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Re: Theos-World On the Coming of maitreya

May 31, 2000 05:15 PM
by ernesto


Dear Tood:

You wrote:


>
> If I remember correctly, Maitreya said that Krishnamurti was an ideal
> disciple. His disciplined thought process was exceptional.
>
>   Of course, there was much talk about the fact that Krishnamurti was often
> over-shadowed by Maitreya during many of his lectures.  Krishnamurti spoke
> of the Masters and was very much aware of Maitreya.
>

I have been reading what Govert Schuller, a member of this list, wrote about K's
teachings, and also what he informs us about the Maitreya's opinion on K´s
teachings.

The Maitreya that you are talking about, evidently, is not the one who is
mentioned by Govert.  We asked you for proofs, and you answered (tough answer is
still being evaluated).  I think that, the obvious disctintion between the two
Maitreyas, requires some kind of proof from Govert, too.  Or at least, some
commentary.

It is not only a matter of who of  these two pwople is Maitreya, if any, but also
a matter of teachings, as we will see.

The paper of Govert (reflections and notes from the Masters about K´s teachings)
differs considerably from Aryel Sanat´s view of K's theachings, too.  As I see
the difference betwen these two points of view (Aryel and Govert´s), the problem
must be resolved entirely in the plane of doctrine, not in the plane of
biographies.

In my personal opinion, after reading Govert´s paper, how could we think that K's
teachings were inspired in the Pure Doctrine?  How could we think that K´s
techings helps us to discover the real Theosophy?.  Theosophy seems, in very
important matters, CLEARLY OPPOSITE to K's teachings.

I repeat that it is not a matter of boigraphy, but a matter of doctrines.  And
FACTS (as Aryel Sanat likes to say) of what K  and HPB (and the Masters, Govert?)
said.  There are K's and HPB's books to compare.  I suppose these are FACTS.

In a previous mail, Govert mentioned the web page where we could find his
quotations on the matter of K´s teachings.  As he mentiones his web page, and as
that web page is of public access, I reproduce it now:

GOVERT SCHULLER.  "Krishnamurti:  An Esoteric View of his Teachings"

A question which might interest many Theosophists is what Blavatsky and the
Masters might have
      thought about the teachings of Krishnamurti.  Although Blavatsky died
before Krishnamurti was
      born, she fortunately left some writings which are helpful in determining
on what points her
      teachings agree and disagree with those of Krishnamurti.  The focus will be
on their differences
      because some disagreements pertain directly to the foundations of
Krishnamurti’s teachings.(1)

      For example, Blavatsky stresses that one cannot pass over even one step on
the path to higher
      consciousness (2), yet Krishnamurti summarily rejects not only a path of
graduated levels in
      attaining truth (3), but also the very existence of a higher self to unite
with.(4)   Furthermore,
      Blavatsky makes it clear that a Guru plays an essential part in one’s
mastery of higher
      consciousness (5), while Krishnamurti repudiates the role of a spiritual
teacher.(6)

      The differences even take a dramatic turn when it becomes clear that
Blavatsky seriously warns
      about the kind of philosophy Krishnamurti teaches. She writes that certain
doctrines in exoteric
      Vedantism--which are very similar to Krishnamurti’s teachings--might have
the effect of
      disconnecting the soul or the personal self from its higher source, the
higher self.(7)  This in turn
      might cause the ‘second death’ of the soul, which is like an implosion of
consciousness into
      nothingness (8) as opposed to the ‘second birth’ of the soul when she
expands into divinity by first
      uniting with the higher self and ultimately with the divine self.  These
differences are not just
      philosophical and void of spiritual relevance.  From an esoteric point of
view they are of great
      significance.

      Aside from the serious and grave warnings inferred from Blavatsky’s
writings, the Masters
      themselves made some specific comments on Krishnamurti’s teachings. Lord
Maitreya, for
      example, pointed out that Krishnamurti made a mistake in assuming that
anyone could reach his
      level of consciousness immediately.(9)  An English Master indicated that
Krishnamurti is teaching
      an erroneous version of Advaita Vedanta (10), confirming indeed what was
gleaned from
      Blavatsky.  Furthermore, this Master warned for some serious dangers in
Krishnamurti’s teachings,
      notably his rejection of an esoteric system of spiritual evaluation and his
invitation to intense
      meditation without occult protection.(11)  According to this Master,
engaging in Krishnamurti’s brand
      of Advaitism might lead to hypocrisy and self-delusion.(12)  Krishnamurti’s
former Guru, Kuthumi,
      likewise expressed a stern warning about the consequences of his
philosophy.(13)  Finally, Geoffrey
      Hodson, a prominent Theosophist and clairvoyant pupil of the Masters,
accuses Krishnamurti of
      circular reasoning (14) and intellectual arrogance.(15)  Again, it has to
be stressed that these errors
      are not just a matter of intellectual interest without spiritual
consequences.  The very health, even
      survival, of one’s spiritual being is involved here.

      Regarding the feasibility of Krishnamurti’s suggestion of a profound
fundamental transformation of
      the human consciousness, it has to be pointed out that Krishnamurti did not
arrive at that level of
      consciousness by way of his own proposed instantaneous ‘non-method.’(16)
He arrived there solely
      by treading first the path of initiation under a Master (17)--going almost
to its final conclusion--then
      stepped aside, and denounced the whole method.(18)   Furthermore, Vimala
Thakar, the only one
      who executed his kind of transformation in a credible way (19)--and as such
could prove its
      feasability--did not arrive there by his proposed ‘non-method’ either.
Instead, she transformed
      because Krishnamurti acted as Guru to her.  She first gradually acquired an
experimental
      understanding of his erroneous brand of Advaita Vedantism and then
Krishnamurti, while laying
      hands on her for healing an auditory ailment, initiated her into his
rebellious state of
      consciousness.(20)  To quote Blavatsky, applying Krishnamurti’s
‘non-method’ is “like destroying a
      bridge over an impassable chasm; The traveler can never reach the goal on
the other shore.”(21)

      The foregoing does not imply that there are no truthful and salutary
insights to be found in
      Krishnamurti’s teachings.  He exhorts people to think for themselves (22)
and to change in a
      fundamental way (23); he skillfully diagnoses certain dangers of the human
ego or synthetic self (24);
      and he invokes with compassion a sense of urgency about the dangerous
situation mankind is
      in.(25)   But these pearls have to be found in a sea of errors. If the
foundations of his teachings are
      erroneous then also its superstructure.  A well-grounded Theosophical
conception of human nature
      and a mastery of the “abstruse difficulties of Indian metaphysics”(26) are
indispensable to catch
      these pearls.  Even then, one might easily trip over the pearls and land in
the mire of Krishnamurti’s
      misconceptions.  Due to the deceptive, even mesmerizing properties of
Krishnamurti’s
      teachings--notwithstanding the apparent awakening and helpful qualities
they have--one might not
      even be aware of it.

      In the same way that Krishnamurti’s teachings can have a temporary
beneficial effect upon certain
      individuals, a civilization based on his teachings might be successful in
its first stages of
      growth.(27)  But, in the end, if not propped up or saved by esoteric
corrections and guidance, it will
      falter, break down and disintegrate. It will never have the chance to
develop into a Golden Age,
      because it rejects the Wisdom Religion.(28) Parallel to this notion is the
idea that an individual will
      find the opposite of enlightenment if he rejects the age-old path of graded
initiations.

      © Govert Schüller 1997

      HOME



                                            Endnotes

        1.
           At the same time it is an undeniable fact that Theosophy and
Krishnamurti have much in common. So
           much even that some Theosophists consider Krishnamurti’s teachings a
modern expression of the ageless
           Wisdom Religion. In many respects both are also very close to
Vedantism, especially the monist (Advaita)
           version.

           The likeness between Krishnamurti’s teachings and Vedantism, albeit
Blavatsky’s understanding of it, will
           become hopefully clearer in endnotes 5 and 7, in which Blavatsky
contrasts esoteric and exoteric
           interpretations of Vedanta. The esoteric interpretation is
Theosophical and the exoteric interpretation is
           similar to Krishnamurti’s position. Endnote 10 contains the explicit
remarks of a Master arguing that
           Krishnamurti is indeed teaching Advaita Vedanta.

           About the likeness between Theosophy and Advaita Vedanta, Blavatsky
states that “in the Esoteric
           philosophy [i.e. Theosophy], which reconciles all these systems... the
nearest exponent... is the Vedanta
           as expounded by the Advaita Vedantists.”

           H.P.Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine (Los Angeles: The Theosophy
Company, 1964), Vol. I, p. 55.

           For more of Blavatsky on Advaita see H.J. Spierenberg, The Vedanta
Commentaries of H.P.Blavatsky
           (San Diego: Point Loma Publications, 1992), pp. 4-5.

                Return to Text
        2.
           “No single rung of the ladder leading to knowledge can be skipped. No
personality [personal self or soul]
           can ever reach or bring itself into communication with Atmâ [divine
self], except through Buddhi-Manas
           [higher self]...”

           H.P. Blavatsky, The Esoteric Writings of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky: A
Synthesis of Science, Philosophy
           and Religion (Wheaton IL: Theosophical Publishing House, 1980), p.
414.

                Return to Text
        3.
           “This idea of a gradual process, this idea of gradual psychological
evolution of man is very gratifying... .
           This gradual concept, which psychologically is generally called
evolution, seems to me utterly false.”

           J. Krishnamurti, The Collected Works of J. Krishnamurti (Dubuque, IA:
Kendall/Hunt, 1992), Vol. XVII, p.
           67.

                Return to Text
        4.
           “Most of us do not want to know what we are. We invent the higher
self, the supreme self, the atma, and
           all the innumerable ideas, to escape from the reality of what we
are--the actual everyday, every-minute
           reality of what we are. And we do not know what we are from day by
day, and on that we impose
           something which thought has bred as the atma, which tradition has
handed over as the higher self.”

           J. Krishnamurti, The Collected Works of J. Krishnamurti (Dubuque, IA:
Kendall/Hunt, 1992), Vol. XIII, p.
           151.

                Return to Text
        5.
           Blavatsky wrote:

           “There is a great difference between an Avatara and a Jivanmukti: one,
as already stated, is an illusive
           appearance, Karma-less, and having never before incarnated; the other,
the Jivanmukta, is one who
           obtains Nirvana by his individual merits. To this expression again an
uncompromising, philosophical
           Vedantin would object. He might say that as the condition of the
Avatara and the Jivanmukta are one and
           the same state, no amount of personal merit, in howsoever many
incarnations, can lead its possessor to
           Nirvana. Nirvana, he would say is actionless; how then can any action
lead to it? It is neither a result nor a
           cause, but an ever-present, eternal Is, as Nagasena defined it. Hence
it can have no relation to, or concern
           with, action, merit, or demerit, since these are subject to Karma. All
this is very true, but still to our mind
           there is an important difference between the two. An Avatara is; a
Jivanmukta becomes one. If the state of
           the two is identical, not so are the causes which lead to it. An
Avatara is a descent of a God into an
           illusive form; a Jivanmukta, who may have passed through numberless
incarnations and may have
           accumulated merit in them, certainly does not become a Nirvani because
of that merit, but only because of
           the Karma generated by it, which leads and guides him in the direction
of the Guru who will initiate him
           into the mystery of Nirvana and who alone can help him reach his
abode.”

           H.P.Blavatsky, The Secret Doctrine (Adyar, India: Theosophical
Publishing House, 1938) Adyar Edition,
           Vol. V, p. 352. Or: Idem., Collected Writings (Wheaton IL:
Theosophical Publishing House, 1985) Vol. XIV,
           p. 374. Or: Idem., The Esoteric Writings, pp. 293-294.

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        6.
           “I have told you frankly that Masters are unessential, that the idea
of Masters is nothing more than a toy to
           the man who really seeks truth.”

           J. Krishnamurti, The Collected Works of J. Krishnamurti (Dubuque IA:
Kendall/Hunt, 1991), Vol. I, p. 173.

           Krishnamurti himself wrote:

           “The core of Krishnamurti’s teaching is contained in the statement he
made in 1929 when he said: 'Truth is
           a pathless land.' Man cannot come to it through any organization,
through any creed, through any dogma,
           priest or ritual, not through any philosophic knowledge or
psychological technique. He has to find it through
           the mirror of relationship, through the understanding of the contents
of his mind, through observation and
           not through intellectual analysis or introspective dissection.”

           J. Krishnamurti, The Core of Krishnamurti’s Teaching (Ojai CA:
Krishnamurti Foundation of America, n.d.).

                Return to Text
        7.
           Blavatsky wrote:

           “In order not to confuse the mind of the western student with the
abstruse difficulties of Indian
           metaphysics, let him view the lower manas, or mind, as the personal
ego [personal self] during the waking
           state, and as Antahkarana only during those moments when it aspires
towards its higher Ego [higher self],
           and thus becomes the medium of communication between the two. It is
for this reason called the ‘Path.’...
           Seeing that the faculty and function of Antahkarana is as necessary as
the medium of the ear for hearing,
           or that of the eye for seeing; then so long as the feeling of
ahamkâra, that is, of the personal "I" or
           selfishness [the synthetic self], is not entirely crushed out in man,
and the lower mind not entirely merged
           into and become one with the higher Buddhi-Manas [higher self], it
stands to reason that to destroy
           Atahkarana is like destroying a bridge over an impassable chasm; The
traveler can never reach the goal
           on the other shore. And there lies the difference between the exoteric
and the esoteric teaching. The
           former makes the Vedânta state that so long as mind (the lower) clings
through Antahkarana to Spirit
           (Buddha-Manas) [higher self] it is impossible for it to acquire true
Spiritual Wisdom, Jnyâna, and that this
           can only be attained by seeking to come en rapport with the Universal
Soul (Atmâ) [the divine self]; that, in
           fact, it is by ignoring the higher Mind [higher self] altogether that
one reaches Râja Yoga. We say it is not
           so. No single rung of the ladder leading to knowledge can be skipped.
No personality can ever reach or
           bring itself into communication with Atmâ, except through
Buddhi-Manas; to try to become a Jivanmukta
           or a Mahâtmâ, before one has become an adept or even a Naljor (a
sinless man) is like trying to reach to
           Ceylon from India without crossing the sea. Therefore we are told that
if we destroy Antahkarana before the
           personal [personal self] is absolutely under the control of the
impersonal Ego [the higher self], we risk to
           lose the latter and be severed for ever from it, unless indeed we
hasten to re-establish the communication
           by a supreme and final effort. It is only when we are indissolubly
linked with the essence of the divine Mind
           [higher self] that we have to destroy Antahkarana.”

           H.P.Blavatsky, The Esoteric Writings, pp. 413-414.

           Krishnamurti’s teaching neatly corresponds to the exoteric position as
presented here by Blavatsky, for he
           proposes to access directly the impersonal universal creative
intelligence (Atma) by tossing out aspiration
           (Antahkarana) and denying the existence of the higher self
(Buddhi-Manas).

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        8.
           Blavatsky warns:

           “Be it far from me the suspicion that any of the esoteric students
have reached to any considerable point
           down the plane of spiritual descent. All the same I warn you to avoid
taking the first step. You may not
           reach the bottom in this life or the next, but you may now generate
causes which will insure you spiritual
           destruction in your third, fourth, fifth, or even some subsequent
birth... Finally, keep ever in mind the
           consciousness that though you see no Master by your bedside, nor hear
one audible whisper in the
           silence of the still night, yet the Holy Power is about you, the Holy
Light is shining into your hour of
           spiritual need and aspirations, and it will be no fault of the
MASTERS, or of their humble mouthpiece and
           servant, if through perversity or moral feebleness some of you cut
yourselves off from these higher
           potencies, and step upon the declivity that leads to Avitchi [state of
soulless-ness].” H.P.Blavatsky, The
           Esoteric Writings, p. 418.

                Return to Text
        9.
           Lord Maitreya:

           "Thus although Krishnamurti was right to emphasize the necessity for
independent thought, he was wrong
           in assuming that everyone else, regardless of past Karma and present
limitations, could instantly reach
           that point which he himself had only reached through lives of effort,
and by the aid of those Cosmic Forces
           apportioned to him solely for his office as Herald of the New Age."

           Lord Maitreya in David Anrias, Through the Eyes of the Masters:
Meditations and Portraits (London:
           Routledge, 1932), p. 67.

           [Full text of Maitreya's message on Krishnamurti]

           Any of the Masters quoted in these endnotes I believe to be genuine
members of the Great White
           Brotherhood.

                Return to Text
        10.
           ‘Sir Thomas,’ an English Master said:

           “Also instead of giving forth the new Teaching so badly needed, he
[Krishnamurti] escaped from the
           responsibilities of his office as prophet and teacher by reverting to
a past incarnation, and an ancient
           philosophy of his own race [Advaita Vedantism] with which you are
familiar, but which is useless for the
           Western World in the present cycle. But those to whom he speaks think
they are receiving a new
           message, and as such it carries undue weight. The message he should
have delivered, he has failed to
           deliver--or only partly delivered. Nothing about Art--no plans for the
new sub-race--educational schemes
           dropped--and in place of all this: Advaita, a philosophy for chelas,
and one of the most easily
           misunderstood paths to liberation... He who attempts to teach Advaita,
and omits all Sanscrit terms,
           courts failure. Sanscrit words engender an occult vibration which is
lost when translated. Western words
           not suitable to describe subjective states of consciousness, because
their associations are mainly
           mundane... Another flaw in this pseudo-Advaita which Krishnamurti is
giving out, is that he addresses the
           personality, the physical plane man [personal self], as if he were the
Monad [divine self] or at least the Ego
           [higher self]. Of course the Monad, the Divine Spark, is the Absolute
Existence-Knowledge-Bliss, and
           hence eternally free, but that doesn't mean that the personality down
here, immersed in endless-seeming
           Karmic difficulties, can share its consciousness, or even that of the
Ego--the link between the personality
           and the Monad."

           ‘Sir Thomas,’ an English Master, in: His Pupil [Cyril Scott], The
Initiate in the Dark Cycle (London:
           Routledge, 1932), pp. 136-139.

                Return to Text

                [Full text of relevant chapter]
        11.
           'Sir Thomas' again:

           “Well did my Brother Koot Hoomi say that Krishnamurti had destroyed
all the many stairways to God,
           while his own remains incomplete. Also being incomplete it may lead to
dangers unforeseen by those who
           attempt to climb it. Danger Number One: Krishnamurti's casting aside
of time-honoured definitions and
           classifications leaves aspirant without true scale of values. Danger
Number Two: climbing his particular
           staircase necessitates constant meditation, which in its turn
necessitates constant protection from
           Guru--and Guru not allowed by Krishnamurti. Of course a moderate
degree may be practiced in safety
           without a Guru, but long-continued meditation leads to states of
consciousness and excursions on to other
           planes where the Master's guidance is absolutely indispensable.”

           ‘Sir Thomas,’ in His Pupil, p. 138.

                Return to Text

                [Full text of relevant chapter]
        12.
           “Krishnamurti's Advaitism, which is not to be confounded with the
recognized form of that philosophy, will, I
           fear, lead his followers nowhere except perhaps to hypocrisy and
self-delusion.”

           ‘Sir Thomas,’ in: His Pupil, p. 139.

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        13.
           Kuthumi dictated in 1975:

           “Today Krishnamurti, denounced by the Brotherhood, denounces the true
teachers and the path of
           initiation, proclaiming that the individual needs only himself and
that this is the only God there is. Leading
           thousands of youth in the direction of sophisticated disobedience to
the God within [divine self], to Christ
           the inner mentor [higher self], and to the masters of the Brotherhood,
this fallen one has been the
           instrument of a philosophy that is not and does not in any way
represent the true teachings of the Great
           White Brotherhood.”

           (Relevant Paragraphs)

           Kuthumi, “An Exposé of False Teachings,” Pearls of Wisdom, Vol. XIX,
no.5, p. 29. Copyright © 1976,
           Summit University Press, P.O. Box 5000, Corwin Springs, Montana
59030-5000. (406) 848-9891. Web
           site: http://www.tls.org/

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        14.
           Hodson wrote:

           “Here are his words [Krishnamurti’s] on the subject: ‘When we
understand profoundly the significance of
           our existence, of the process of ignorance and action, we will see
what we call purpose has no
           significance. The mere search for the purpose of life covers up,
detracts from the comprehension of
           oneself.’ That quotation is a perfect example of the closed circle of
thought outside of which I for one find
           myself to be shut when endeavouring to comprehend these teachings...
He seems to put the very goal
           itself as the first step towards its attainment.”

           Geoffrey Hodson, Krishnamurti and the Search for Light (Sydney:
St.Alban Press, n.d.), pp. 12-13.

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        15.
           “In him, singleness of purpose has developed into intolerance. Unique
individuality has become a fetish,
           worship of which produces narrow-mindedness and causes him to display
distinct signs of intellectual
           arrogance. He alone is right. Everyone else, from the Lord Buddha down
to the latest teacher of the Law, is
           wrong, criminally wrong.”

           Ibid. p. 8.

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        16.
           Theosophist John Algeo correctly observes that Krishnamurti is
“teaching ends without means.”

           John Algeo, review of Krishnamurti--Love and Freedom by Peter Michel
in Quest Vol. 8, no. 3 (Autumn
           1995), p. 86.

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        17.
           See Mary Lutyens, Krishnamurti: The Years of Awakening (New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1975),
           for the story of Krishnamurti’s initiations and spiritual development.
See Charles W. Leadbeater, The
           Masters and the Path (Adyar, India: Theosophical Publishing House,
1925) for a Theosophical
           understanding of the initiatory process.

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        18.
           “The Arhat initiation is the one in which the Master withdraws all
guidance from his pupil, who may have to
           negotiate the most difficult problems without being allowed to ask any
questions. He has to rely entirely on
           his own judgment, and if he makes mistakes, must bear the
consequences. And so what did Krishnamurti
           do? Like the proverbial manservant who knows he is about to be given
notice, he gave notice first. In other
           words, he cut himself adrift from the White Lodge, and repudiated all
of us. And unfortunately he induced
           others far below him in spiritual evolution to do likewise.”

           ‘Sir Thomas,’ in: His Pupil, p. 139.

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        19.
           “I wish I could describe how I witnessed the ego [the synthetic self]
being torn to pieces and being thrown
           to the winds... . The center of thinking dissolved into nothingness.”

           Vimala Thakar, On an Eternal Voyage (Ahmedabad, India: The New Order
Book Co., 1969), pp. 46-47.

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        20.
           Vimala Thakar thought, and I think correctly, that her transformation
had something to do with the
           healing-sessions with Krishnamurti. She wrote: “I have told you
[Krishnamurti] about the invasion of a new
           awareness, irresistible and uncontrollable. I have told you how it has
swept away everything. Now--this has
           something to do with the healing.”

           Thakar, p. 43.

           Krishnamurti on the contrary was quite sure that the two phenomena
were not related. Apparently, when
           she published her autobiography against Krishnamurti’s wishes, he
ended their friendship and later his
           biographers gave her the silent treatment.

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        21.
           See endnote 7.

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        22.
           “If with all its power and superiority, one cannot think for oneself,
there can be no peace in the world.”

           J.Krishnamurti, The First and Last Freedom (New York: Harper &
Brothers, 1954), p. 64.

           For this Krishnamurti received some compliments from the Masters:

           “He did good work in teaching people to use their own brain.” ‘Sir
Thomas,’ in: His Pupil, p. 139. And:

           “Krishnamurti was right to emphasize the necessity for independent
thought.” Lord Maitreya in: David
           Anrias, p. 67.

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        23.
           “One sees that there must be change in oneself--the more sensitive,
the more alert and intelligent one is,
           the more one is aware that there must be a deep, abiding, living
change.”

           J.Krishnamurti, The Awakening of Intelligence (New York: Harper & Row,
1973), p. 43.

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        24.
           “But when the mind seeks a timeless state which will go into action in
order to destroy the [synthetic] self,
           is that not another form of experience which is strengthening the
‘me’[synthetic self]?... So, having
           projected this state of continuance in a timeless state as a spiritual
entity, you have an experience; and
           such an experience only strengthens the self.”

           From chapter IX, “What is the Self,” in The First and Last Freedom,
pp. 76-82.

           It is hard to find quotes by Krishnamurti, uncontaminated by his basic
errors. In the previous quote, for
           example, Krishnamurti does not differentiate between aspirations of
the soul, which are wholesome (see
           endnote 7 about the Antahkarana), and ambitions of the mind, which
might be destructive depending on
           who or what principle directs the mind. This line of thought makes him
throw out the baby (the soul)
           together with the bathwater (the synthetic self).

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        25.
           “We have learned now the power of propaganda and that is one of the
greatest calamities that can happen:
           to use ideas as a means to transform man... Man is not
important--systems, ideas, have become
           important. Man no longer has any significance. We can destroy millions
of men as long as we produce a
           result and the result is justified by ideas... When the intellect has
the upper hand in human life, it brings
           about an unprecedented crisis.”

           From “On the Present Crisis,” in The First and Last Freedom, pp.
145-146.

                Return to Text
        26.
           See endnote 7.

                Return to Text
        27.
           The whole Krishnamurti phenomenon might be one of world-historical
significance. We might be observing
           the birth of a completely new, though flawed, religion and
civilization based on Krishnamurti’s teachings,
           with its geographical center in India and its outposts in the West.

           For some interesting ideas about the rise and fall of civilizations
see Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History
           (London: Oxford University Press, 1946).

                Return to Text
        28.
           H.P. Blavatsky had high hopes for the Judeo-Christian and Indic
civilizations to transform themselves into a
           “heaven” in the 21st century with the aid of the Theosophical Society,
led by a prophesied “torch-bearer of
           Truth,” expected in the last quarter of the 20th century. See her
Conclusion, “The Future of the
           Theosophical Society,” in The Key to Theosophy (Pasadena CA:
Theosophical University Press, 1995),
           pp. 304-307.

           Annie Besant defended her involvement with Krishnamurti by referring
explicitly to Blavatsky's view about
           the future mission of the Theosophical Society and the “torch-bearer
of Truth.” She clearly believed
           Krishnamurti to be the vehicle for that expected teacher. She wrote in
1912 that the only difference
           between herself and Blavatsky regarding the coming of “the next great
Teacher” was that “she put that
           event perhaps half a century later than I do. Which of us is right
only time can show.” Annie Besant,
           “Freedom of Opinion in the T.S.,” letter to The Vâhan 21\8 (March
1912), p. 153.

           With the 20th century now drawing to a close; the world in a state of
unparalleled crisis, the Theosophical
           Society only a minor agent of change and no sign of a “torch-bearer of
Truth” connected with it, it behooves
           Theosophists to contemplate the texts quoted in this pamphlet and
consider an alternative perception of
           the esoteric history of the 20th century.

           My own proposal is contained in a pamphlet, The Masters and Their
Emissaries: From H.P.B. to Guru Ma
           and Beyond, in which is stated that the teachings of the Masters,
which were originally planned to be given
           through Krishnamurti, were given through Guy and Edna Ballard in the
30s and 40s, through Geraldine
           Innocente in the 50s,  through Mark and Elizabeth Prophet in the 50s
till the 90s, and through Monroe and
           Carolyn Shearer from 1995 on.

           For an overview of a wide variety of other Theosophical views of
Krishnamurti see  Krishnamurti and the
           World Teacher Project: Some Theosophical Perceptions.

- - - - - -


I think it wold be interesting to hear Aryel´s commentary of this paper, and to
know Govert´s proofs or reasons that could confirm the identity of the Masters
mentioned here.

Friendly,

DAVID C.



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