fact. And this is exactly the method,
and the only method of resolving doubt known to occultism. Vichy Chacha has been defined as doubt
of the doctrines of karma and reincarnation, and of the efficacy of the method of attaining the
highest good by this path of holiness. And the casting off of this Samijan is the arriving at
absolute certainty, based either upon personal first-hand knowledge or upon reasoning that the
alcohol teaching upon these points is true the third fetter to be got rid of comprehends of all kinds of unreasoning or mistaken belief all dependence on the efficacy of outward rights and ceremonies to purify the heart he who would cast it off must learn to depend upon himself alone not upon others nor upon the outer husk of any religion the first three fetters are in a coherent series the difference between individuality and personality being fully realized it is then possible to some extent to appreciate the actual course of reincarnation and so as to dispel all doubt on that head this
done, the knowledge of the spiritual permanence of the true ego gives rise to the reliance on one's
own spiritual strength and so dispels superstition. 2. Sakadagami. The pupil has entered upon
this second stage is spoken of as a Sakadakamin, the man who returns but one, signifying that
a man who has reached this level should need but one more inclination will full attaining a
rawhatship. At this step, no additional fet is a cast off, but the pupil is occupied in
reducing to a minimum those which still enchain him. It is, however, usually a period of consideration
psychic and intellectual advancement.
If what are commonly called psychic faculties have not been previously acquired,
they must be developed at this days.
As without them, it would be impossible to assimilate the knowledge which must now be given
or to do the higher work for humanity in which the pupil is now privileged to assist.
He must have the astral consciousness at this command during his physical waking life,
and during sleep, the heaven world will be opened before him.
For the consciousness of a man, when away from his physical body,
is always one stage higher than it is while he is still burdened with the house of flesh.
3. Anagami. The Anagamin, he who does not return, is so called because having reached this stage, he ought to be able to attain the next one in the life he is then living. He enjoys while moving through the round of his daily work, all the splendid possibilities of progress, given by the full possession of the plices faculties of the heaven world. And when he leaves his physical vehicle at night, he enters once more into the wonderfully widened consciousness that belongs to the booty. In this step, he finally gets rid of any lingering remaining of the two fetters. Of, four, come around,
attachment to the enjoyment of sensation to be provided by earthly love and five patiga all possibility of anger or hatred the student who has cast off these fetters can no longer be swayed by the influence of his senses either in the direction of love or hatred and is free from either attachment or to the impatience of physical playing conditions here again we must guard against a possible misconception one with which we frequently meet the purest and noblest human love never dies away is never in any way diminished by occult training on the
On the contrary, it is increased and widened until it embraces all with the same favour which at first was lavished on one or two.
But the student does in time rise above all considerations connected with the mere personality of those around him.
And so is free from all the injustice and partiality which ordinary love so often brings in its train.
Nor should it for a moment be supposed that in gaining this wide affection for all, he loses the special love for his closer friends.
The unusually perfect link between Anandah and the Buddha, as between S. John and Jesus,
is on record to prove that on the contrary, this enormously intensifies, and the tie between the
master and his pupils is stronger than any earthly bond, and not merely between personalities.
Therefore, it is strong and permanent without fear of diminution or fluctuation, for it is that
perfect love which casteth out fear.
Four, Arachat, the venerable, the perfect.
On detaining this level, the aspirin constantly enjoys the consciousness of the budic plane,
and is able to use its powers and faculties while still in the physical body.
And when he leaves that body in sleep or trance,
he passes at once into the unutterable glory of the Nirvanic plain.
In this stage, the occultists must cast off the last remnants of the five remaining fetters,
which are six.
Ruparaga, desire for beauty or form or for physical existence in a form,
even including that in the heaven world.
Seven, Aruparaga, desire for formless life.
Eight.
manor pride nine udhachacha agitational irritability ten avija ignorance on this way we remark that the casting off of the ruperaga involves not only getting rid of the desire for earthly life however grand or noble that life may be an astral or devachanic life however glorious but also of all liability to be unduly influenced or repelled by the external beauty or ugliness of any personal thing
Aruparaga, desire for life either in the house and formless plains of the heaven world or in still more exalted
budic plain would be merely a higher and less central form of selfishness and must be cast off just as much as the lower.
Woodha Chacha really means liability to be disturbed in mind and a man who has finally cast off this fetter would be absolutely unruffled by anything whatever that might happen to him,
perfectly impervious to any kind of attack upon his dignified serenity.
The getting rid of ignorance, of course, implies the acquisition of perfect knowledge, practical
obniscence as regard our planetary chain. When all the fetters are finally cast off,
the advancing ego reaches the fifth stage, the stage of full adeptship, and becomes five,
Aseka, the one who has no more to learn. Again, as regards our planetary chain,
it is quite impossible for us to realise at our present level what this attainment means.
All the splendour of the nivor of the nivorne, lies open before the waking eyes of the adept.
While when he chooses to leave his body, he has the power to enter a
upon something higher still, a plain which to us is the merest name. As Professor Rice,
David explains, he is now free from all sin. He sees and values all things in his life at their
true value, all evil being rooted from his mind. He experiences only righteous desires for himself
and tender pity and regard and exalted love for others. To show how little he has lost the
sentiment of love, we read in the metasota of the state of mind of one who stands at this level.
As a mother loves, who even at the risk of her own life protects her only son, such love, let there be
towards all things.
That good will, without measure, prevail in the whole world, above, below, around, unstinted,
unmixed with any feelings of differing or opposing interest.
When a man remains steadfastly in this state of mind, all the while,
whether he be standing or walking, sitting or lying down,
then has come to pass the saying which is written.
Even in this life, has holiness been found.
End of chapter 16, read by KBHZ.
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Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater
What Lies Beyond?
Beyond this period, it is obvious that we can know nothing of the new qualifications.
required for the still higher levels which yet lie before the perfect man.
It is abundantly clear, however, that when a man has become a seca,
he has exhausted all the possibilities of moral development,
so that further advancement for him can only mean still wider knowledge
and still more wonderful spiritual powers.
We are told that when man has thus attained his spiritual majority,
whether in the slow course of evolution or by the shorter path of self-development,
he assumes the fullest control of his own destinies
and makes choice of his future line of evolution
among seven possible paths which he sees opening before him.
Naturally, at our present level we cannot expect to understand much about these
and the faint outline of some of them which is all that can be scared,
sketched in for us conveys very little to the mind, except that most of them take the adept
altogether away from our earth chain, which no longer affords sufficient scope for his evolution.
One path is that of those who, as the technical phrase goes, accept Neivana, through what incalcable
little aeons they remain in that sublime condition, for what work they are preparing themselves,
and what will be their future line of evolution, are questions upon which we know nothing.
And indeed, if information upon such points could be given, it is more than likely that it would
prove quite incomprehensible to us at our present stage.
But this much at least we may grasp.
that the blessed state of Neuavana is not, as some have ignorantly supposed, a condition of blank nothingness,
but on the contrary, a far more intense and beneficent activity, and that ever as man rises higher in the scale of nature,
his possibilities become greater, his work for others ever grander and more far-reaching,
and that infinite wisdom and infinite power mean for him only infinite capacity for service
because they are directed by infinite love.
Another class chooses a spiritual evolution not quite so far removed from humanity.
For though not directly connected with the next chain of our system,
it extends through two long periods corresponding to its first and second round round.
at the end of which time they also appear to accept Neovana, but at the highest stage than those previously mentioned.
Others join the Deva evolution, whose progress lies along a grand chain consisting of seven chains like ours,
each of which to them is as one world.
This line of evolution is spoken of as the most gradual, and therefore,
the least arduous of the seven causes. But though it is sometimes referred to in the books as
yielding to the temptation to become a god, it is only in comparison with the sublime height of
renunciation of the near Manakaya that it can be spoken of in this half-disparaging manner.
For the adept who chooses this course has indeed a glorious career before him, and though the
path which he selects is not the shortest, it is nevertheless a very noble one. Yet another group
are the near Manakaias, those who, declining all these easier methods, choose the shortest, but steepest
path to the heights which still lie before them. They form what is poetically termed, the
guardian wall, and, as the voice of the silence tells us,
protect the world from further and far greater misery and sorrow,
not indeed by warding off from it external evil influences,
but by devoting all their strength to the work of pouring down upon it,
a flood of spiritual force and assistance,
without which it would assuredly be in far more hopeless case than now.
Yet again, there are those who remain even more direct,
in association with humanity and continue to incarnate among it, choosing the path which leads
through the four stages of what we have called above the official period.
And among these are the masters of wisdom, those from whom we, who study theosophy, have learnt
such fragments as we know of the mighty harmony of evolving nature.
it was seen that only a certain comparatively small number adopt this course, probably only
so many as are necessary for the carrying on of this physical side of the work.
In hearing of these different possibilities, people sometimes exclaim rashly that there
could of course be no thought in a master's mind of choosing any but that course which most
helps humanity, a remark which greater knowledge would have prevented them from making.
We should never forget that there are other evolutions in the solar system besides our own,
and no doubt it is necessary for the carrying out of the vast plan of the Logos. There should be
adepts working on all the seven lines to which we have referred. Surely the choice of the
master would be to go wherever his work was most needed, to place his services with absolute selflessness
at the disposal of the powers in charge of this part of the great scheme of evolution.
This then is the path which lies before us, the path which each one of us should be beginning
to tread.
Stupendous though its heights appear, we should remember that they are attained but gradually
and step by step, and that those who now stand near the summit once toiled in the mayer of the valleys,
even as we are doing. Although this path may at first seem hard and toilsome, yet ever as we rise
our footing becomes firmer and our outlook wider, and thus we find ourselves better able to help
those who are climbing beside us. Because it is at first thus hard and toilsome to the lower
self, it has sometimes been called by the very misleading title of the path of war.
But, as Mrs. Besant has beautifully written,
Through all such suffering, there is a deep and abiding joy,
for the suffering is of the lower nature and the joy of the higher.
When the last shred of the personality is gone,
all that can thus suffer has passed away.
and in the perfected adept there is unruffled peace and everlasting joy he sees the end toward which all is working and rejoices in that end
knowing that earth's sorrow is but a passing phase in human evolution that of which little has been said is the profound content which comes from being on the path
from realising the goal and the way to it from knowing that the power to be useful is increasing and that the lower nature is being gradually extirpated and little has been said of the rays of joy which fall upon the path from loftier levels
the dazzling glimpses of the glory to be revealed the serenity which the storms of earth cannot ruffle to any one who has entered on the path all other ways have lost their charm
and its sorrows have a deeper bliss than the best joys of the lower world vehan volume five number twelve let no man therefore despair despair
because he thinks the task too great for him.
What man has done, man can do.
And just in proportion as we extend our aid to those whom we can help,
so will those who have already attained be able in their turn to help us.
So from the lowest to the highest,
we who are treading the steps of the path are bound together
by one long chain of mutual sense.
service and none need feel neglected or alone.
For though sometimes the lower flights of the great staircase may be wreathed in mist,
we know that it leads up to happier regions and purer air, where the light is always shining.
End of Chapter 17.
End of Invisible Helpers by C.W. Leadbeater
