The Theosophical Society,
The Writings of C Jinarajadasa
The
Hidden Work of Nature
First Published 1915
Never, in the history of mankind, has there been a time as to-day when it could
be so truly said that,
The
old order changeth, yielding place to new,
And God fulfils Himself in many ways,
Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.
It is true that “the man in the street”
knows of no such great change ; life for him moves as of
old in its fixed grooves, and if the world’s progress has multiplied for him
life’s conveniences, it has also multiplied for him life’s needs. Change to him
is largely a matter of a surplus of comforts over pains, and in this regard the
old order has changed but little for him. But the man in the library, the
laboratory, the studio, the pulpit, is aware of the great change, and he knows
that it began with the work of
The importance of the work of modern scientists lies in the fact that they have
marshaled for us the events of nature into an orderly pageant of evolution.
What exoteric religion has not been able to do, science has achieved, and that
is to show Life as one. Technological trinities of Creator, Creation, and
Creature, or dualities of God and Man, have not unified life for us in the way
science has done. Mysticism alone, with its truth of the Immanence, has
revealed to men something of that unified existence of all that is, which is
the logical deduction from modern evolutionary theories.
When we contemplate the pageant of nature, we see her at a work of building and
un-building. From mineral to bacterium and plant, from microbe to animal and
man, nature is busy at a visible work, step by step evolving higher and more complex
structures. Though she may seem at first sight to work blindly and
mechanically, she has in reality a coherent plan of action. Her plan is to
evolve structures stage by stage, so that the amount of time needed by a given
creature for its self-protection and sustenance may be less and less with each
successive generation. The higher the structure is in its organization and
adaptability, the more time, and hence more energy, there is free for other
purposes of life than sustenance and procreation.
Two elements in life arise from the perfection of the structural mechanism
which the higher order of creatures reveals. First, they have time for play,
for it is in play that such energy manifests as is not required for gaining
food and shelter. The second element manifests itself only when human beings
appear in evolution, and men begin to show a desire for adaptability.
Adaptability to environment exists in the plant and in the animal, but it is in
them purely instinctive or mechanical; with man on the other hand there is an
attempt at conscious adaptability.
When this desire for adaptability increases, nature reveals a
new principle of evolution. To the principle of the survival of the
fittest by a struggle for existence, she adds the new one of evolution by
interdependence. Therefore we find human units aggregating themselves into
groups, and primitive men organizing themselves into families and tribes.
Once more this means a saving of labor and time in the material struggle for
existence. Some of both is now at nature’s disposal,
to train men to discover new ways of life and action. To the play of the
individual, there is added a communal life which makes civilization possible.
For civilization means that some individuals in a community are dissatisfied
with what contents all the others, and that therefore they are burning with a
zeal for reform, and the spirit of reform sooner or
later is inevitable in evolution. The survival of the fittest can only come
about by that mysterious arrival of the fittest which no scientist can explain.
Nature now ushers in “the fittest” in the few who are planning for reform. For
reform means that organisms will consciously adapt themselves more and more to
the exigencies of environment, for to each successive change to greater
adaptability nature has something new to give.
Thus individual men and women become nature’s tools; she works with their
hearts and minds and hands to create social and political activities. Religion
and science and art appear among men; the struggle for existence is no longer
nature’s sole means for bringing to realization her aim ; interdependence of
units, and therewith reform, are the means which she uses now.
Then it is that nature proclaims to men that message which she has kept for
them through the ages. It is the joy of social service. Strange and unreal, as
yet, to most men is the thought of such joy. But evolution has only lately
entered on this phase of her work, and ages must yet elapse before social
service becomes instinctive in men as are now self-assertion and selfishness.
That day must inevitably be the handful of reformers today
are as the “missing links” of a chain which stretches forward from man
to superman. As, from the isolation and selfishness of the of
the brute, nature has evolved the interdependence of men, so too, is
self-sacrifice the next logical step in her evolutionary Self-revelation.
A more inspiring picture there could hardly be than this, of nature at work on
her building and un-building. Yet there are not a few dark shadows in the
picture. So long as the individual lives only the few brief years of his life,
so long as nothing of him remains as an individual after his death, there is a ruthlessness about nature which is appalling. Where is
today “the glory that was
So long as we contemplate nature’s visible work only, not the greatest
altruist but must now and then feel the shadow of great despair. That which
alone makes life and self-sacrifice real and inspiring to great souls — the thought
and the feeling that their work will endure forever — is lacking when we
consider nature’s work in the light of modern science alone. Yet many an
altruist would be content to die, and be nothing thereafter, if he could but
feel that nature had some pity for his fate. Well the poet voices the feeling
which arises from the conception of nature, or of a deity who is as passionless
as nature; -
Life
is pleasant, and friends may be nigh,
Fain would I speak one word and be spared ;
Yet I could be silent and cheerfully die,
If I were only sure God cared;
If I had faith and were only certain
That light is behind that terrible curtain.
It is here that Theosophy steps in to continue the work of science, and explain
the true significance of nature’s manifestations. As modern science points to
nature’s visible work, so Theosophy points to a Hidden Work of Nature.
There is a hidden Light which reveals to men that nature is but one expression
of a Consciousness at work ; that this Consciousness
is at work with a Plan of evolution; and that this Consciousness carries out
its plan through us and through us alone. The moment that we realize the
significance of this message of the Hidden Light, that men are immortal souls
and not perishable bodies, we begin to see that, while careful of the type,
nature is not less careful of the single life too. For then we see that
nature’s latest phase, a fullness of life through social service, necessarily
involves the recognition of men as souls; for it would be useless for nature
slowly to fashion a reformer, unless she could utilize his ability and
experience for greater reforms in the future.
That his
specialized abilities shall not be dissipated would surely then be logical, in
a nature for which we postulate an aim which persists from age to age.
It does not require much profound thought or speculation to deduce from this
view of nature’s work that men live for ever as souls, and that, through
reincarnation, they become fitter tools in nature’s hands to achieve her
purpose of evolution. Let but reincarnation be considered a part of nature’s
plan, and at once the tragedy of nature transforms itself into an inspiring and
stately pageant. For then the future is ourselves ; it
is we who shall make the glorious utopias of dreams; we who painfully toil
today to fashion bricks for nature’s beautiful edifice in far-off days; we, and
not others, shall see that edifice in its splendor, and be its very possessors.
Though the spirit of action of the best of us is ever a sic vos non vobis, “thus ye work,
but not for yourselves”, yet in reality, like bread cast upon the waters, our
work shall greet us ages hence, and we shall then be glad that we have toiled
so well now.
So comes to us the message of the Hidden Light that nature is consciously going
from good to better, from better to best, and that she works out her splendid
purpose through us, who may become her ministers, or must be her slaves.
The spirit of reform, then, being a part of the evolutionary process, the next
point to note is that in all effective reform there are two elements: first the
reform is brought about by individuals working as a group, and second, the
group has a leader. It is fairly easy to understand the grouping of individuals
to co-operate for a common aim as a part of nature’s evolutionary plan; their
united action but expresses the social instinct. But it is perhaps less easy to
see that nature selects the leader, and sends him to a particular group
to crystallize its dreams and plans into organization and action. Yet this is
the message of the Hidden Light — that a leader does not appear by a mere
concatenation of chance circumstances, but only because he is selected for a
particular work, and is sent to do it. For a leader does not come in evolution
as a “sport” – a passing variant produced nobody knows how; he is fashioned by
a slow laborious process lasting thousands of years. Life after life, in a
process of rebirth, the would-be leader must earn his future position by
dedication to works of reform ; by little actions for
reform as a savage, by larger actions as a civilized man, he trains himself for
the role which nature has written for him.
If we look at reformers in the light of reincarnation, we shall see that their
present ability to lead is simply the result of work done in past lives. Since
biologists are agreed that acquired characters are not transmissible, we must
look for that rare inborn capacity to lead, not in the heredity of the
organism, but in a spiritual heredity which is in the life and in the
consciousness of the individual. This is exactly what reincarnation says ; the individual acquired his ability to lead today
only be endeavors to lead many a past life, and by partial successes at least
in so doing.
Furthermore, the Hidden Light reveals to us that each present movement for
reform was rehearsed in many a primitive setting long ago, with the present
leaders and their coadjutors as actors. We need but look at the reform
movements for the amelioration of the lot of the working classes in
So nature plans and achieves, and the stately pageant moves on. But her purpose
is not achieved slowly and leisurely , adding change
to change; she does not bring about a new order of things by an accumulation of
small changes. Nature goes by leaps, per saltum;
and as in the biological world crises appear, and nature makes a leap and
ushers in new species, so too is it in the world of human affairs. Though there
is a slow steady upward movement for progress through reform, yet now and then
there is a crisis in the affairs of men. Then things happen, and after the
crisis is over, there is, as it were, a new species of
human activity. Reform takes a new trend, and a whole host of new reforms are
ushered in to make life fuller and nobler.
One such crisis in human affairs came in
So too was it in India, six centuries before Christ ; another “dreamer”
appeared, Siddhartha, Prince of the Satya clan. Men
listened to Him and loved Him and followed Him, but they little dreamed that He
was in reality building an Empire of Righteousness, which even after
twenty-five centuries should embrace within it five hundred millions of souls.
To the critics of His time, he was but another “Teacher”, one of hundreds then
living in
Every so often, then, there is a climax in human affairs, and always such a
climax is preceded by an age when men “dream dreams.” In
In every such climax, small or great, the resolution of the crisis comes
through the intermediary of a Personality. For as nature
weaves the tangled knot of human fate, “nowise moved except unto the working
out of doom,” she plans too the Solver of the knot. For every crisis
which is of her planning, she has prepared the Man who holds the solution in
his heart and brain.
In this out twentieth century, men dream dreams as never heretofore. East and
West, North and South, the machinery of human life grates on the ear, and there
is not a single man or woman of true imagination who can say, “God’s in his
heaven, All’s right with the world!” De profundis clamari better describes the wail of every nation.
Millions are spent on armies and navies, while the poor are clamouring
for bread ; and statesmen themselves are wringing
their hands that they cannot give a nation’s wealth back to the nation in
hospitals and schools and fair gardens and clean habitations. For there are “wars and rumors of wars.” The spirit of
charity grows year by year, but it seems as though charity but added patches to
a rotting garment, and the more the patches which are put on the more the rents
appear. Strife between capital and labor, race hatred between white and brown
and yellow and black, a deadlock between science and religion, and more than
all else, the increasing luxury of the few and the increasing misery of the
many, these are but a few of the problems facing philanthropists today.
Every reformer realizes, in whatever department he works, that for lasting
reform a complete reconstruction is needed of the whole social structure, if
poverty, disease and ignorance and misery shall be as a nightmare that has been
but shall never be again. All are eager for reform ;
thousands are willing to co-operate. But none knows where to begin, in the true
reconstruction. Each is indeed terrified, lest in trying to pull one brick out
of the social edifice, to replace it by a better, he may
pull the whole structure down, and so cause misery instead of joy.
This is the crisis present before our eyes, confronting not one nation, but
all. “Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord,” is true today as never
before.
Everywhere, in every department where men work for reform, mean are looking for a Leader. Where is He whom nature has selected,in whose mind is the
Plan, in whose is the spirit and in whose hand is the Power? Let him but
appear, let him but say, “This is how you shall work,” and thousands will flock
to Him in joy. And it is this message of the Hidden Light that He is ready, for
when from the hearts of men a cry goes forth, from the bosom of God a Son shall
come. The world is in the birth throes once again for the coming of the Son of
Man, and the young men who see visions today shall in their prime find Him in
their midst, the Wonderful, the Councillor, the
Prince of Peace.
Never
an age, when God has need of him,
Shall want its man, predestined by that need,
To pour his life in fiery word and deed,
The great
When He, whom the world waits for, and
whom nature has planned to come “unto this hour,” shall appear, what will be
His work? What but to carry on nature’s work one step further? The day is past
when men can go forward with competition as their cry of progress
; nothing lasting can now come for men unless it is brought about by
interdependence and co-operation. The best of men today see the inevitable
coming of this new age, when men shall be sons of God in deed and not merely in
name; but their cry for altruism and co-operation is as a voice cast in the
teeth of the tempest. They can but gather round them here an enthusiast and
there a disciple ; but they accomplish little, for
they lack the character which compels the world to listen. Till comes that
Personality who is not of one nation but of all, whose message is not for this
century alone but for all others to come ; till then the dawn of the new day
will drag its slow length along. But when He comes, then indeed what He says
and what He does will be the proof to us that it is He and not another, whom
nature has planned to be the Shadow of God upon earth to men, the Savior who is
born unto them this day.
Then once more shall the Hidden Light be
revealed to men, that Light that “shineth in
darkness, and the darkness comprehended it not.” Then science shall be our
religion, and religion our art ; then shall we cease
to be nature’s slaves, and enter upon our heritage, and become her councillors and guides. Then shall we know, not merely believe, that behind the seeming pitiless plan of nature
there is a most pitiful Mind, careful of the type and careful of the single
life too. Nevermore shall our eyes be blinded by passionate tears as we look at
the misery of men, and feel the utter hopelessness of its effective diminution ; for we shall know that nature but veils an Eye
that sees, a Heart that feels, and a Mind that plans, for One shall be with us
to be a Martyros, a Witness, of that Light
that shineth in darkness, even when the darkness
comprehends it not.
He will call on the many to co-operate in all good works “in His name and for
the love of mankind”; He will teach them the next lesson which nature has
planned for them, the joy of neighbourly service. But
to a few He will give the call to follow Him through the ages. For He comes to
usher in a new age ; that age must be tended and fostered decade after decade,
century by century, till the seed becomes the tree and the tree bears flowers,
and by the perfecting of man comes the fulfillment of God. As He is nature’s
husbandman, so will he need helpers in those fields from whence alone comes the
Daily Bread for men.
The many will love Him for the peace and joy which He will bring
; but a few will answer the call to follow Him life after Life, toiling,
toiling in a work seemingly without end. To these few alone will be it given to
know the inwardness of the message of the Hidden Light. It is that nature keeps
her diadems not for those who reap happiness in her pleasant fields and
gardens, but for those who co-operate with her in her Hidden Work, and try “to
lift a little of the heavy karma of the world.” For this is Nature’s Hidden
Work, to weave a vesture out of the karmas of men which shall reflect the
pattern given her from on high ; and the weaving halts, unperfected, till
through the actions of all men there shall shine one great Action. When the
perfect vesture is woven for him who desires it, and the karmas of all men act
in unison, then, and not before, will come “that day” when Nature can say to
all men, as now to her God : “I am in my Father, and
ye in me and I in you.” Unto that hour she toils at her Hidden Work, and it is
the Hidden Light which reveals to men her process of evolution as she shapes in
moulds of dust immortal Sons of God.
History
of the Theosophical Society
Quick Explanations with Links to More Detailed Info
What is Theosophy ? Theosophy Defined (More Detail)
Three Fundamental Propositions Key Concepts of Theosophy
Cosmogenesis Anthropogenesis Root Races
Ascended Masters After Death States
The Seven Principles of Man Karma
Reincarnation Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Colonel Henry Steel Olcott William Quan Judge
The Start of the Theosophical Society
History of the Theosophical Society
Theosophical Society Presidents
History of the Theosophical Society in Wales
The Three Objectives of the Theosophical
Society
Explanation of the Theosophical Society
Emblem
The Theosophical Order of Service (TOS)
Glossaries of Theosophical Terms
Quotes from the Writings of
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
The Secret Doctrine , Volume
2, Page 100
It is only by the attractive force of the contrasts
that the two opposites — Spirit and Matter — can be cemented together on
Earth, and, smelted in the fire of self-conscious experience and suffering, find
themselves wedded in Eternity.
The Secret Doctrine , Volume
2, Page 108
It is the motive, and the motive alone, which makes
any exercise of power become black, malignant, or white, beneficent Magic. It is
impossible to employ spiritual forces if there is the slightest tinge of
selfishness remaining in the operator .... The powers
and forces of animal nature can equally be used by the selfish and revengeful,
as by the unselfish and the all-forgiving; the powers and forces of spirit lend
themselves only to the perfectly pure in heart — and this is Divine Magic.
Isis Unveiled, Volume 1, Page 36
The Secret Doctrine
, Volume 3, Page 14
Even ignorance is better than
Head-learning with no Soul-wisdom to illuminate and guide it.
The
Voice of the Silence, Page 43
Annotation - The
Path, May, 1888
The Secret Doctrine , Proem [Volume 1], Page 35
Isis Unveiled,
Volume 1, Page 210
The Secret Doctrine , Volume 1, Page 134
Oaths will never be binding till each man will fully understand that humanity is the highest manifestation on earth of the Unseen Supreme Deity, and each man anincarnation of his God; and when the sense of personal responsibility will be so
developed in him that he will consider forswearing the greatest possible insult to himself, as well as to humanity. No oath is now binding, unless taken by one who, without any oath at all, would solemnly keep his simple promise of honour.Isis Unveiled,
Volume 2, Page 374
It is the motive,
and the motive alone, which makes any exercise of power become black, malignant,
or white, beneficent Magic. It is impossible to employ spiritual forces if
there is the slightest tinge of selfishness remaining in the operator
.... The powers and forces of animal nature can equally be used by the
selfish and revengeful, as by the unselfish and the all-forgiving; the powers
and forces of spirit lend themselves only to the perfectly pure in heart — and
this is Divine Magic.
The Secret Doctrine , Volume 2, Page 498
Isis Unveiled,
Volume 1, Page 36
From strength to
strength, from the beauty and perfection of one plane to the greater beauty
and perfection of another, with accessions of new glory, of fresh knowledge and
power in each cycle, such is the destiny of every Ego, which thus becomes its own saviour in each world and incarnation.
The Key to
Theosophy, Page 105
The Secret Doctrine , Volume 1, Page 69
The mind receives
indelible impressions even from chance acquaintance or persons encountered but
once. As a few seconds' exposure of the sensitized photographic plate is all
that is requisite to preserve indefinitely the image of the sitter, so is it
with the mind.
Isis Unveiled,
Volume 1, Page 311
The Key to Theosophy, Page 228
The Theosophical Society,