NIRVANA
Nirvana
A Study in
Synthetic
Consciousness
by
George Sidney
Arundale
First published 1926
Dr Arundale was International President of
the Theosophical Society (Adyar) from 1933 to 1945
__________
The Australian Section
A Vision
By G
Let us look for a while into the future of our Australian
Section. I see the Section enormously more influential, not so much because of
its increased membership, but because of the far greater extent to which it
practises the Theosophy
which beforehand it had more preached than practised.
I see the Section as the real heart of
I see membership of the Section becoming a privilege, a mark of
respect, rather than a matter for ridicule or disapproval as it was in the
middle of the twentieth century. People in the outside world do not always want
to join the Society, for it involves
very strenuous, though very joyous, living; but they recognise the valuable
contribution members make to the National uplift.
They also recognise the fact that members of the Society do not live for
themselves, but for those around them, and that their opinions and activities
are always constructive, never separative.
I see that the Section forms part of the heart of that great
Each Section of the Society represents its own
particular country in the smaller
call the Empire thus becomes a unity which no individual
divergence of ideals is able to break, for at the heart of the League is a
Universal Brotherhood begun, The Theosophical
Society is a world in itself, a living example to the larger
world of the future which awaits it.
The greatest safeguard against wars, quarrels and all other kinds
of disruptive forces is the Theosophical
Society. The Society, in certain
respects at all events, strongly influences public opinion, and becomes so well
organised, so harmonious, that it inevitably exercises the power which order
ever has over
disorder. That against which the Society unitedly stands,
the world finds it increasingly difficult to do.
How does this come about? Not by force. The Society does not believe in
force, even if it had the force to wield, which it has not. But by
compelling-example.
The Society, every individual
member, is living Theosophy,
living it in the everyday things of life. Theosophists live differently. They
live without fear. They live peacefully. They live far more happily. They live
far more healthily.
They seem to have in great measure eradicated disease because
they know how to live. First, they do not live at the expense of others. They
do not live on the pain of others, whether human or sub-human. They eat pure
things, and find deliciousness in grace, in purity and in simplicity, not in
complexity and
coarseness. Second, they live hygienically. Their clothes, their
homes, all their arrangements for the care of the body, are designed to this
end. And they have learned that hygienic living does not merely mean pure air,
the right values of food, and so on; it means also artistic and rhythmic
living, graceful living. This is equally indispensable.
I see, too, that the Theosophists of this period - it is not,
perhaps, so very far off - have ceased to worry and to be anxious, have to a
large extent done away with irritability. Anger and hatred have, of course,
entirely disappeared.
So have suspicion and distrust. The sexual problem has also been
solved, partly by a clear understanding of sex and its divine purpose, partly
by the recognition of marriage and maternity as wonderful Sacraments. The
Theosophists of this period are deeply reverent while at the same time
delightfully light-hearted.
I see the Lodges of to-day gradually becoming communities. They
are communities at the time of which I write. Little by little, families
congenial to each other have either built or taken houses close together on the
outskirts of the towns, and community living begins, without the loss of
individuality. More and
more, that which can advantageously be done in common is done in
common, with the result that living becomes cheaper and much more time becomes
available for the larger work.
In some cases, a number of families live together in a house
specially built for the purpose - a kind of monastery without any of the
disadvantages or restrictions, and giving ample opportunity for individual
development, as well as, within reason, for the satisfaction of individual
idiosyncrasies. In other
cases, there is a kind of village community, a group of houses or
cottages, self-contained, a kind of Garden City on a small scale. I see that
these communities specially concern themselves with education and with
amusements.
I could write at length on the educational side, but it must
suffice to say that the Theosophical education given in the times of which I
write is extraordinarily practical, is far more by doing than by learning,
enables the young people to understand the Laws of Life and how to use them,
and certainly makes for a very great efficiency. These Theosophical young
people are much more markedly different from other young people than those of
to-day. Very practical, very thorough in everything, never satisfied unless
they get to the root of things, always
insisting on finding out things for themselves, deeply reverent of the
Real, equally impatient of the unreal,
of sham, of hypocrisy, of pretence, reliable, beautifully courteous to all,
tender, understanding. It is obviously so beautiful to be young that those who
are no longer young almost begin to be impatient for youth again. I can hear
some of them saying: “Ah! well, in a short time I shall have a young body once
more.” Death thus comes to
mean but exchange, the giving up of the old clothes for new.
Young people in these later times are so very delightful. They
make life so sparkling. Old people never feel “out of things,” partly
because the young share with them their
bright lives, and partly because they have their own “things” to do, things appropriate to age, things only age
can do, and which need to be done. I thus see every Lodge and every Centre a
community, or a number of communities.
These communities almost become places of pilgrimage for the
people round. People gradually become attracted to the Science whose votaries
are so obviously happy, and equally obviously “all there”. People see that
these Theosophists are no mere talkers and dreamers, but are the best among the
citizens, patriotic, loyal, and always ready both to help good causes and to
fight bad ones. There are no weaklings, whether in body or in mind, among these
Theosophists. Straight, clear, strenuous, efficient, healthy, they all of them
are.
Thus, as people see the
effect of belief in brotherhood, in Karma, in Reincarnation, and so on, they begin to turn to
these beliefs, very rightly holding that there must be something in theories
which produce such results, and which for most of the Theosophists do not seem
to be mere theories, but rather experienced facts. Theories which make better
people need looking into. And the result is that by degrees vegetarianism, for
example, becomes widespread, and in all spheres of life begins a great
renaissance of Reality.
I see such beautiful libraries in these communities, so
up-to-date, not so much with Theosophical literature, although each community
has its full complement of standard Theosophical works, but with the latest
works of outer world thinkers in religion, politics, philosophy, sociology,
science, art, literature,
education, etc.
These communities are nothing if not thorough, and being in
advance of the world in certain directions they take good care to be abreast of
the world’s most eminent thinkers and workers in all departments. Wireless
keeps them in constant touch with events all over the world, just as the world,
as well as all Theosophical communities in every part of the world, receive
wireless news from the principal Theosophical communities everywhere.
I must specially stress the beautiful colour and sound-music
these communities have developed in wonderful degree, music far more subtle
than that which the outer world has reached. I also notice the simplicity and
dignity of the furnishing of the rooms, and the beautiful homage paid to
greatness in the
inspiring pictures of the world’s great deeds and the world’s
great doers of them, as also pictures of places of great historic and spiritual
interest.
The keynote of every community is service. All that is done is
done to that end. Service is the dominant objective of all community activity.
Every member of the community lives and grows in an atmosphere of joyous and
efficient service. In
all emergencies; National or local, Theosophists are active with
trained capacity and tireless energy. They are the first people upon whom
reliance is placed in all difficulties, for they know how to apply the healing
balm of scientific brotherhood to all wounds in the body politic. In the outer
world, for the most part, are the world’s great scientists, poets, statesmen,
philosophers, industrialists, but within the Theosophical
Society are the
world’s great seers and prophets, and those who lead the way in
the application of brotherhood to life in all its varied aspects. Thus does the Theosophical
Society become a golden chain of Brotherhood encircling and
uniting the world.
Of course, all this is immensely hastened by the life of the
Christ in the world. Many recognise Him. Some do not. But His example, and
above all His immensely potent insistence on the Real, brushing aside
conventionalities, conveniences, superstitions, shams, hypocrisies, though at
first repellent to
the many who had been living on all these, in many cases no doubt
unconsciously, gradually commands the attention Truth ever ultimately compels
when garbed in the Form of the world’s great mirror of Truth - the Christ.
It is impossible for me to find words to express the marvellous
benediction of the Christ’s immediate Presence. Indeed does He revolutionise,
but as He revolutionises He heals. From all that He touches drops away the
unreal, and the world grows bright in the renewal of its youth. The dust of
ages is swept away,
the encrustations of centuries disappear, and life stands once
more revealed in all its simplicity, in all its beauty, in all its power and
purpose.
How foolish are those who deny Him! How sad for them! Yet the
time will come for them, too, to recognise a Saviour, for Saviours of the world
will come again and again until none are left to deny, until all rejoice.
Perchance we who hope to recognise Him in the near future have denied
aforetime. Our turn has come to
recognise - theirs perhaps not yet.
Do you wonder, with so glorious a vision before my eyes, that I
become eager for the vision to descend into the outer world? I know it is on
the threshold. I have written of the vision as it is when partly realised, but
I know that its beginnings are now. I know that every member of our Society -
for though I write of Australia, the vision is for all countries - should
without delay begin to turn his eyes towards the Real. I know that every member
should raise his anchor from the unreal and sail away into the East, the land
of the Real.
How well it would be if even from now every member eagerly began
to plan ways and means of entering more quickly into our Theosophic
inheritance, if every member made up his mind to live quite definitely more
unto brotherhood, less unto self! How well it would be if every member
determined to make Theosophy
a truly living force in his life, far more in the daily routine, in the daily
toil, in the daily cares and troubles, even than in his utterances, so that his
utterances are fortified by their harmonisation with his daily life! How
wonderful it would be if we could live Theosophy as well as
preach it! Many are
trying to do this already, I know; but it needs to be done by us
all, and far more fully. We must believe, really believe, in Theosophy, so that as time
goes on it becomes impossible to live otherwise than Theosophically, so that we
become Theosophists, not merely members of the Theosophical
Society.
How well it would be if all over Australia - and everywhere else,
too, of course - members, groups of members, groups of families, Centres,
Lodges,seriously began to discuss ways and means of making brotherhood more
practical among themselves, discussed schemes of community living, concerted
measures for doing as much together as possible, went into the possibilities of
combining in certain activities to make living cheaper, to make leisure more
enjoyable and purposeful, to pool individual resources in pursuit of common
happiness and greater efficiency! Why cannot Lodges and Centres go into all
these questions to see what can be done? At the least, why cannot certain
families and friends combine to live much more together, to work much more
together, to play much more together? Is it not time for us to hustle, and to
make our nuclei of the Universal Brotherhood much more real than they are?
The result will be, because of the more brotherly living, a much
more potent and effective brotherhood activity in the outer world. To set the
Nation-house in order, or the world-house, or the town or city-house, we must
set our Lodge or Centre-house in order, as well as our body-house, too, of
course. We shall in
this way become much more strenuous and efficient than before.
We shall have much more time to participate in all kinds of
brotherhood activity in the outer world. Though we may live on the outskirts of
the town, and grow very self-contained, we shall not become in the least degree
exclusive or aloof. On the contrary, the increased sense of brotherhood will
compel us to regard our community life merely as a centre from which we radiate
our vitality to the farthest limits, of our respective circumferences. We shall
take part in all the life of our surroundings as we have never taken part in it
before. We shall
have our centres in our town or city, veritable hives of
brotherhood industry, places of meeting, centres for organisation, for
industrial, commercial political, educational, social and religious activities
of all kinds.
These centres will gradually be recognised as centres of truly
practical idealism. We shall show the world how to live, how really to live,
how to be full of life, of true life, in every sphere - in the home, in
business, in the duties of citizenship, in leisure.
Let us begin, individually and in groups, to think about all
these things now. Let us begin to think about them with definite intention to
achieve them. Let us not think of them as unattainable. They are attainable.
They are about to come.
If we have the will, we must assuredly find the way.
Difficulties? Of course. But as we encounter the difficulties, let us discover
ways and means of overcoming them. Under no circumstances must we give up
simply because we encounter difficulties and obstacles. These are things to be
got over, or under, or round. In some cases, indeed, they may be imaginary, so
that with a little
light-heartedness and self-confidence we may go through them.
I make it a personal request that members of the Australian
Section begin to discuss ways and means. I ask them to consider these things at
members’ meetings in a spirit of constructive criticism, looking for the way to
them. The way is there. The way for every Lodge and Centre is there. It only
has to be sought persistently. Of course, it means an upsetting of conventional
jogtrot living. But that is exactly what we have to do. Let every member impose
this penance upon himself - not to throw cold water on the discussion or on any
earnest endeavour to find the way. It is so easy to throw cold water, to find
difficulties. Anyone can do this. It requires little intelligence, and is the
way of the world, and so the line of most easy going, of least resistance, of
least effort.
Let us find out the way how to achieve. It may take time. Achievement
is not by any means possible all at once. But I ask for the thin end of the
wedge. Will every Lodge, every Centre, every member, find the thin edge of the
wedge, never mind how thin it is, place it in position and begin to hammer it
home, however long the hammering may take? Every hammer-blow will bring us
nearer to the Real, and deliver us from the shackles of the unreal.
__________
THEOSOPHY
NIRVANA
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