Service

There comes a time in everyone’s life when they must decide who or what they serve. Do they serve only themselves, do they serve their Deities, do they serve some ideals, their family, their country, the company, or what? Most people bumble along doing what is expected of them, without making any particular conscious choice, and this is fine as far as it goes. But sooner or later one is always confronted with a situation where one must choose. Whose interests will prevail?

Human beings are very good at aligning their personal interests with those of the people around them. Often there is no conflict between one’s own interest and the interest of one’s family, country, employer, etc etc. But sooner or later there will be, and in making the choices that must follow, we show what kind of person we are.

For the most part, it is a juggling act, trying to satisfy the different interests that we have given a stake in our lives – children, partners, work, hobbies, charities, community, wider family, friends, and also for Pagans, we often have relationships with Deities and other-world contacts to consider as well. Some people manage to keep juggling for much of their lives, before being confronted with the necessity of choice. Others are driven to it much sooner by the impossibility of satisfying all these potentially conflicting interests.

The way of the wise is to know thyself – the true self, the soul intelligence that struggles, usually, to exert its guiding influence over one’s life, which for most is managed from the seat of reason, according to the scripts learned in child-hood. When one is in contact with the true self, the conflict between one’s own self interest and the interest of others, human and non-human, disappears. There is simply the right thing to do, at the time. The Buddhists have the concept of “Right Action”, or Dharma, which transcends principles, laws and moral guidelines. Right action is perceived directly by the luminous intelligence which is both individual and collective. It may take considerable courage to enact it. Indeed, in respect of Right Action, we may say there are three sorts of people. Those who don’t see it at all. Those who perceive it, but aren’t able to follow through with it, for whatever reason, and those who see it and act upon it. Most are in the first category. Those who begin to work on themselves spiritually, and start opening up their hidden faculties, first find themselves in the second category. That is they begin to perceive their right action, but lack the means, the commitment or the courage to act upon it. Thus begins a long, difficult and painful journey, of putting what they perceive into practice, of living their right action. At the end of this journey, with the blessing of the Ancient Ones, they may find themselves in the third category, of living the Right Action that they perceive. Such a one appears to others as a Mage or Saint, or a person of accomplishment and integrity, having achieved alignment between their lives and their spiritual vision and faculty. The rest of us struggle on, as best we may, aware of the gulf between our perceptions of right action, and the lives we actually live, but committed to closing the gap as we gain in skills, confidence, understanding, and spiritual independence. And in this journey, we are assisted by our Deities and inner world contacts, who provide a mechanism for contacting the numinous sphere of existence, and opening the perceptions to the true self.

BB

Robyn :)

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