NEW MOON
THE BURNING GROUND & THE CLEAR COLD LIGHT
(THE RAYS AND THE INITIATIONS:-Rule I.)
For Applicants: Let the disciple search within the heart's deep
cave. If there the fire burns bright, warming his brother yet heating not
himself, the hour has come for making application to stand before the door.
For Disciples and Initiates: Within the fire of mind, focussed
within the head's clear light, let the group stand. The burning ground has done
its work. The clear cold light shines forth and cold it is and yet the
heat—evoked by the group love—permits the warmth of energetic moving out.
Behind the group there stands the Door. Before them opens out the Way. Together
let the band of brothers onward move—out of the fire, into the cold, and toward
a newer tension. (RI Page 19).
2. The burning ground has done its work.
Here there is quite apt to be misunderstanding. To most people
the burning ground stands for one of two things:
a. Either the fire of the mind, burning up those things in the
lower nature of which it becomes increasingly aware.
b. Or the burning ground of sorrow, agony, horror and pain which
is the characteristic quality of life in the three worlds, particularly at this
time.
But the burning ground referred to here is something [Page 30]
very different. When the blazing light of the sun is correctly focussed on or
through a glass it can cause ignition. When the blazing light of the Monad is
focussed directly upon the personality, via the antahkarana and not
specifically through the soul, it produces a blazing fire which burns up all
hindrances in a steady, sequential process. Wording it otherwise, when the will
aspect streams from the Monad and focusses through the personal will (as the
mind can grasp and realise it) it destroys as by fire all elements of
self-will. As the energy of Shamballa streams out and makes a direct contact
with humanity (omitting the transmission via the Hierarchy, which has hitherto
been customary), you have what has been seen in the world today, a destructive
conflagration or a world burning ground. When the antahkarana of a group is
rightly constructed, then the individualised group-will will disappear in the
full consciousness of the monadic purpose or clear directed will. These are
points which the disciple preparing for initiation has to consider as he
prepares for the higher initiations, and these are the points which any group
or ashram in preparation for initiation has also to consider. (RI Page 29-30).
Upon the Path of Initiation, the monadic will (of which the
egoic will is the reflection and the individual self-will is the distortion) is
gradually transmitted, via the antahkarana, direct to the man upon the physical
plane. This produces the higher correspondence of those qualities so glibly
spoken of by the well-trained but dense esotericist—transmutation and
transformation. The result is the assimilation of the individual will and the
egoic will into the purpose of the Monad which is the purpose—undeviating and
unalterable—of the One in Whom we live and move and have our being. This is the
field of the true burning, for our "God is a consuming Fire." This is
the burning bush or the burning tree of life of Biblical symbolism. This
highest of all the fires, this deeply spiritual and hitherto seldom recognised
burning-ground, has its effects summed up for us in the next phrase or sentence
of Rule I. (RI Page 31).
Where, however, real love exists, it will produce the lessening
of the personality will, the evocation of the sacrificial egoic will, and a
constantly growing capacity to identify [Page 33] the group with the will or
purpose of the Monad. The progress of the group is, therefore, from one burning
ground to another—each burning ground being colder and clearer than the
preceding one but producing sequentially the burning fire, the clear cold
lighted fire, and the consuming divine fire. (RI Page 32-33).
Before proceeding to study the final phrases of Rule [Page 39] One, I would call your attention to the fact that the initiate has faced two major tests, symbolically described as "the burning ground" and the "clear cold light." Only after he has successfully passed these can he—or the group, when considering group initiation—move forward and outward into the wider reaches of the divine consciousness. These tests are applied when the soul grips the personality and the fire of divine love destroys the loves and desires of the integrated personality. Two factors tend to bring this about: the slow moving forward of the innate conscience into greater control, and the steady development of the "fiery aspiration" to which Patanjali* makes reference. These two factors, when brought into living activity, bring the disciple into the centre of the burning ground which separates the Angel of the Presence from the Dweller on the Threshold. The burning ground is found upon the threshold of every new advance, until the third initiation has been taken. (RI Page 38-39).
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