People who appreciate H.P. Blavatsky's The Voice of the Silence, might care to know more about the philosophy behind it. Sacred
Sound, in all its metaphysical theory and practical applications, is a
fundamental part of the Theosophical teachings, perhaps best summarized as the
doctrine of the Logos, equated with the Sabda;
H. P. Blavatsky describes Sabda Brahmam as “The Unmanifested Logos.” The
Vedas; “Ethereal Vibrations diffused throughout Space ”. (Theosophical
Glossary). In the same she states: ''This is why
it is stated in the Purânas that Âkâsa has but one attribute, namely
sound, for sound is but the translated symbol of Logos—“Speech” in its mystic
sense.'' Her definition of Vach provides a brief general overview. The classic work in the field is Guy L. Beck, Sonic Theology: Hinduism and Sacred Sound (1993). Blavatsky has also commented on the what is perhaps the best known exposition
of the Logos concept, see her Notes on the Gospel of John. Another classic exposition of the concept is AUM! by William Q. Judge. The text below is a solid basic esoteric explanation from Isis Unveiled 2, Chapter 9:
Have
the seven
prismatic colors of the rainbow seen by Noah no other meaning than that of a covenant between God and man
to refresh the memory of the former? To the kabalist, at least, they have a
significance inseparable from the seven
labors of magic, the seven upper spheres, the seven notes of the musical scale,
the seven numerals of Pythagoras, the seven wonders of the world, the seven
ages, and even the seven steps of the Masons, which lead to the Holy of Holies, after passing the
flights of three and five.
Whence
the identity then of these enigmatical, ever-recurring numerals that are found
in every page of the Jewish Scriptures, as in every ola and sloka of Buddhistic
and Brahmanical books? Whence these numerals that are the soul of the
Pythagorean and Platonic thought, and that no unilluminated Orientalist nor
biblical student has ever been able to fathom?
And
yet they have a key ready in their hand, did they but know how to use it.
Nowhere is the mystical value of human language and its effects on human action
so perfectly understood as in India,
nor any better explained than by the authors of the oldest Brahmanas. Ancient as their epoch is
now found to be, they only try to express, in a more concrete form, the
abstract metaphysical speculations of their own ancestors.
Such
is the respect of the Brahmans for the sacrificial mysteries, that they hold
that the world itself sprang into creation as a consequence of a "sacrificial word" pronounced
by the First Cause. This word is the
"Ineffable name" of the kabalists, fully discussed in the last
chapter.
Sarasvati riding a Peacok |
Agni |
This
testimony from an unwilling witness shows again the identity between the
ancient religions as to their secret doctrine. The Gayatri metre, for example, consists of
thrice eight syllables, and
is considered the most sacred of metres. It is the metre of Agni, the fire-god, and becomes at
times the emblem of Brahma himself,
the chief creator, and "fashioner of man" in his own image. Now Pythagoras says that "The number
eight, or the Octad, is the first cube, that is to say, squared in all senses,
as a die, proceeding from its base two, or even number; so is man four-square or perfect."
Of course few, except the Pythagoreans and kabalists, can fully comprehend this
idea; but the illustration will assist in pointing out the close kinship of the
numerals with the Vedic Mantras.
The chief problems of every theology lie concealed beneath this imagery of fire and the varying rhythm of its flames. The
burning bush of the Bible,
the Zoroastrian and other sacred fires, Plato's universal soul, and the
Rosicrucian doctrines of both soul and body of man being evolved out of fire,
the reasoning and immortal element which permeates all things, and which,
according to Herakleitus, Hippocrates, and Parmenides, is God, have all the
same meaning.
Each
metre in the Brahmanas
corresponds to a number, and as shown by Haug, as it stands in the sacred
volumes, is a prototype of some visible form on earth, and its effects are
either good or evil. The "sacred
speech" can save, but it can kill as well; its many meanings and
faculties are well known but to the Dikshita
(the adept), who has been initiated into many mysteries, and whose
"spiritual birth" is completely achieved; the Vach of the mantra
is a spoken power, which awakes another corresponding and still more occult
power, each allegorically personified by some god in the world of spirits, and,
according as it is used, responded to either by the gods or the Rakshasas (bad spirits). In the
Brahmanical and Buddhist ideas, a curse, a blessing, a vow, a desire, an idle
thought, can each assume a visible shape and so manifest itself objectively to the eyes of its author,
or to him that it concerns.
There are words which have a destructive quality in
their very syllables, as though objective things; for every sound awakens a corresponding one in the invisible world of
spirit, and the repercussion produces either a good or bad effect. Harmonious rhythm, a melody vibrating
softly in the atmosphere, creates a beneficent and sweet influence around,
and acts most powerfully on the psychological as well as physical natures of
every living thing on earth; it reacts even on inanimate objects, for matter is
still spirit in its essence, invisible as it may seem to our grosser senses.
So with the numerals. Turn wherever we will, from the
Prophets to the Apocalypse, and we will see the biblical writers constantly
using the numbers three, four, seven,
and twelve.
And yet we have known some partisans of the Bible who maintained that the Vedas were copied from the Mosaic
books!* The Vedas, which are
written in Sanscrit, a language whose grammatical rules and forms, as MaxMuller and other scholars confess, were completely
established long before the days when the great wave of emigration
bore it from Asia all over the Occident, are there to proclaim their parentage
of every philosophy, and every religious institution developed later among
Semitic peoples. And which of the numerals most frequently occur in the
Sanscrit chants, those sublime hymns to creation, to the unity of God, and the
countless manifestations of His power? One, three, and seven. Read the hymn by
Dirghatamas. (1)
"The God
here present, our blessed patron, our sacrificer, has a brother who spreads
himself in mid-air. There exists a third
Brother whom we sprinkle with our libations. . . . It is he whom I have seen
master of men and armed with seven
rays."†
And again:
"Seven
Bridles aid in guiding a car which has but one wheel, and
which is drawn by a single horse that shines with seven rays. The wheel has three limbs, an immortal wheel, never-wearying, whence
hang all the worlds."
"Sometimes seven
horses drag a car of seven
wheels, and seven personages
mount it, accompanied by seven
fecund nymphs of the water."
And the following again, in honor of the fire-god — Agni, who is so clearly shown but a
spirit subordinate to the One God.
"Ever
one, although having three
forms of double nature (androgynous) — he rises! and the priests offer to God, in the act of sacrifice, their
prayers which reach the heavens, borne aloft by Agni."
Is
this a coincidence, or, rather, as reason tells us, the result of the
derivation of many national cults from one primitive, universal religion? A mystery for the uninitiated, the unveiling of the most sublime (because
correct and true) psychological and physiological problems for the initiate.
Revelations of the personal spirit of man which is divine because that spirit
is not only the emanation of the one Supreme God, but is
the only God man is able, in his weakness and helplessness, to comprehend — to
feel within himself. This
truth the Vedic poet clearly confesses, when saying:
"The Lord,
Master of the universe and full of wisdom, has entered with me (into me) — weak
and ignorant — and has formed me of himself in that place*
where the spirits obtain, by the help of Science, the peaceful
enjoyment of the fruit, as sweet as
ambrosia."
* To avoid
discussion we adopt the palaeographical conclusions arrived at by Martin Haug
and some other cautious scholars. Personally we credit the statements of the
Brahmans and those of Halled, the translator of the "Sastras."
† The god
Heptaktis.
* The sanctuary of the initiation.
(1) Blavatsky is referencing the famous Asya Vamasya Hymn from Rig Veda
I.164. See Vedic Origins of the Zodiac: The Hymns of Dirghatamas in the Rig Veda. She is quoting from the work of German Orientalist Martin Haug.
(Isis Unveiled 2, 408-412)
For a good basic introduction, see Sacred Sound
For information on the practical aspects, see The Practice of Nada Yoga
For a good basic introduction, see Sacred Sound
For information on the practical aspects, see The Practice of Nada Yoga
No comments:
Post a Comment