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April 30, 1943 Friday Evening Address by Alice A. Bailey With questions and discussion with advanced students |
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AAB:
I want to do a rather different thing this evening. I have been thinking
a great deal, and I have hinted at it once or twice in these talks,
about the relationship of all of us in this group to the Masters. I am
going to say things that might perhaps suggest questions to you; I want
you to note the questions that come into your mind and let me answer
them if I can. What I am about to say I want to be taken exactly on its
face value; it will be the truth as far as I know it. There is no
symbolism or subtle suggestion about what I am saying; I am stating
exactly the facts. I
have watched the School for twenty odd years, very odd, and things have
happened to students in the School that have justified the work that we
have done. Students are always writing in and telling of their wonderful
experiences and of being in touch with the Masters, and those of us who
handle those letters withhold judgment about this. There are students in
the School, one or two, that I have put directly into the Disciples�
Degree, who have definitely had contact with the Masters. They are
usually quite bewildered and disturbed at the happening. They are afraid
of psychism, of autosuggestion, of gullibility; and one of the things I
have had to do is say, �yes, you did have contact with the Master. Go
on.� You would be quite surprised if you knew who they were. There are
others in the School who are definitely conscious that they are under
supervision but have not yet registered in their physical plane
consciousness a relationship to the Masters. The testimony, as I go
about in different countries, is that there are men and women in every
country who have definitely made contact with the Masters and know it.
There are others who are aware of being disciples and are waiting for
the moment of registration. I have the feeling as I work in the School
that behind practically all of them lies a hope. They want to know for
themselves that the Masters are a fact. They dream of a time when a
Master will approach them and tell them they are disciples. It
seems to me that one of the things we have to do in the School is to
bear testimony to the fact of the Masters because we know. I want
to take up with you, largely subject to your interest and questions, how
you can know; and I do not mean in vagueness, but in reality. The second
thing that we have to do in the School, something that the Tibetan told
me to do years ago and that I tried feebly to do, is to talk about the
Hierarchy to everybody, not in terms of �I know there is a Hierarchy,
therefore I am justified in speaking,� but to talk about the Hierarchy
so that They appear as a reasonable proposition, and touch upon evidence
throughout the world among reputable men and women who believe in the
Masters. When you can speak from the point of contact with a Master (not
by statements about the Masters) your words carry power, though
you say nothing about yourself at all. The major result of a Master�s
bringing himself into relationship with a disciple is not to lead the
disciple to say, �here I am; a Master has recognized me,� but the
power emanating from the Master will be of such a nature that it will
affect the disciple and enable him first to think clearly on the
subject, then to know what he should do, and then to recognize what he
contacts. At
a meeting of commentators two years ago I touched a little on the
subject of the Hierarchy and on the subject of discipleship. I made a
distinction between accepted disciple and world disciple,
and I took the position that I was a world disciple. It is the only
claim that I have ever made, and it is the only claim that I shall ever
make. The claim of discipleship is a legitimate claim because disciples
range all the way from the accepted disciple who is accepted in this
life for the first time, up to such a great and liberated disciple as
the Master KH, who is a disciple of Sanat Kumara. The claim of
discipleship is one you can always make to anyone. They may not
interpret it with the meaning that it has for you, but they will
interpret it correctly because the Christian religion and poetry are all
full of the idea of discipleship. We are critical of the Church, but the
Church has made some very valuable contributions to the thought of the
world. They have preserved for us the fact of God in an era of
materialism; they have preserved for us the fact of Christ, belief in
immortality, in the Soul, and they have always spoken of discipleship.
Those are wonderful contributions no matter how we may regard the
Church. The
claim of discipleship is one that I would like to feel that the senior
students in the School could make and make truthfully. As I have told
you before, some of you with very little effort might make the grade.
You do not know how close you may be to discipleship. What
is the difference between an accepted disciple and a world disciple? Why
can I say definitely that I am a world disciple and challenge anybody to
say I am not? The various inner grades of discipleship are characterized
by one fact only � the extent of influence. Now there are heaps of
people in this country and other countries who will say they are
disciples or high initiates, and yet their influence is very limited.
Because they love the sense of power and like to feel that people
respond to their influence they overestimate themselves. But a world
disciple is a person who in spite of himself influences thousands. I
have influenced tens of thousands in my life, and I can say that because
I don�t care whether I have or not. I am not a Christ; I am not an
initiate of frightfully high degree. A great initiate influences
millions. Avatars influence everybody on the planet right down to the
lowest human specimen. How does that come to be? I will tell you another
distinction between accepted disciple and world disciple. An accepted
disciple cooperates with the Plan. The Plan is presented to him and he
cooperates with it. A world disciple knows the Plan himself and his
cooperation is of a different kind. It is not based on obedience; it is
based on inevitability. I want to see the School train and develop world
disciples. World
disciples are very seldom taught by other world disciples. They
generally have to thrash everything out by themselves with a tiny lead
given them by some utterly unimportant person. Sometimes I think that
all of you have had too much information. Do you get what I mean? You
know too much, and the mass of your knowledge obliterates the one or two
points that you need to get and that nobody can give you; you have to
wrestle them out for yourself. I never had anyone teach me about the
Hierarchy. I got a lot of teaching about planes and energy and forces, a
lot of academic knowledge. The thing that I had to wrestle out by myself
from the time I was 15 until I was 35 had to be done without a soul
giving me any assistance. The interesting thing is that you can have a
direct contact with a Master but simply not recognize it, not know who
he is, and not understand the gist of what he has told you. Only life
unfolds the significance of what he said. People are often under the
impression that the Master comes to them and tells them that they have
reached the point of development where they can do things, that there
lies a future of service ahead of them, that an important future can be
theirs, feeding the pride, that subtle something in all of us that seeks
recognition. I suppose that in my last life as an accepted disciple I
sinned greatly along that line, because I have been so terrified of
claim-making, of lack of humility, of self-satisfaction, that in this
life I have gone the other way. I
remember that I did a big work in India. I went there when I was 22, and
after six months, because there was nobody better, in fact nobody else
to do it, I was put in charge of six soldiers� homes. I had the
catering to do for these six homes, with 600 men in each, every day in
the week. I conducted fifteen prayer meetings and gospel meetings a
week. I did a good job, and I thought it was the result of my character,
but now I think it was because I was young and good looking and full of
life and the men were lonely and had nobody else to talk to. This is the
point I want to make. I went to forty British regiments; I had a Sunday
Bible class of 600 men each Sunday; I got thousands of letters. They
were all eulogistic. One day I took them all out of the drawers and
boxes and piled them up in the middle of the room and sat down and
looked at them and said, �this is where I am beginning to deteriorate.
What shall I do to teach myself a lesson in humility that I will never
forget?� Then I burned them all. It was a symbol to me that the
personality doesn�t matter; it is the spiritual influence that counts,
and spiritual values are not your personal possession. They are
something that, from bitter experience down the ages, you have learned
to tap. You use them as best you can, and then the time comes when you
have the necessary experience and enough is pouring through you so that
you influence people. Your vision alters all the time. What you think is
wonderful, a satisfying experience, reaches a point of endeavor � a
point of climax � and then you see something else. Then all that you
have achieved seems as nothing, because away on ahead of you is another
goal that makes your achievement seem to be small potatoes, very small.
I can remember a time in India when I was being written about in all the
papers, and the officers� mess in a town would turn out and listen to
me talk and sing. But I was conscious that I had reached a point where I
wasn�t getting anywhere. I had used up all I knew. I was dead sick of
teaching, of being orthodox. An old Hindu bearer went with me wherever I
went. He used to watch me with a funny expression. I traveled all over
India alone, and this old man always went with me. One day he came to me
and like a bolt out of the blue said, �Will you please know that same
God loves us as loves you, loved us long before you came to India.�
That old Hindu said in effect that your fundamentalism is all wrong. God
is love. Then
a sergeant of the Royal Horse Artillery said to me after I had given a
talk on Hell and all the men had left the hall, �If you will only
speak the truth from your heart, the men will stay and listen to you.
But when you tell lies they will go.� So I got help from unimportant
people. There was enough in me to use those few words for expansion. A
disciple can get more definite training. I suppose I got more of it in
another life because when I came across The Secret Doctrine it
never puzzled me. The accepted disciple can take a lot of teaching, and
you have had a lot of teaching. An accepted disciple is one who grows
within himself, yes, but grows also in response to outside teaching,
whereas a world disciple grows from knowledge assimilated in another
life, a seed from the past. I
got a great deal from the Tibetan when he was giving me the subject
matter of Cosmic Fire and Esoteric Psychology because I
had taken the trouble to master The Secret Doctrine and become
steeped in it. I am not talking about myself because I want to talk
about myself. I am a guinea pig tonight. What is the good of my going on
and teaching all of you and not letting you benefit from my experience?
I may estimate you higher than you estimate yourself. I think a great
many of you in this room are capable of taking a great step forward. You
can all become accepted disciples in this life and then start in the
next life the way I did, or you can lay such a foundation of realization
of the light that in your early formative years you will be a disciple.
Being a world disciple doesn�t mean anything but hard work. You are
misunderstood; you are so busy with the thing that has to be done and so
anxious to help that you make lots of mistakes. A world disciple starts
as an accepted disciple and works on from there as he can and makes the
grade by hard work. You
might meet a Master and you might be interested in what he says to you,
but you also might be so closed up and sealed by your own ideas, by your
constant thinking about yourself, that you would not know him for what
he was. I tell you this from my own experience: you are not desperate
enough to help humanity. You haven�t reached the point where you
don�t care whether you ever see a Master. I
came into incarnation in a very wealthy family. I had everything
possible that a human being could have, and as a Gemini I started to
travel when I was one year old. I went to Canada and later to
Switzerland and all over Europe. I was always delicate, always unhappy,
the plainest of my family, the stupidest of my family. Three times,
before I was fourteen, I tried to commit suicide - the first time when I
was only six years old. I was miserable because the world was so
unhappy. I wanted to do something about it and nobody was doing anything
about it. When I got to be fourteen or fifteen I would go off onto the
moors by myself and lie in the heather and think terrible thoughts and
hate God, hate the world, and love humanity, wishing I could do
something to make people happy. The
family had all gone to church one Sunday and I was alone in the drawing
room, hating life and hating the world, when the door opened and a man
came in. I wasn�t surprised that he had a turban on his head, and he
said, �You are an exceedingly naughty little girl. I am sorry because
I had hoped that you would take hold and help us early. I am beginning
to wonder whether you will, or whether it will take another life before
you do. If you want to be of service to this world, take yourself in
hand and make something of yourself. If you do that then we can use you.
I will tell you what you have to do, but I am not sure you will do
it.� He outlined to me something that I could do and walked out. I got
scared and thought, �I have seen a vision.� I went out into the
grounds and thought that I didn�t know whether it was a vision or
whether I was going crazy, but one bit of that advice was good: I could
take myself in hand and become nice. And I was too nice. In fact, one
day my aunt came to me and said, �Good Lord, Alice, lose your
temper.� My intentions were good though foolishly handled. I never
told anyone what had happened because I thought that on top of my
goodness they would think I was going insane. I thought that I had seen
Jesus. Occasionally thereafter in times of crisis I would get an
intimation of what I was to do, and always on a beam of light, literally
in the room. I began to get compulsive about it and took up work among
British soldiers, and then came to this country. Then
I came across the Theosophical Society, went into the Shrine Room and
saw a picture of the Master K.H. I had gone from age fifteen to
thirty-five and never knew that I had met a Master. I didn�t know who
he was, and my interpretation was all wrong as to its being a vision. It
was twenty years before I discovered his identity. That should encourage
all of you. Do the thing you are told to do at any cost, even if you
lose your friends. I am not the least interested in people knowing that
I am a disciple of K.H. The world is full of disciples of K.H; there are
several in the School who have come to me as disciples of K.H. and know
it. Roberto Assagioli is a disciple of K.H. There are also many
disciples of the Master Morya, great world leaders through whom the
power of the Master M. is pouring. The Atlantic Charter and the Four
Freedoms came straight from the Hierarchy, and only disciples could have
brought it through in that concise form. It does not matter what you
think about the personality of a disciple; the personality does not
count. It
is a curious thing � if an initiate of high degree would come and talk
to us he would evoke in us all that is undesirable and make us quite
impossible. Yet at the same time he would evoke all that is beautiful.
One of the things that I have watched in the School, and that you who
carry on the work when I am not here will watch, is the effect of
spiritual knowledge on the best students. As they develop in knowledge
and in wisdom their faults and prejudices also develop. It is an
indication of growth, because when a prejudice, a hatred or a
selfishness is brought to the surface and to the light, it rides
rampant. Then, when that goes too far, they wake up to it. The mark of a
disciple is that when he knows a thing isn�t right he eliminates it.
The best students will be the worst students, because they get
overstimulated. They get discouraged about themselves because all their
faults emerge. At
the Wesak commentators meeting we will elaborate on that a little bit.
The commentators must become aware of the evocative nature of spiritual
force, and of the effect of that spiritual force flowing through him or
herself. It will have a good as well as a bad effect. Considering your
position in the School, you are subjecting yourself deliberately and
voluntarily to the force of a large group. That is going to have some
effect on you. The effect of a Master on a group is serious and that is
why the Masters do not appear more frequently. I would hate to see K.H.
appear to me or at the Wesak meeting. It would mean disaster to some
through over-stimulation. The disciple pays the price of contact in his
physical body. He can�t sleep for days after he has had a conversation
with a Master. If a disciple is so affected, what would happen to people
not on the path of discipleship? I want this group to think this subject
through so that they will speak practically of the Masters. We
talk about the Planetary Logos being one of the imperfect gods. The
Masters are not perfect. They get irritated with each other; they often
don�t agree with each other. I am sure I am irritating to the Master
K.H., if he had the time to think about me, because I do such silly
things. It�s all relative. To listen to some of the schools of thought
you would think the Masters were perfect. HPB says that some of the
Masters are very uneducated, but they know how to use their disciples�
intelligence. Take the teaching of the Tibetan. He can�t speak good
English, but I am very well educated. He uses my English and my mind
through which to work. Some of the Masters know very little. The Tibetan
knows far more about the Ageless Wisdom than K.H. knows, but they know
the people in their Ashram who have the necessary knowledge. Just as the
great executives out in the world pick and choose their sub-executives
because of their capacity to meet the need of the organization, they
pick and choose their subordinates. But they are perfect so far as you
and I are concerned, because they have completely overcome the
hindrances that keep you and me away from the center of life. The
Masters work through all kinds of instruments. I often say to Foster,
�I don�t see how the Masters could ever work through me.�
Fortunately they are not deterred by personality faults. They work
through all kinds of instruments, so we have to be ready and willing to
work through all kinds of instruments. If the Masters have to put up
with their accepted disciples and world disciples, you and I have to put
up with all kinds of people too. But because we are not as far along as
they are and are still personal and don�t see the picture whole, the
personalities of those with whom we work sometimes clash with ours.
There is nobody who is attacked more and gets more unkind and untrue
things said about them than disciples. You have to be ready for that. I
have wanted so much this evening to make the fact of the Masters a
reality to you. One student came to me not long ago and said, �I go
subjectively on certain nights to a big room on a mountain under the
pines. Off to the left of the room is the small room where you and one
or two others are. You are often at a table with charts on it. Off of
that room is another room with the Master K.H.� I replied, �That is
the Ashram of the Master K.H., and I am in that other room with the
other people where I have a great deal to do with the charts of
beginners.� She knew she was a disciple of K.H. It is utterly amazing
where you find disciples. They aren�t always the wonderful and the
beautiful and the outstandingly good people, but they are always people
who have influence. The Masters are a fact, and I want you to know them
for a fact for yourself. I
tell you as a disciple that you can make the grade if you want to. I do
not mean you are going to be a world disciple. I have an idea that the
ranks of world disciples are going to be recruited from the very young
who are coming in as disciples. Some of you in this room have already
made it. I don�t want any misunderstanding in what I have said
tonight. I have made a perfectly ordinary claim that can be made by
hundreds throughout the world. There are hundreds of world disciples; by
their fruits you will know them and by the extent of that which they
precipitate upon Earth you will know them. ES:
Will you come back to the point you made about the importance of our
talking about the Hierarchy, broadcasting the idea? AAB:
Don�t talk as I have talked tonight. HR:
We in our turn have to tell what is for us the truth. If we talk the
truth then we are all right. AAB:
No, you are not. This is the first time I have talked about my half
century of experiences. It would be wrong to talk of your inner
experiences. You can say to people who are on the verge of discipleship,
�I am a disciple,� and by doing so you can strengthen their faith;
but you can�t do it anywhere else. HR:
Can you speak the truth? AAB:
You mean the truth of the Ageless Wisdom? HR:
The whole truth, if you don�t put yourself in. AAB:
You can say the Masters are facts. RK:
We want to forget all about the fact that we talk to the Masters. We
have to live them, and then people will want to find out what is the
pattern lying behind our lives. It is living, not speech, that
introduces the Masters. It is that their inner life reflects itself in
my inner life and makes me dynamic. AAB:
We can talk about the Plan and speak of the great disciples in the world
through whom the Plan has evolved. Certain great figures say certain
things that have affected the consciousness of humanity. Luther brought
about the Reformation, the first great step toward the freedom of the
human consciousness, the first great blow at theology. Knox and Calvin
tried to do the same thing and got themselves hated. They were not
disciples. Some day we will have a book written on disciples and how
certain great ideas emanating from the Hierarchy worked through their
disciples on the physical plane and how they said certain things that
brought about certain great changes. HPB was one; she struck a blow at
theology and the then science. HR:
We ought to keep in mind the inevitability of the Hierarchy�s coming
into people�s consciousness; so many groups could accept them because
they have accepted guidance. AAB: That is what this School exists for. I have been thinking a great deal about the School. We let in many people who are not material for the School, and in the preliminary papers we say that is our objective. But sometimes I question whether we have done them any good. I sometimes wonder whether we could eliminate the people who are not material for disciples and have a small but more powerful group, a group that would be so magnetic that it would attract to it the material that is ready to be trained as accepted disciples. The whole nature of the Hierarchical method has changed. The Theosophical Society is based on the Indian technique, the Master and disciple. The Master would give a disciple a hint and he would work it out, because there were so few people in the world ready for discipleship. That isn�t the practice now. It never was in the Ashram where the disciple is handled in group formation. The Masters train groups and they stand ready to handle the material in the School when we have it ready for them. Insofar as you can make the grade in discipleship, thus far will this group become potent enough to attract to it material that can be trained. |
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