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<div style=" font-size:130%; border:1px solid #ccc; background:#d8dfe8; margin:0; padding:.3em; color:#000;">Featured Article</div>
<div style=" font-size:130%; border:1px solid #ccc; background:#d8dfe8; margin:0; padding:.3em; color:#000;">Featured Article</div>
[[File:Kandinsky_Composition_VIII_-_1923.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Kandinsky and Composition VIII, 1923]]
[[File:Disciple_and_Master.jpg|right|200px|thumb|Master and disciple]]
'''[[Wassily Kandinsky]]''' (1866-1944) was a Russian artist who was heavily influenced by [[Theosophy]]. He wrote a pioneering work ''Über das Geistige in der Kunst'', or '''''Concerning the Spiritual in Art''''', which has been translated into at least 20 languages. Like Theosophists [[Alexander Scriabin]] and [[Claude Bragdon]], he was keenly interested in the experience of '''synesthesia''', or the linking of senses. Visual perceptions of color and form can be linked to the hearing of musical notes, and to smell and taste. In Kandinsky's viewpoint, paintings should convey the emotions of music, and music should have a language of color. His abstract expressionist paintings and his writing continue to be enormously influential.
'''[[Chela]]''' is the word used in Hinduism to describe the religious student or disciple of a spiritual master or guru. In [[Theosophy]] the term is frequently used to refer to a person that has become a disciple of one of the [[Masters of Wisdom]], being thus a candidate for initiation into the [[Esoteric Philosophy]]. There are generally three degrees of chelaship &ndash; a lay chela, a probationary chela, and an accepted chela. Some synonyms frequently found in the Theosophical literature are "Disciple" and "Lanoo." Chelaship is a frequent topic of the [[The_Mahatma_Letters_to_A._P._Sinnett_(book)|Mahatma Letters]].
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'''This Web site is made possible by generous grants from [[The Kern Foundation]] and support from the [[Theosophical Society in America]].
'''This Web site is made possible by generous grants from [[The Kern Foundation]] and support from the [[Theosophical Society in America]].

Revision as of 21:36, 1 July 2022

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Master and disciple

Chela is the word used in Hinduism to describe the religious student or disciple of a spiritual master or guru. In Theosophy the term is frequently used to refer to a person that has become a disciple of one of the Masters of Wisdom, being thus a candidate for initiation into the Esoteric Philosophy. There are generally three degrees of chelaship – a lay chela, a probationary chela, and an accepted chela. Some synonyms frequently found in the Theosophical literature are "Disciple" and "Lanoo." Chelaship is a frequent topic of the Mahatma Letters.


This Web site is made possible by generous grants from The Kern Foundation and support from the Theosophical Society in America.