The Dark Side of Light

John Algeo – USA

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John Algeo at his best: lecturing at Olcott in Wheaton

An old kabbalistic motto holds that Demon est Deus inversus, "The devil is God upside down," or "The devil is God's complement." The Irish poet William Butler Yeats took, as his mystical name in the kabbalistic Order of the Golden Dawn, the initials of that Latin motto, D.E.D.I. Those letters, however, also spell the Latin verb dedi, which means "I have given" and thus punningly suggests that the diabolic is a divine gift.

The Three Pillars of Practice

Tim Boyd – USA, India

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Tim Boyd at the beautiful International Theosophical Centre in Naarden, the Netherlanda

IN all traditions that aim at self-transformation, or human regeneration, there is a necessary emphasis on the need for practice. Some people might resist the discipline and time required to develop and persist in a practice, thinking of it as just another process of conditioning, which it is, but it is paradoxical. Spiritual practice is a process of conditioning that leads to the possibility of freedom from conditioning. The preoccupation with practice in spiritual and religious circles is based on a couple of observations. The first is that whether we recognize it or not, we are continually practicing something.

Service as a Universal Path

 Douglas Keene – USA  

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  Douglas Keene, National President of the Theosophical Society in America

Service comes in many descriptions and circumstances. This can be as simple as a smile, lending a caring ear, or treating others with respect. Fulfilling our family obligations, work duties, and community responsibilities can all be seen as service and perhaps is needed before we extend our efforts beyond our individual commitments.

Why? 

Barbara Hebert – USA

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Toddlers and young children frequently ask “why?”:  Why is the sky blue?  Why does it rain? Why is grass green? and so on. They are trying to learn about the world in which they find themselves. As seekers for truth, we also frequently ask the question “why?” We want to understand ourselves, the world into which we were born, and the cosmos in which we exist. While these are all valuable questions and help us as we seek, there is an important question that we don’t often consider. It is: Why were we born at this particular time in history?

Gandhiji’s fasting – (In the Light of Theosophy)

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In the article, “My Fasts” Gandhiji says that his religion has taught him to fast and pray whenever there is distress which one is unable to remove. “What the eyes are for the outer world, fasts are for the inner.” Curiously, he mentions that these fasts undertaken by him are not undertaken for amusement or fame, but because “they are imposed upon me by a higher Power and the capacity to bear the pain also comes from that Power.” The fasts [unto death] undertaken by him are not to be undertaken lightly. “I, must, therefore undertake the fast only when the still small voice within me calls for it….A genuine fast cleanses the body, mind and soul. It crucifies the flesh and to that extent, sets the soul free….Purity thus gained, when it is utilised for a noble purpose, becomes a prayer.” He seems to suggest that fasting and prayer go hand in hand. When one abstains from food and water, it marks the beginning of the surrender to God.

Boris de Zirkoff’s  talk on  INNER AWARENESS

Edited by Hector Tate

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[From the last issue of Theosophia a magazine that was published every three months, from May 1944 till June 1981.  It's objectives were: to uphold and promote the Original Principles of the modern Theosophical Movement, and to disseminate the teachings of the Esoteric Philosophy as set forth by H.P. Blavatsky and her Teachers. It's Editor was Boris de Zirkoff.]

Rudolf Steiner's Teachings in Knowledge of the Higher Worlds

Antti  Savinainen – Finland

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Rudolf Steiner

Introduction

Rudolf Steiner (1861–1925) published a series of articles titled How to Know Higher Worlds? (in German Wie erlangt man Erkenntnisse der höheren Welten?) in the journal Lucifer-Gnosis between 1904 and 1905. These articles were published as a book in 1909. Steiner reworked his text extensively several times. The book's title has also changed with the translations: the English translation with all Steiner’s changes appeared with the title Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and Its Attainment. Steiner intended to create such a precise description of spiritual practices and the way to proceed that the presence of a teacher or guru, as required by the old spiritual tradition, would become superfluous.

Understanding Universal Intelligence

Deepa Padhi – India

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Deepa Padhi, International Vice President and Tim Boyd, International President of the TS-Adyar

The very concept of universal intelligence suggests that the universe is created by intelligent design. There is an intelligent principle working behind the universe and it exists for a purpose. The creation is teleological, not mechanical or coincidental.

Universal Intelligence and the Human Condition

Tim Boyd – USA, India

Tim and Michiel

Photo taken in Adyar a few years ago, MICHIEL HAAS and TIM BOYD 

One of the wonders of the theosophical endeavor is that people find their way to it, their meaning in it, then expand on that according to their own understanding and needs. There are people for whom the Theosophical Society (TS) and its work are related to history, the work of tracing the thread of wisdom that runs through the complex tapestry of humanity’s unfoldment — identifying it as it appears and expresses in different times and cultures, and through different people.

Theosophical Meditation: A question from Dewald Bester for the Theosophical Society

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Nada Yoga

With reactions-contemplations from David M. Grossman, Esther Pockrandt, Pablo Sender and Juliana Cesano

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Dewald Bester, Cape Town – South Africa

I am late to this topic, but I will, at least to my satisfaction, solve this problem. That, or some more drastic action will have to be taken - one that so many before me have taken.

Here is a quote from the Inner Group Teachings, an answer to a question - we trust it is a faithful recollection,

H.P.B. said she had seen the chelas, mounting the seven steps of the spine, close the ears, nostrils, eyes, and lastly the mouth, holding the breath for a short time.(1995, 17).

The Nature of Theosophical Meditation

Pablo Sender – USA

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Pablo Sender

The Theosophical Society (TS) played a pioneering role in introducing meditation to the Western world. During the early 1880s, the TS started presenting the idea of meditation through publications in theosophical journals. Meanwhile, H. P. Blavatsky (HPB) privately trained a small group of individuals in meditation, particularly her pupils in the Inner Group. This was decades before Hindu swamis and Buddhist monks began to talk about meditation in the West. In the second generation of theosophists, individuals such as Annie Besant, C. W. Leadbeater, and others began to present this subject more systematically and extensively in their talks and books.

The Power of One:  Collective Consciousness and Individuality

Esther Pockrandt – Australia

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[Part 2: Individuality; for Part 1 click HERE] 

The Theosophical emblem is surrounded by the translation of the Sanskrit words, “Satyāt nāsti paro dharmah”, ‘There is no Religion (or path) Higher than Truth’.

ANNIE Besant

Annie Besant

In the Ageless Wisdom texts, we are constantly reminded that we are ONE and that that which separates or divides is not the Truth. We know this intellectually and repeat it in our spiritual circles. We recite The Universal Prayer by Annie Besant:

Oh hidden life vibrant in every atom,

Oh hidden light shining in every creature,

Oh hidden love uniting all in Oneness,

May all who feel themselves as one with Thee,

Know they are therefore one with every other.

Each Member A Centre

William Quan Judge –  USA

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William Quan Judge

Some years ago one of those Masters in whom so many of our members believe directed H.P.B. to write a letter for him to a certain body of Theosophists. In this he said that each member could become, in his own town or city, if earnest, sincere and unselfish, an active centre from which would radiate unseen powerful forces able to influence men and women in the vicinity for good; and that soon enquirers would appear, a Branch in time be organized and thus the whole neighbourhood would receive benefit. This seems just and reasonable in addition to its being stated by such high authority. Members ought to consider and think over it so that action may follow.

The Science of Spiritual Practices

Antti Savinainen – Finland

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The author

This essay is largely based on the book Science and Spiritual Practices (2018) by biologist Rupert Sheldrake (b. 1942). Sheldrake is an independent and courageous thinker and seeker with a PhD from the prestigious University of Cambridge. He has published research on plant physiology and parapsychology and developed the idea of the morphic field (more on this later in the article).

In his youth, Sheldrake was an atheist because he felt it was part of the scientific worldview. While studying biology, he found that its methods distanced him from plants and animals because the organisms he was studying had to be killed first. However, the holistic approach of the German philosopher and poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe showed that there was another way to study nature. Sheldrake later explored meditation and the spirituality of different religions. He is now an open-minded Christian.

Our Universal Objectives

Boris de Zirkoff – USA

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[Original cover-photo]

It is imperative for us at all times to make a clear distinction between the Theosophical Society as an organized body, and the Theosophical Movement as a world-wide trend towards universality of outlook and a more spiritual, therefore unified, view of life.

Do Animals Dream? (In the Light of Theosophy)

Do Animals Dream? (In the Light of Theosophy)

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Do animals dream like we do and, if so, what they are dreaming about? and if they do, about what? It is not easy to figure this out and yet, biologists feel that studying the dream-like states of octopuses, pigeons and spiders, can help us understand the purpose of human dreams. In order to dream, one must sleep, and scientists believe that there is no known animal that does not sleep. It may enable animals to get rid of waste products and toxins that build up when they are active, says Daniela Rößler, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Konstanz in Germany.

The Land and Us

Tim Boyd -- USA, India

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International President of theTheosophical Society-Adyar, Tim Boyd

I would like to share a few thoughts with you on a subject that may seem a little odd, “The Land and Us”. When we look around the world the land that we all inhabit universally seems to have great importance. No matter where we are from, or from what point of history we tend to look at, the land is the source of some of the highest human expressions.

The Big Bang or The Big Bounce?

Jacques Mahnich - France

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Jacques Mahnich is an aeronautics engineer, author, lecturer and excellent violinist

Every morning the sun appears on the horizon in its natural amazing splendor. Even though we know that it is the movement of the earth around the sun which causes this regular appearance, this contact with the light is still enchanting. Every evening, we see it disappear without any worry because our experience, since birth, shows us that it will come back to enlighten and warm us the next day. It is the engine of life on this Earth.

Jellyfish (In the Light of Theosophy)

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Jellyfish, being one of the biologically simplest kinds of animal that lack brain, we would think that they cannot learn. Researchers had generally assumed that learning from experience and adapting a behaviour was limited to biologically complex animals with relatively large brains, which include mice, birds and primates. According to Jan Bielecki at Kiel University in Germany, “Learning is the pinnacle of nervous system performance.” But some studies have hinted that it is possible for simple creatures also to have this ability, and this led Bielecki and his colleagues to investigate learning in jellyfish, which has shown that Caribbean box jellyfish can learn from experience, even though they lack a central brain.

The Cycle of Strength, Justice, and Unity

Douglas Keene – USA  

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Douglas Keene, who last year succeeded Barbara Hebert as President of the Theosophical Society in America 

When we consider the relationship between strength and unity, we must also consider justice, for justice is an outcome of strength and leads to unity. In fact, each quality can be seen as an essential bridge in the cycle, strength leading to justice, justice leading to unity and finally, unity back to strength. Love is the adhesive which holds the wheel in alignment. Each time that justice is achieved, strength and unity increase. When strength manifests, justice is possible. When we see strength and justice, unity usually follows.

Krishna – Christos

Krishna – Christos

David M. Grossman – USA

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Krishna and Christos or Christ are names that reverberate across countries and civilizations deep into the fabric of human history; names that today resonate in the hearts and minds of millions upon millions of people, east and west, names  that represent divine incarnations to many, names that bring peace, inspiration and meaningful direction to people’s lives.

We know two of the world’s great religions revolve around Krishna and Christos, the latter referred to as Jesus the Christ or Jesus Christ. The term Christos was around long before it was conflated and made synonymous with Jesus. Some Gnostics spoke of Jesus as a great prophet who was overshadowed or illuminated by the Christos.

Strength in Unity

Barbara Hebert – USA

 Barbara Hebert portrait

The author

When we think of diversity or the differences we see in our world, we don’t typically think of strength. Yet, diversity provides us with strength. The differences we see allow each of us to choose our own spiritual path, to grow in our own way. Through different perspectives, ideas, and thoughts, each of us can choose, or even create, our own path as we search for Truth. We may be reminded of Krishnamurti’s statement that “Truth is a pathless land.” As many of us can attest, it takes strength and courage to walk the spiritual path.