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Alice Bailey

Alice Ann Bailey (June 16, 1880 – December 15, 1949) was a writer of more than twenty-four books on theosophical subjects, and was one of the first writers to use the term New Age. Bailey was born as Alice La Trobe-Bateman, in Manchester, England.[1] She moved to the United States in 1907, where she spent most of her life as a writer and teacher.

Alice Ann Bailey
Alice Bailey
Born
Alice La Trobe-Bateman

(1880-06-16)June 16, 1880
Manchester, England
DiedDecember 15, 1949(1949-12-15) (aged 69)
New York City, United States
NationalityBritish and American
OccupationEsoteric author
Spouses
Walter Evans
(divorced)
Foster Bailey
(m. 1921)
Children3

Bailey's works, written between 1919 and 1949, describe a wide-ranging neo-Theosophical system of esoteric thought covering such topics as how spirituality relates to the Solar System, meditation, healing, spiritual psychology, the destiny of nations, and prescriptions for society in general. She described the majority of her work as having been telepathically dictated to her by a Master of Wisdom, initially referred to only as "the Tibetan" or by the initials "D.K.", later identified as Djwal Khul.[2] Her writings bore some similarity to those of Madame Blavatsky and are among the teachings often referred to as the "Ageless Wisdom". Though Bailey's writings differ in some respects to the Theosophy of Madame Blavatsky, they have much in common with it. She wrote on religious themes, including Christianity, though her writings are fundamentally different from many aspects of Christianity or other orthodox religions. Her vision of a unified society included a global "spirit of religion" different from traditional religious forms and including the concept of the Age of Aquarius.[3][4]

Biography Edit

Childhood and early life Edit

Bailey was born into a wealthy middle-class British family and, as a member of the Anglican Church, received a thorough Christian education.[5]

Her autobiography states that at the age of 15, on June 30, 1895, Bailey was visited by a stranger, "...a tall man, dressed in European clothes and wearing a turban" who told her she needed to develop self-control to prepare for certain work he planned for her to do.[6][7] This turned out to be the creation and publication of 19 books, together with educational and meditation work that reached "practically all the countries of the world".[8]

At the age of 22, Bailey did evangelical work in connection with the YMCA and the British Army.[9] This took her to India, where, in 1907, she met her future husband, Walter Evans. Together, they moved to America, where Evans became an Episcopalian priest.[10] The marriage did not last, and Bailey pushed for and received a divorce. She left with their three children after their formal separation in 1915. Then followed a difficult period in which she worked in a sardine factory to support herself and the children.[6][11]

With the Theosophical Society Edit

 
The Society's seal incorporated the Swastika, Star of David, Ankh, Aum and Ouroboros symbols

Bailey discovered the Theosophical Society and the work of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky. The Theosophical Society states that Bailey became involved in 1917.[12] Theosophist Joy Mills states that in 1918 she became a member of the Esoteric Section of the society.[13] Theosophist Bruce F. Campbell notes, "She quickly rose to a position of influence in the American Section of the Adyar society, moving to its headquarters at Krotona in Hollywood. She became editor of its magazine, The Messenger, and member of the committee responsible for Krotona."[14] In 1919, Foster Bailey (1888–1977), who was to be her second husband, became National Secretary of the Theosophical Society. They married in 1921.[15]

The Theosophist published the first few chapters of her first work, Initiation, Human and Solar,[16][17] (p. 762) but then stopped for reasons Bailey called "theosophical jealousy and reactionary attitude".[18] Bailey "objected to the 'neo-Theosophy' of Annie Besant" and worked with Foster Bailey to gain more power in the American Section.[18] According to Theosophist Josephine Maria Davies Ransom, she became part of a progressive "Back to Blavatsky movement, led mainly by Mr. and Mrs. Foster Bailey".[19] She outlined her vision for the Esoteric Section of the Theosophical Society; however, her efforts to influence the society failed, and she and her husband were dismissed from their positions.[20]

According to historian of religion Olav Hammer, Bailey's early writings on communications with the Tibetan were well received within the society, but society president Annie Besant questioned Bailey's claims of communications with "the Tibetan" and allowed the Baileys to be expelled from the organization.[21] According to Bailey, she had come to see the society as authoritarian and involved with "lower psychic phenomena".[6]

Lucis Trust Edit

Alice and Foster Bailey founded the Lucis Trust in 1922. Its activities include the Arcane School, World Goodwill, Triangles, a quarterly magazine called The Beacon, and a publishing company primarily intended to publish Bailey's many books. The Arcane School gives instruction and guidance in meditation via correspondence based on the ideas in Bailey's books. World Goodwill is intended to promote better human relations through goodwill, which they define as "love in action". That "action" included the support of the United Nations. The "Triangles" are groups of three people who agree to link up in thought each day and to meditate on right human relations, visualizing light and love pouring into human minds and hearts, followed by the use of the Great Invocation. It is not necessary for each person to link in thought at the same time each day and it only takes a few moments of time. Alice and Foster Bailey founded "Lucifer Publishing Company" ("'Lucifer' and 'Lucis' come from the same word root, lucis being the Latin genitive case meaning of light). [22] After the first two or three years, the name was changed to "Lucis Publishing Co."[23] (The Theosophical Society also used the name "Lucifer" for its early magazine.) In 1923, with the help of Foster Bailey, Alice Bailey founded the Arcane School, which is part of Lucis Trust. This school provides educational correspondence, meditation instruction, and guided study based on her writings.[24]

Bailey continued to work up until the time of her death in 1949.[25]

Main ideas Edit

The seven rays of energy Edit

Bailey's writings includes a detailed exposition of the "seven rays" which are presented as the fundamental energies that are behind and exist throughout all manifestation. They are seen as the basic creative forces of the universe and emanations of Divinity that underlie the evolution of all things.[26] The rays are described as related to human psychology, the destiny of nations, as well as the planets and stars of the heavens. The concept of the seven rays can be found in Theosophical works.[27] Campbell writes that Bailey, "... was the first to develop the idea of the seven rays, although it can be found in germ in earlier Theosophical writings."[28] The seven rays also appear in Hindu religious philosophy.[29][30]

Esoteric astrology Edit

Esoteric astrology is part of Alice Bailey's "Ageless Wisdom" teachings, which she said were relayed by her Tibetan Master Djwhal Khul.[31][32]

The esoteric astrologers who follow the teachings of Bailey typically base their work on her five-volume Treatise on the Seven Rays, particularly volume three which focuses on astrology. Her esoteric astrology deals with the evolution of soul consciousness and the obstacles to that evolution.[33]

Esoteric healing Edit

Bailey's teaching on healing primarily concerns the relationship of soul to personality, of the spiritual to the material nature. In her view, all disease has its ultimate root in some type of blocked or inhibited soul life. Therefore, healing consists of releasing the soul, that is the establishing of a right relation between the soul and the personality where the personality is defined as the instrument of soul expression. Eliminating obstructions and congestion, the source of a major part of disease. The whole process of healing is directed by thought, the mind of the healer and sometimes emotional synergy to inhibit causes of disease. Healing becomes automatic where the practitioner no longer is directed by energies, currents, centers, that include the nadis as one area of focus, the abstract is related back to the practices where appropriate but healing is directed without effort.[34][35]

The constitution of man Edit

In line with previous Theosophical teachings,[36] Bailey taught that man consists of

  1. Monad (spark of God, true Self)
  2. Soul (higher mind, Love nature, higher consciousness)
  3. Personality consisting of three aspects
    • Lower mind (intellect)
    • Emotions or astral nature
    • Physical and etheric body

Each of the three aspects of the lower nature is described as a "body" or aura of energy and seen as partial expression of the real self or soul. The soul is regarded as the reflection of the real self that works through or uses the three aspects of personality.[37][38] She also speaks of these as "vehicles" or "sheaths", and alternately as the "mental body", "astral body", or "physical body".[39] The "etheric" body is most directly related to physical health and is seen as the vital energizing agent for the individual while in physical incarnation.[40][self-published source?] (p. 172)[41] (p. 33) See also: Subtle body. The mind and emotional nature are seen as auras.[42] or energy fields of which brain activity is a secondary effect.[43] (p. 411)

The Great Invocation Edit

The Great Invocation is a mantra given in 1937 by Bailey. The mantra begins with "From the point of Light within the Mind of God, let light stream forth into the minds of men ..." with the rest of the passage expressing the ideas of love, the return of The Christ (Maitreya) and of men acting in accordance with the plan of God.

It is well known by some followers of the New Age movement, where it is widely used as part of meditation, particularly in groups.[44] For instance, the invocation has been used in the Findhorn Foundation community since the 1970s. In response to the September 11 attacks (2001), the Great Invocation was used as a central element of a new daily program at Findhorn known as the "Network of Light meditations for peace".[45] Rosemary Keller described the Great Invocation as a call for "the Christ to return to Earth" and wrote that Bailey-related groups purchased radio and television time to broadcast the invocation as part of their mission, and that often the invocation was recited in what Keller called "light groups", to accomplish what Bailey's disciples considered to be attracting and focusing "spiritual energies to benefit the planet".[6]

Alice Bailey's writings have a theme that generally advocates replacement of the old with the new and this occurs in connection with the Great Invocation as follows: "This new Invocation, if given widespread distribution, can be to the new world religion what the Lord's Prayer has been to Christianity and the 23rd Psalm has been to the spiritually minded Jew."[46]

Discipleship and service Edit

Bailey's writings downplayed traditional devotional and religious aspects of the spiritual life, in favor of a life of meditation, service to humanity, and cooperation with "the Plan of the Hierarchy".[47] In her thinking, service, "... is a soul instinct ... innate and peculiar to soul unfoldment. It is the outstanding characteristic of the soul, just as desire is the outstanding characteristic of the lower nature ..."[48]

Unity and divinity of nations and groups Edit

Ross describes Bailey's teachings as emphasizing the "underlying unity of all forms of life", and the "essential oneness of all religions, of all departments of science, and of all the philosophies".[49] Campbell notes that the New Group of World Servers was established for "... promotion of international understanding, economic sharing, and religious unity".[28]

Comparison with Theosophy Edit

Theosophists are divided on their assessment of Alice Bailey's writings. For instance, the noted contemporary Theosophical writer Geoffrey Hodson wrote a highly favorable review of one her books, saying, "Once more Alice Bailey has placed occult students in her debt."[50] Olav Hammer writes, "Her first book, Initiation Human and Solar, was at first favorably received by her fellow theosophists. Soon, however, her claims to be recipient of ageless wisdom from the Masters met with opposition."[51] The conflict is understandable since her works contain some criticisms of Theosophy, and at the time of the break she voiced her criticism of what she saw as dogmatic structures within the society, while questioning the pledges of loyalty to Theosophical leaders that were required. "During the annual convention of 1920 in Chicago, there was a power struggle between forces loyal to Besant and the Esoteric Section and others who believed that the latter had become too powerful. Below the surface was a hidden controversy regarding Alice's work with the Tibetan."[10] For a more recent example of Bailey/Theosophy division, see Theosophy in Scandinavia.

Campbell writes that Bailey's books are a reworking of major Theosophical themes, with some distinctive emphases, and that they present a comprehensive system of esoteric science and occult philosophy, cognizant of contemporary social and political developments.[52] Steven J. Sutcliffe points out that both Bailey and Blavatsky's work evoke a picture of Tibet as the spiritual home of the Masters and that Bailey claimed a more-or-less direct lineage to Blavatsky. He describes Bailey as a 'post-Theosophical' theorist, reporting that Bailey received instruction from "former personal pupils of Blavatsky" and notes that her third book (A Treatise on Cosmic Fire) not only reproduces Blavatsky's apocryphal Stanzas of Dzyan but is dedicated to Blavatsky, as well.[53]

Parallels between Theosophy and Bailey are many, for instance, one principle of Theosophy, the Law of Attraction was discussed in esoteric writings by Blavatsky,[54] Annie Besant,[55] William Quan Judge,[56] and others;[57][58] and was also discussed in the writings of Alice Bailey, including a whole chapter in one of her books.[59][60][61] The term has been embraced, in a simplified form, by the contemporary New Age movement and was popularized in the 2006 film The Secret.

Jon Klimo, in Investigations on Receiving Information from Paranormal Sources, writes, "As with Blavatsky/Theosophical material, and more recent contemporary channeled material from other sources, we find in the Bailey work the same occult cosmological hierarchy: physical, etheric, astral, mental, causal, and higher inhabited levels of existence."[62] Olav Hammer, in the book Claiming Knowledge: Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age, highlights Bailey's Theosophical similarities as well as noting what he thinks are some differences between them: "To a large extent, Bailey's teachings are a restatement and amplification of theosophy of the Secret Doctrine. Bailey inherited from Blavatsky and Leadbeater a predilection for profuse details and complex classificatory schemes. ... Her books have also introduced shifts in emphasis as well as new doctrinal elements."[63]

Some Theosophical critics have contended that there are major differences between Bailey's ideas and the Theosophy of Blavatsky, such as Bailey's embrace of some mystical Christian terms and concepts and her acceptance of Charles Webster Leadbeater.[28][64]

Nicholas Weeks, writing for the Theosophical magazine Fohat in 1997, felt Bailey's assertion that "... her teachings are grounded in and do not oppose in any fundamental way Theosophy as lived and taught by HPB and her Gurus" was false. Her books are in fact "rooted in the pseudo-theosophy pioneered by C. W. Leadbeater." He stated Bailey accepted Leadbeater's "fantasy" of the return of Christ and disparaged Bailey's Great Invocation, a prayer supposed to "induce Christ and his Masters to leave their hidden ashrams [and] enter into major cities" to lead the Aquarian Age. This contrasts with the Theosophy of Blavatsky, he says, which emphasizes reliance on "the Christos principle within each person".[64]

Ideas about races and evolution Edit

Bailey described a concept of racial differentiation that posited a division of humanity into races that are on different levels in a "ladder of evolution". These '"races" do not represent a national or physical type but a stage of evolution. For example, she states that the Aryan root race (or '5th race'), is an "emerging new race" and so a relatively new evolutionary phenomenon. She stated that this newer type is forming in every land but primarily in lands where Caucasian peoples are found and indicates a culture where thought or intellect is dominant. She stated that as evolution proceeds, things are accelerated and humanity will soon be predominantly distinguished by the Aryan consciousness. "I speak not in terms of the Aryan race as it is generally understood today or in its Nordic implications."[65]

In her book Education in the New Age, Bailey made predictions about the use of this esoteric racial concept in the schools of the future and that these schools would incorporate the idea of "root races". These "races" are a way of conceptualizing evolution as it occurs over vast prehistoric spans of time, and during which humanity developed body (Lemurian), emotion (Atlantean), and mind (Aryan). She states that there is now being developed a "new race" with a spiritual dimension that expresses as "group qualities and consciousness and idealistic vision".[66] She stated that this new development may take many thousands of years and may therefore not be the quick advance some of her New Age followers wish for. In her The Destiny of the Nations, Bailey described a process by which this "new race" will evolve, after which "very low grade human bodies will disappear, causing a general shift in the racial types toward a higher standard."[67] For Bailey, the evolution of humanity was intimately bound up with its relationship to this Spiritual Hierarchy. She believed that the influences of religions, philosophies, sciences, educational movements, and human culture in general are the result of this relationship.[68]

Criticism of her ideas on races Edit

Bailey's ideas about race were criticized by Victor Shnirelman, a cultural anthropologist and ethnographer, who in a survey of modern Neopaganism in Russia, drew particular attention to "... groups [that] take an extremely negative view of multi-culturalism, object to the 'mixture' of kinds, [and] support isolationism and the prohibition of immigration." Shnirelman saw some of Bailey's ideas on race as similar to the racism he perceived in the writing of Julius Evola, saying that "... racist and antisemitic trends are explicit, for example, in the occult teachings of Alice Bailey and her followers, who wish to cleanse Christianity of its "Jewish inheritance" and reject the "Jewish Bible" as a prerequisite for entering the Age of Aquarius."[69]

Shnirelman's view was echoed by Isaac Lubelsky who criticized not only Bailey, but Blavatsky, Steiner, and others. In Lubelsky's view, racists ideas were common to the whole "Theosophical family".[70]

Monica Sjöö, a Swedish painter, writer and a radical anarcho/eco-feminist wrote that Bailey, through her published teachings, had a "reactionary and racist influence on the whole New Age movement."[71] She also noted what she called Bailey's (and Theosophy's) "pro-fascist religious views", such as the belief in a secret elite of "Masters" who influence world events and human minds through occult means and attempt to bring about the evolution of an Aryan race (although this is an understandably modern misunderstanding of her teaching – 'Aryan' as used by Bailey is easily confused with the modern terminology, and the "Masters" are not an elite, but instead are 'enlightened' individuals originally introduced in theosophy as having evolved beyond the human or "4th kingdom" into the fifth or "Kingdom of souls", and who – in her view – guide the human race as a whole).[72]

Controversy has arisen around some of Bailey's statements on nationalism, American isolationism, Soviet totalitarianism, Fascism, Zionism, Nazism, race relations, Africans, Jews, and the religions of Judaism and Christianity. Yonassan Gershom and others have claimed that her writings contain racist material.[73][74][75][76][77][78][79]

The American Chassidic author Yonassan Gershom wrote that Bailey's plan for a New World Order and her call for "the gradual dissolution—again if in any way possible—of the Orthodox Jewish faith" revealed that "her goal is nothing less than the destruction of Judaism itself." Gershom also wrote that "This stereotyped portrayal of Jews is followed by a hackneyed diatribe against the Biblical Hebrews, based upon the "angry Jehovah" theology of nineteenth-century Protestantism. Jews do not, and never have, worshipped an angry vengeful god, and we Jews never, ever call God 'Jehovah'."[74]

Researcher Hannah Newman described what she found to be an antisemitic element in the Great Invocation. According to Newman, "the Plan" named in the invocation refers to the plan authored by "the Hierarchy", that Newman states places "high priority on removing all Jewish presence and influence from human consciousness, a goal to be achieved by eliminating Judaism."[73][a]

On organized religions Edit

Bailey taught a form of universal spirituality that transcended denominational identification, believing that, "Every class of human beings is a group of brothers. Catholics, Jews, Gentiles, occidentals and orientals are all the sons of God." She stated that all religions originate from the same spiritual source, and that humanity will eventually come to realize this, and as they do so, the result will be the emergence of a universal world religion and a "new world order".[81][82]

Author Steven Sutcliffe wrote that Bailey's "World Goodwill" organization was promoting groups of "world servers" to, as he quotes Bailey, "serve the Plan, Humanity, the Hierarchy and the Christ".[83]

Despite her focus on unity of religion, Bromley and Hammond point out that Bailey and other "occultists" "... hammered home the central idea, 'The East is the true home of spiritual knowledge and occult wisdom'."[84]

Influence Edit

Groups founded by Bailey or her followers Edit

The Arcane School, founded by Alice and Foster Bailey to disseminate spiritual teachings, organizes a worldwide "Triangles" program to bring people together in groups of three, for daily meditation and study. Their belief is that they receive divine energy through meditation and that this energy is transmitted to humanity, so raising spiritual awareness.[85] John Michael Greer's New Encyclopedia of the Occult states that the school "seeks to develop a New Group of World Servers to accomplish the work of the Hierarchy of Masters, under the guidance of its head, the Christ."[86] Twelves is a modern continuation of Triangles and many members of Lucis Trust and other respected orgs are members today.

Influence on the New Age movement Edit

Bailey made extensive use of the term "New Age" in her books and some writers have described her as the founder of the New Age movement,[4][69][87] although The New Age was used as the title of a Journal of Christian liberalism and Socialism, published as early as 1894, predating Bailey's use of the term.[88][89]

James R. Lewis and J. Gordon Melton, in Perspectives on the New Age wrote, "The most important—though certainly not the only—source of this transformative metaphor, as well as the term "New Age", was Theosophy, particularly as the Theosophical perspective was mediated to the movement by the works of Alice Bailey."[90]

Sir John Sinclair, in his book The Alice Bailey Inheritance, commented on the seminal influence of Alice Bailey, which, he said, underlies the consciousness growth movement in the 20th century.[91]

Influence on neopaganism Edit

Several writers have mentioned the affinity of some of Bailey's concepts with modern expressions of paganism.[92][93]

During the 1960s and 1970s, the neopagan author and ceremonial magic ritualist Caroll Poke Runyon published a magazine called The Seventh Ray, its name taken from the writings of Alice Bailey. Three volumes of collected articles from the magazine were published as The Seventh Ray Book I, The Blue Ray, The Seventh Ray Book II, the Red Ray and The Seventh Ray Book III, the Green Ray.

In contrast to this, Daren Kemp in Handbook to the New Age sees critical differences between neopaganism and New Age movements and indicates that it is a mistake to conflate them.[94]

Influence on women in religion Edit

Author Catherine Wessinger wrote that Bailey was a liberated woman "... sixty years before it became popular" and that Bailey's books expressed a similar "millennial view" to the works of Annie Besant. Wessinger stated that they were "an important source of the contemporary New Age movement."[95]

According to the Encyclopedia of Women And Religion in North America, several leaders of New Age philosophy have further developed Bailey's teachings, including the well-known personalities JZ Knight (who purports to channel the entity known by the name Ramtha), Helen Schucman (author of A Course in Miracles purportedly through the process of telepathic dictation she called "scribing"), and Elizabeth Clare Prophet (who published what she referred to as "dictations from Ascended Masters"). These developments have been referred to by other sources as "spin-offs" and splinter groups."[96] (p. 65)[97] (p. 557) The differences between Theosophy, Bailey and Elizabeth Clare Prophet can be noted in connection with Elizabeth Clare Prophet's radical concepts of catastrophic change and survivalism, including the building of fall-out shelters.[98] (p. 81) The validity of the Elizabeth Clare Prophet's writings was "... disputed by Theosophical writers".[citation needed]

The many claims and teachings of the spin-off groups underscores their divergences, for example there appears to be a widespread confusion about the phrase and meaning of "Ascendant Master" in that it was adopted by Mark and Elizabeth Prophet but not by Theosophists or Alice Bailey.[99][100][self-published source?] (p. 111) The concepts and language have been conflated in the popular mind.[101]

Influence on psychotherapy and healing Edit

In 1930, with the patronage of English-Dutch spiritualist, theosophist and scholar Olga Froebe-Kapteyn, Bailey established the short-lived "School of Spiritual Research" located on Froebe-Kapteyn's estate, Casa Gabriella, in Switzerland. (In 1932 the school was closed because of personal conflict between Bailey and Froebe-Kapteyn, at which time Froebe-Kapteyn replaced it with the Eranos group.)

Roberto Assagioli, founder of Psychosynthesis, was a lecturer at School of Spiritual Research.[102] He continued a close association with Bailey during the 1930s; some of his writings were published in Bailey's magazine The Beacon; and he was a trustee of Bailey's organization, the Lucis Trust.[103] He had developed his approach to psychology, called Psychosynthesis, beginning in 1910; his methods were later influenced by some elements of Bailey's work.[104][105][106][107][108] However, authors John Firman and Ann Gila write that Assagioli kept what he referred to as a "wall of silence" between the areas of psychosynthesis and religion or metaphysics, insisting that they not be conflated with each other.[109]

Roger J. Woolger said, in a paper presented to the "Beyond the Brain" Conference held at Cambridge University in 1999, "In Tansley as in Brennan you will find descriptions of a hierarchy of subtle bodies called the etheric, emotional, mental and spiritual that surround the physical body. (Tansley attributed the source of his model to Alice Bailey's theosophical commentary on The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, the locus classicus of Hindu teaching.)"[110]

Bailey's influence can be found in therapeutic communities with which she was never directly involved, such as the Human Potential Movement.[6] She was also cited in THERAPEUTIC TOUCH: Healing Science or Psychic Midwife? by Sharon Fish.[111]

Influence on UFO groups Edit

Alice Bailey makes no reference to unidentified flying objects.[112] This is not surprising since Alice Bailey's books were written between 1919 and 1949[113] and "the emergence of religion specifically focused on UFOs is a post-1947 phenomena."[114] But she did speak of Masters as having evolved beyond the human level, and expounded a cosmology of a living universe in which even planets and stars are regarded as living entities. These ideas may partially account for an association in minds of some between Bailey, and others of the Theosophical schools, and UFOs. For instance, Christopher Partridge wrote of this association as "easily transferred".[115] The connection does exist in the sense that there is a subset of persons interested in both esoteric writings and UFOs and who link them as shown by the fact that some books that cite Alice Bailey or Theosophy also cite UFOs.[116]

Christopher Partridge wrote that the works of Bailey, Rudolf Steiner, and Theosophy in general all influenced what he called the "UFO religions".[117] He explained that "... Theosophy has several prominent branches, and, strictly speaking, the branch which has had the most important influence on the UFO religion is that developed by Alice Bailey".[118] Partridge also quoted Gordon Melton, who suggested that the first UFO religion was Guy Ballard's "I Am" Activity,[117] (which Bailey described as a "cheap comedy".[119])

Professor Robert S. Ellwood of the University of Southern California investigated a wide range of religious and spiritual groups in the United States during the 1970s, including a nationwide group of UFO believers called Understanding, Inc., which had been founded by a contactee named Daniel Fry. He reported that, "There is no particular religious practice connected with the meeting, although the New Age Prayer derived from the Alice Bailey writings is used as an invocation."[120]

George D. Chryssides of the University of Wolverhampton, cited Bailey's influence on the ideas of the Order of the Solar Temple and related UFO organisations.[121]

In popular culture Edit

Lou Reed of the Velvet Underground was a devoted reader of Bailey's work, especially her book A Treatise on White Magic, which he urged on others. Author Ryan H. Walsh suggests that book had an influence on the Velvet's second album, White Light/White Heat.[122]

In 1975, Todd Rundgren released an album titled Initiation which has a song called "Initiation" on side one. The title of the album is apparently based on the Theosophical concept of initiation taught by Alice A. Bailey and C.W. Leadbeater. The entire second side of the album is taken up by a song called "A Treatise on Cosmic Fire"; the three parts of the song are listed as: "I. The Internal Fire, or Fire by Friction; II. The Fire of Spirit, or Electric Fire; The Fire of Mind, or Solar Fire." The second parts of these three phrases are taken directly from Alice A. Bailey's book A Treatise on Cosmic Fire. Also in 1975, Rundgren released an album by his side-project Utopia titled Another Live. This album contained a song titled "The Seven Rays" (see reference above). Finally, in 1977, Rundgren followed up with another Bailey reference with a song entitled "Love in Action" from the Utopia album Oops! Wrong Planet. Love in Action was the concept promoted by Bailey's and Foster Bailey's "World Goodwill" organization.[original research?]

In 1982, Bailey's influence appeared in pop culture, with the release of Van Morrison's album Beautiful Vision, in which he directly referred to the teachings and the Tibetan in the lyrics of the songs "Dweller on the Threshold" and "Aryan Mist".[123] Morrison also used the phrase "world of glamour", reminiscent of Bailey's Glamour: A World Problem, in the songs "Ivory Tower" and "Green Mansions". The song "Ancient of Days" from the 1984 Sense of Wonder album appears to be a reference to a Bailey concept found in such books as The Externalization of the Hierarchy. Alice A. Bailey and the Tibetan's Glamour: A World Problem is also directly cited in the liner notes to Morrison's album Inarticulate Speech of the Heart.[original research?]

Bibliography Edit

The Lucis Trust Publishing Company and the Lucis Press Limited are the official publishers of Alice Bailey's books.

Credited to Alice Bailey Edit

Works containing the prefatory Extract from a Statement by the Tibetan, generally taken to indicate the book was a "received" work.

  • Bailey, Alice (1922). Initiation, Human and Solar. ISBN 978-0-85330-110-3.
  • Bailey, Alice (1922). Letters on Occult Meditation. ISBN 978-0-85330-111-0.
  • Bailey, Alice A. (1925). A Treatise on Cosmic Fire. ISBN 978-0-85330-117-2.
  • Bailey, Alice (1997) [1927]. The Light of the Soul: Its Science and Effect : a paraphrase of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. ISBN 978-0-85330-112-7.
  • Bailey, Alice (1987) [1934]. A Treatise on White Magic, or, The Way of the Disciple (5 ed.). ISBN 978-0-85330-123-3.
  • Bailey, Alice A.; Khul, Djwhal (1944). Discipleship in the New Age I. ISBN 978-0-85330-103-5.
  • Bailey, Alice A.; Khul, Djwhal (1955). Discipleship in the New Age II. ISBN 978-0-85330-104-2.
  • Bailey, Alice (1944). The Problems of Humanity. ISBN 978-0-85330-113-4.
  • Bailey, Alice (1947). The Reappearance of the Christ. ISBN 978-0-85330-114-1.
  • Bailey, Alice (1949). The Destiny of the Nations. ISBN 978-0-85330-102-8.
  • Bailey, Alice (1950). Glamour: A World Problem. ISBN 978-0-85330-109-7.
  • Bailey, Alice; Khul, Djwhal (1950). Telepathy and the Etheric Vehicle. ISBN 978-0-85330-116-5.
  • Bailey, Alice (1954). Education in the New Age. ISBN 978-0-85330-105-9.
  • Bailey, Alice A.; Khul, Djwhal (1957). The Externalisation of the Hierarchy. ISBN 978-0-85330-106-6.
  • Bailey, Alice A. (2003). Ponder on This (compilation). ISBN 978-0-85330-131-8.
  • A Treatise on the Seven Rays:

Credited to Alice A. Bailey alone Edit

Works in which Bailey claimed sole authorship of the material.

Biography Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ A commentary on the Great Invocation on Lucis Trust's website says "Christ emphasised ever the Fatherhood of God and substituted it in place of the cruel, jealous tribal Jehovah."[80] See also Marcionism.

References Edit

  1. ^ American Astrology magazine, September 1937
  2. ^ Bailey 1951 p.1. From the Preface by Foster Bailey.
  3. ^ Bailey 1951. pp.233–234.
  4. ^ a b Jenkins 2000. p.87. "Writers of the 1920s and 1930s presented themselves as advocates of a New Age of occult enlightenment, and Alice Bailey did much to popularize the dual terms 'New Age' and 'Aquarian'"
  5. ^ Bailey 1951. pp. 9, 12.
  6. ^ a b c d e }Keller 2006. p.65.
  7. ^ Bailey, Alice (1951). The Unfinished Biography. Lucis Publishing Company. p. 34. ISBN 0853301247.
  8. ^ York, Michael (1 January 1995). The Emerging Network: A Sociology of the New Age and Neo-pagan Movements. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8476-8001-6.
  9. ^ Ross, Joseph E. (2004). Krotona of Old Hollywood, Vol. II. Joseph Ross. p. 340. ISBN 0-925943-12-6.
  10. ^ a b Keller, Rosemary Skinner. Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America. Indiana University Press. 2006. p 762
  11. ^ Sutcliffe, Steven J (2003). Children of the New Age: A History of Spiritual Practices. Routledge. p. 46. ISBN 0-415-24299-1.
  12. ^ Mills, Joy, 100 Years of Theosophy, A History of the Theosophical Society in America, 1987, p. 62
  13. ^ Meade, Marion, Madame Blavatsky, the Woman Behind the Myth, Putnam, 1980, p. 468
  14. ^ Campbell, Bruce, F., Ancient Wisdom Revived, a History of the Theosophical Movement, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1980, p. 151
  15. ^ Penn, Lee (2004). False Dawn: The United Religions Initiative, Globalism, and the Quest for a One World Religion. Sophia Perennis. p. 20. ISBN 1-59731-000-X.
  16. ^ Sutcliffe, Steven (31 December 2003). Children of the New Age: A History of Spiritual Practices. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780415242998 – via Google Books.
  17. ^ Keller, Rosemary Skinner; Ruether, Rosemary Radford; Cantlon, Marie (1 January 2006). Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34685-1.
  18. ^ a b Campbell, Bruce, F., Ancient Wisdom Revived, a History of the Theosophical Movement, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1980, p. 151
  19. ^ Ransom, Josephine, A Short History of the Theosophical Society, Adyar, 1938, p. 452
  20. ^ Ross, Joseph E., Krotona of Old Hollywood, Vol. II Joseph Ross, 2004, p. 346
  21. ^ Hammer, Olav (2004). Claiming Knowledge: Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age. BRILL. p. 65. ISBN 90-04-13638-X.
  22. ^ "The Esoteric Meaning of Lucifer (Lucis Trust)". www.lucistrust.org.
  23. ^ Initiation, Human and Solar. Copyright 1922 by Alice A. Bailey. First Edition. Lucifer Publishing Co., 135 Broadway, New York City
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  25. ^ Judah, Stillson J. "History and Philosophy of Metaphysical Movements in America" (1967), Westminster Press, pp.119–131, and Campbell, Bruce, Ancient Wisdom Revived: A History of the Theosophical Movement (1980), pp. 150–55, University of California Press, Berkeley, ISBN 0-520-03968-8, as cited in Beekman, Scott, William Dudley Pelley: A Life in Right-Wing Extremism And the Occult (2005), p.196, Syracuse University Press, ISBN 0-8156-0819-5
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  29. ^ Colebrooke, Henry Thomas (1858). Essays on the Religion and Philosophy of the Hindus. Williams and Norgate. pp. 79, 83, 119. Reprinted from 'Asiatic researches' and from the 'Transactions of the Royal Asiatic society.' Original from Harvard University.
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  37. ^ Bailey, Alice A. Esoteric Healing. Lucis Trust. 1953 p 564
  38. ^ Bailey, Alice A. Initiation Human and Solar, Lucis Trust. 1922 p IV, chart III
  39. ^ Ponder on This. Lucis. 1 January 1983.
  40. ^ Rogers, Mark (13 February 2014). The Esoteric Codex: Theosophy I. Lulu.com. ISBN 978-1-312-01114-4.[self-published source]
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  42. ^ Jurriaance, Aart, Bridges, " Bridges Trust, South Africa, c. 1978, p. 130, 77, 91, 105
  43. ^ Bailey, Alice A. (1 January 1971). Ponder on this: From the Writings of Alice A. Bailey and the Tibetan Master, Djwhal Khul. Lucis Publishing Companies. ISBN 978-0-85330-131-8.
  44. ^ Melton, J. Gordon; Clark, Jerome; Kelly, Aidan A. (1990). New Age Encyclopedia. Gale Research Inc. p. 57. ISBN 0-8103-7159-6.
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  46. ^ "CHAPTER TWO - CHRIST'S UNIQUE OCCASION - Online Books (Lucis Trust)". www.lucistrust.org.
  47. ^ Lane, David H. (1996). The Phenomenon of Teilhard: Prophet for a New Age. Mercer University Press. p. 132. ISBN 0-86554-498-0. "One of the three fundamental requirements of the training in the School is "occult meditation" and disciples are taught to "cooperate with the Plan of Hierarchy" elaborated in the writings of Alice Bailey. Serving "the Plan" by serving humanity is central to the esotericism which forms a practical way of life for disciples and prepares them for "service in the Aquarian age". ([footnote in situ] from the Arcane School brochure supplied by the Triangle Center, Wellington NZ. The Aquarian Age is the "New Age" issued in under the astrological sign Aquarius.)"
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  49. ^ Ross, Joseph E., Krotona of Old Hollywood, Vol. II Joseph Ross, 2004, p. 398
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  51. ^ Hammer, Olav, Claiming Knowledge: Strategies of epistemology from theosophy to the new age. BRILL, 2001, p. 65
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  61. ^ Bailey, Alice A. (1973). A Treatise on Cosmic Fire. Lucis Trust. pp. 1166–1229. ISBN 0-85330-117-4. SECTION TWO – DIVISION F – THE LAW OF ATTRACTION
  62. ^ Klimo, Jon, Investigations on Receiving Information from Paranormal Sources, J. Tarcher, Inc, 1987, p 118.
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  67. ^ Penn, Lee, False Dawn: The United Religions Initiative, Globalism, and the Quest for a One-World Religion, p. 264, Sophia Perennis, ISBN 1-59731-000-X
  68. ^ Jurriaance, Aart, Bridges, " Bridges Trust, South Africa, c. 1978, p. 209, 261, 268
  69. ^ a b Shnirelman, Victor A. Russian Neo-pagan Myths and Antisemitism 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine in Acta no. 13, Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism. The Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. 1998. Retrieved 2007-08-22.
  70. ^ Lubelsky, Isaac Lubelsky (2013). Mythological and Real Race Issues in Theosophy, in "Handbook of the Theosophical Current" (PDF). Brill. pp. 335–353.
  71. ^ Sjöö, Monica of the 1960s onward. The Racist Legacy of Alice Bailey 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine in From the Flames – Radical Feminism with Spirit issue 22. Winter 1998/1999. Retrieved August 23, 2013.
  72. ^ Sjöö, Monica, Some Thoughts About the New Age Movement, Wood and Water magazine, Summer 1989:2–6. as cited in York, Michael, The Emerging Network: A Sociology of the New Age and Neo-Pagan Movements, p. 124, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 0-8476-8001-0
  73. ^ a b Newman, Hannah (2005). "Invocation, The Great". In Levy, Richard S. (ed.). Antisemitism: A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution. ABC-CLIO. pp. 351–352. ISBN 1-85109-439-3.
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Further reading Edit

  • Newburn, Kathy. A Planetary Awakening: Reflections on the Teachings of the Tibetan in the Works of Alice A. Bailey. Nevada City, CA: Blue Dolphin Publications, 2007.

External links Edit

  • All the books of Alice A. Bailey can be read online at Lucis Trust
  • short excerpt
  • Dissertation from the U of W. Sydney, The texts of Alice A. Bailey: An inquiry into the role of esotericism in transforming consciousness.

alice, bailey, american, writer, children, books, articles, periodicals, alice, cooper, bailey, confused, with, alice, bailly, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statement. For the American writer of children s books and articles for periodicals see Alice Cooper Bailey Not to be confused with Alice Bailly This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alice Ann Bailey June 16 1880 December 15 1949 was a writer of more than twenty four books on theosophical subjects and was one of the first writers to use the term New Age Bailey was born as Alice La Trobe Bateman in Manchester England 1 She moved to the United States in 1907 where she spent most of her life as a writer and teacher Alice Ann BaileyAlice BaileyBornAlice La Trobe Bateman 1880 06 16 June 16 1880Manchester EnglandDiedDecember 15 1949 1949 12 15 aged 69 New York City United StatesNationalityBritish and AmericanOccupationEsoteric authorSpousesWalter Evans divorced wbr Foster Bailey m 1921 wbr Children3Bailey s works written between 1919 and 1949 describe a wide ranging neo Theosophical system of esoteric thought covering such topics as how spirituality relates to the Solar System meditation healing spiritual psychology the destiny of nations and prescriptions for society in general She described the majority of her work as having been telepathically dictated to her by a Master of Wisdom initially referred to only as the Tibetan or by the initials D K later identified as Djwal Khul 2 Her writings bore some similarity to those of Madame Blavatsky and are among the teachings often referred to as the Ageless Wisdom Though Bailey s writings differ in some respects to the Theosophy of Madame Blavatsky they have much in common with it She wrote on religious themes including Christianity though her writings are fundamentally different from many aspects of Christianity or other orthodox religions Her vision of a unified society included a global spirit of religion different from traditional religious forms and including the concept of the Age of Aquarius 3 4 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood and early life 1 2 With the Theosophical Society 1 3 Lucis Trust 2 Main ideas 2 1 The seven rays of energy 2 2 Esoteric astrology 2 3 Esoteric healing 2 4 The constitution of man 2 5 The Great Invocation 2 6 Discipleship and service 2 7 Unity and divinity of nations and groups 2 8 Comparison with Theosophy 2 9 Ideas about races and evolution 2 9 1 Criticism of her ideas on races 2 10 On organized religions 3 Influence 3 1 Groups founded by Bailey or her followers 3 2 Influence on the New Age movement 3 3 Influence on neopaganism 3 4 Influence on women in religion 3 5 Influence on psychotherapy and healing 3 6 Influence on UFO groups 4 In popular culture 5 Bibliography 5 1 Credited to Alice Bailey 5 2 Credited to Alice A Bailey alone 5 3 Biography 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography EditChildhood and early life Edit Bailey was born into a wealthy middle class British family and as a member of the Anglican Church received a thorough Christian education 5 Her autobiography states that at the age of 15 on June 30 1895 Bailey was visited by a stranger a tall man dressed in European clothes and wearing a turban who told her she needed to develop self control to prepare for certain work he planned for her to do 6 7 This turned out to be the creation and publication of 19 books together with educational and meditation work that reached practically all the countries of the world 8 At the age of 22 Bailey did evangelical work in connection with the YMCA and the British Army 9 This took her to India where in 1907 she met her future husband Walter Evans Together they moved to America where Evans became an Episcopalian priest 10 The marriage did not last and Bailey pushed for and received a divorce She left with their three children after their formal separation in 1915 Then followed a difficult period in which she worked in a sardine factory to support herself and the children 6 11 With the Theosophical Society Edit nbsp The Society s seal incorporated the Swastika Star of David Ankh Aum and Ouroboros symbolsBailey discovered the Theosophical Society and the work of Helena Petrovna Blavatsky The Theosophical Society states that Bailey became involved in 1917 12 Theosophist Joy Mills states that in 1918 she became a member of the Esoteric Section of the society 13 Theosophist Bruce F Campbell notes She quickly rose to a position of influence in the American Section of the Adyar society moving to its headquarters at Krotona in Hollywood She became editor of its magazine The Messenger and member of the committee responsible for Krotona 14 In 1919 Foster Bailey 1888 1977 who was to be her second husband became National Secretary of the Theosophical Society They married in 1921 15 The Theosophist published the first few chapters of her first work Initiation Human and Solar 16 17 p 762 but then stopped for reasons Bailey called theosophical jealousy and reactionary attitude 18 Bailey objected to the neo Theosophy of Annie Besant and worked with Foster Bailey to gain more power in the American Section 18 According to Theosophist Josephine Maria Davies Ransom she became part of a progressive Back to Blavatsky movement led mainly by Mr and Mrs Foster Bailey 19 She outlined her vision for the Esoteric Section of the Theosophical Society however her efforts to influence the society failed and she and her husband were dismissed from their positions 20 According to historian of religion Olav Hammer Bailey s early writings on communications with the Tibetan were well received within the society but society president Annie Besant questioned Bailey s claims of communications with the Tibetan and allowed the Baileys to be expelled from the organization 21 According to Bailey she had come to see the society as authoritarian and involved with lower psychic phenomena 6 Lucis Trust Edit Main article Lucis Trust Alice and Foster Bailey founded the Lucis Trust in 1922 Its activities include the Arcane School World Goodwill Triangles a quarterly magazine called The Beacon and a publishing company primarily intended to publish Bailey s many books The Arcane School gives instruction and guidance in meditation via correspondence based on the ideas in Bailey s books World Goodwill is intended to promote better human relations through goodwill which they define as love in action That action included the support of the United Nations The Triangles are groups of three people who agree to link up in thought each day and to meditate on right human relations visualizing light and love pouring into human minds and hearts followed by the use of the Great Invocation It is not necessary for each person to link in thought at the same time each day and it only takes a few moments of time Alice and Foster Bailey founded Lucifer Publishing Company Lucifer and Lucis come from the same word root lucis being the Latin genitive case meaning of light 22 After the first two or three years the name was changed to Lucis Publishing Co 23 The Theosophical Society also used the name Lucifer for its early magazine In 1923 with the help of Foster Bailey Alice Bailey founded the Arcane School which is part of Lucis Trust This school provides educational correspondence meditation instruction and guided study based on her writings 24 Bailey continued to work up until the time of her death in 1949 25 Main ideas EditThe seven rays of energy Edit Bailey s writings includes a detailed exposition of the seven rays which are presented as the fundamental energies that are behind and exist throughout all manifestation They are seen as the basic creative forces of the universe and emanations of Divinity that underlie the evolution of all things 26 The rays are described as related to human psychology the destiny of nations as well as the planets and stars of the heavens The concept of the seven rays can be found in Theosophical works 27 Campbell writes that Bailey was the first to develop the idea of the seven rays although it can be found in germ in earlier Theosophical writings 28 The seven rays also appear in Hindu religious philosophy 29 30 Esoteric astrology Edit Esoteric astrology is part of Alice Bailey s Ageless Wisdom teachings which she said were relayed by her Tibetan Master Djwhal Khul 31 32 The esoteric astrologers who follow the teachings of Bailey typically base their work on her five volume Treatise on the Seven Rays particularly volume three which focuses on astrology Her esoteric astrology deals with the evolution of soul consciousness and the obstacles to that evolution 33 Esoteric healing Edit Bailey s teaching on healing primarily concerns the relationship of soul to personality of the spiritual to the material nature In her view all disease has its ultimate root in some type of blocked or inhibited soul life Therefore healing consists of releasing the soul that is the establishing of a right relation between the soul and the personality where the personality is defined as the instrument of soul expression Eliminating obstructions and congestion the source of a major part of disease The whole process of healing is directed by thought the mind of the healer and sometimes emotional synergy to inhibit causes of disease Healing becomes automatic where the practitioner no longer is directed by energies currents centers that include the nadis as one area of focus the abstract is related back to the practices where appropriate but healing is directed without effort 34 35 The constitution of man Edit In line with previous Theosophical teachings 36 Bailey taught that man consists of Monad spark of God true Self Soul higher mind Love nature higher consciousness Personality consisting of three aspects Lower mind intellect Emotions or astral nature Physical and etheric bodyEach of the three aspects of the lower nature is described as a body or aura of energy and seen as partial expression of the real self or soul The soul is regarded as the reflection of the real self that works through or uses the three aspects of personality 37 38 She also speaks of these as vehicles or sheaths and alternately as the mental body astral body or physical body 39 The etheric body is most directly related to physical health and is seen as the vital energizing agent for the individual while in physical incarnation 40 self published source p 172 41 p 33 See also Subtle body The mind and emotional nature are seen as auras 42 or energy fields of which brain activity is a secondary effect 43 p 411 The Great Invocation Edit The Great Invocation is a mantra given in 1937 by Bailey The mantra begins with From the point of Light within the Mind of God let light stream forth into the minds of men with the rest of the passage expressing the ideas of love the return of The Christ Maitreya and of men acting in accordance with the plan of God It is well known by some followers of the New Age movement where it is widely used as part of meditation particularly in groups 44 For instance the invocation has been used in the Findhorn Foundation community since the 1970s In response to the September 11 attacks 2001 the Great Invocation was used as a central element of a new daily program at Findhorn known as the Network of Light meditations for peace 45 Rosemary Keller described the Great Invocation as a call for the Christ to return to Earth and wrote that Bailey related groups purchased radio and television time to broadcast the invocation as part of their mission and that often the invocation was recited in what Keller called light groups to accomplish what Bailey s disciples considered to be attracting and focusing spiritual energies to benefit the planet 6 Alice Bailey s writings have a theme that generally advocates replacement of the old with the new and this occurs in connection with the Great Invocation as follows This new Invocation if given widespread distribution can be to the new world religion what the Lord s Prayer has been to Christianity and the 23rd Psalm has been to the spiritually minded Jew 46 Discipleship and service Edit Bailey s writings downplayed traditional devotional and religious aspects of the spiritual life in favor of a life of meditation service to humanity and cooperation with the Plan of the Hierarchy 47 In her thinking service is a soul instinct innate and peculiar to soul unfoldment It is the outstanding characteristic of the soul just as desire is the outstanding characteristic of the lower nature 48 Unity and divinity of nations and groups Edit Ross describes Bailey s teachings as emphasizing the underlying unity of all forms of life and the essential oneness of all religions of all departments of science and of all the philosophies 49 Campbell notes that the New Group of World Servers was established for promotion of international understanding economic sharing and religious unity 28 Comparison with Theosophy Edit Theosophists are divided on their assessment of Alice Bailey s writings For instance the noted contemporary Theosophical writer Geoffrey Hodson wrote a highly favorable review of one her books saying Once more Alice Bailey has placed occult students in her debt 50 Olav Hammer writes Her first book Initiation Human and Solar was at first favorably received by her fellow theosophists Soon however her claims to be recipient of ageless wisdom from the Masters met with opposition 51 The conflict is understandable since her works contain some criticisms of Theosophy and at the time of the break she voiced her criticism of what she saw as dogmatic structures within the society while questioning the pledges of loyalty to Theosophical leaders that were required During the annual convention of 1920 in Chicago there was a power struggle between forces loyal to Besant and the Esoteric Section and others who believed that the latter had become too powerful Below the surface was a hidden controversy regarding Alice s work with the Tibetan 10 For a more recent example of Bailey Theosophy division see Theosophy in Scandinavia Campbell writes that Bailey s books are a reworking of major Theosophical themes with some distinctive emphases and that they present a comprehensive system of esoteric science and occult philosophy cognizant of contemporary social and political developments 52 Steven J Sutcliffe points out that both Bailey and Blavatsky s work evoke a picture of Tibet as the spiritual home of the Masters and that Bailey claimed a more or less direct lineage to Blavatsky He describes Bailey as a post Theosophical theorist reporting that Bailey received instruction from former personal pupils of Blavatsky and notes that her third book A Treatise on Cosmic Fire not only reproduces Blavatsky s apocryphal Stanzas of Dzyan but is dedicated to Blavatsky as well 53 Parallels between Theosophy and Bailey are many for instance one principle of Theosophy the Law of Attraction was discussed in esoteric writings by Blavatsky 54 Annie Besant 55 William Quan Judge 56 and others 57 58 and was also discussed in the writings of Alice Bailey including a whole chapter in one of her books 59 60 61 The term has been embraced in a simplified form by the contemporary New Age movement and was popularized in the 2006 film The Secret Jon Klimo in Investigations on Receiving Information from Paranormal Sources writes As with Blavatsky Theosophical material and more recent contemporary channeled material from other sources we find in the Bailey work the same occult cosmological hierarchy physical etheric astral mental causal and higher inhabited levels of existence 62 Olav Hammer in the book Claiming Knowledge Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age highlights Bailey s Theosophical similarities as well as noting what he thinks are some differences between them To a large extent Bailey s teachings are a restatement and amplification of theosophy of the Secret Doctrine Bailey inherited from Blavatsky and Leadbeater a predilection for profuse details and complex classificatory schemes Her books have also introduced shifts in emphasis as well as new doctrinal elements 63 Some Theosophical critics have contended that there are major differences between Bailey s ideas and the Theosophy of Blavatsky such as Bailey s embrace of some mystical Christian terms and concepts and her acceptance of Charles Webster Leadbeater 28 64 Nicholas Weeks writing for the Theosophical magazine Fohat in 1997 felt Bailey s assertion that her teachings are grounded in and do not oppose in any fundamental way Theosophy as lived and taught by HPB and her Gurus was false Her books are in fact rooted in the pseudo theosophy pioneered by C W Leadbeater He stated Bailey accepted Leadbeater s fantasy of the return of Christ and disparaged Bailey s Great Invocation a prayer supposed to induce Christ and his Masters to leave their hidden ashrams and enter into major cities to lead the Aquarian Age This contrasts with the Theosophy of Blavatsky he says which emphasizes reliance on the Christos principle within each person 64 Ideas about races and evolution Edit Bailey described a concept of racial differentiation that posited a division of humanity into races that are on different levels in a ladder of evolution These races do not represent a national or physical type but a stage of evolution For example she states that the Aryan root race or 5th race is an emerging new race and so a relatively new evolutionary phenomenon She stated that this newer type is forming in every land but primarily in lands where Caucasian peoples are found and indicates a culture where thought or intellect is dominant She stated that as evolution proceeds things are accelerated and humanity will soon be predominantly distinguished by the Aryan consciousness I speak not in terms of the Aryan race as it is generally understood today or in its Nordic implications 65 In her book Education in the New Age Bailey made predictions about the use of this esoteric racial concept in the schools of the future and that these schools would incorporate the idea of root races These races are a way of conceptualizing evolution as it occurs over vast prehistoric spans of time and during which humanity developed body Lemurian emotion Atlantean and mind Aryan She states that there is now being developed a new race with a spiritual dimension that expresses as group qualities and consciousness and idealistic vision 66 She stated that this new development may take many thousands of years and may therefore not be the quick advance some of her New Age followers wish for In her The Destiny of the Nations Bailey described a process by which this new race will evolve after which very low grade human bodies will disappear causing a general shift in the racial types toward a higher standard 67 For Bailey the evolution of humanity was intimately bound up with its relationship to this Spiritual Hierarchy She believed that the influences of religions philosophies sciences educational movements and human culture in general are the result of this relationship 68 Criticism of her ideas on races Edit Bailey s ideas about race were criticized by Victor Shnirelman a cultural anthropologist and ethnographer who in a survey of modern Neopaganism in Russia drew particular attention to groups that take an extremely negative view of multi culturalism object to the mixture of kinds and support isolationism and the prohibition of immigration Shnirelman saw some of Bailey s ideas on race as similar to the racism he perceived in the writing of Julius Evola saying that racist and antisemitic trends are explicit for example in the occult teachings of Alice Bailey and her followers who wish to cleanse Christianity of its Jewish inheritance and reject the Jewish Bible as a prerequisite for entering the Age of Aquarius 69 Shnirelman s view was echoed by Isaac Lubelsky who criticized not only Bailey but Blavatsky Steiner and others In Lubelsky s view racists ideas were common to the whole Theosophical family 70 Monica Sjoo a Swedish painter writer and a radical anarcho eco feminist wrote that Bailey through her published teachings had a reactionary and racist influence on the whole New Age movement 71 She also noted what she called Bailey s and Theosophy s pro fascist religious views such as the belief in a secret elite of Masters who influence world events and human minds through occult means and attempt to bring about the evolution of an Aryan race although this is an understandably modern misunderstanding of her teaching Aryan as used by Bailey is easily confused with the modern terminology and the Masters are not an elite but instead are enlightened individuals originally introduced in theosophy as having evolved beyond the human or 4th kingdom into the fifth or Kingdom of souls and who in her view guide the human race as a whole 72 Controversy has arisen around some of Bailey s statements on nationalism American isolationism Soviet totalitarianism Fascism Zionism Nazism race relations Africans Jews and the religions of Judaism and Christianity Yonassan Gershom and others have claimed that her writings contain racist material 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 The American Chassidic author Yonassan Gershom wrote that Bailey s plan for a New World Order and her call for the gradual dissolution again if in any way possible of the Orthodox Jewish faith revealed that her goal is nothing less than the destruction of Judaism itself Gershom also wrote that This stereotyped portrayal of Jews is followed by a hackneyed diatribe against the Biblical Hebrews based upon the angry Jehovah theology of nineteenth century Protestantism Jews do not and never have worshipped an angry vengeful god and we Jews never ever call God Jehovah 74 Researcher Hannah Newman described what she found to be an antisemitic element in the Great Invocation According to Newman the Plan named in the invocation refers to the plan authored by the Hierarchy that Newman states places high priority on removing all Jewish presence and influence from human consciousness a goal to be achieved by eliminating Judaism 73 a On organized religions Edit Bailey taught a form of universal spirituality that transcended denominational identification believing that Every class of human beings is a group of brothers Catholics Jews Gentiles occidentals and orientals are all the sons of God She stated that all religions originate from the same spiritual source and that humanity will eventually come to realize this and as they do so the result will be the emergence of a universal world religion and a new world order 81 82 Author Steven Sutcliffe wrote that Bailey s World Goodwill organization was promoting groups of world servers to as he quotes Bailey serve the Plan Humanity the Hierarchy and the Christ 83 Despite her focus on unity of religion Bromley and Hammond point out that Bailey and other occultists hammered home the central idea The East is the true home of spiritual knowledge and occult wisdom 84 Influence EditGroups founded by Bailey or her followers Edit The Arcane School founded by Alice and Foster Bailey to disseminate spiritual teachings organizes a worldwide Triangles program to bring people together in groups of three for daily meditation and study Their belief is that they receive divine energy through meditation and that this energy is transmitted to humanity so raising spiritual awareness 85 John Michael Greer s New Encyclopedia of the Occult states that the school seeks to develop a New Group of World Servers to accomplish the work of the Hierarchy of Masters under the guidance of its head the Christ 86 Twelves is a modern continuation of Triangles and many members of Lucis Trust and other respected orgs are members today Influence on the New Age movement Edit Bailey made extensive use of the term New Age in her books and some writers have described her as the founder of the New Age movement 4 69 87 although The New Age was used as the title of a Journal of Christian liberalism and Socialism published as early as 1894 predating Bailey s use of the term 88 89 James R Lewis and J Gordon Melton in Perspectives on the New Age wrote The most important though certainly not the only source of this transformative metaphor as well as the term New Age was Theosophy particularly as the Theosophical perspective was mediated to the movement by the works of Alice Bailey 90 Sir John Sinclair in his book The Alice Bailey Inheritance commented on the seminal influence of Alice Bailey which he said underlies the consciousness growth movement in the 20th century 91 Influence on neopaganism Edit Several writers have mentioned the affinity of some of Bailey s concepts with modern expressions of paganism 92 93 During the 1960s and 1970s the neopagan author and ceremonial magic ritualist Caroll Poke Runyon published a magazine called The Seventh Ray its name taken from the writings of Alice Bailey Three volumes of collected articles from the magazine were published as The Seventh Ray Book I The Blue Ray The Seventh Ray Book II the Red Ray and The Seventh Ray Book III the Green Ray In contrast to this Daren Kemp in Handbook to the New Age sees critical differences between neopaganism and New Age movements and indicates that it is a mistake to conflate them 94 Influence on women in religion Edit Author Catherine Wessinger wrote that Bailey was a liberated woman sixty years before it became popular and that Bailey s books expressed a similar millennial view to the works of Annie Besant Wessinger stated that they were an important source of the contemporary New Age movement 95 According to the Encyclopedia of Women And Religion in North America several leaders of New Age philosophy have further developed Bailey s teachings including the well known personalities JZ Knight who purports to channel the entity known by the name Ramtha Helen Schucman author of A Course in Miracles purportedly through the process of telepathic dictation she called scribing and Elizabeth Clare Prophet who published what she referred to as dictations from Ascended Masters These developments have been referred to by other sources as spin offs and splinter groups 96 p 65 97 p 557 The differences between Theosophy Bailey and Elizabeth Clare Prophet can be noted in connection with Elizabeth Clare Prophet s radical concepts of catastrophic change and survivalism including the building of fall out shelters 98 p 81 The validity of the Elizabeth Clare Prophet s writings was disputed by Theosophical writers citation needed The many claims and teachings of the spin off groups underscores their divergences for example there appears to be a widespread confusion about the phrase and meaning of Ascendant Master in that it was adopted by Mark and Elizabeth Prophet but not by Theosophists or Alice Bailey 99 100 self published source p 111 The concepts and language have been conflated in the popular mind 101 Influence on psychotherapy and healing Edit In 1930 with the patronage of English Dutch spiritualist theosophist and scholar Olga Froebe Kapteyn Bailey established the short lived School of Spiritual Research located on Froebe Kapteyn s estate Casa Gabriella in Switzerland In 1932 the school was closed because of personal conflict between Bailey and Froebe Kapteyn at which time Froebe Kapteyn replaced it with the Eranos group Roberto Assagioli founder of Psychosynthesis was a lecturer at School of Spiritual Research 102 He continued a close association with Bailey during the 1930s some of his writings were published in Bailey s magazine The Beacon and he was a trustee of Bailey s organization the Lucis Trust 103 He had developed his approach to psychology called Psychosynthesis beginning in 1910 his methods were later influenced by some elements of Bailey s work 104 105 106 107 108 However authors John Firman and Ann Gila write that Assagioli kept what he referred to as a wall of silence between the areas of psychosynthesis and religion or metaphysics insisting that they not be conflated with each other 109 Roger J Woolger said in a paper presented to the Beyond the Brain Conference held at Cambridge University in 1999 In Tansley as in Brennan you will find descriptions of a hierarchy of subtle bodies called the etheric emotional mental and spiritual that surround the physical body Tansley attributed the source of his model to Alice Bailey s theosophical commentary on The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali the locus classicus of Hindu teaching 110 Bailey s influence can be found in therapeutic communities with which she was never directly involved such as the Human Potential Movement 6 She was also cited in THERAPEUTIC TOUCH Healing Science or Psychic Midwife by Sharon Fish 111 Influence on UFO groups Edit Alice Bailey makes no reference to unidentified flying objects 112 This is not surprising since Alice Bailey s books were written between 1919 and 1949 113 and the emergence of religion specifically focused on UFOs is a post 1947 phenomena 114 But she did speak of Masters as having evolved beyond the human level and expounded a cosmology of a living universe in which even planets and stars are regarded as living entities These ideas may partially account for an association in minds of some between Bailey and others of the Theosophical schools and UFOs For instance Christopher Partridge wrote of this association as easily transferred 115 The connection does exist in the sense that there is a subset of persons interested in both esoteric writings and UFOs and who link them as shown by the fact that some books that cite Alice Bailey or Theosophy also cite UFOs 116 Christopher Partridge wrote that the works of Bailey Rudolf Steiner and Theosophy in general all influenced what he called the UFO religions 117 He explained that Theosophy has several prominent branches and strictly speaking the branch which has had the most important influence on the UFO religion is that developed by Alice Bailey 118 Partridge also quoted Gordon Melton who suggested that the first UFO religion was Guy Ballard s I Am Activity 117 which Bailey described as a cheap comedy 119 Professor Robert S Ellwood of the University of Southern California investigated a wide range of religious and spiritual groups in the United States during the 1970s including a nationwide group of UFO believers called Understanding Inc which had been founded by a contactee named Daniel Fry He reported that There is no particular religious practice connected with the meeting although the New Age Prayer derived from the Alice Bailey writings is used as an invocation 120 George D Chryssides of the University of Wolverhampton cited Bailey s influence on the ideas of the Order of the Solar Temple and related UFO organisations 121 In popular culture EditLou Reed of the Velvet Underground was a devoted reader of Bailey s work especially her book A Treatise on White Magic which he urged on others Author Ryan H Walsh suggests that book had an influence on the Velvet s second album White Light White Heat 122 In 1975 Todd Rundgren released an album titled Initiation which has a song called Initiation on side one The title of the album is apparently based on the Theosophical concept of initiation taught by Alice A Bailey and C W Leadbeater The entire second side of the album is taken up by a song called A Treatise on Cosmic Fire the three parts of the song are listed as I The Internal Fire or Fire by Friction II The Fire of Spirit or Electric Fire The Fire of Mind or Solar Fire The second parts of these three phrases are taken directly from Alice A Bailey s book A Treatise on Cosmic Fire Also in 1975 Rundgren released an album by his side project Utopia titled Another Live This album contained a song titled The Seven Rays see reference above Finally in 1977 Rundgren followed up with another Bailey reference with a song entitled Love in Action from the Utopia album Oops Wrong Planet Love in Action was the concept promoted by Bailey s and Foster Bailey s World Goodwill organization original research In 1982 Bailey s influence appeared in pop culture with the release of Van Morrison s album Beautiful Vision in which he directly referred to the teachings and the Tibetan in the lyrics of the songs Dweller on the Threshold and Aryan Mist 123 Morrison also used the phrase world of glamour reminiscent of Bailey s Glamour A World Problem in the songs Ivory Tower and Green Mansions The song Ancient of Days from the 1984 Sense of Wonder album appears to be a reference to a Bailey concept found in such books as The Externalization of the Hierarchy Alice A Bailey and the Tibetan s Glamour A World Problem is also directly cited in the liner notes to Morrison s album Inarticulate Speech of the Heart original research Bibliography EditThe Lucis Trust Publishing Company and the Lucis Press Limited are the official publishers of Alice Bailey s books Credited to Alice Bailey Edit Works containing the prefatory Extract from a Statement by the Tibetan generally taken to indicate the book was a received work Bailey Alice 1922 Initiation Human and Solar ISBN 978 0 85330 110 3 Bailey Alice 1922 Letters on Occult Meditation ISBN 978 0 85330 111 0 Bailey Alice A 1925 A Treatise on Cosmic Fire ISBN 978 0 85330 117 2 Bailey Alice 1997 1927 The Light of the Soul Its Science and Effect a paraphrase of the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali ISBN 978 0 85330 112 7 Bailey Alice 1987 1934 A Treatise on White Magic or The Way of the Disciple 5 ed ISBN 978 0 85330 123 3 Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1944 Discipleship in the New Age I ISBN 978 0 85330 103 5 Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1955 Discipleship in the New Age II ISBN 978 0 85330 104 2 Bailey Alice 1944 The Problems of Humanity ISBN 978 0 85330 113 4 Bailey Alice 1947 The Reappearance of the Christ ISBN 978 0 85330 114 1 Bailey Alice 1949 The Destiny of the Nations ISBN 978 0 85330 102 8 Bailey Alice 1950 Glamour A World Problem ISBN 978 0 85330 109 7 Bailey Alice Khul Djwhal 1950 Telepathy and the Etheric Vehicle ISBN 978 0 85330 116 5 Bailey Alice 1954 Education in the New Age ISBN 978 0 85330 105 9 Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1957 The Externalisation of the Hierarchy ISBN 978 0 85330 106 6 Bailey Alice A 2003 Ponder on This compilation ISBN 978 0 85330 131 8 A Treatise on the Seven Rays Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1936 Volume 1 Esoteric Psychology I ISBN 978 0 85330 118 9 Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1942 Volume 2 Esoteric Psychology II ISBN 978 0 85330 119 6 Volume 3 Esoteric Astrology 1951 ISBN 978 0 85330 120 2 Bailey Alice Anne 1953 Volume 4 Esoteric Healing ISBN 978 0 85330 121 9 Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1960 Volume 5 The Rays and the Initiations ISBN 978 0 85330 122 6 Credited to Alice A Bailey alone Edit Works in which Bailey claimed sole authorship of the material Bailey Alice 1922 The Consciousness of the Atom ISBN 978 0 85330 101 1 Bailey Alice 1930 The Soul and Its Mechanism ISBN 978 0 85330 115 8 Bailey Alice A 1932 From Intellect to Intuition ISBN 978 0 85330 108 0 Bailey Alice A 1937 From Bethlehem to Calvary ISBN 978 0 85330 107 3 Between War and Peace 1942 No ISBN Published by Lucis Publishing Company Bailey Alice A 1951 The Unfinished Autobiography ISBN 978 0 85330 124 0 Bailey Alice A 1974 1957 The Labours of Hercules ISBN 978 0 85330 137 0 Biography Edit Blackthorn Isobel 2020 Alice A Bailey Life and Legacy ISBN 979 8 63575 990 5 See also EditAgni Yoga Annie Besant Helena Petrovna Blavatsky Esoteric cosmology Benjamin Creme Esoteric healing List of spirituality related topics Lucis Trust Magic and religion New World Order Planes of existence Reincarnation Helena Roerich Western mystery traditionNotes Edit A commentary on the Great Invocation on Lucis Trust s website says Christ emphasised ever the Fatherhood of God and substituted it in place of the cruel jealous tribal Jehovah 80 See also Marcionism References Edit American Astrology magazine September 1937 Bailey 1951 p 1 From the Preface by Foster Bailey Bailey 1951 pp 233 234 a b Jenkins 2000 p 87 Writers of the 1920s and 1930s presented themselves as advocates of a New Age of occult enlightenment and Alice Bailey did much to popularize the dual terms New Age and Aquarian Bailey 1951 pp 9 12 a b c d e Keller 2006 p 65 Bailey Alice 1951 The Unfinished Biography Lucis Publishing Company p 34 ISBN 0853301247 York Michael 1 January 1995 The Emerging Network A Sociology of the New Age and Neo pagan Movements Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8476 8001 6 Ross Joseph E 2004 Krotona of Old Hollywood Vol II Joseph Ross p 340 ISBN 0 925943 12 6 a b Keller Rosemary Skinner Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America Indiana University Press 2006 p 762 Sutcliffe Steven J 2003 Children of the New Age A History of Spiritual Practices Routledge p 46 ISBN 0 415 24299 1 Mills Joy 100 Years of Theosophy A History of the Theosophical Society in America 1987 p 62 Meade Marion Madame Blavatsky the Woman Behind the Myth Putnam 1980 p 468 Campbell Bruce F Ancient Wisdom Revived a History of the Theosophical Movement University of California Press Berkeley 1980 p 151 Penn Lee 2004 False Dawn The United Religions Initiative Globalism and the Quest for a One World Religion Sophia Perennis p 20 ISBN 1 59731 000 X Sutcliffe Steven 31 December 2003 Children of the New Age A History of Spiritual Practices Psychology Press ISBN 9780415242998 via Google Books Keller Rosemary Skinner Ruether Rosemary Radford Cantlon Marie 1 January 2006 Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 34685 1 a b Campbell Bruce F Ancient Wisdom Revived a History of the Theosophical Movement University of California Press Berkeley 1980 p 151 Ransom Josephine A Short History of the Theosophical Society Adyar 1938 p 452 Ross Joseph E Krotona of Old Hollywood Vol II Joseph Ross 2004 p 346 Hammer Olav 2004 Claiming Knowledge Strategies of Epistemology from Theosophy to the New Age BRILL p 65 ISBN 90 04 13638 X The Esoteric Meaning of Lucifer Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Initiation Human and Solar Copyright 1922 by Alice A Bailey First Edition Lucifer Publishing Co 135 Broadway New York City Arcane School Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Judah Stillson J History and Philosophy of Metaphysical Movements in America 1967 Westminster Press pp 119 131 and Campbell Bruce Ancient Wisdom Revived A History of the Theosophical Movement 1980 pp 150 55 University of California Press Berkeley ISBN 0 520 03968 8 as cited in Beekman Scott William Dudley Pelley A Life in Right Wing Extremism And the Occult 2005 p 196 Syracuse University Press ISBN 0 8156 0819 5 The Science Of The Seven Rays Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Wood Ernest The Seven Rays Theosophical Publishing House Wheaton Illinois 1925 a b c Campbell Bruce F Ancient Wisdom Revived a History of the Theosophical Movement University of California Press Berkeley 1980 p 153 Colebrooke Henry Thomas 1858 Essays on the Religion and Philosophy of the Hindus Williams and Norgate pp 79 83 119 Reprinted from Asiatic researches and from the Transactions of the Royal Asiatic society Original from Harvard University Garrett John 1871 A Classical Dictionary of India Illustrative of the Mythology Philosophy Literature Antiquities Arts Manners Customs amp c of the Hindus Higginbotham and Co pp 203 216 Director of Public Instruction Mysore India Original from Oxford University Leo Alan 1978 Esoteric Astrology Destiny Books p 318 ISBN 0 89281 181 1 Leo Alan 2005 Symbolism and Astrology An Introduction to Esoteric Astrology Cosimo Classics p 88 ISBN 1 59605 614 2 Oken Alan 1990 Soul Centered Astrology The Crossing Press 068 070 Lucis Trust www lucistrust org CHAPTER I The Psychological Causes of Disease Part 1 Online Books Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Leadbeater C W A Textbook Of Theosophy The Theosophical Publishing House India 1914 chapter I Bailey Alice A Esoteric Healing Lucis Trust 1953 p 564 Bailey Alice A Initiation Human and Solar Lucis Trust 1922 p IV chart III Ponder on This Lucis 1 January 1983 Rogers Mark 13 February 2014 The Esoteric Codex Theosophy I Lulu com ISBN 978 1 312 01114 4 self published source Bailey Alice A 1 January 1971 Ponder on this From the Writings of Alice A Bailey and the Tibetan Master Djwhal Khul Lucis Publishing Companies ISBN 978 0 85330 131 8 Jurriaance Aart Bridges Bridges Trust South Africa c 1978 p 130 77 91 105 Bailey Alice A 1 January 1971 Ponder on this From the Writings of Alice A Bailey and the Tibetan Master Djwhal Khul Lucis Publishing Companies ISBN 978 0 85330 131 8 Melton J Gordon Clark Jerome Kelly Aidan A 1990 New Age Encyclopedia Gale Research Inc p 57 ISBN 0 8103 7159 6 Sutcliffe Steven J 2003 Children of the New Age A History of Spiritual Practices Routledge pp 138 139 ISBN 0 415 24299 1 CHAPTER TWO CHRIST S UNIQUE OCCASION Online Books Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Lane David H 1996 The Phenomenon of Teilhard Prophet for a New Age Mercer University Press p 132 ISBN 0 86554 498 0 One of the three fundamental requirements of the training in the School is occult meditation and disciples are taught to cooperate with the Plan of Hierarchy elaborated in the writings of Alice Bailey Serving the Plan by serving humanity is central to the esotericism which forms a practical way of life for disciples and prepares them for service in the Aquarian age footnote in situ from the Arcane School brochure supplied by the Triangle Center Wellington NZ The Aquarian Age is the New Age issued in under the astrological sign Aquarius Bailey Alice A Khul Djwhal 1 January 1942 Esoteric Psychology Vol II Lucis Publishing Companies ISBN 978 0 85330 119 6 Ross Joseph E Krotona of Old Hollywood Vol II Joseph Ross 2004 p 398 Hodson Geoffrey World Theosophy Magazine February 1931 June 1931 The Theosophical Society 1931 Hammer Olav Claiming Knowledge Strategies of epistemology from theosophy to the new age BRILL 2001 p 65 Campbell Bruce F Ancient Wisdom Revived a History of the Theosophical Movement University of California Press Berkeley 1980 p 152 Sutcliffe Steven J Children of the New Age A History of Spiritual Practices Routledge 2003 p 48 Blavatsky Helena Petrovna Michael Gomes 1997 Isis Unveiled Secrets of the Ancient Wisdom Tradition Quest Books p 83 ISBN 0 8356 0729 1 Besant Annie Wood 1919 Popular Lectures on Theosophy Theosophical Publishing House p 79 Judge William Quan 1915 The Ocean of Theosophy United Lodge of Theosophists p 103 Kumar Sri K Parvathi 1942 Occult Meditations Dhanishta Publications p 230 ISBN 81 89467 04 2 Tatya Tukaram 1887 A Guide to Theosophy Containing Select Articles for the Instructions of Aspirants to the Knowledge of Theosophy Bombay Theosophical Publication Fund p 265 Bailey Alice A 1942 Letters on Occult Meditation Lucis Trust pp 53 p265 Bailey Alice A 1942 Esoteric Psychology II Lucis Trust pp 111 113 ISBN 0 85330 119 0 Bailey Alice A 1973 A Treatise on Cosmic Fire Lucis Trust pp 1166 1229 ISBN 0 85330 117 4 SECTION TWO DIVISION F THE LAW OF ATTRACTION Klimo Jon Investigations on Receiving Information from Paranormal Sources J Tarcher Inc 1987 p 118 Hammer Olav Claiming Knowledge Strategies of epistemology from theosophy to the new age BRILL 2001 p 65 a b Weeks Nicholas Theosophy s Shadow A Critical Look at the Claims and Teachings of Alice A Bailey blavatskyarchives com Bailey Alice A 1950 Glamour A World Problem Lucis Publishing pp 113 114 ISBN 978 0 85330 109 7 Bailey Education in the New Age p 69 71 Penn Lee False Dawn The United Religions Initiative Globalism and the Quest for a One World Religion p 264 Sophia Perennis ISBN 1 59731 000 X Jurriaance Aart Bridges Bridges Trust South Africa c 1978 p 209 261 268 a b Shnirelman Victor A Russian Neo pagan Myths and Antisemitism Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine in Acta no 13 Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism The Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 1998 Retrieved 2007 08 22 Lubelsky Isaac Lubelsky 2013 Mythological and Real Race Issues in Theosophy in Handbook of the Theosophical Current PDF Brill pp 335 353 Sjoo Monica of the 1960s onward The Racist Legacy of Alice Bailey Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine in From the Flames Radical Feminism with Spirit issue 22 Winter 1998 1999 Retrieved August 23 2013 Sjoo Monica Some Thoughts About the New Age Movement Wood and Watermagazine Summer 1989 2 6 as cited in York Michael The Emerging Network A Sociology of the New Age and Neo Pagan Movements p 124 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 8476 8001 0 a b Newman Hannah 2005 Invocation The Great In Levy Richard S ed Antisemitism A Historical Encyclopedia of Prejudice and Persecution ABC CLIO pp 351 352 ISBN 1 85109 439 3 a b Gershom Yonassan 2005 orig 1997 Antisemitic Stereotypes in Alice Bailey s Writings Archived from the original on 12 October 2007 Penn Lee 2004 False Dawn The United Religions Initiative Globalism and the Quest for a One World Religion Sophia Perennis pp 267 268 273 299 ISBN 1 59731 000 X Miller Elliott 1989 A Crash Course on the New Age Movement Describing and Evaluating a Growing Movement Baker Book House p 197 ISBN 0 8010 6248 9 Sjoo Monica 1998 New Age Channelings Who Or What Is Being Channeled Bristol England Green Leaf Bookshop Entire text online at Monica Sjoo website page found 2010 06 28 Sjoo Monica Sinister Channelings Notes and explanations to accompany the New Age Channelings book Entire text online page found 2010 06 28 A comparison between H P Blavatsky amp Alice Baily The Pseudo Occultism of Alice Baily by Alice Leighton Cleather and Basil Crump 1929 The Great Invocation Its Use and Significance Lucis Trust Lane David H 1996 The Phenomenon of Teilhard Prophet for a New Age Mercer University Press p 139 ISBN 0 86554 498 0 Hick John 2001 Dialogues in the Philosophy of Religion Palgrave Macmillan p 155 ISBN 0 333 76103 0 Sutcliffe Steven J 2003 Children of the New Age A History of Spiritual Practices Routledge p 51 ISBN 0 415 24299 1 Bromley David G Phillip E Hammond 1987 The Future of New Religious Movements Mercer University Press p 15 ISBN 0 86554 238 4 New Age Movement subsection Origins in Encyclopaedia Britannica 2003 Greer John Michael 2003 The New Encyclopedia of the Occult Llewellyn Worldwide p 31 ISBN 1 56718 336 0 Pike Sarah M 2004 New Age and Neopagan Religions in America Columbia University Press p 64 ISBN 0 231 12402 3 Chapter II pp 17 31 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 30 May 2008 Retrieved 20 November 2009 Modernist Journals Project Has Grant to Digitize Rare Magazines Brown University Press Releases April 19 2007 Lewis James R and J Gordon Melton Perspectives on the New Age SUNY Press 1992 p xi Sinclair Sir John R The Alice Bailey Inheritance Turnstone Press Limited 1984 Roberts Richard H amp Joanne Pearson Geoffrey Samuel Nature Religion Today paganism in the modern world Edinburgh University Press 1998 pp 34 41 43 203 219 Kemp Daren New Age A Guide Edinburgh University Press 2004 p 57 Kemp Daren Lewis James 28 May 2007 Handbook of New Age BRILL ISBN 9789047420132 Wessinger Catherine Lowman Women s Leadership in Marginal Religions Explorations Outside The Mainstream University of Illinois Press 1993 p 80 McClelland Norman C 1 April 2010 Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 5675 8 Cush Denise Robinson Catherine York Michael 21 August 2012 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 18978 5 Wessinger Catherine 1 January 1993 Women s Leadership in Marginal Religions Explorations Outside the Mainstream University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 06332 9 Sender Pablo Theosophical Society in America www theosophical org Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2016 Rogers Mark 13 February 2014 The Esoteric Codex Theosophy I Lulu com ISBN 978 1 312 01114 4 self published source Mahatmas versus Ascended Masters Theosophical Society in America Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2016 McGuire William An Adventure in Collecting the Past Princeton University Press 1989 p 23 Roberts Richard H amp Joanne Pearson Geoffrey Samuel Nature Religion Today Paganism in the Modern World p 44 Grof Stanislav The Adventure of Self Discovery SUNY Press 1988 p 123 Bromley David G amp Phillip E Hammond The Future of New Religious Movements Mercer University Press 1987 Steichen Donna M Ungodly Rage Hidden Face of Catholic Feminism Ignatius Press 1991 p Rossman Martin L Contributor Dean Ornish Guided Imagery for Self Healing H J Kramer 2000 page 213 Visser Frank Contributor Ken Wilber Ken Wilber Thought As Passion SUNY Press 20093 p 307 Firman John Ann Gila 2002 Psychosynthesis A Psychology of the Spirit SUNY Press p 16 ISBN 0 7914 5533 5 Woolger Roger J The Presence of Other Worlds In Psychotherapy and Healing Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine from a paper delivered at the Beyond the Brain Conference held at St John s College Cambridge University England 1999 Fish Sharon THERAPEUTIC TOUCH Healing Science or Psychic Midwife PDF CRI Welcome Online Books Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Alice Bailey Books Lucis Trust www lucistrust org Partridge Christopher 2003 UFO Religions Routledge p 9 Partridge Christopher 2004 UFO Religions Nova Religio 8 2 110 112 doi 10 1525 nr 2004 8 2 110 JSTOR 10 1525 nr 2004 8 2 110 O Learynewspaper Los Angeles Times Stephen 22 April 1997 PERSPECTIVE ON THE MILLENNIUM SEEDS OF APOCALYPSE ARE AMONG US THE INSANITY OF SO CALLED CULTS IS MORE INTENSE BUT NOT DIFFERENT FROM THE BELIEFS OF MANY AMERICANS via Historical Archaeology and Public Engagement Department of Anthropology University of Illinois Urbana Champaign a b Partridge Christopher H 2003 UFO Religions Routledge Pages 8 9 Partridge Christopher H The Re enchantment of the West p 175 1 Retrieved October 22 2007 Bailey Alice A 1957 The Externalization of the Hierarchy Lucis Trust Page 16 Ellwood Robert S 1973 Religious and Spiritual Groups in Modern America Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 773317 8 Pages 143 145 Understanding Inc and Reading Selection Understanding Inc Chryssides George D An untitled paper presented at the CESNUR Conference held in Palermo Sicily 2005 Astral Weeks A Secret History of 1968 NY Penguin Press 2018 123 24 Drury Nevill 1985 Music for Inner Space Prism Press p 60 ISBN 0 9589759 0 6 Further reading EditNewburn Kathy A Planetary Awakening Reflections on the Teachings of the Tibetan in the Works of Alice A Bailey Nevada City CA Blue Dolphin Publications 2007 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alice Bailey Alice Bailey lectures All the books of Alice A Bailey can be read online at Lucis Trust Alice Bailey The Externalisation of the Hierarchy p 25 short excerpt Some works of Alice Bailey The Jewish Problem interpreted by some to be anti Semitic Dissertation from the U of W Sydney The texts of Alice A Bailey An inquiry into the role of esotericism in transforming consciousness Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alice Bailey amp oldid 1180464433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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