The Adamantine Gates of Wisdom
Nov 18, 2006 03:39 PM
by carlosaveline
Dear Friends,
To an ordinary observer, some controversies at ?Theos-talk? might look like a chaos.
To the student of Esoteric Philosophy, there is a higher or inner order in this apparent dis-order.
Actually, there is nothing wrong in the fact that difficulties and contradictions emerge.
Some people see the spiritual path as a way of obtaining peace and comfort at the personal level. In their deeds, if not in words, they try to reject all ?probations? and tests. They fear pain. They attach themselves to pleasure.
When these people learn about H.P.B.?s struggle against theological dogmatism and other forms of collective ignorance and hypocrisy, they feel that the main teacher of the esoteric philosophy was excessively polemist. They think that H.P.B. had a temper and that she was less peaceful than she should have been.
Thinking like this may help us disguise our own tamasic love for routine and ommision. Those who challenge collective ignorance are fiercely attacked in various ways ? so it is convenient for us to have some handy explanations and excuses as to why we do not try to follow the example and the vibration pattern of Initiates.
Naive students believe that HPB challenged the dogmas of her time because she was anxious, neurotic ? or perhaps because she had ?a missing principle? in her inner consciousness. The matter of the fact is that she was setting an example for future generations of truth-seekers to follow.
She couldn?t avoid challenging the dogmas of her time because she had a greater view of things. The same happened to many Messengers, great and small, since Pythagoras, Buddha and Lao-tzu. Messengers don?t care about established dogmas or personal well-being. Seen as an example of an vibration pattern, H.P.B.?s life and suffering contain an inspiring example for us in the 21st century.
One Mahatma wrote in a letter to a lay chela:
?You were told (...) that the path to Occult Sciences has to be trodden laboriously and crossed at the danger of life; that every new step in it leading to the final goal, is surrounded by pit-falls and cruel thorns; that the pilgrim who ventures upon it is made first to confront and conquer the thousand and one furies (1) who keep watch over its adamantine (2) gates and entrance ? furies called Doubt, Skepticism, Scorn, Ridicule, Envy and finally Temptation ? especially the latter; and that he, who would see beyond had to first destroy this living wall; that he must be possessed of a heart and soul clad in steel, and of an iron, never failing determination and yet be meek and gentle, humble and have shut out from his heart every human passion, that leads to evil.?(3)
What about ?Theos-talk? as a probationary field of search for truth?
Contradictions here are evidences that it is alive.
Right now, the flow of messages precipitates some materials from sutble realms into the ?visible? world and destroys others, in several levels of consciousness, and with various kinds of magnetism.
New learning opportunities may be emerging from such an exchange of views.
Regards, Carlos.
NOTES:
(1) Furies: in classical Mythology, feminine deities who punished crimes, prompted by the victims, and who took revenge on behalf of the gods.
(2) Adamantine: like a diamond; impenetrably hard; utterly and unyieldingly firm.
(3) ?The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett?, Theosophical University Press, Pasadena, California, 1992, Letter LXII, pp. 351-352.
O o o O o o O o o O o o O o o O o o O
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