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From Theosophy's Sacred Teachings:The Voice of the Silence - The Seven Portals - P1/2
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Helena Petrovna
von Hahn,
more popularly known
as Madame Blavatsky
or H.P.B., came from a
noble family in Ukraine.
Her father,
Peter von Hahn
was a descendant
of German nobility;
while her mother, Helena
Andreyevna Hahn,
came from one
of the oldest families of
Russian nobility and was
also a celebrated novelist.
As a child she would
often have visions and
displayed clairvoyance
as well as other
metaphysical phenomena.
Years later,
she traveled
through Europe and
the Middle East studying
under various teachers
and Sufi saints.
She met her teacher,
an Indian yogi named
Master Morya, in London
who later directed her
to go to New York
in the United States.
Once there, she founded
the Theosophical Society.
In 1885,
she started to write
“The Secret Doctrine”
which was finally
published
three years later in 1888.
“The Secret Doctrine”
has been acknowledged
by many as one of
the most remarkable
books in the world.
It is considered to be
the Bible of Theosophy,
a sourcebook of
the esoteric tradition
that outlines
the fundamental tenets
of the secret doctrine
of the past ages.
Published
as two volumes
during her lifetime –
“The Cosmogenesis”
and “Anthropogenesis”
- “The Secret Doctrine”
explains the origin and
evolution of the universe
and of humanity
through an account of
"Root Races" dating back
millions of years.
Although the writer
of “The Secret Doctrine,”
Madame Blavatsky often
expressed that she was
only the compiler
of ancient wisdom
that was passed on to her.
The true authors of the
work were her teachers,
the Mahatmas,
or Great Souls,
who were the guardians
of the Secret Wisdom
of the ages.
Today on Between
Master and Disciples,
we invite you to listen to
“The Seven Portals” from
Madame Blavatksy’s book,
“The Voice of the Silence.”
We thank you
for your kind presence
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again
next Thursday for
part 2 of excerpts from
Madame Blavatsky’s book,
“The Voice of the Silence.”
Now, please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants,
coming up next right
after Noteworthy News.
May Providence guide you
in wisdom and love.
We appreciate your
magnanimous company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television for
Planet Earth:
Our Loving Home,
coming up next right
after Noteworthy News.
We wish you
and your loved ones
much joy and abundance
every day.
The Voice of the Silence
by H. P. Blavatsky
Fragment III:
The Seven Portals
"Upadya (Guru),
the choice is made,
I thirst for Wisdom.
Now hast thou rent the veil
before the secret Path
and taught the greater
Yana (vehicle).
Thy servant here is ready
for thy guidance."
'Tis well, Sravaka (student).
Prepare thyself,
for thou wilt have to
travel on alone.
The Teacher can
but point the way.
The Path is one for all,
the means
to reach the goal must
vary with the Pilgrims.
Which wilt thou choose,
O thou of dauntless heart?
The Samtan (Tibetan)
of "eye Doctrine,"
four-fold Dhyana
(a state of deep meditation),
or thread thy way
through Paramitas,
six in number,
noble gates of virtue
leading to Bodhi
(awakening) and to Prajna,
seventh step of Wisdom?
The rugged Path
of four-fold Dhyana
winds on uphill.
Thrice great is he
who climbs the lofty top.
The Paramita heights
are crossed by
a still steeper path.
Thou hast to fight thy way
through portals seven,
seven strongholds held
by cruel crafty Powers –
passions incarnate.
Be of good cheer,
Disciple; bear in mind
the golden rule.
Once thou hast passed
the gate Srotapatti,
"he who the stream
hath entered";
once thy foot
hath pressed the bed
of the Nirvanic stream
in this or any future life,
thou hast but
seven other births
before thee,
O thou of adamantine Will.
Look on. What see'st thou
before thine eye,
O aspirant
to god-like Wisdom?
"The cloak of darkness is
upon the deep of matter;
within its folds I struggle.
Beneath my gaze
it deepens, Lord;
it is dispelled beneath
the waving of thy hand.
A shadow moveth,
creeping like the
stretching serpent coils...
It grows, swells out and
disappears in darkness."
It is the shadow of thyself
outside the Path, cast on
the darkness of thy sins.
"Yea, Lord;
I see the PATH;
its foot in mire,
its summits lost in
glorious light Nirvanic.
And now I see
the ever narrowing Portals
on the hard and
thorny way to Gnyana
(Knowledge, Wisdom)."
Thou seest well,
Lanoo (disciple).
These Portals
lead the aspirant
across the waters
on "to the other shore".
Each Portal hath a golden
key that openeth its gate;
and these keys are:
1. Dana, the key of charity
and love immortal.
2. Shila, the key of Harmony
in word and act, the key
that counterbalances
the cause and the effect,
and leaves no further room
for Karmic action.
3. Kshanti, patience sweet,
that nought can ruffle.
4. Virag, indifference
to pleasure and to pain,
illusion conquered,
truth alone perceived.
5. Virya, the dauntless energy
that fights its way
to the supernal Truth,
out of the mire
of lies terrestrial.
6. Dhyana, whose
golden gate once opened
leads the Narjol
(saint, an adept)
toward the realm
of Sat eternal and its
ceaseless contemplation.
7. Prajna, the key
to which makes of a man
a god, creating him
a Bodhisattva, son of
the Dhyanis (Buddhas).
Such to the Portals
are the golden keys.
Before thou canst
approach the last,
O weaver of thy freedom,
thou hast to master these
Paramitas of perfection –
the virtues transcendental
six and ten in number –
along the weary Path.
For, O Disciple!
Before thou wert
made fit to meet
thy Teacher face to face,
thy Master light to light,
what wert thou told?
Before thou canst approach
the foremost gate
thou hast to learn to part
thy body from thy mind,
to dissipate the shadow,
and to live in the eternal.
For this, thou hast to
live and breathe in all,
as all that thou perceivest
breathes in thee;
to feel thyself
abiding in all things,
all things in Self.
Thou shalt not
let thy senses
make a playground
of thy mind.
Thou shalt not separate
thy being from Being,
and the rest, but merge
the Ocean in the drop,
the drop within the Ocean.
So shalt thou be in full
accord with all that lives;
bear love to men
as though they were
thy brother-pupils,
disciples of one Teacher,
the sons of
one sweet mother.
Of teachers there are many;
the Master-Soul is one
Alaya, the Universal Soul.
Live in that Master
as Its ray in thee.
Live in thy fellows
as they live in Its.
Before thou standest on
the threshold of the Path;
before thou crossest
the foremost Gate,
thou hast to merge the two
into the One
and sacrifice the personal
to Self impersonal,
and thus destroy the "path"
between the two –
Antaskarana
(the lower Manas,
or undisciplined mind) .
Thou hast to be prepared
to answer Dharma,
the stern law,
whose voice will ask thee
at thy first,
at thy initial step:
"Hast thou complied
with all the rules,
O thou of lofty hopes?"
"Hast thou attuned
thy heart and mind to
the great mind and heart
of all mankind?
For as the sacred River's
roaring voice whereby
all Nature-sounds
are echoed back,
so must the heart of him
'who in the stream
would enter,' thrill
in response to every sigh
and thought of all
that lives and breathes."
Disciples may be likened
to the strings of
the soul-echoing Vina;
mankind,
unto its sounding board;
the hand that sweeps it
to the tuneful breath
of the Great World-Soul.
The string that fails
to answer 'neath
the Master's touch
in dulcet harmony with
all the others, breaks –
and is cast away.
So the collective minds
of Lanoo-Sravakas.
They have to be attuned
to the Upadya's mind –
one with the Over-Soul –
or, break away.
Thus do the "Brothers
of the Shadow" –
the murderers
of their Souls,
the dread Dad-Dugpa clan.
Hast thou attuned thy being
to Humanity's great pain,
O candidate for light?
Thou hast? . . .
Thou mayest enter.
Yet, ere thou settest foot
upon the dreary Path
of sorrow, 'tis well
thou should'st first learn
the pitfalls on thy way.
Armed with the key
of Charity, of love
and tender mercy,
thou art secure
before the gate of Dana,
the gate that standeth at
the entrance of the Path.
Behold, O happy Pilgrim!
The portal that faceth thee
is high and wide,
seems easy of access.
The road
that leads there through
is straight and smooth
and green.
'Tis like a sunny glade
in the dark forest depths,
a spot on earth mirrored
from Amitabha's paradise.
There, nightingales
of hope and birds
of radiant plumage sing
perched in green bowers,
chanting success
to fearless Pilgrims.
They sing of
Bodhisattvas' virtues five,
the fivefold source
of Bodhi power,
and of the seven steps
in Knowledge. Pass on!
For thou hast brought
the key; thou art secure.
And to the second gate
the way is verdant too.
But it is steep and
winds up hill; yea,
to its rocky top.
Grey mists
will over-hang its
rough and stony height,
and all be dark beyond.
As on he goes,
the song of hope
soundeth more feeble
in the pilgrim's heart.
The thrill of doubt
is now upon him;
his step less steady grows.
Beware of this,
O candidate!
Beware of fear
that spreadeth, like
the black and soundless
wings of midnight bat,
between the moonlight
of thy Soul
and thy great goal
that loometh in
the distance far away.
Fear, O disciple,
kills the will
and stays all action.
If lacking in
the Shila virtue –
the pilgrim trips,
and Karmic pebbles
bruise his feet
along the rocky path.
Be of sure foot,
O candidate.
In Kshanti's (patience)
essence bathe thy Soul;
for now thou dost approach
the portal of that name,
the gate of fortitude
and patience.
Close not thine eyes,
nor lose thy sight of Dorje
(an instrument
that is a symbol of power
of evil influences);
Mara's arrows
ever smite the man who
has not reached Viraga
(feeling of
absolute indifference to
the objective universe, to pleasure and to pain.) Beware of trembling.
'Neath the breath of fear
the key of Kshanti rusty
grows: the rusty key
refuseth to unlock.
The more thou dost advance,
the more thy feet pitfalls
will meet.
The path that leadeth on,
is lighted by one fire –
the light of daring,
burning in the heart.
The more one dares,
the more he shall obtain.
The more he fears,
the more
that light shall pale –
and that alone can guide.
For as the lingering
sunbeam, that on the top
of some tall mountain
shines, is followed by
black night
when out it fades,
so is heart-light.
When out it goes,
a dark and threatening
shade will fall from
thine own heart
upon the path,
and root thy feet
in terror to the spot.
Beware, disciple,
of that lethal shade.
No light
that shines from Spirit
can dispel the darkness
of the nether Soul,
unless all selfish thought
has fled therefrom,
and that the pilgrim saith:
"I have renounced
this passing frame;
I have destroyed the cause:
the shadows cast can,
as effects, no longer be."
For now the last great fight,
the final war
between the Higher
and the Lower Self,
hath taken place.
Behold, the very battlefield
is now engulfed
in the great war,
and is no more.
But once
that thou hast passed
the gate of Kshanti,
step the third is taken.
Thy body is thy slave.
Now,
for the fourth prepare,
the Portal of temptations
which do ensnare
the inner man.
Ere thou canst
near that goal,
before thine hand
is lifted to upraise
the fourth gate's latch,
thou must have mustered
all the mental changes
in thy Self
and slain the army
of the thought sensations
that, subtle and insidious,
creep unasked within
the Soul's bright shrine.
If thou would'st not
be slain by them,
then must thou harmless
make thy own creations,
the children of thy thoughts,
unseen, impalpable, that
swarm round humankind,
the progeny and heirs to man
and his terrestrial spoils.
Thou hast to study
the voidness
of the seeming full,
the fullness
of the seeming void.
O fearless Aspirant,
look deep within the well
of thine own heart,
and answer.
Knowest thou of Self
the powers,
O thou perceiver
of external shadows?
If thou dost not –
then art thou lost.
For, on Path fourth,
the lightest breeze
of passion or desire
will stir the steady light
upon the pure white walls
of Soul.
The smallest wave
of longing or regret
for Maya's gifts illusive,
along Antaskarana –
the path that lies between
thy Spirit and thy self,
the highway of sensations,
the rude arousers
of Ahankara
(the “I-am-ness”) –
a thought as fleeting
as the lightning flash
will make thee
thy three prizes forfeit –
the prizes thou hast won.
For know, that the Eternal
knows no change.
"The eight dire miseries
forsake for evermore.
If not, to wisdom, sure,
thou can'st not come,
nor yet to liberation,"
saith the great Lord,
the Tathagata of perfection, "
he who has followed
in the footsteps
of his predecessors.".
Stern and exacting
is the virtue of Viraga.
If thou its path
would'st master,
thou must keep thy mind
and thy perceptions
far freer than before
from killing action.
Thou hast to saturate
thyself with pure Alaya
(the eight consciousness
or the storehouse
consciousness),
become as one with
Nature's Soul-Thought.
At one with it
thou art invincible;
in separation,
thou becomest
the playground of Samvriti
(one of the two truths
which demonstrates
the illusive character or
emptiness of all things),
origin of
all the world's delusions.
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