The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett - 1923

Masonic, Occult and Esoteric Online Library


The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett - 1923

By A. T. Barker

Appendix

Letter No. CXXX.—From T. Subha Row. States the conditions on which he will give .^.P.S. instruction in Occult Science—wavering state of mind fatal ; 457.

Letter No. CXXXI.—From T. Subha Row. Sinnett gives qualified consent—impossible to give him practical instruction—rules inflexible—the sacrifices demanded by Occult Science—acquisition of psychic powers not the object of occult training—they alone will never secure immortality ; 458. The true aim of Occult Science—prepared to give theoretical instruction only.

 

Letter No. CXXXIL—T. Subba Row—the Rishi M.*s system of training—the first three initiations ; 459. K.H.'s comment. Letter No. CXXXIIL—From H.P.B. Warns A.P.S. of self-deception—dis-cusses his attitude to K.H.'s letter—" Olcott behaved like an ass "—whythe Masters liked Olcott; 460. The S.P.R. and its bugbear Theosophy.Letter No. CXXXIV.—A dictated letter from M. All Theosophists endeavourto correspond with him—do not deserve such privilege; 461. What is ex-pected of them—thousands of Fakirs, Sannyasis, etc., have never seen orheard of them—they are on the path of error—bad physical magneticemanations not insurmountable—faith in God and Gods attract the worstinfluences—the Chohans of darkness preside at Pralayas ; 462. All is contrast in the Universe—the Gods of the bigoted Hindus, Christians, andMohammedans—the work of the Red-caps—Brothers can prolong life butcannot destroy death or evil—details about H.P.B. 's identity; 462. Letter No. CXXXV.—From H.P.B. Explains what she said about sevenobjective planets and septenary chains ; 464

Letter No. CXXXVL—From H.P.B. Sinnett's invitation to her—reasons forrefusing—what she endured—K.H. and M. prepare to work—H.P.B.'shour of triumph approaches—Sinnett does not know the real H.P.B. ; 465.Her inner real self imprisoned—prophecies that Sinnett will one day blas-pheme against K.H.—their benevolent contempt for H.P.B. ; 466. 

Letter No. CXXXVU.—D.K. precipitates a letter phenomenally in H.P.B.'scabin ; 467. Letter No. CXXXVHL—from H.P.B. New battle to be fought—K.H.'sobservations on the T.S.—H.P.B. now accused of fraud—Mahatmasdragged before the public—Hodgson's attitude—hopeless situation—happyDamodar—the land of Bliss ; 468. Hume wants to save the Society—meeting called—his plans—his suggestions rejected—phenomena must beprohibited ; 469. Her physical condition—transmission of letters—ArthurGebhard—dying people do not tell lies—H.P.B. never a deceiver—explainsthe methods of occult transmission of letters; 470-1. H.P.B. "a fraudwith excellent qualities "—explains what happened to Gebhard 's letter—nofraud ; 472. T.S. will live in India but seems doomed in Europ>e—Hodgson's investigation—the opposition of the Padris—her trials—cannot trusther friends ; 473. Propaganda against the Founders—Oakleys adviseH.P.B. to resign—pledges herself not to mention the Masters' names—tryto deserve personal communicaticMi with the Master ; 474. Probably herlast letter. 

Letter No. CXXXIX.—from H.P.B. She urges Sinnett to develop hisintuition—explains about a letter of K.H. which Sinnett suspected; 475.S. asked not to be ungrateful and not to misunderstand—what H.P.B. sawin K.H.'s aura—Prince's Hall meeting a failure; 476. Chelas take theleft-hand path—nearing the end—Gladstone—the Jesuits ; 477. 

Letter No. CXL.—From H.P.B. The Countess a great clairvoyant—H.P.B.describes a vision—K.H. teaches her English—M. sends her back to Europe—parting words of K.H.—she writes Isis Unveiled at K.H.'s dictation—her English; 479. The writing of K.H.'s letters—did he write them himself?—precipitation—either H.P.B. invented the Mahatmas or she did not;480. The Secret Doctrine—truth will triumph—Hume's lies; 481. 

Letter No. CXLL—H.P.B. in Sinnett's hands—Mrs. Leadbeater—Gladstonea Roman Catholic ; 482. The condition of the T.S. in Europe—India—America—the indestructibility of the Society—the efforts of the dugpas— the T.S. in need of quality and not quantity of members—the two courses before the London Lodge—by their fruits shall ye know them ; 483. Worldly society in the L.L.—A.P.S. incapable of perceiving the truth—no inner group consecrated to the truth—the last trial of a Chela ; 484, The necessity of spiritual discernment—nothing can kill the London Lodge except passivity—human dirt never sticks ; 485. Sinnett urged to develop his intuition ; 4S6. 

Letter No. CXLIIa.—Memorandum by Damodar. The Theosophical Society considered a religious sect—if based upon universal Brotherhood the occult study should be secret—sacred knowledge should not be vulgarised—unconsciously misleading the public as to management of the Society—the Adepts do not control the Society—admission of members—fees—phe- nomena hunters ; 486-488. 

Letter No. CXLIIb.—Comment by K.H. on Damodar's memorandum; 488. MARS AND MERCURY. Sinnett reopens the controversy—implications against H.P.B.—Mrs. Besant's statements in Lucifer on the subject—the facts in the light of K.H.'s letter—the misunderstood passage—Mrs. Besant's " categorical statement that Mars and Mercury belong to Earth Chain "—quotations " from the Secret Doctrine "—the whole theory prove false ; 489-92.
 

 

 

Masonic Publishing Company

Purchase This Title

Browse Titles
"If I have seen further than
others, it is by standing
upon the shoulders of giants."

- BROTHER ISAAC NEWTON

Comasonic Logo

Co-Masonry, Co-Freemasonry, Women's Freemasonry, Men and Women, Mixed Masonry

Copyright © 1975-2024 Universal Co-Masonry, The American Federation of Human Rights, Inc. All Rights Reserved.