TREATISE ON WHITE MAGIC


TREATISE ON WHITE MAGIC
This book contains the Fifteen Rules for Magic, and for soul control, based on these words in the Bhagavad-Gita: "Though I am Unborn, the Soul that passes not away, though I am the Lord of Being, yet as Lord over My nature I become manifest, through the magical power of the Soul."
The soul unmanifest in its essential being, manifest through the nature of its personality equipment, is always a source of mystery. It evades the analytical concrete mind: it reveals its true self to the illumined mind fused with the open heart, seeking not to grasp and to hold for personal progress, but to wield the magical power in service. The power of the soul is always available to the one who seeks, as an aspirant to accepted discipleship, to become of practical service in his own peculiar times, state and environment.
A Treatise On White Magic
Throughout the whole of this
series of books runs a single thread uniting various aspects of life and
specialised activities within the Plan for man. This is the thread of
consciousness, evolving in man through the efforts of the soul to
contact and control its personality equipment; and evolving within the
planet as the centre Hierarchy becomes increasingly able to impress the
Plan on the miuds of men.
This book, therefore, contains the Fifteen
Rules for Magic, and for soul control, based on these words in the
Bhagavad-Gita: "Though I am Unborn, the Soul that passes not away,
though I am the Lord of Being, yet as Lord over My nature I become
manifest, through the magical power of the Soul."
The soul
unmanifest in its essential being, manifest through the nature of its
personality equipment, is always a source of mystery. It evades the
analytical concrete mind: it reveals its true self to the illumined mind
fused with the open heart, seeking not to grasp and to hold for
personal progress, but to wield the magical power in service. The power
of the soul is always available to the one who seeks, as an aspirant to
accepted discipleship, to become of practical service in his own
peculiar times, state and environment.
The teaching in this book is based on four fundamental postulates which will:
1. Teach the laws of spiritual psychology as distinguished from mental and emotional psychology.
2.
Make clear the nature of the soul of man and its systentic and cosmic
relationships. This will include its group relationship as a preliminary
step.
3. Demonstrate the relations between the self and the sheaths
which that self may use, and thus clarify thought as to the constitution
of man.
4. Elucidate the problem of supernormal powers and give the rules for their safe and useful devaopment.
Through these underlying postulates runs the theme of energy,
of the one informing life as a centre of energy, pervading and uniting
all within the divine flow. Man is essentially and inherently divine;
and the soul, the centre of consciousness, the result of the pervasive
union of Spirit with matter, is the means whereby man evolves a
consciousness of divinity and unity, redeems the gross matter of his
vehicles and liberates the pure flame of life energy from the limitation
of form. The soul is the vital link, therefore, between God and man.
The
book closes with a rousing call to the soul in all aspirants: "I close
with an appeal to all who read these instructions, to rally their
forces, to renew their vows of dedication to the service of humanity, to
subordinate their own ideas and wishes to the group good, to take their
eyes off themselves and fix them anew upon the vision, . . . Let all
students make up their minds in this day of emergency and of opportunity
to sacrifice all they have to the helping of humanity. . . . I call
upon all of you to join the strenuous efforts of the Great Ones."