Intuition,
therefore, brings with its appearance three qualities:
Illumination.
By illumination I do not mean the light in
the head. That is incidental and phenomenal, and many truly
intuitive people are entirely unaware of this light. The light
to which I refer is that which irradiates the Way. It is "the
light of the intellect," which really means that which
illumines the mind and which can reflect itself in that mental
apparatus which is held "steady in the light." This
is the "Light of the World," a Reality which is
eternally existent, but which can be discovered only when
the individual interior light is recognized as such. This
is the "Light of the Ages," which shineth ever more
until the Day be with us. The intuition is therefore the recognition
in oneself, not theoretically but as a fact in one's experience,
of one's complete identification with the Universal Mind,
of one's constituting a part of the great World Life, and
of one's participation in the eternal persisting Existence.
Understanding.
This must be appreciated in its literal sense
as that which "stands under" the totality of forms.
It connotes the power of recession or the capacity to withdraw
from one's agelong identification with form life. I would
like to point out that this withdrawal is comparatively easy
for those who have much of the first ray quality in them.
The problem is to withdraw in the esoteric sense, but to avoid
at the same time the sense of separateness, of isolation and
of superiority. It is easy for first ray people to resist
the tendency to identify themselves with others. To have true
understanding involves an increased ability to love all beings
and yet, at the same time, to preserve personality detachment.
This detachment can be so easily founded on an inability to
love, in a selfish concern for one's own comfort - physical,
mental or spiritual, and above all, emotional. First ray people
dread emotion and despise it, but sometimes they have to swing
into an emotional condition before they can use emotional
sensitivity in the right manner.
Understanding involves contact with life as
an integrated personality, plus egoic reaction to the group
purposes and plans. It connotes personality-soul unification,
wide experience, and a rapid activity of the indwelling Christ
principle. Intuitional understanding is always spontaneous.
Where the reasoning to an understanding enters, it is not
the activity of the intuition.
Love.
As earlier said, this is not affectionate
sentiment, or the possession of a loving disposition; these
two later aspects are incidental and sequential. When the
intuition is developed, both affection and the possession
of a spirit of loving outgo will, necessarily, in their pure
form, be demonstrated, but that which produces these is something
much more deep and comprehensive. It is that synthetic, inclusive
grasp of the life and needs of all beings (I have chosen these
two words with intent!) which it is the high prerogative of
a divine Son of God to operate. It negates all that builds
barriers, makes criticism, and produces separation. It sees
no distinction, even when it appreciates need, and it produces
in one who loves as a soul immediate identification with that
which is loved.
These three words sum up the three qualities
or aspects of the intuition and can be covered by the word,
universality, or the sense of universal Oneness.
Is that not something which all aspirants
aim to achieve? And is it not something that each of you,
as individuals, needs in a peculiar sense? Where it is present,
there is an immediate decentralization of the dramatic "I,"
of that capacity always to relate all happenings, all phenomena,
all group work to oneself as the center.
I cannot enlarge further upon the subject
of Intuition. It is too vast a matter, and too abstruse. All
I can do is to put before you its three aspects and then to
urge upon you the need to submit to that training and to apply
to yourselves that discipline which will work out in your
life as love, light and understanding. When the theory is
grasped and the right adjustments are made and when the needed
work is done, the personality then becomes magnetic, whilst
the brain cells around the pineal gland, which have hitherto
been dormant, become awakened and vibrant. The nucleus of
every cell in the body is a point of light, and when the light
of the intuition is sensed, it is this cell-light which will
immediately respond. The continuance of the inflow of the
light of the intuition will draw forth, esoterically speaking,
into the light of day every cell which is so constituted that
it will respond.
- Alice A. Bailey |