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'''Chela''' (devanāgarī: चेल ''cela'') is a [[Sanskrit]] word that meaning "servant" or "slave." In [[Hinduism]] the term is used to denominate 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 a candidate for [[initiation]] into the [[occult science]].  
'''Chela''' (devanāgarī: चेल ''cela'') is a [[Sanskrit]] word that meaning "servant" or "slave." In [[Hinduism]] the term is used to denominate the religious student or disciple of a spiritual master or guru. In [[Theosophy]] the term is frequently used to refer to a person that, after having successfully gone through a period of [[probation]], has become a disciple of one of the [[Masters of Wisdom]], being thus a candidate for [[initiation]] into the [[occult science]].  


== General Description ==
== General Description ==

Revision as of 16:28, 5 March 2013

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Chela (devanāgarī: चेल cela) is a Sanskrit word that meaning "servant" or "slave." In Hinduism the term is used to denominate the religious student or disciple of a spiritual master or guru. In Theosophy the term is frequently used to refer to a person that, after having successfully gone through a period of probation, has become a disciple of one of the Masters of Wisdom, being thus a candidate for initiation into the occult science.

General Description

In her The Theosophical Glossary H. P. Blavatsky defines it as "A disciple, the pupil of a Guru or Sage, the follower of some adept of a school of philosophy (lit., child).[1] Some synonyms frequently found in the Theosophical literature are "Disciple" and "Lanoo".

According to A. Besant and C. W. Leadbeater

Dr. Annie Besant described a disciple in the following way:

A "disciple" is the name given, in the occult schools, to those who, being on the probationary path, are recognized by some Master as attached to Himself. The term asserts a fact, not a particular moral stage, and does not carry with it a necessary implication of the highest moral elevation. . . . Discipleship implies a past tie between Master and disciple, and a Master may recognise that tie, growing out of past relationship, with one who has still much to achieve; the disciple may have many and serious faults of character, may by no means—though his face be turned to the Light—have exhausted all the heavy Karma of the past, may be facing many a difficulty, fighting on many a battlefield with the legions of the past against him. The word "disciple" does not necessarily imply initiation, nor saintship; it only asserts a position and a tie—that the person is on the probationary path, and is recognised by a Master as His.[2]

Lay Chelas

Accepted Chelas

The accepted chela or disciple is one that has successfully gone through the period of probation and the Master is now ready to bring him into a closer relationship.

Online resources

Articles and pamphlets

Notes

  1. Blavatsky, H. P., Theosophical Glossary (Krotona, CA: Theosophical Publishing House, 1918), 74.
  2. Besant, Annie, Discipleship And Some Karmic Problems (Adyar Pamphlets, No 195, Adyar, Madras: Theosophical Publishing House, March 1935),3-4.