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An Outline of Theosophy
By
Charles Webster Leadbeater
Reincarnation
Since the
finer movements cannot at first affect the soul, he has to draw round him
vestures of grosser matter through which the heavier vibrations can play; and
so he takes upon himself successively the mental body, the astral body, and the
physical body. This is a birth or incarnation –the commencement of a physical
life. During that life all kinds of experiences come to him through his
physical
body, and from them he should learn some lessons and develop some qualities in
himself.
After a time
he begins to withdraw into himself, and puts off by degrees the vestures which
he has assumed. The first of these to drop is the physical body, and his
withdrawal from that is what we call death. It is not the end of his
activities, as we so ignorantly suppose; nothing could be further from the
fact.
He is simply
withdrawing from one effort, bearing back with him its results; and after a
certain period of comparative repose he will make another effort of the same
kind.
Thus, as has
been said, what we ordinarily call his life is only one day in the real and
wider life – a day at school, during which he learns certain lessons.
But inasmuch
as one short life of seventy or eighty years at most is not enough to give him
an opportunity of learning all the lessons which this wonderful and beautiful
world has to teach, and inasmuch as God means him to learn them all in His own
good time, it is necessary that he should come back again many times, and live
through many of these schooldays that we call lives, in different classes and
under different circumstances, until all the lessons are learned;
and then this
lower schoolwork will be over, and he will pass to something higher and more
glorious – the true divine lifework for which all this earthly
school-life
is fitting him.
That is what
is called the doctrine of reincarnation or rebirth – a doctrine which was
widely known in the ancient civilisations, and is even today held by
the majority
of the human race.
Of it Hume
has written:-
“What is incorruptible
must also be ungenerable. The soul, therefore, if immortal, existed before our
birth…..The metempsychosis is, therefore, the only
system of
this kind that Philosophy can hearken to.” *
(* Hume. “Essay on
Immortality,”
Writing of
the theories of metempsychosis in
In his last
and posthumous work this great Orientalist again refers to this doctrine, and
expresses his personal belief in it.
And Huxley
writes: -
“Like the
doctrine of evolution itself, that of transmigration has its roots in the world
of reality; and it may claim such support as the great argument from analogy is
capable of supplying.” ^ ( ^ Huxley, “Evolution and Ethics,” p. 61, 1895.)
So it will be
seen that modern as well as ancient writers recognise this hypothesis as one
deserving of the most serious consideration.
It must not
for a moment be confounded with a theory held by the ignorant, that it was
possible for a soul which had reached humanity in its evolution to re-become
that of an animal. No such retrogression is within the limits of possibility;
when once man comes into existence – a human soul, inhabiting what we call in
our books a causal body – he can never again fall back into what is in truth a
lower kingdom of nature, whatever mistakes he may make or however he may fail
to take advantage of his opportunities. If he is idle in the school of life, he
may need to take the same lesson over and over again before he has really
learned it , but still on the whole progress is steady, even though it may
often be slow. A few years ago the essence of this doctrine was prettily put
thus in one
of the magazines: -
“A boy went
to school. He was very little. All that he knew he had drawn in with his
mother’s milk. His teacher (who was God) placed him in the lowest class, and
gave him these lessons to learn: Thou shalt not kill. Thou shalt do no hurt to
any living
thing. Thou shalt not steal. So the man did not kill; but he was cruel, and he
stole, - At the end of the day (when his beard was grey – when the
night was
come) his teacher (who was God) said – Thou hast learned not to kill. But the
other lessons thou hast not learned. Come back tomorrow.”
“On the
morrow he came back, a little boy, and his teacher (who was God) put him in a
class a little higher, and gave him these lessons to learn: Thou shalt do no hurt to any living thing.
Thou shalt not steal. Thou shalt not cheat. So the man did no hurt to any
living thing; but he stole and he cheated.
And at the
end of the day – when his beard was grey – when the night was come – his
teacher
(who was god)
said: Thou hast learned to be merciful. But the other lessons thou hast not
learned. Come back tomorrow.”
“Again, on
the morrow, he came back, a little boy. And his teacher (who was God) put him
in a class yet a little higher, and gave these lessons to learn: Thou shalt not
steal. Thou shalt not cheat. Thou shalt not covet. So the man did not steal;
but he cheated, and he coveted. And at the end of the day – (when his beard was grey –when night was come) his
teacher (who was God) said: Thou hast learned not to steal. But the other lessons thou hast not learned.
Come back, my child, tomorrow.”
“This is what
I have read in the faces of men and women, in the book of the world, and in the
scroll of the heavens, which is writ in the stars.” (
Benson, in
The Century Magazine, May 1894).
I must not
fill my pages with the many unanswerable arguments in favour of this doctrine
of reincarnation; they are set forth very fully in our literature by a far
abler pen than mine. Here I will say only this. Life presents us with many
problems which, on any other hypothesis than this of reincarnation, seem
utterly insoluble; this great truth does explain them, and therefore holds the
field until another more satisfactory hypothesis can be found. Like the rest of
the
teaching,
this is not a Hypothesis, but a matter
of direct knowledge for many of us; but naturally our knowledge is not proof to
others.
Yet good men
and true have been sorrowfully forced to admit that they were unable to
reconcile the state of affairs which exists in the world around us with the
theory that God was both almighty and all-loving. They felt, when they looked
upon all the heartbreaking sorrow and suffering, that either He was not
almighty, and could not prevent it, or He was not all-loving, and did not care.
In Theosophy
we hold with determined conviction that He is both almighty and all-loving, and
we reconcile with that certainty the existing facts of life by means of this
basic doctrine of reincarnation. Surely the only hypothesis which
allows us
reasonably to recognise the perfection of power and love in the Deity is one
which is worthy of careful examination.
For we
understand that our present life is not our first, but that each have behind us
a long line of lives, by means of which we have evolved from the
condition of
primitive man to our present position.
Assuredly in
these past lives we shall have done both good and evil, and from every one of
our actions a definite proportion of result must have followed under the
inexorable law of justice. From the good follows always happiness and further
opportunity; from the evil follows always sorrow and limitation.
So, if we
find ourselves limited in any way, the limitation is of our own making, or is
merely due to the youth of the soul; if we have sorrow and
suffering to
endure, we ourselves alone are responsible. The manifold and complex destinies
of men answer with rigid exactitude to the balance between the good and evil of
their previous actions; and all is moving onward under the divine order towards
the final consummation of glory.
There is
perhaps, no Theosophical teaching to which more violent objection is made than
this great truth of reincarnation; yet it is in reality a most comforting
doctrine. For it gives us time for the progress which lies before – time and
opportunity to become “perfect”. Objectors chiefly found their protest on the
fact that they have had so much trouble and sorrow in this life that they will
not listen to any suggestion that it may be necessary to go through it all
again. But this is obviously not argument; we are in search of truth, and when
it is found we must not shrink from it, whether it be pleasant or unpleasant,
though, as a matter of fact, as said above, reincarnation rightly understood is
profoundly comforting.
Again, people
often enquire why, if we have had so many previous lives, we do not remember
any of them. Put briefly, the answer to this is that some people do remember them;
and the reason why the majority do not is because their consciousness is still
focused in one or other of the lower sheaths.
That sheath
cannot be expected to recollect previous incarnations, because it has not had
any; and the
soul, which has, is not yet fully conscious on its own plane. But the memory of
all the past is stored within the soul, and expresses itself here in the innate
qualities with which the child is born; and when the man has evolved
sufficiently to be able to focus his consciousness there instead of only in
lower vehicles the entire history of that real and wider life will be open
before him
like a book.
The whole of
this question is fully and beautifully worked out in Mrs. Besant’s manual on
Reincarnation, Dr, Jerome Anderson’s Reincarnation and in the chapters on that
subject in The Ancient Wisdom, to which
the attention of the reader is specially directed.
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