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Path, The
The "Path" represents an important theosophical
teaching. The term is used in different senses to denote not just the Path
itself but also the Probationary Path along which a man must journey before
he can enter the former. Impelled by the profound longing for the highest,
for service of God and his fellows, man first starts this journey by devoting
himself wholeheartedly to this service. When entering upon the Probationary
Path, he become the chela or disciple of one of the Masters or Perfected
men who have all finished the great journey, and he devotes himself to the
acquiring of four qualifications: (1) knowledge of only what is real; (2)
rejection of what is unreal; (3) the six mental attributes of control over
thought, control over outward action, tolerance, endurance, faith, and balance,
these attributes though all necessary in some degree, not being necessary
in perfect degree; and (4) the desire to be one with God. During this period
of his efforts to acquire the qualifications, the chela advances in many
ways, for his Master imparts to him wise counsel; he is taught by meditation to attain divine heights unthought
of by ordinary men; he constantly works for the betterment of his fellows;
usually in the hours of sleep, and striving thus and in similar directions,
he fits himself for the first initiation
at the entrance to the Path proper, but it may be mentioned that he has
the opportunity either during his probation or afterwards to forego the
heavenly life that is his due and so to allow the world to benefit by the
powers that he has gained, and which in ordinary course, he would utilize
in the heavenly life. In this case, he remains in the astral
world, from whence he makes frequent returns to the physical world.
Of initiations there are four, each at the beginning of a new stage on the
Path, manifesting the knowledge of that stage. On the first stage there
are three obstacles or, as they are commonly termed, fetters, (see Sanyojanas) which must be realized only to
be an illusion; doubt which must be cleared away by knowledge; and superstition
which must be cleared away by the discovery of what in truth is real. This
stage traversed, the second initiation follows, and after this comes the
consciousness that earthly life will be short, that only once again will
physical death be experienced, and the man begins more and more to function
in his mental body. After the third initiation, the man has two other fetters
to unloose-desire and aversion; and now his knowledge becomes keen and piercing
and he can gaze deep into the heart of things. After the fourth initiation,
he enters on the last stage and finally frees himself of what fetters that
remain--the desire for life whether bodily or not, and the sense of individual
difference from his fellows. He has now reached the end of his journey,
and is no longer troubled by sin or anything that can hinder him from entering
the state of supreme bliss where he is reunited with the divine consciousness.
A.G.H.