The Work of Invisible Helpers


Book Description

This is a collection of stories. The student of occult and mystic teaching can use this as a text book, or as a course of instruction. The author shows how a person may become an occult helper of humanity and the animal kingdom. Partial Contents: The Way; How may I become a helper? Invisible helpers in action; Some strange occult stories; Devas, Nature Spirits and Angels; How helpers assist the animal kingdom; How helpers work with the dead; Reincarnation is a fact; Catastrophes, their cause and cure; Is Spiritual healing possible? Are animals subject to spiritual influence; Thoughts of children shape their future lives; How the mystic accounts for genius; Miscellaneous stories of helpers; Are angels real? Copyright © Libri GmbH. All rights reserved.




Work of Invisible Helpers


Book Description

This is a new release of the original 1945 edition.




Invisible Helpers


Book Description




Invisible Helpers


Book Description

Charles Webster Leadbeater released a book titled "Invisible Helpers". The book, written by notable Theosophical Society member Leadbeater, discusses the concept of "helpers" or spiritual creatures who support people in their everyday lives. There are two sections to the book. In the first section, numerous instances of individuals who have benefited from these unseen aid providers during trying circumstances, such as sickness or danger, are described. The nature of these assistance, their traits, and how to interact with them are covered in the book's second section. Leadbeater thinks that these helpers are often ex-humans who have died but are still able to aid the living. He also claims that anybody may develop communication skills with them via spiritual activities like meditation. People who are interested in spiritualism and esoteric concepts continue to study the book, which had an impact on the New Thought movement. It has, however, also drawn criticism for encouraging superstition and false beliefs.




Invisible Helpers


Book Description

Invisible Helpers by English priest, spiritualist, theosophist and author Charles Webster Leadbeater, was originally published in 1915. The work looks at examples of "invisible helpers" coming to the aid of those in danger. What this implies about higher planes of existence, and whether transdimensional beings watch over us from the astral plane. Leadbeater outlines the notion that there is a universal belief in spiritual assistance in times of need, from superphysical reality. He also considers what lies in the beyond for us all.




Invisible Helpers


Book Description

In this book, CW Leadbeater explores the universal belief in spiritual assistance in times of need, the reality of superphysical life, and what lies beyond for us all. Thereby, he gives us evidence of the Invisible World. Content: - Universal Belief in them - Some Modern Instances - A Personal Experience - The Helpers - The Reality of Superficial Life - A Timely Intervention - The Angel Story - The Story of A Fire - Materialization and Repercussion - Wrecks and Catastrophes - Work among the Dead - Other Branches of the Work - The Qualifications Required - The Probationary Path - The Path Proper; What Lies Beyond.




Invisible Helpers


Book Description

Thoughts are things, intensely real things, visible enough to those whose eyes have been opened to see, and by their means the poorest man may bear his part in the good work of the world as fully as the richest. In this way at least, whether we can yet function consciously upon the astral plane or not, we all can join, and we all ought to join, the army of invisible helpers... Charles Webster Leadbeater (1854-1934) was a ranking officer of the Theosophical Society, an organization formed in 1875 to advance the spiritual principles and search for Truth known as Theosophy.




Invisible Helpers


Book Description




Invisible Helpers


Book Description

Charles Webster Leadbeater (16 February 1854 - 1 March 1934) was a member of the Theosophical Society, author on occult subjects and co-initiator with J. I. Wedgwood of the Liberal Catholic Church. Originally a priest of the Church of England, his interest in spiritualism caused him to end his affiliation with Anglicanism in favor of the Theosophical Society, where he became an associate of Annie Besant. He became a high-ranking officer of the Society. His interest in Theosophy was stimulated by A.P. Sinnett's Occult World, and he joined the Theosophical Society in 1883. The next year he met Helena Petrovna Blavatsky when she came to London; she accepted him as a pupil and he became a vegetarian. Around this time he wrote a letter to Kuthumi, asking to be accepted as his pupil. Shortly afterward, an encouraging response influenced him to go to India; he arrived at Adyar in 1884. He wrote that while in India, he had received visits and training from some of the "Masters" that according to Blavatsky were the inspiration behind the formation of the Theosophical Society, and were its hidden guides. This was the start of a long career with the Theosophical Society. Leadbeater wrote 69 books and pamphlets during the period from 1895 to his death in 1934, many of which continued to be published until 1955. Two noteworthy titles, Astral Plane and the Devachanic Plane (or The Heaven World) both of which contained writings on the realms the soul passes through after death. "For the first time among occultists, a detailed investigation had been made of the Astral Plane as a whole, in a manner similar to that in which a botanist in an Amazonian jungle would set to work in order to classify its trees, plants and shrubs, and so write a botanical history of the jungle. For this reason the little book, The Astral Plane, was definitely a landmark, and the Master as Keeper of the Records desired to place its manuscript in the great Museum." Highlights of his writing career included addressing topics such as: the existence of a loving God, The Masters of Wisdom, what happens after death, immortality of the human soul, reincarnation, Karma or the Law of Consequence, development of clairvoyant abilities, the nature of thought forms, dreams, vegetarianism, Esoteric Christianity He also became one of the best known speakers of the Theosophical Society for a number of years and served as Secretary of the London Lodge. (wikipedia.org)




Invisible Helpers


Book Description