Often mistaken for
Heaven, Devachan is still something
to look forward to.
Get some idea of what to expect with
The
South of Heaven
Guide
to
Theosophy
& Devachan
In the Egyptian Book of the Dead, Chapter 10 describes the place where, after death, disembodied souls
remain in different degrees of perfection. Some are shown as taking wheat three
cubits high, while others are only permitted to glean it -- "he gleaned
the fields of Aanroo." Thus some enjoy the
perfection of spiritual bliss, while others attain only to minor degrees in
that place or state where divine justice is meted out to the soul.
Devachan is the land of
reward; the domain of spiritual effects. The word spiritual here refers to
disembodiment; it must only be used as relative to our material existence. The
Christian demonstrates this fact by the material entourage of his heaven.
In the Secret Doctrine, H. P.
Blavatsky says: "Death itself is unable to deliver man from it [Karma],
since death is simply the door through which he passes to another life on
earth, after a little rest on its threshold -- Devachan." Devachan, then,
is the threshold of life. In the Hindu system it is etymologically the place of
the gods, Indra's heaven. Indra
is the regent of heaven, who gives to those who can reach his realm
long-enduring gifts of happiness and dominion. The Bhagavad-Gita
says: "After enjoying felicity for innumerable years in the regions of Indra, he is born again upon this earth."
For the purpose of this
article, we assume that the entire man, minus the body, goes into Devachan.
This, however, is not so. The post-mortem division of our sevenfold
constitution given by Theosophy is exact. It exhibits the basis of life, death
and reincarnation. It shows the composite being, man, in analogy with that
other composite being, nature. Both are a unity in diversity. Man, suspended in
nature, like her, divides and reunites. This sevenfold division will be treated
in a future article.
Devachan, being a state of
prolonged subjective happiness after the death of the body, is plainly the
heaven of the Christian, but with a difference. It is a heaven made
scientifically possible.
Heaven itself must accord
with the divine laws projected into nature. As sleep is a release from the
body, during which we have dreams, so death is a complete separation and
release, after which in Devachan we dream until, on being again incarnated in a
new body on earth, we come once more into what we call waking existence. Even
the human soul would weary of the ceaseless round of rebirths, if some place or
state were not provided in which rest could be obtained; in which germinating
aspirations, restricted by earth-life, could have their full development.
No energy can be annihilated,
least of all a psychic energy; these must somewhere find an outlet. It is found
in Devachan; this realization is the rest of the soul. Its deepest desires, its
highest needs are there enjoyed. There every hope blooms out in full and
glorious flower. To prolong this blissful state, Hindu books give many
incantations and provide innumerable ceremonies and sacrifices, all of them
having for end and aim a long stay in Devachan. The Christian does precisely
the same. He longs for heaven, prays that he may go there, and offers up to his
God such propitiatory rites and acts as seem best to him, the only difference
being that he does not do it half so scientifically as the Hindu. The Hindu is
also more vivid in his conception of this heaven than the Christian is. He
postulates many places or conditions adapted to the energic
and qualitative differences between souls.
Kama-loka
and other states are where concrete desires, restricted by life in the body,
have full expression, while in Tribûvana the abstract
and benevolent thinkers absorb the joys of lofty thought.
The orthodox heaven has no
such proviso. It also ignores the fact that a settled monotony of celestial
existence would exhaust the soul -- would be stagnation, not growth. Devachanic
life is development of aspiration, passing through the various stages of
gestation, birth, cumulative growth, downward momentum, and departure to
another condition, all rooted in joy. There is nothing in the mere fact of
death to mould a soul anew. It is a group of psychic energies, and heaven must
have something in common with these, or why should it gravitate there? Souls
differ as men do. In Devachan each one receives that degree of bliss which it
can assimilate; its own development determines its reward.
The Christian places all the snuffy old saints as high as other holy souls, sinking
genius to the level of the mediocre mass, while the Hindu gives infinite
variety of occupation and existence suited to grave and gay, the soul of genius
or of poetry. No one sits in undesired seats, nor sings psalms he never liked,
nor lives in a city which might pall upon him if he were forever compelled to
walk its pearly streets. The laws of cause and effect forbid that Devachan
should be monotonous. Results are proportionate to antecedent energies. The
soul oscillates between Devachan and earth-life, finding in each conditions
suited to its continuous development, until, through effort, it reaches a
perfection in which it ceases to be the subject of the laws of action and
reaction, becoming instead their conscious co-worker.
Devachan is a dream, but only
in the sense in which objective life can be called such. Both last until Karma
is satisfied in one direction, and begins to work in the other.
The Devachanee
has no idea of space or time except as he makes for
himself. He creates his own world. He is with all he ever loved, not in bodily
companionship, but in one to him real, close and blissful. When a man dies, the
brain dies last. Life is still busy there after death has been announced. The
soul marshals up all past events, grasps the sum total, the average tendency
stands out, the ruling hope is seen. Their final aroma forms the keynote of
Devachanic existence. The lukewarm man goes neither to heaven nor hell. Nature
spews him out of her mouth. Positive conditions, objective or subjective, are
only reached through positive impulsion. Devachanic distribution is governed by
the ruling motive of the soul. The hater may, by reaction, become the lover,
but the indifferent have no propulsion, no growth.
The
South of Heaven
Guide
to
Theosophy
& Devachan
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