The Key to Theosophy

Helena
Petrovna Blavatsky
1831
-1891
_______________________
The Key to Theosophy
By
Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Theosophy and
The Theosophical Society
The Meaning of the Name
Q. Theosophy and its doctrines are often referred to as a
newfangled religion.
Is it a religion?
A. It is not. Theosophy is Divine Knowledge or Science.
Q. What is the real meaning of the term?
A. "Divine Wisdom," (Theosophia)
or Wisdom of the gods, as (theogonia),
genealogy of the gods.
The word 'theos' means a god in Greek, one of the
divine beings, certainly not "God" in the sense attached in our day
to the term.
Therefore, it is not "Wisdom of God," as translated by
some, but Divine Wisdom such as that possessed by the gods. The term is many
thousand years old.
Q. What is the origin of the name?
A. It comes to us from the Alexandrian philosophers, called lovers
of truth,
Philaletheians, from (phil) "loving," and (aletheia) "truth." The name Theosophy
dates from the
third century of our era, and began with Ammonius Saccas and his disciples, also called Analogeticists,
who started the Eclectic Theosophical
system.
As explained by Professor Wilder, they were called so because of
their practice
of interpreting
all sacred legends and narratives, myths and mysteries, by a
rule or principle
of analogy and correspondence: so that events which were
related as having
occurred in the external world were regarded as expressing
operations and
experiences of the human soul. They were also denominated
Neo-Platonists. Though
Theosophy, or the Eclectic Theosophical system, is
generally attributed
to the third century, yet, if Diogenes Laërtius is to
be
credited, its origin
is much earlier, as he attributed the system to an Egyptian
priest, Pot-Amun, who lived in the early days of the Ptolemaic dynasty.
The same author tells us that the name is Coptic, and signifies one consecrated
to Amun, the God of Wisdom. Theosophy is the
equivalent of Brahma-Vidya , divine knowledge.
Q. What was the object of this system?
A. First of all to inculcate certain great moral truths upon its
disciples, and
all those who
were "lovers of the truth." Hence the motto adopted by the
Theosophical Society: "There is no religion higher than
truth."
Eclectic Theosophy was divided under three heads:
1. Belief in one absolute, incomprehensible and supreme Deity, or
infinite
essence, which is
the root of all nature, and of all that is, visible and
invisible.
2. Belief in man's eternal immortal nature, because, being a
radiation of the
Universal Soul, it is of an identical essence with it.
3. Theurgy, or "divine work,"
or producing a work of gods; from theoi,
"gods,"
and ergein, "to work."
The term is very old, but, as it belongs to the vocabulary of the
mysteries, was
not in popular
use. It was a mystic belief-practically proven by initiated
adepts and
priests-that, by making oneself as pure as the incorporeal
beings-i.e., by
returning to one's pristine purity of nature-man could move the
gods to impart to
him Divine mysteries, and even cause them to become
occasionally visible,
either subjectively or objectively. It was the
transcendental aspect of
what is now called Spiritualism; but having been abused
and misconceived
by the populace, it had come to be regarded by some as
necromancy, and was
generally forbidden. A travestied practice of the theurgy
of Iamblichus lingers still in the ceremonial magic
of some modern Cabalists.
Modern Theosophy avoids and rejects both these kinds of magic and
"necromancy" as being very dangerous. Real divine theurgy
requires an almost superhuman purity and holiness of life; otherwise it
degenerates into mediumship or black magic. The
immediate disciples of Ammonius Saccas,
who was called Theodidaktos,
"god-taught"-such as Plotinus and his
follower Porphyry-rejected theurgy at first, but were
finally reconciled to it through Iamblichus, who
wrote a work to that effect entitled De Mysteriis,
under the name of his own master, a famous Egyptian priest called Abammon. Ammonius Saccas was the son of Christian parents, and, having been
repelled by dogmatic Spiritualistic Christianity from his childhood, became a
Neo-Platonist, and like J. Boëhme and other great
seers and mystics, is said to have had divine wisdom revealed to him in dreams
and visions. Hence his name of Theodidaktos.
He resolved to reconcile every system of religion, and by demonstrating their
identical origin to establish one universal creed based on ethics. His life was
so blameless and pure, his learning so profound and vast, that several Church
Fathers were his secret disciples. Clemens Alexandrinus
speaks very highly of him. Plotinus, the "
accompanied the Roman
Emperor Gordian and his army to the East, to be instructed by the sages of
The system of meditation the Philaletheians
resorted to was ecstasy, a system akin to Indian Yoga practice. What is known
of the
The chief aim of the Founders of the
reconcile all
religions, sects, and nations under a common system of ethics,
based on eternal
verities.
Q. What have you to show that this is not an impossible dream; and
that all the
world's religions
are based on the one and the same truth?
A. Their comparative study and analysis. The
"Wisdom-Religion" was one in
antiquity; and the
sameness of primitive religious philosophy is proven to us by
the identical
doctrines taught to the Initiates during the mysteries, an
institution once
universally diffused.
All the old worships indicate the existence of a single Theosophy
anterior to
them. The key
that is to open one must open all; otherwise it cannot be the
right key.
__________________________

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