THE
title of my talk to you today was given to me, chosen
for me, possibly because the subject is the one in which
I have specialised, the one in which I find the easiest
mode of expression. For each one of us must find the road
by which the Self can manifest, choosing the subject
according to the bent of his mind and the type of his
temperament. But if I might have chosen the title for myself
I would have changed only one letter and instead of speaking
on " Life as Ceremonial" I would have said
“Life is Ceremonial". For that is what life
appears to me, one great gorgeous ceremonial in which, with
attention to every smallest detail, one endeavours to carry
out the great Plan, the Plan conceived by the Logos when
He came forth into manifestation, creating matter that it
might be vivified and informed with His Life and become a
veritable manifestation of Himself. And so into matter He [page
2] breathed
the Divine Spark, shielded and encased It, that eventually
It might shine through more gloriously in that to which It
had given Life.
The Great Plan is the Reality towards which
we are all groping, feebly, blindly, constantly losing our
way, and yet led by the Light which shines within each one
of us, which dimly we see and follow. If we would take part
in the carrying out of that Great Plan, we must strive for
some understanding of it; and thither surely our studies
in the Divine Wisdom will lead us until at long last we learn
to co-operate with the Supreme Will in evolution — the
evolution of that matter in which the Self is encased, that
matter through which and by which we learn, through which
and by which we shall come to complete
self-consciousness. For
here is the real Crucifixion, the great Sacrifice — the sacro facio — in
which we lay ourselves on the Altar and make all holy
by the utter giving of ourselves in service, service
to all that lives, in all of which is the Divine Life
of the Logos, who has manifested Himself in this world
of matter, that each tiniest atom may know itself as
Divine, Eternal. And the manner of our giving ? That
is for each one of us — the
manifested Divine spark-to determine. For myself [page
3] I choose the way of
ceremonial, for to me that is the easiest mode of expression,
the easiest method of work, and I believe strongly in the
conservation of energy. Each one of us has only a certain
amount of energy, of strength, and it behoves us to use that
power to the best of our ability and to use any and every
means available to attain our end, the making of our personality,
of our lower bodies, the perfect expression of the Divine
within us. Therefore I choose ceremonial as the easiest way,
the way of least resistance, the way by which all my bodies
are attuned to like vibrations that so there may be no obstacle
to the passage through the encasing sheaths of matter, and
the Divine Life may shine through, glorious and complete,
proving that Spirit and Matter are but the two poles of the
one great glorious Reality, the manifestation of the Great
Eternal Life.
More
than once our great Leaders have spoken to us of the important
part that ceremonial will play in the coming new civilisation,
and so, partly for that reason but also because I love
the order, the rhythm, the dignity of ceremonial, I have
set myself to study it, to find out the uses, the value,
the purposes of it, and how I may adapt it to my daily
life. The word ceremonial comes to us through the [page
4] French
from the Latin kaeremonia, from the root kar, meaning
to act or to do; that is, the translation into action of
our thoughts, of our ideals, of the Self within us. That
surely is our work as Theosophists. Yet so often I hear from
members of the Theosophical Society: "But I do not like
ceremonial, I like life to be plain and simple". Yes,
but we cannot get away from ceremonial. In this wonderful
gathering of members from all over Europe, has there not
been a very elaborate and carefully thought-out ceremonial,
to make of this Congress a settled plan of action, that step
by step shall lead the various units to realise the greatness
of the Plan, to make plain to them the reality of the brotherhood,
that however diverse the nationality or the individuality,
is yet manifest in the
common aim, the common goal, the common service ? Have
not the members of the various committees worked hard
and faithfully that the material comforts of the visitors
may be assured, that the various branches of our organisation
may be adequately represented, that the spiritual needs
of all may be satisfied ? Yet in all this, have they not
only followed the ways of the Great Hierarchy Itself,
where there is a great and wondrous ceremonial, in
which Each holds His own place [page
5] and
carries out the particular work of His own office,
working according to the Great Plan and obedient to the
wishes of the Logos ?
In
the Theosophical Society there is a ceremony of admission,
sometimes omitted, but when practised, very distinctly
a ceremony, worked according to an arranged plan. Even
in the Order of the Star in the East, [ Since disbanded] – least
ceremonious of Orders, there is a ceremony of meditation,
for one deliberately orders the attitude of body, emotions
and mind before getting into touch with the Higher Self;
there is an ordered harmony, a very deliberate taking
hold of every part of one's being. In how many households,
Catholic, Anglican, Non-conformist, is not the taking
of food, the commonest action of our daily life, transformed
into a ceremony, because it is prefaced by a grace and
concluded by a set form of thanks, that our physical
bodies, composed of matter and nourished by matter, may,
in a world of matter, become competent vehicles for the
living soul within and fit to carry out the work of the
Self? Always
religion has expressed itself in ceremonial, more or less elaborate
according to nationality and temperament; always the ideals
of the people have shown themselves in the [page
6] common acts of daily life; always religion has been
the moving spirit and the life of a Nation; and woe betide
that nation that shuts out religion, that substitutes materialism
for the Spirit that gives the Life. For the end is Death,
a mere existence of the form which in time must surely perish
without the life which alone makes the form possible. For the
form is merely an expression of life and once the life is withdrawn,
the form must disintegrate and cease to be. Truly the form
in itself and without the ensouling life within may be unimportant,
but as a visible expression of that which it represents, the
correctness of a form is essential. For
us Theosophists, the form is important, for, in a world
of matter, only by the form can we manifest the Divine
Life that is within us. For the whole purpose of evolution
is unity with the Divine, the desire to express the unity
that lies behind diversity, and this great truth — that
we are one with the Divine Life — Plotinus
realised when, almost in his last words, he stated that
he would bear the Divine within him to the Divine in
the Universe. So
must we thus build the form that it shall truly be the expression
of the Self. Here ceremonial comes to our aid and teaches us
how to build the form with the least expenditure of energy;
for the ceremonialist [page
7] makes use of any and every
means to this end that he may not unnecessarily waste his
strength. Not only does he use all external means, but quite
consciously and deliberately he makes use of the unseen forces
in the Universe, those which we sometimes call angelic forces,
as well as the Elemental Kingdoms.
Now I am going to specialise
on one form of ceremonial, that which I know best, and in which
I, the real me, find the easiest mode of expression. I speak
of Masonry, that great and wonderful exposition of Truth, which
explains the mysteries of Life and Death; which makes plain
the great teaching and plan of evolution; which leads man
from darkness to Light; which makes him know himself as Divine,
learning, suffering, giving in uttermost service, that
in the end darkness may be conquered and the Light may shine
forth. That light is made visible through the ceremonies of
Masonry, and is there seen glorious, triumphant, making the
Path visible to all, with helping, loving hands outstretched
an the way that none may fail to reach the goal. There
is no lesson that Masonry cannot teach, no difficulty,
no problem that Masonry cannot solve, for to the weakest
and to the strongest, its training is complete and thorough;
it trains physical body, emotions and [page
8] mind until
they become perfect expressions of the Self, each working
to its highest capacity, each
utterly responsive to the Will of the Divine.
The training is very gradual, a slow
and careful quickening of the vibrations in the matter of
which our bodies are composed. It is a truism that the greatest
characteristic of matter is inertia. We recognise in Masonry
that the Higher Triad of Spirit works through the lower quaternary
of physical body, emotional body, lower and higher mental
bodies, and so we set ourselves to make of that lower quaternary
an expression of the Self and so to train and purify it,
that by quickening the vibrations of that lower quaternary,
it may come to the highest possible power of expression.
The normal rate of vibration in matter is very slow, but
consider the manner of quickening that rate. An
action is performed and the imposition of the Will of the
man that has caused that action results in the quickening
of the rate of vibration in the physical body; an emotion
is carefully fostered in the astral body and the same thing
happens to the matter of which that body is composed; a thought
is carefully considered and again the rate of vibration is
increased in the matter of the [page
9] mental body. At each
of our Masonic meetings, at each ceremony, we deliberately
quicken slightly the normal rate of vibration by the impress
of the Will and beyond that, the power of the Self; until
gradually by continual repetitions this habit of a quicker
rate is set up, and so,
as the worn-out particles of matter are thrown aside we take
in those that can respond to the higher rate at which our
bodies are now vibrating. Thus, by these continually repeated
efforts at ceremony after ceremony, we build our bodies of
finer and finer matter, until at last each body will be composed
of the seventh sub-plane of its own type of matter, perfectly
responsive to the Will of the Self, its evolution completed,
the outpouring of the Logos manifested in full glory. That
is our goal, that towards
which we aim, the accomplishment to which we have set our
hands.
The
means? Of some I may not speak, but of some of our methods
of work I will tell you. The first lesson we learn is
that when we enter the Temple to do our work as Masons
we must leave our difficult personalities outside and
work in harmony with our brothers, meeting in the common
interest and on the common ground of Masonry ; for in
Masonic ceremonial we are trying to manifest our ideals
through the
[page 10] common
language of symbols instead of through the various languages
of nations. For the great symbols are universal in their
form, universal in their application, and neither language,
nation nor sex can be any bar to their understanding
and to their expressions. In them can be shown forth
the thoughts of all, the aspirations of all, and so,
working together to express our ideals through the impersonal,
universal language of symbols we learn in Masonry our
first lesson, — the
reality and not merely the intellectual or emotional concept
of Brotherhood, the Oneness, the Unity of Humanity, in the
lessons to be learned, in its hopes, in its aims.
The
next lesson we learn is the value of rhythmic, concerted
action. The value of rhythm in action is now beginning
to be generally recognised, as may be seen by the rapid
spread of the teaching of eurhythmics in our schools.
Listening to music played to them the children learn
to feel the joy or the sorrow in that music, to understand
the thought expressed in sound, and then to translate that
understanding of feeling and thought into movements and
actions of the physical body. So the physical, astral
and mental bodies are brought into harmony and work in unity,
all striving to express the same idea, and so [page
11] setting up rhythmic vibrations in all three
bodies. That is the first value of rhythmic action. Secondly,
in ceremonial we learn the value of concerted action
combined with rhythm, where a large body of people, with
understanding of the work they are doing, move, feel and
think alike, using a symbol or a set form of words and
actions to express an idea. No one who has been present
at a Masonic ceremony where each member knows and understands
what is behind the form of the ceremony can be insensible
of the effect produced upon the candidate; it is not
only that he is conscious of the earnestness and sincerity
of those around him, but you will find if you question
him afterwards, that he received definite
impressions of that which lay behind speech and actions. So
the very real power of thought, in which we all believe,
is made manifest in ceremonial by the unity of thought
of a large number of people being translated into unity
of action and so gaining, with comparatively slight individual
effort, a strength and a force that one single person,
however strong in concentration, can rarely attain. The
strength of one is so small, the combined strength of
many so great. There is so much work to be done that
we must all use our powers in the [page
12] wisest
manner, and with as little expenditure of our strength
as possible. In this we are only following the example
of the Masters Themselves, Whose energy and strength,
great though they may appear to us, yet have their limitations,
and so when some great work is to be accomplished, They
combine and work together. And where They lead, shall
we not follow ?
Thirdly, rhythmic concerted action gives
the power
of vision and that vision is necessary if we would carry
out that which we have so often been told, that we must
see big, think big and act big. For it is by the power
of that wonderful vision that we establish the perfect harmonic
vibrations of all our bodies which make it possible for
the Light to shine through without obstacle, irradiating
all the dark and obscure places, so that the mind of
man, freed from the maya of illusion, sees the great
Realities, and knows the pairs of opposites as one in
essence, though two in manifestation. Thus
shall be fulfilled the great purpose of the Logos, to
vivify matter by the sacrifice of the Spirit and thus
show Spirit and Matter as one by the power of the Centre.
Another lesson that we learn in Masonry is to know Something
of our own nature, to [page
13] understand the nature of the material through
which the Self has to work. The Mason should begin his
studies by a knowledge of himself and so learn to know
matter in all its forms, to discover the laws that govern
its various phases, the
forces that act in it, its response to stimuli from without,
its reactions, the systole and diastole as the Life informs
or withdraws from the matter it uses. And the tools put
into his hands with which to work on this matter are
all important, beginning with the simplest and most elementary,
one by one adding others, the whole wonderfully progressive
in their action, fitting the different stages of the
work. It is interesting to note how the tools of the
Mason, the builder, have been used in all ages, even
the most remote in a symbolical sense, as a guide and
help for our daily life. In ancient China there was a
great mystic religion in which the priests wore, as do
our Modern Masons,
aprons of skin and, dependent from a chain round the
neck, a jewel denoting and symbolical of the office held.
In
the Book of History, the oldest of the Chinese
classics, which deals with a period ranging
from the twenty-fourth to the seventh century B.C., there
are many allusions to the symbolism of the tools used
by Masons. In [page
14] another
famous Chinese classic, The Great Learning, about
500 B.C., there is an allusion to acting towards others
as we would wish them to act towards us; and the writer
adds: "This
is called the principle of acting on the square".
Again
in the writings of the great Chinese philosopher, Mencius,
about 300 B.C., it is taught that men should apply the square
and compasses figuratively to their lives, and the marking-line
also, if they would keep within the bounds of honour and
virtue and live upright and cleanly. We find this very clear
statement in Book VI of his philosophy: "A Master - Mason,
in teaching his apprentices, makes use of the compasses and
the square. Ye who are engaged in the pursuit of Wisdom must
also make use of the compasses and square". In the Middle
Ages also the tools of the Mason were used symbolically;
for example, in rebuilding in 1830 a very ancient bridge,
called Baal's Bridge, near Limerick in Ireland, an old brass
square, much corroded, was found under the foundations; and
on its two surfaces was found this inscription, together
with the date 1517: "I will strive to live with love and
care, upon the level by the square". The
rule or measure, was called in ancient Egypt "that [page
15] which
is straight", and
was frequently used as a symbol of the Goddess Maat, Goddess
of Truth. You
all remember the Hall of Judgment in which the soul of the
deceased was led before Osiris, and the heart was laid in the
scales to be weighed by Tehuti against that feather which also
symbolises Maat. And beside the scales stood the Beast of Amenti,
the Devourer of the Unjustified, ready to do his dread duty
if the balance were not equal. I could give many more examples
but these will suffice for the moment. All these tools and
many others are placed before the Mason for his use and he
is taught their symbolical application in all the difficulties
and circumstances of his daily life. Also we learn obedience
to the Great Law which is symbolised by the Master of the Lodge
who stands for Justice and whose commands we must obey.
There
are so many other things we learn also in Masonry: self-control,
restraint, gentleness, consideration for others, poise
and balance, the most exquisite courtesy, obedience to
and respect for authority; in fact, all that goes to
make a gentleman in the best and highest sense of the
word. If
we could carry into our daily life these virtues and
principles that we practise habitually in our Masonic
Temples, the world [page
16] would soon be a very
different place, and would be more fit to receive the Great
Teacher Whom we await so eagerly and for Whose Coming
we long. And yet to some extent, small at present because
we are so slow to learn and the rude material of our
natures needs so many heavy
blows to knock it into shape, yet to some extent, the
lessons learnt in our Temples bear fruit, and in our
daily contact with our fellow-creatures we instinctively
extend towards them the courtesy and gentleness we use in
our ceremonies; the habit of "acting upon the square" becomes
an integral part of us, and the effort to make words
and actions beautiful and harmonious shows itself in
the common dealings of daily life. Sometimes I picture
to myself the world as it might be if we lived our lives
as they are lived during the brief hours of our ceremonies,
and I realise that if I dream this wonderful dream sufficiently
vividly and often enough, it will in very truth become
a reality. For
I believe in dreaming. It is the dreamers who are the real
world-builders. For the dreams of the Mystic are woven and
translated into action by the Occultist, the inspiration of
the artist is shown in colour, in sound and in form, that all
men may see and know the Beautiful; out of the [page
17] dreams of the compassionate are born
the acts of love, of service and of brotherhood, and from
the vision of the Eternal comes the City Beautiful, where every
stone is polished, perfect in shape and form to make flawless
the buildings fashioned in love and selfless service.
This
is my dream. I see a wondrous Temple, shining and spotless,
perfect in all its parts, more beautiful than any building
conceived by the mind of man, vaster than any built by the
hand of man, for it contains all humanity; and it reaches
from North to South, and from East to West, from the highest
point of heaven to the lowest depths of despair and misery
and hell, for none is shut out of that great Temple. Ranged
in orderly array they stand, row upon row in serried ranks,
elder and younger, wise and ignorant, united by the common
bond of humanity, conscious of the brotherhood of common
need and common service, made one in the bond of kinship and
of love. As they stand, there pass before them in gorgeous
ceremonial, arrayed in splendour of colour and glittering flashes
of light, in slow and stately procession, the Great Ones Who
are in charge of this Temple. Slowly
They pass, walking from one point to another, until they have
described a double square, that symbol which in the ancient [page
18] hieroglyphs of Egypt
represented Truth, and which now we know as the double cube,
symbol of the Universe; then, one by one Each passes to His
appointed place and we find the principal officers forming
the Great Triangle of Spirit within that great square. And
of those Three, there is One Who rules and presides, and over
His Head shines the Star and around Him is a great glory of
Light. By right of uttermost service is He in that chair, for
He that is greatest is He that serveth best. Only dimly can
I perceive what follows, but I am conscious of the perfect
and glorious ceremonial in which Each plays His part. Then
the Master speaks. To each one of us listening there it seems
that He speaks individually, for He talks to us out of the
knowledge gained from His own experience; He too has trodden
the path on which we now walk, He too has known the bitter
failures and humiliations, the selfishness, the laziness, the
lack of effort, the resultant suffering, until at last the
lesson is learned and, stumbling sometimes, falling sometimes,
but each time rising again to greater effort, the path of Service
has been trodden; and freedom from re-birth has been won through
the knowledge
that perfect freedom is only found in perfect service. Again
with stately ceremonial [page
19] my dream comes to an end and the Great Ones
pass from my vision, leaving peace and blessing in Their passing.
The teaching given, the truths taught through the symbolism
of that ceremonial remain with me, the more vivid that I have
seen them thus displayed in action, presented to me in drama
and not merely as an intellectual concept. Taking up again
my daily life full of perplexities, full of constant irritations,
misunderstandings, difficulties of all kinds, that vision shines
out strongly before me and I realise that it is opposition
to the Law that makes the difficulties; that if I will but
obey the Law of Service fully and completely, I shall be in
harmony with all that lives.
For Service is the greatest lesson
of all that we learn in our Temples. How beautifully that
is put by our English poet Rudyard Kipling, himself a Mason:
Lift the stone or cleave the wood to make a path more fair or flat,
Lo, it is black already with blood some son of Martha spilled for that.
Not as a ladder from Earth to Heaven, not as an altar to any creed,
But simple Service simply given, to their own kind in their common need. [page 20]
Even
in our most elaborate ceremonial “simple service
simply given" is a marked
characteristic of our work. An officer, for instance,
wants to get rid of something he has been using and,
occupied with what is in front of him, stretches out
his hands behind him and immediately several hands are
outstretched to receive the article,
whatever it may be. It is the simplicity of the service
in ceremonial that is so
wonderful. Quite lately I was working in a Masonic Lodge
which practises what is I
suppose the most elaborate ceremonial of any Lodge in
our Order; but so perfectly was it performed that a
very distinguished visitor who was present said to me
afterwards: "What beautiful working; it was all so
simple". Take for example your
own Kreisler, that greatest of artists, who was born
in Austria and belongs to you but
who is also one of the great gifts given to the world
and in whom we all claim a
share. Listen to his wonderful playing, and the most
intricate and difficult music appears simple because
of his consummate ease in playing. And yet what care
and thought and work have gone to achieve that simplicity
of result, that ease of
technique; what complete mastery there is of the Man
over his vehicles, so
that listening to him one forgets the marvel [page
21] of
technique in the beauty of the thoughts and feelings
shown to us in perfect sound. As
the artist has expressed himself in music, so the ceremonialist
expresses himself in action, and "simple service simply
given" is as natural to him as the manner in
which Kreisler moves his fingers on the strings of his
violin.
And these little acts of
service become instinctive with us who are trained by
ceremonial, so that they become a part of us and are
carried into practice in our work in the outside world,
so that service becomes a recognised part of human life;
and not until service, absolute
and complete, is the very mainspring of our being, is
our work completed.
Every bit
of our training in ceremonial teaches us how to serve,
teaches us to be quick to see
the need of another and instant to respond to that need;
to that end body, emotions
and mind are trained and controlled and the intuition awakened
by continual practice, by strict discipline and obedience; until
by repeated effort alone every atom of
our vehicles becomes responsive to the Will of the
controlling Self. So out of my dream
I build my life among my Brothers, knowing that
life is the action by which the spirit
makes itself manifest and knowing also [page
22] that
unless I can bring into action in my daily life the
lessons learned in the Temple, my Masonry is but a dead
thing and its ceremonial an empty form. But
the habits of right thought and right action get built
into me and made a part of
me by the constant practice of ceremonial, and slowly
but surely the habit of living
in the world of ideals and translating them into action
extends from the limited hours
of those ceremonies into the whole of life; and gradually
the grosser particles of matter that compose my bodies will
be replaced by those finer atoms which alone
can respond to the quickened vibrations imposed by
the Will of the Self as it gains mastery and control
over its vehicles.
This then is what ceremonial does
for me; it
teaches me obedience to Law; it trains me in gradual
evolution; it puts me in touch with the guiding spirit
of Life; it gives me the inspiration of the Self which
alone makes these vehicles or sheaths of matter of value; it
leads me from the unreal to the real and shows me that
by the knowledge and control of
matter — that in which
we work and move. and have our being — the Self
can become more glorious, more
potential, absolutely Lord of all Planes. In short,
it teaches me that I am in [page
23] very
truth the Master of my Fate, that I am the Captain
of my Soul. For
to the ceremonialist who is also a Mason it is in our
Temples that we learn those
God-like qualities which must characterise and distinguish
each one of us before our
evolution is finished, and not until we possess these
can the wheel of re-birth cease
to turn for us. When we have learned that great lesson
of service to all then indeed our
reward shall be great — the greatest reward of
all — the
reward of ever greater service in His holy Temple, that
great Temple of perfected Humanity which has been conceived
and carried out to glorious completion by the Logos, the
Great Architect of the Universe. The temples in which
we work here on earth and where we learn
these great lessons are but faint reflections of that
great glorious Temple of
Humanity in which each stone, wrought by love and almost
incredible sacrifice, is without flaw, perfect in shape,
glorious in beauty. That Temple is the visible creation
of the Great Architect of the Universe, the perfected Plan
of the Logos Who conceived the great truth of Evolution,
Who manifested Himself that all might partake
of His glory, created man that he might become God,
out of His own
super-abounding Life gave Life, that each [page
24] manifestation
of Himself might become as Himself, that through Service
man might learn the lesson of Eternal
Love, that Love which is the truest manifestation of
the Divine, that which is Divinity
itself, the in-breathing and the out-breathing, the
Life of the Logos.
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