
A TOUCHSTONE REVIEW:
The Chakras * by Charles Webster Leadbeater Quest Books; 2nd edition (2013)
* For this review, I have mined information on the history and influence of this book from Kurt Leland’s Rainbow Body: A History of the Western Chakra System from Blavatsky to Brennan (2016).
The Author (1854-1934)

Charles Leadbeater in 1914 (age 60)
The young Charles Webster Leadbeater, interested in spiritualism and trained as an Anglican clergyman, joined the Theosophical Society in 1883 and became a high-ranking officer of the Society. He remained one of its leading members until his death in 1934, writing over 60 books and pamphlets and maintaining regular speaking engagements. At the time Leadbeater wrote The Chakras, he was a bishop of the Liberal Catholic Church (a reinvention of Catholicism along Theosophical lines).
Leadbeater’s first substantial reference to the chakras occurred in 1898 in answer to a question concerning the existence of organs in the astral body. Leadbeater’s clairvoyant investigations of the chakras seem to have occurred at about the same time.
The Book
First published in 1927, this pioneering book by clairvoyant C. W. Leadbeater was among the first to introduce to the West the concept of chakras and the seven chakra system as centers of spiritual contact in the human body and bridges to higher consciousness and well-being. He didn’t ask, Are chakras real? And he didn’t seek scientific evidence. He based his findings on his own mystical experience of the chakras described in the ancient texts of Hinduism. At that time, he was a pioneer in the field of subtle energies, and the first to publish a clairvoyant view of the chakras and their energy flow.
The Force Centers
Leadbeater begins by identifying the chakras as force centers and describing their appearance according to his own experience.
The Forces
Before going on to describe how the force centers are awakened, Leadbeater discourses on the origin and nature of “the mysterious power called kundalini or the serpent fire,” the three nadis or channels through which the three streams of energy flow in and around the spinal cord, the movement of forces through the nerve systems, and the “vital energy” or “prana” carried in sunlight.
The Absorption of Vitality
Leadbeater devotes an entire chapter to explain in greater detail how vital energy or prana, in the form of “vitality globules,” is absorbed as food by the etheric double. “Etheric” being the name Leadbeater gives to a type of matter that is “still physical though invisible.”
The Development of the Chakras
Without giving away precise details of the practice, which is only handed down orally from teacher to student, Leadbeater discusses the way to properly awaken the energy centers, and how and why to avoid premature awakening.
The Laya Yoga
The final chapter of the book, written twenty years later than the material preceding it, discusses the English translations of Sanskrit literature which existed at the time that dealt with laya yoga, a practice in which Supreme Consciousness is achieved and the self is united with the Divine by working energy down from the crown chakra through the lower chakras to awaken kundalini.
Leadbeater’s Chakra System
In the Eastern chakra system, the energy that awakens the chakras either arises from the lowest chakra at the base of the spine or descends from the highest at the top of the head or circulates in both directions, but always along the spine.
In Leadbeater’s system, these vortices form along the outer edge of the astral and etheric bodies. They absorb forces from their respective planes and channel them into the core of the body along whirling funnels (a lesser known meaning of chakra is “whirlpool”) that converge on astral or etheric centers that correlate to organs or nerve plexuses of the physical body.
Leadbeater’s model arranges the subtle bodies in layers around the physical body like nested dolls increasing in size. In the same way, each organ and nerve center is surrounded by its own etheric field, a more expansive astral field, and an even more expansive mental field.
Controversy
Shortly after the publication of The Chakras in 1927, a Hindu spiritual teacher active in California, Rishi Singh Gherwal, published a passionate complaint against Leadbeater’s work, calling him “the greatest enemy of yoga philosophy.”
Going Further
The force fields of a higher body, also referred to as color bodies, appear to dictate to large degree the life and development of the physical organism. Each force center correlates to nerve plexuses in each one of those force centers. And there is always a colony of glands and organs around each one of these force centers related to them. Each is like a universe – its own little world.


