To Netnews Homepage     Previous     Next      Index      Table of Contents
Letters on Occult Meditation - Letter XI - The Resultant Life of Service
3. The Attitude following Action

What should this attitude be? Utter dispassion, utter self-forgetfulness, and utter occupation with the next step to be taken. The perfect server is he who does to the utmost of his ability what he believes to be the Master's will, and the work to be done by him in cooperation with God's plan. Then, having done his part, he passes on to a continuance of the work, and cares not for the result of his action. He knows that wiser eyes than his see the end from the beginning; that insight, deeper and more loving than his, is weighing up the fruit of his service; and that judgment, more profound than his, is testing the force and extent of the vibration set up, and is adjusting that force according to the motive. He does not suffer from pride over what he has done, nor from undue depression over [349] lack of accomplishment. At all times he does his very best, and wastes not time in backward contemplation, but steadily presses forward to the accomplishment of the next duty. Brooding over past deeds, and casting the mind back over old achievement, is in the nature of involution, and the servant seeks to work with the law of evolution. This is an important thing to note. The wise server, after action, pays no attention to what his fellow servants say, provided his superiors (either incarnating men and women, or the Great Ones Themselves) prove content or silent; he cares not if the result is not that which he anticipated, provided that he faithfully did the highest thing he knew; he cares not if reproach and reproof assail him, provided his inner self remains calm and non-accusing; he cares not if he loses friends, relatives, children, the popularity once enjoyed, and the approbation of his environing associates, provided his inner sense of contact with Those Who guide and lead remains unbroken; he cares not if he seem to work in the dark and is conscious of little result from his labors, provided the inner light increases and his conscience has naught to say.

To sum it all up:
The motive may be epitomized in these few words:

  • The sacrifice of the personal self for the good of the One Self.

The method may also be shortly put:

  • Wise control of the personality, and discrimination in work and time.

The resultant attitude will be:

  • Complete dispassion, and a growing love of the unseen and the real.

All this will be consummated through steady application to occult Meditation.

To Netnews Homepage     Previous     Next      Index      Table of Contents
Last updated Monday, May 11, 1998           © 1998 Netnews Association. All rights reserved.