The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett - 1923

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The Mahatma Letters to A.P. Sinnett - 1923

By A. T. Barker

Letter No LXXXIV

My dear friend,— 
The enclosure is to be transmitted to the L.L.T.S, through you in your capacity of Vice-president of the Parent Society and there- fore representative of the President Founder, not as member of the Branch at London.

The recent occurrences in which you have borne a part not altogether pleasant, may be distressing to some and tiresome to others, yet it is better so than that the old paralytic calm should have continued. An outbreak of fever in the human body is nature's evidence that she is trying to expel the seeds of disease and perhaps death anteriorily absorbed. As things were, the London Branch was but vegetating and the vast possibilities of psychic evolution in Britain were completely untried. Karma evidently required that the repose should be broken by the agency of the one most responsible for it—C. C. Massey, and so it was he who brought Mrs. K. to her present position. She has not accomplished her object, but Karma has its own; henceforth the London group aroused, stimulated and warned, have a clear field in which to exercise their activities. Your own karma my friend, destines you to play a still more conspicuous part in European theosophical affairs than you have yet. Olcott's forthcoming visit will result in important developments, in whose out-working you are to have a hand. My desire is that you should be gathering together all the reserve forces of your being so that you may rise to the dignity and importance of the crisis. However little you may seem to achieve—psychically—in this birth, remember that your interior growth proceeds every instant, and that toward the end of your life as in your next birth your accumulated merit shall bring you all you aspire to.

It is not politic that H. S. Olcott should be exclusively your guest during his whole stay in Britain ; his time should be divided between yourself and others of various opinions—should they wish to invite him for a short time. He will be accompanied by Mohini whom I have chosen as my chela and with whom I sometimes communicate directly. Treat the boy kindly, forgettingheis a Bangalee, and only remembering he is now my Chela. Dowhat you can to dignify Olcott's office; for he represents theentire Society, and by reason of his official position, if for noother, stands with Upasika, closest to ourselves in the chainofTheosophical work. Assirvaclam. 

K. H.
 

 

 

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