A Textbook of Theosophy eBook

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

A Textbook of Theosophy eBook

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

It was through these works that I myself first came to know their author, and afterwards Madame Blavatsky herself; from both of them I learned much.  When I asked Madame Blavatsky how one could learn still more, how one could make definite progress along the Path which she pointed out to us, she told me of the possibility that other students might be accepted as apprentices by the great Masters, even as she herself had been accepted, and that the only way to gain such acceptance was to show oneself worthy of it by earnest and altruistic work.  She told me that to reach that goal a man must be absolutely one-pointed in his determination; that no one who tried to serve both God and Mammon could ever hope to succeed.  One of these Masters Himself had said:  “In order to succeed, a pupil must leave his own world and come into ours.”

This means that he must cease to be one of the majority who live for wealth and power, and must join the tiny minority who care nothing for such things, but live only in order to devote themselves selflessly to the good of the world.  She warned us clearly that the way was difficult to tread, that we should be misunderstood and reviled by those who still lived in the world, and that we had nothing to look forward to but the hardest of hard work; and though the result was sure, no one could foretell how long it would take to arrive at it.  Some of us accepted these conditions joyfully, and we have never for a moment regretted the decision.

After some years of work I had the privilege of coming into contact with these great Masters of the Wisdom; from Them I learnt many things—­among others, how to verify for myself at first hand most of the teachings which They had given.  So that, in this matter, I write of what I know, and what I have seen for myself.  Certain points are mentioned in the teaching, for the verification of which powers are required far beyond anything which I have gained so far.  Of them, I can say only that they are consistent with what I do know, and in many cases are necessary as hypotheses to account for what I have seen.  They came to me, along with the rest of the Theosophical system, upon the authority of these mighty Teachers.  Since then I have learnt to examine for myself by far the greater part of what I was told, and I have found the information given to me to be correct in every particular; therefore I am justified in assuming the probability that that other part, which as yet I cannot verify, will also prove to be correct when I arrive at its level.

To attain the honour of being accepted as an apprentice of one of the Masters of the Wisdom is the object set before himself by every earnest Theosophical student.  But it means a determined effort.  There have always been men who were willing to make the necessary effort, and therefore there have always been men who knew.  The knowledge is so transcendent that when a man grasps it fully he becomes more than man and he passes beyond our ken.

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