Invisible helpers - C. W. Leadbeater

Invisible helpers

Original spellings were standardised only when a dominant version was found. Misspellings of words that occur only once have been corrected. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
C. W. LEADBEATER
AMERICAN REVISED EDITION WITH INDEX
CHICAGO: THE THEOSOPHICAL BOOK CONCERN “Krotona,” Hollywood, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA
LONDON: THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY, 3 LANGHAM PLACE BENARES: THE THEOSOPHICAL PUBLISHING SOCIETY MADRAS, THE “THEOSOPHIST” OFFICE, ADYAR.
1915
INVISIBLE HELPERS
It is one of the most beautiful characteristics of Theosophy that it gives back to people in a more rational form everything which was really useful and helpful to them in the religions which they have outgrown. Many who have broken through the chrysalis of blind faith, and mounted on the wings of reason and intuition to the freer, nobler mental life of more exalted levels, nevertheless feel that in the process of this glorious gain a something has been lost—that in giving up the beliefs of their childhood they have also cast aside much of the beauty and the poetry of life.
If, however, their lives in the past have been sufficiently good to earn for them the opportunity of coming under the benign influence of Theosophy, they very soon discover that even in this particular there has been no loss at all, but an exceeding great gain—that the glory and the beauty and the poetry are there in fuller measure than they had ever hoped before, and no longer as a mere pleasant dream from which the cold light of common-sense may at any time rudely awaken them, but as truths of nature which will bear investigation—which become only brighter, fuller and more perfect as they are more accurately understood.
A marked instance of this beneficent action of Theosophy is the way in which the invisible world (which, before the great wave of materialism engulfed us, used to be regarded as the source of all living help) has been restored by it to modern life. All the charming folk-lore of the elf, the brownie and the gnome, of the spirits of air and water, of the forest, the mountain and the mine, is shown by it to be no more meaningless superstition, but to have a basis of actual and scientific fact behind it. Its answer to the great fundamental question “If a man die, shall he live again?” is equally definite and scientific, and its teaching on the nature and conditions of the life after death throws a flood of light upon much that, for the Western world at least, was previously wrapped in impenetrable darkness.

C. W. Leadbeater
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Язык

Английский

Год издания

2023-02-19

Темы

Theosophy

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