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'''Dhyan Chohan''' or Dhyani-Chohan is a generic term for all Devas, Angels or celestial beings,<ref>CW10, 340</ref> of which are several hierarchies and degrees. The Sanskrit word ''dhyani'' means "contemplative, one who meditates" while the origin of the word ''chohan'' is unknown. According to [[H. P. Blavatsky]] it is a Tibetan word meaning "'Lord' or 'Master'; a chief". "Thus," she continues, "Dhyan-Chohan would answer to 'Chief of the Dhyanis', or celestial Lights--which in English would be translated Archangels".<ref>Blavatsky, H. P., Theosophical Glossary (??????), 83?</ref> The Dhyan Chohans are the agents of the Karmic and Cosmic Laws.<ref>Secret Doctrine vol. I, 274</ref>.
'''Dhyan Chohan''' or '''Dhyani-Chohan''' is a generic term for all Devas, Angels or celestial beings,<ref>CW10, 340</ref> of which are several hierarchies and degrees. The Sanskrit word ''dhyani'' means "contemplative, one who meditates" while the origin of the word ''chohan'' is unknown. According to [[H. P. Blavatsky]] it is a Tibetan word meaning "'Lord' or 'Master'; a chief". "Thus," she continues, "Dhyan-Chohan would answer to 'Chief of the Dhyanis', or celestial Lights--which in English would be translated Archangels".<ref>Blavatsky, H. P., Theosophical Glossary (??????), 83?</ref> The Dhyan Chohans are the agents of the Karmic and Cosmic Laws.<ref>Secret Doctrine vol. I, 274</ref>.


== Their nature ==
== Their nature ==

Revision as of 18:27, 13 March 2012

Dhyan Chohan or Dhyani-Chohan is a generic term for all Devas, Angels or celestial beings,[1] of which are several hierarchies and degrees. The Sanskrit word dhyani means "contemplative, one who meditates" while the origin of the word chohan is unknown. According to H. P. Blavatsky it is a Tibetan word meaning "'Lord' or 'Master'; a chief". "Thus," she continues, "Dhyan-Chohan would answer to 'Chief of the Dhyanis', or celestial Lights--which in English would be translated Archangels".[2] The Dhyan Chohans are the agents of the Karmic and Cosmic Laws.[3].

Their nature

In the "Summing Up" of the first volume of the Secret Doctrine, Mme. Blavatsky describes their nature:

The whole Kosmos is guided, controlled, and animated by almost endless series of Hierarchies of sentient Beings, each having a mission to perform, and who—whether we give to them one name or another, and call them Dhyan-Chohans or Angels—are “messengers” in the sense only that they are the agents of Karmic and Cosmic Laws. They vary infinitely in their respective degrees of consciousness and intelligence; and to call them all pure Spirits without any of the earthly alloy “which time is wont to prey upon” is only to indulge in poetical fancy. For each of these Beings either was, or prepares to become, a man, if not in the present, then in a past or a coming cycle (Manvantara). They are perfected, when not incipient, men; and differ morally from the terrestrial human beings on their higher (less material) spheres, only in that they are devoid of the feeling of personality and of the human emotional nature—two purely earthly characteristics. The former, or the “perfected,” have become free from those feelings, because (a) they have no longer fleshly bodies—an ever-numbing weight on the Soul; and (b) the pure spiritual element being left untrammelled and more free, they are less influenced by maya than man can ever be, unless he is an adept who keeps his two personalities—the spiritual and the physical—entirely separated. The incipient monads, having never had terrestrial bodies yet, can have no sense of personality or EGO-ism. That which is meant by “personality,” being a limitation and a relation, or, as defined by Coleridge, “individuality existing in itself but with a nature as a ground,” the term cannot of course be applied to non-human entities; but, as a fact insisted upon by generations of Seers, none of these Beings, high or low, have either individuality or personality as separate Entities, i.e., they have no individuality in the sense in which a man says, “I am myself and no one else; “in other words, they are conscious of no such distinct separateness as men and things have on earth. Individuality is the characteristic of their respective hierarchies, not of their units; and these characteristics vary only with the degree of the plane to which those hierarchies belong: the nearer to the region of Homogeneity and the One Divine, the purer and the less accentuated that individuality in the Hierarchy. They are finite, in all respects, with the exception of their higher principles—the immortal sparks reflecting the universal divine flame—individualized and separated only on the spheres of Illusion by a differentiation as illusive as the rest.[4]

Men as future Dhyan Chohans

Ordinarily, a man is said to reach Nirvana when he evolutes into a Dhyan Chohan. The condition of a Dhyan Chohan is attained in the ordinary course of Nature, after the completion of the 7th round in the present planetary chain. After becoming a Dhyan Chohan, a man does not, according to the Law of Nature, incarnate in any of the other planetary chains of this Solar system. The whole Solar system is his home. He continues to discharge his duties in the Government of this Solar system until the time of Solar Pralaya, when his monad, after a period of rest, will have to overshadow in another Solar system a particular human being during his successive incarnations, and attach itself to his higher principles when he becomes a Dhyan Chohan in his turn. There is progressive spiritual development in the innumerable Solar systems of the infinite cosmos. Until the time of Cosmic Pralaya, the Monad will continue to act in the manner above indicated, and it is only during the inconceivable period of cosmic sleep which follows the present period of activity, that the highest condition of Nirvana is realized.[5]

Dhyan Chohans associated to human evolution

The passage of humanity into a planet and its going therefrom to another—are two critical junctures, necessitating the appearance of a Dhyan Chohan. At its first appearance, the seed of "spiritual wisdom" has to be implanted and then carried on to the next planet, when the period of obscuration of the inhabited planet approaches. The intervening disturbances, caused by racial cataclysms, on the globe, do not destroy that seed and its growth is ensured by the appearance of the intermediate Buddhas.[6]


Notes

  1. CW10, 340
  2. Blavatsky, H. P., Theosophical Glossary (??????), 83?
  3. Secret Doctrine vol. I, 274
  4. SD I, (??????) 274-5
  5. CW6, 248-249
  6. CW6, 267-8


Further reading