|
C.W. Leadbeater (1847 or 1854-1934), English clergyman & Theosophical creator, contributed to globe thought mostly across his function as a clairvoyant.
Leadbeater was an Anglican priest when he joined a Theosophical Society in 1883. A next month he met Helena Petrovna Blavatsky when she came to London. At this instance he was a recipient of two or three Mahatma letters which influenced him to go to India. Within India he claimed to use received visits & how to videos from either occasionally of Blavatsky's Masters. See [http://blavatskyarchives.com/leadbeaterbib.htm#Account C.W. Leadbeater's "Account of the Development of His Clairvoyance]. This was the start of a long career in the Theosophical Society.
He remains well known and influential in his work through clairvoyance with for instance his books The Chakras and Man, Visible and Invisible dealing with the human aura and chakras, and writing on the function of the Sacraments in the Liberal Catholic Church, to name just a few subjects.
His most well-known activity was the discovery of Jiddu Krishnamurti, on the private beach that formed part of the Theosophical headquarters in Adyar, India. Krishnamurti and his family had been living in the headquarters for a few months before this discovery. Krishnamurti was to be the vessal for the indwelling of the coming "Globe Teacher" that many Theosophists were expecting. This new teacher would, in the pattern of Moses, Buddha, Zarathustra (Zoroaster), Christ, and Muhammad divulge a new dispensation, a new religious teaching. Theosophists believed that the teacher was a spiritual being who would dwell in the body vessal.
Charles Leadbeater stayed in India for some time overseeing the raising of Krishnamurti, but eventually felt that he was being called to go to Australia for the cause. While in Australia he became a leading member of the Liberal Catholic Church.
Leadbeater was accused of paedophilia but was never charged or brought to court, though there is a body of evidence that suggests he may have sexually abused his students in the United States, India and Australia. Peter Michel, in his biography of Charles W. Leadbeater, writes that these accusations are suspect as they came from what can be considered as his enemies: Alexander Fullerton, Herbert Burrows, G.R.S. Mead, Hubert van Hook, Katherine Tingley and Hilda Martyn. It has been speculated that an incriminating letter to a young boy attributed to Leadbeater, that was signed "Thousand kisses darling", was a forgery by Fullerton.
It is true however that (before 1906), he recommended the practice of masturbation as a prophylactic in certain cases to young boys. But these were ideas that Charles Leadbeater already had before he joined the Theosophical Society and still was a member of the Church.
Leadbeater's clairvoyance was not without grave errors. In his book The Inner Life he claims that there is a population of humans on the planet Mars. See [http://blavatskyarchives.com/leadbeatermars.htm Leadbeater's Observations on Mars].
For more on his teachings, see [http://blavatskyarchives.com/leadbeaterbib.htm#Criticisms Criticisms of C.W. Leadbeater's Teachings].
Literature
Caldwell, Daniel. [http://leadbeater.info/ Charles Webster Leadbeater: His Life, Writings & Theosophical Teachings].
Michel, Peter. [http://www.amazon.de/exec/obidos/ASIN/3894271078/ Charles W. Leadbeater:Mit den Augen des Geistes] ISBN 3894271078 (In German; No English translation available)
Tillett, Gregory. [http://www.wisdomtraditions.com/PLPCat9_1.html The Elder Brother: A Biography of Charles Webster Leadbeater].
Works
Chakras (1927)
The Inner Side Of Christian Festivals (1920)
The Science of the Sacraments (1920)
Glimpses of Masonic History (1926)
The Hidden Life in Freemasonry (1926)
The Masters And The Path (1925)
Man Visible And Invisible (1902)
The Inner Life (1911)
Occult Chemistry (book)
For a more complete list of his works, see [http://blavatskyarchives.com/leadbeaterbib.htm#Chronological A Chronological Listing of C.W. Leadbeater's Books and Pamphlets].
|