Theosophy and the Number
Seven
A selection of articles
relating to the esoteric
significance
of the Number 7 in Theosophy
The Number Seven and Our Society
by
THE thoughtful reader must have pondered well over the
mysterious import that
the number
Seven seems to have always had among the ancients, as succinctly
epitomized in our
June number, as well as the theory of cycles, discussed in the
July issue. It was
there stated that the German scientists are now giving
attention to this
manifestation of the numerical harmony and periodicity of the
operations of
Nature. A series of statistical observations, embracing some
centuries of
historical events, tend to show that the ancients must have been
perfectly aware of
this law when constructing their systems of philosophy. In
fact, when statistical
science shall have been fully perfected, as it seems
likely to be,
there will be constantly increasing proofs that the evolution of
heroes, poets,
military chieftains, philosophers, theologians, great merchants,
and all other
remarkable personages, is as capable of mathematical estimate upon the basis of
the potentiality of numbers, as the return of a comet by the rules of
astronomical calculations.
The comparatively modern system of life insurance rests upon the
calculated expectancy of life on the average at certain ages; and, while
nothing is so uncertain as the probable longevity of any single individual in a
community, nothing is more certain than that the probable life-chance of any
one person, in the mass of population, can be known on the basis of the general
average of human life. In fact, as M. de Cazeneuve,
in the Journal du Magnetisme,
justly observes, the law of numerical proportions is verified in every
department of the physical sciences.
We see it in chemistry as the law of definite proportions and
multiple proportions; in physics, as the law of optics, acoustics, electricity,
&c.; in mineralogy, in the wonderful phenomena of crystallization; in
astronomy, in the celestial mechanics. Well may
the writer, above-quoted, remark: "Physical and moral laws
have so infinitely numerous points of contact, that, if we have not as yet
reached the point where we can demonstrate their identity, it is none the less
certain that there exists between them a very great analogy."
We have attempted to show how, by a sort of common instinct, a
peculiar
solemnity and
mystical significance has been given the Number Seven among all
people, at all
times. It now remains for us to cite, from the experience of the
Theosophical Society, some facts which indicate how its power
has manifested
itself with us.
Continually our experiences have been associated with Seven or
some
combination or multiple of it. And it must be remembered that, in not a
single instance,
was there any intention that the number should play a part in
our affairs;
but, on the contrary, what happened was in many cases exactly the
reverse of what
we desired. It was only the other day that we began to take any
note of the
striking chain of circumstances, and some have only been recalled
now at the
moment of writing.
The two chief founders of our Society were the President,
Colonel Olcott, and
the Conductor
of this Magazine. When they made each other's acquaintance (in
1874), the office number of the former was seven, the house
number of the latter
seventeen. The
President's Inaugural Address before the Society was delivered,
up-town streets in
On the 23rd March, thirty-five (7 X 5) days after landing,
Colonel Olcott delivered his first public oration on Theosophy, at Framji Cowasji Institute,
But we anticipate events. In the beginning of April, last year,
Colonel Olcott
and the
Conductor of this Magazine went to the N.W. Provinces to meet Swami
Dayánand, and were
absent from the Head-quarters thirty-seven days, and visited seven different
cities during the trip. In December of that year we again went northward, and
on the 21st (7 X 3) of that month, a special meeting of the
Society of Benares Pandits
was held to greet Colonel Olcott and elect him an
Honorary Member in token of the friendliness of the orthodox
Hindu pandits for
our
Society--a most important event.
Coming down to the
sailed from
reached Point de Galle on the 17th. At the first meeting in
for
initiation, a group of seven persons presented themselves. At Panadure,
seven were also
initiated first, the evening proving so boisterous and stormy
that the rest
could not leave their houses. At
initiated the first
night, while, at the preliminary meeting to organize the
local branch
temporarily, there were twenty-seven. At
Upon counting up the entire number of lay Buddhists included in
our seven
the
singularity of the fact is that the same is the case with the sum-total of
priests who
joined our Parent Society.
Our septenary fatality followed us all
throughout the return voyage to
Of the Delegation, two members, having urgent business, took an
earlier steamer
from
12th--the fifty-seventh day after
our landing. The sea voyage from
priests--again seven--who came aboard at Colombo to bid us
farewell, we learned that the July THEOSOPHIST had reached there, and being
naturally anxious to see a copy, urgently requested that one should be sent us
to look at, if possible, before 5 o'clock P.M., the hour at which it was
thought we would leave port.
This was promised us, and, after our friends left, we watched
every craft that
came from
shore.
At Tuticorin, Mr. Padshah,
one of our party, went ashore as his desire was to
return by rail
to
he went
ashore we noticed, after she had got clear from the crowd of craft
alongside, bore the
number forty-seven. Going down the coast on our outward
voyage, our
steamer touched at fourteen (7 X 2 ports; coming home, our vessel,
owing to the
monsoon weather and the heavy surf along the
And finally, as though to show us that our septenate
destiny was not
to be
evaded, it was at exactly
shows--when we
sighted the pilot off
slow down the
engines, at 7.47 the pilot stepped on the "bridge" and took
command of the
ship, and, at 9.37, our anchor was dropped off the Apollo Bunder,
and our voyage was thus ended on the 24th of July, the seventy-seventh day
after the one on which we had sailed for
The most superficial examination of the doctrine of chance will
suffice to show that. And, if, indeed, we must admit that some mysterious law
of numerical potentialities is asserting itself in shaping the fortunes of the
Theosophical Society, whither shall we turn for an explanation but to those
ancient Asiatic philosophies which were built upon the bed-rock of Occult
Science?
From The Theosophist, September, 1880
Theosophical Society, Cardiff Lodge,
Cardiff Lodge’s Instant Guide to Theosophy
Cardiff Lodge’s Gallery of Great Theosophists