Universal Invocation

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The Universal Invocation, also known as Universal Prayer, was written in 1923 by Dr. Annie Besant, then president of the Theosophical Society (Adyar). It reads:

O Hidden Life, vibrant in every atom;
O Hidden Light, shining in every creature;
O Hidden Love, embracing all in Oneness;
May all who feel themselves as one with Thee,
Know they are therefore one with every other.

Garden of Remembrance, Olcott campus. Photo by Glenn Kujansuu.

History and use

The verse is recited every international convention of the Theosophical Society in Adyar in the ceremony of reciting the Prayers of the the Religions, beginning in 1925,[1] and daily at many theosophical centers around the world.

"O Hidden Life" is quoted on a plaque in the Garden of Remembrance on the Olcott campus of the Theosophical Society in America.

Variations

In the 1930 Lodge Procedure Book of the American Theosophical Society, the final two lines varied, and were followed by an additional line:

May each, who feels himself as one with Thee,
Know he is therefore one with every other.
Let us go forth to sound the note of harmony in the discords of the world.[2]
Title of "O Hidden Life"

Musical settings

The words were set to music at least twice, by Charles Elliott Fouser and by J. Eleanor Stakesby-Lewis,[3] and another member, W. H. Perrins, proposed yet another version.[4]

Online resources

Articles

  • OHiddenLife.org. This website offers links to musical performances of "O Hidden Life" by several groups, plus poetry and commentaries.
  • "O Hidden Life" by Joy Mills

Notes

  1. C. Jinarājadāsa, Foreword to Bhārata Samāj Pūja, (Adyar, Madras, India: The Theosophical Publishing House, 1948), 6-7.
  2. Sidney A. Cook, "From Lodge Procedure Book" The Theosophical Messenger 18.12 (December 1930), 280.
  3. NOTE: Both versions are available from Theosophical Society in America Archives.
  4. W. H. Perrins correspondence with James S. Perkins. September-November, 1953. James S. Perkins Papers. Records Series 08.06. Theosophical Society in America Archives.