CYCLES AND CYCLIC LAW
LADIES and gentlemen: This is our last meeting; it is the
last impulse of the Cycle which we began when we opened our sessions
at this Parliament. All the other bodies which have met in this
building have been also starting cycles just as we have been.
Now, a great many people know what the word "cycle"
means, and a great many do not. There are no doubt in Chicago
many men who think that a cycle is a machine to be ridden; but
the word that I am dealing with is not that. I am dealing with
a word which means a return, a ring. It is a very old term, used
in the far past. In our civilization it is applied to a doctrine
which is not very well understood, but which is accepted by a
great many scientific men, a great many religious men, and by
a great many thinking men. The theory is, as held by the ancient
Egyptians, that there is a cycle, a law of cycles which governs
humanity, governs the earth, governs all that is in the universe.
You may have heard Brother Chakravarti say the Hindus are still
teaching that there is a great cycle which begins when the Unknown
breathes forth the whole universe, and ends when it is turned
in again into itself. That is the great cycle.
In the Egyptian monuments, papyri, and other records the cycles
are spoken of. They held, and the ancient Chinese also held,
that a great cycle governs the earth, called the sidereal cycle
because it related to the stars. The work was so large that it
had to be measured by the stars, and that cycle is 25,800 and
odd years long. They claim to have measured this enormous cycle.
The Egyptians gave evidence they had measured it also and had
measured many others, so that in these ancient records, looking
at the question of cycles, we have a hint that man has been living
on the earth, has been civilized and uncivilized for more years
than we have been taught to believe. The ancient Theosophists
have always held that civilization with humanity went around
the earth in cycles, in rings, returning again and again upon
itself, but that at each turn of the cycle, on the point of return
it was higher than before. This law of cycles is held in Theosophical
doctrine to be the most important of all, because it is at the
bottom of all. It is a part of the law of that unknown being
who is the universe, that there shall be a periodical coming
from and a periodical returning again upon itself.
Now, that the law of cycles does prevail in the world must
be very evident if you will reflect for a few moments. The first
cycle I would draw your attention to is the daily cycle, when
the sun rises in the morning and sets at night, returning again
next morning, you following the sun, rising in the morning and
at night going to sleep again, at night almost appearing dead,
but the next morning awaking to life once more. That is the first
cycle. You can see at once that there are therefore in a mans
life just as many cycles of that kind as there are days in his
life. The next is the monthly cycle, when the moon, changing
every 28 days, marks the month. We have months running to more
days, but that is only for convenience, to avoid change in the
year. The moon gives the month and marks the monthly cycle.
The next is the yearly cycle. The great luminary, the great
mover of all, returns again to a point from whence he started.
The next great cycle to which I would draw your attention, now
we have come to the sun--it is held by science and is provable
I think by other arguments the next cycle is that the sun, while
stationary to us, is in fact moving through space in an enormous
orbit which we can not measure. As he moves he draws the earth
and the planets as they wheel about him. We may say, then, this
is another great cycle. It appears reasonable that, as the sun
is moving through that great cycle, he must draw the earth into
spaces and places and points in space where the earth has never
been before, and that it must happen that the earth shall come
now and then into some place where the conditions are different
and that it may be changed in a moment, as it were, for to the
eye of the soul a thousand years are but a moment, when everything
will be different. That is one aspect of cyclic doctrine, that
the sun is drawing the earth in a great orbit of his own and
is causing the earth to be changed in its nature by reason of
the new atomic spaces into which it is taken.
We also hold that the earth is governed by cyclic law throughout
the century as in a moment. The beings upon it are never in the
same state. So nations, races, civilizations, communities are
all governed in the same way and moved by the same law. This
law of cycles is the law of reincarnation that we were speaking
of today: that is, that a man comes into the world and lives
a day, his life is as a day; he dies out of it and goes to sleep,
elsewhere waking; then he sleeps there to wake again the next
great day; after a period of rest, he again enters life; that
is his cycle. We hold in Theosophical philosophy it has been
proven by the Adepts by experiment that men in general awake
from this period of rest after 1,500 years. So we point in history
to an historical cycle of 1,500 years, after which old ideas
return. And if you will go back in the history of the world you
will find civilization repeating itself every 1,500 years, more
or less like what it was before. That is to say, go back 1,500
years from now and you will find coming out here now the Theosophists,
the philosophers, the various thinkers, the inventors of 1,500
years ago. And going further back still, we hold that those ancient
Egyptians who made such enormous pyramids and who had a civilization
we cannot understand, at that dim period when they burst on the
horizon of humanity to fall again, have had their cycle of rest
and are reincarnating again even in America. So we think, some
of us, that the American people of the new generation are a reincarnation
of the ancient Egyptians, who are coming back and bringing forth
in this civilization all the wonderful ideas which the Egyptians
held. And that is one reason why this country is destined to
be a great one, because the ancients are coming back, they are
here, and you are very foolish if you refuse to consider yourselves
so great. We are willing you should consider yourselves so great,
and not think you are born mean, miserable creatures.
The next cycle I would draw your attention to is that of civilizations.
We know that civilizations have been here, and they are gone.
There is no bridge between many of these. If heredity, as some
people claim, explains everything, how is it not explained why
the Egyptians left no string to connect them with the present?
There is nothing left of them but the Copts, who are poor miserable
slaves. The Egyptians, as a material race, are wiped out, and
it is so because it is according to the law of cycles and according
to the law of nature that the physical embodiment of the Egyptians
had to be wiped out. But their souls could not go out of existence,
and so we find their civilization and other civilizations disappearing,
civilizations such as the ancient civilization of Babylon, and
all those old civilizations in that part of the East which were
just as strange and wonderful as any other. And this civilization
of ours has come up instead of going down, but it is simply repeating
the experience of the past on a higher level. It is better in
potentiality than that which has been before. Under the cyclic
law it will rise higher and higher, and when its time comes it
will die out like the rest.
Also religions have had their cycles. The Christian religion
has had its cycle. It began in the first year of the Christian
era and was a very different thing then from what it is now.
If you examine the records of Christianity itself you will see
that the early fathers and teachers taught differently in the
beginning from that which the priests of today are teaching now.
Similarly you will find that Brahminism has had its cycle. Every
religion rises and falls with the progress of human thought,
because cyclic law governs every man, and thus every religion
which man has.
So it is also with diseases. Is it not true that fevers are
governed by a law of recurrence in time; some have three days,
some four days, nine days, fifteen days, three years and so on?
No physician can say why it is so; they only know that it is
a fact. So in every direction the law of cycles is found to govern.
It is all according to the great inherent law of the periodical
ebb and flow, the Great Day and Night of Nature. The tides in
Ocean rise and fall; similarly in the great Ocean of Nature there
is a constant ebb and flow, a mightier tide which carries all
with it. The only thing that remains unshaken, immovable, never
turning is the Spirit itself. That, as St. James said--and he
doubtless was himself a wise Theosophist--is without variableness
and hath no shadow of turning.
Now, this great law of periodical return pertains also to
every individual man in his daily life and thought. Every idea
that you have, every thought, affects your brain and mind by
its impression. That begins the cycle. It may seem to leave your
mind, apparently it goes out, but it returns again under the
same cyclic law in some form either better or worse, and wakes
up once more the old impression. Even the very feelings that
you have of sorrow or gladness will return in time, more or less
according to your disposition, but inevitably in their cycle.
This is a law it would do good for every one to remember, especially
those who have variations of joy and sorrow, of exaltation and
depression. If when depressed you would recollect the law and
act upon it by voluntarily creating another cycle of exaltation,
on its returning again with the companion cycle of lower feeling
it would in no long time destroy the depressing cycle and raise
you to higher places of happiness and peace. It applies again
in matters of study where we use the intellectual organs only.
When a person begins the study of a difficult subject or one
more grave than usual, there is a difficulty in keeping the mind
upon it; the mind wanders; it is disturbed by other and older
ideas and impressions. But by persistency a new cycle is established,
which, being kept rolling, at last obtains the mastery.
We hold further--and I can only go over this briefly-- that
in evolution itself, considered as a vast inclusive whole, there
are cycles, and that unless there were these turnings and returnings
no evolution would be possible, for evolution is but another
word for cyclic law. Reincarnation, or re-embodiment over and
over again, is an expression of this great law and a necessary
part of evolution.
Evolution means a coming forth from something. From out of
what does the evolving universe come? It comes out from what
we call the unknown, and we call it "unknown" simply
because we do not know what it is. The unknown does not mean
the non-existent; it simply means that which we do not perceive
in its essence or fulness. It goes forth again and again, always
higher and better; but while it is rolling around at its lower
arc it seems to those down there that it is lower than ever;
but it is bound to come up again. And that is the answer we give
to those who ask, What of all those civilizations that have disappeared,
what of all the years that I have forgotten? What have I been
in other lives, I have forgotten them? We simply say, you are
going through your cycle. Some day all these years and experiences
will return to your recollection as so much gained. And all the
nations of the earth should know this law, remember it and act
upon it, knowing that they will come back and that others also
will come back. Thus they should leave behind something that
will raise the cycle higher and higher, thus they should ever
work toward the perfection which mankind as a whole is striving
in fact to procure for itself.
NOTE.--Final address by W.Q.J. at Parliament
of Religions, 1893. Other talks by Mr. Judge on "The Organized
Life of the T.S." and "Theosophy in the Christian Bible"
were printed in Pamphlets No. 3 and No. 15.
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