TEACHINGS OF AN INITIATE
by
Max Heindel
[1865-1919]
THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
MT. ECCLESIA
P.O. BOX 713
OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA, 92054, USA
This volume of the writings of Max Heindel,
the Western Mystic, is the concluding number embodying the messages he sent out
through monthly lessons to his students. These lessons, reprinted since this
great soul was called to a greater work in the higher worlds on January 6th,
1919, may be found in the following books in addition to the present volume:
"Freemasonry and Catholicism"; "The Web of Destiny";
"The Mystical Interpretation of Christmas"; "The Mysteries of the
Great Operas"; "The Gleanings of a Mystic"; and "Letters to
Students." These writings comprise the later investigations of this seer.
The helpful messages and the spiritual
encouragement that the readers have received from the inspired words in the
earlier volumes we know have been far-reaching in their effects. We also feel
that in years to come enlightened and advanced students and seekers along
mystical and occult lines will realize more and more the true value of the works
of Max Heindel. His words reach the very depths of the heart of the reader. Many
who have read his first work, "The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception," have
been thrilled by their contact with it.
Max Heindel, who was the authorized messenger
of the true Rosicrucian Brotherhood, lived the teachings which he taught. Only
one who has suffered as he suffered during his lifetime is able to touch the
heart strings of humanity. Only he who has felt the labor pains of spiritual
birth which has admitted him to the realms of the soul can write with the power
to thrill his readers. As the result of such a spiritual birth the writings
which Max Heindel has bequeathed to humanity will live and bear fruit. May the
readers of this book feel the heart throbs of this great lover of humanity, who
sacrificed his very physical existence in his desire to impart to man the
wonderful truths which he had garnered through his contact with the Elder
Brothers of the Rosicrucian Order.
--August Foss Heindel
THE DAYS OF NOAH AND OF CHRIST
When Nicodemus came to Christ and was told
about the necessity of rebirth, he asked, "How can these things be?"
And we also with out inquiring minds are often anxious for more light upon the
various teachings concerning our future. It helps us if we can feel that these
teachings fit into physical facts as we know them. Then we seem to have firmer
ground for our faith in other things which we have not yet proved.
It has been the writer's work to investigate
spiritual facts and correlate them with the physical in such a manner as would
appeal to the reason and thus pave the way for belief. In this way it has been
his privilege to give light to seeking souls on many of the mysteries of life.
Recently a new discovery was made which, though it seemed as remote from
connection with the coming of Christ as east is from west, throws considerable
light on that event, especially on the manner of our meeting with the Lord
"in the twinkling of an eye" as the Bible has it. Our students well
know how distasteful it is to the writer to relate personal experiences, but
sometimes, as in the present case, it seems necessary, and we shall crave
indulgence for using the personal pronoun while relating to the incident.
One night some time ago while in transit to
a place in a far country where I had a mission to perform, I heard a cry. Though
the human voice can be heard only in air, there are overtones which are heard in
the spiritual realms at distances exceeding those traversed by wireless
messages. The cry was close by, however, and I was on the scene in an instant,
but not soon enough to give the needed help. I found a man sliding down a
slanting embankment, bare of vegetation, perhaps a dozen feet in width, and as
it proved on subsequent examination, almost smooth, and without a fissure which
would have afforded a hold for his fingers. To have saved him would have
involved materialization of both arms and shoulders, but there was no time. In a
moment he had slid over the overhanging precipice and was falling to the floor
of the canyon below, probably several thousand feet, though I am not certain,
being a poor judge of distance.
Prompted by a natural spirit of fellow
feeling I followed and on the way observed the phenomenon which is the basis of
this article, namely, that when the body had attained a considerable velocity,
the ethers composing the vital body commenced to ooze out, and when the body
crashed into the rocks below, a mangled mass, there was very little of any ether
left in it. Gradually, however, the ethers drifted together, took form, and
hovered with the finer vehicles above the mangled corpse; but the man was in a
stupor unable to sense or realize the fact of his altered condition.
As soon as I saw that he was beyond present
help I went on; but on thinking the matter over it dawned on me that something
unusual had happened and that it was my duty to find out if the ethers left that
way in every one who feel, and if so, why. Under old-time conditions this would
have been difficult, but the advent of the flying machine claims many victims,
especially in these unfortunate war times. It was therefore easy to ascertain
the fact that when a falling body has attained a certain velocity, the higher
ethers leave the dense body, and the falling man becomes insensible. As the body
reaches the ground, it is mangled, but the poor man may regain consciousness
when the ether has reorganized itself. He will then begin to suffer from the
physical consequences of the fall. If the fall continues after the higher ethers
have left, the increased velocity dislodges the lower ethers, and the Silver
Cord is all that remains attached to the body. This is ruptured at the moment of
impact with the ground, and the seed atom passes on to the breaking point, where
it is held in the usual way.
From these facts we came to the conclusion
that it is the normal air pressure which holds the vital body within the dense.
When we move with an abnormal velocity, the pressure is removed from some parts
of the body and a partial vacuum formed, with the further result that the ethers
leave the body and flow into this vacuum. The two higher ethers, which are most
loosely bound, are the first to disappear and leave the man senseless after they
have produced the panorama of life in a flash. Then if the fall continues to
increase the air pressure in front of the body and the vacuum behind, the more
closely bound lower ethers are also forced out, and the body is dead before it
reaches the ground.
It was found by examining a number of people
in normal health that each of the prismatic atoms composing the lower ethers
radiated from itself the lines of force which set spinning the physical atoms in
which it is inserted, enduing the hole body with life. The united trend of all
these units of force is toward the periphery of the body, where they constitute
what has been called the "Odic Fluid," also designated by other names.
When the air pressure from without is lowered by residence in a high altitude, a
tendency to nervousness becomes manifest because the etheric force from within
ruses outward unchecked; and were the man not able to shut off the outflow of
solar energy in part by an effort of will to overcome the difficulty, no one
could live in such places.
We had heard of "shell shock" and
we were aware that numbers of people who had not even the slightest wound were
found dead on the battle field. In fact, we had seen and spoken with people who
had passed out in this manner but were at a loss to know why death has resulted.
They all disclaimed fear and were unanimously in their assertion that they had
suddenly become unconscious and a moment later they had found themselves in that
they had not a single scratch on their bodies. Our preconceived idea that it
must have been a momentary fear at a particularly close call which though
unrealized, had caused their demise, prevented a full investigation; but the
ascertained results of the consequences of a fall led us to believe that
something similar might take place in this connection, and this surmise proved
to be correct.
When a large projectile passes through the
air, it creates a vacuum behind it by the enormous velocity wherewith it moves,
and if a person is within this vacuum zone while the shell is passing, he
suffers in a measure determined by his own nature and his proximity to the
center of suction. His position is in fact a reverse replica of the man who
falls; for he stands still while a moving body removes the air pressure and
allows the ethers to escape. If the amount of ether dislocated is comparatively
slight and is composed only of the third and fourth ethers which govern sense
perception and memory, he will probably suffer only a temporary loss of memory
and inability to sense things or move. This disability will disappear when the
extracted ethers are again fitted inside the dense body--a much more difficult
achievement than where the physical body succumbs and the reorganization takes
place without reference to that vehicle.
Had the people thus hurt learned now to
perform the exercises which separate the higher and lower ethers, they might
have found themselves outside the body in full consciousness and perhaps ready
for their first soul flight if they had had the courage to undertake it. However
that may be, it is safe to say that on their return to the dense body they would
have experienced very little if any inconvenience, and in case the vacuum had
been strong enough to extract all four ethers and cause death, there would
probably have been no unconsciousness such as overtakes the ordinary person; for
it was discovered that the people who said that they felt unconscious for a
moment only were wrong. It required a time varying from one to several days in
the cases we investigated before the vital body was reorganized and
consciousness reestablished.
Let us now see what bearing these newly
discovered facts have on the coming of Christ and our meeting with Him. While we
lived in ancient Atlantis in the basins of the earth, pressure of the
moisture-laden mist was very heavy. This hardened the dense body, and as a
further result the vibrations of the interpenetrating finer vehicles were
considerably slowed down. This was especially true of the vital body, which is
made of ether, a grade of matter belonging to the physical world and subject to
some of the physical laws. The solar life did not penetrate the dense mist in
the same abundance as is present in the clear atmosphere of today. Add to this
the fact that the vital bodies of that day were almost entirely composed of the
two lower ethers, which further assimilation and reproduction, and we shall
understand that progress was very slow. Man lad mainly a vegetative existence,
and his main exertions were devoted to the purpose of obtaining food and
reproducing his kind.
Had such a man been removed to our
atmosphere conditions the, lack of exterior pressure would have resulted in an
outflowing of the vital body which means death. Gradually the physical body grew
less dense and the amount of the two higher ethers increased, so that man become
fitted to live in a clear atmosphere under a decreased pressure such as we have
enjoyed since the historical event known as the "Flood" when the mist
condensed. Since that time we have also been able to specialize more of the
solar life force. The larger proportion of the two higher ethers now found in
our vital bodies enables us to express the higher human attributes appropriate
to the development of this age.
The vibrations of the vital body under the
present atmospheric conditions have enabled the spirit to build that which we
call civilization, consisting of industrial and artistic achievements and of
moral and spiritual standards, the industrial and moral excellence being as
closely connect and interdependent as the artistic achievement is dependent on a
spiritual conception. Industry is designed to develop the moral side of man's
nature, art to unfold the spiritual. Thus we are now being prepared for the next
step in our unfoldment.
Let it now be remembered that the
qualifications necessary for our emancipation from the conditions prevailing in
Atlantis were party physiological; we had to evolve lungs to breathe the pure
air in which we are now immersed and which allows the vital body to vibrate at a
more rapid rate than did the heavy moisture of Atlantis. With this in mind we
shall readily see that future advancement lies in freeing the vital body
entirely from the trammels of the dense body and letting it vibrate in pure air.
This is what happened in the lofty altitude
exoterically known as the "Mount of Transfiguration." Advanced men of
various ages, Moses, Elijah, and Jesus (or rather the body of Jesus ensouled by
Christ) appeared in the luminous garment of the liberated soul body, which all
will wear in the New Galilee, the Kingdom of Christ. "Flesh and blood
cannot inherit the kingdom,: for it would interfere with the spiritual progress
of the day; so when Christ appears we must be prepared with a soul body and thus
be ready to part from out dense body to be "caught up and meet Him in the
air."
The results of the investigation which form
the basis of the present article may give us an insight into the method of
transition when compared with the information given in the Bible. It is said
that the Lord will appear with a mighty sound like the voice of an Archangel. We
read of thunders and the blasts of trumpets in connection with the event. A
sound is an atmospheric disturbance, and since the passage of a projectile made
by man can lift the vital bodies of soldiers out of their dense bodies, it needs
to argument to prove that the shout of a superhuman voice could accomplish
similar results more efficiently--"in the twinkling of an eye."
"When shall these things be?"
asked the disciples. They were told that as it was in the days of Noah (when the
Aryan Epoch was about to be ushered in), so should it be in the Day of Christ.
They ate and drank, they married and were given in marriage. But some who
perhaps seemed not so different from the rest, had evolved the all-important
lungs so that when the atmosphere cleared they were able to breathe pure air,
while others who had only the gill clefts perished. In the Day of Christ when
His voice sounds the Call, there will be some who will find themselves with a
properly organized soul body, able to ascent above the discarded dense bodies,
while others will be like the soldiers who meet death from "shell
shock" on the battle fields today.
May we prepare for that day by following in
His steps.
THE SIGN OF THE MASTER
There are at the present time many who,
judging from the signs of the times, believe Christ to be at the door and are
watching him in joyful anticipation. Though, in the opinion of the writer, the
"things which must first come to pass" have not taken place in many
important particulars, we must not forget that He gave warning that "as it
was in the days of Noah, so shall be in the day of the Son of Man." Then
they ate, drank, and made merry; they married and were given in marriage up to
the very moment when the flood descended and engulfed them. Only a small remnant
was saved. Therefore we who pray for His coming will do well to watch also lest
our prayers be answered before we are ready, for He said, "The day of the
Lord will come as a thief in the night."
But there is also another danger, a very
great danger which He pointed out, namely, "There shall be false
Christs;" and "they shall deceive even the very elect, if that were
possible." So we are warned that if people say, "Christ is here in the
city or there in the desert," we are not to go, or we shall certainly be
deceived.
But on the other hand, if we do not
investigate, how shall we know? May we not run the risk of rejecting Christ by
refusing to hear all claimants and judging each according to merits? When we
examine the injunctions of the Bible upon this point, they seem bewildering and
altogether subversive of the end they are supposed to help us attain, and the
great question,: How shall we know Christ at His coming?" is still rife. We
have issued a pamphlet on this subject but feel sure additional light will be
welcome to all.
Christ said that some of the false Christs
would work signs and wonders. He always refused to prove His divinity in that
sordid manner when asked to do so by the scribes and Pharisees, because He knew
that phenomena only excited the sense of wonder and whetted the appetite for
more. Those who witness such manifestations are sometimes sincere in their
efforts to convince others but they are generally met with an attitude of mind
which says in effect: "You say you have seem him do so and so and therefore
you believe. Very well! I also am willing to be convinced. Let him show
me."
But even supposing a Master were willing to
prove his identity, who among the multitude is qualified to judge the validity
of the proof? No one! Who knows the sign of the Master when he sees it? The sign
of the Master is not a phenomenon which may be repudiated or explained away by
the sophists, neither is it something the Master may show or hide as he pleases,
nor can he take it up and lay it aside at will. He is forced to carry it with
him always as we carry out arms and limbs. It would be just as impossible to
hide the sign of the Master from those qualified to see, know and judge it as it
would be for us to hide our members, from anyone who has physical sight. On the
other hand, as the sign of the Master is spiritual, it must be spiritually
perceived, and it is therefore is impossible to show the sign of the Master to
those who lack spiritual sight as it is to show a physical figure to the
physically blind.
Therefore we read: "A wicked and
adulterous generation seeketh after a sign, and there shall no sign be given
unto it." A little further on in the same chapter (Matt. 16) we find the
Christ asking His disciples, "Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man,
am?" The answer developed that though the Jews saw in Him a superior
person, Moses, Elias, or one of the prophets, they were incapable of recognizing
His true character. They could not see the sign of the Master, or they would
have needed no other testimony.
Christ then turned to His disciples and
asked them, "But whom say ye that I am?" And from Peter came the
answer weighted with conviction, quick and to the point, "Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living God." He had seen the sign of the Master, and
he knew whereof he spoke, independent of phenomena and exterior circumstances,
as emphasized by Christ when He said, "Blessed art thou, Simon, Son of
Jonah, for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which
is in heaven." In other words, the perception of this GREAT TRUTH depended
upon an interior qualification.
What this qualification was, and is, we
learn from the next words of Christ: "And I say also unto thee that thou
art Peter (PETROS, A ROCK,) and upon this rock (PETRA) I will build my
church."
Christ said concerning the multitude of
materialistic Jews: "A wicked and adulterous generation seeketh after a
sign, and there shall no sign be given unto it but the sign of the prophet
Jonah"; and much speculation has been the consequence among equally
materialistic Christians in latter times. Some have contended that an ordinary
whale did swallow the prophet and later cast him ashore. Churches have divided
on this as on many other foolish issues. But when we consult the occult records
we find an interpretation which satisfies the heart without doing violence to
the mind.
This great allegory, like so many other
myths, is pictured upon the film of the firmament, for it was first enacted in
heaven before it was staged on the earth, and we still see in the starry sky
"Jonah, the Dove," and "Cetus, the Whale". But we will not
concern ourselves so much with the celestial phase as with its terrestrial
application.
"Jonah" means dove, a well
recognized symbol of the Holy Spirit. During the three "days"
comprising the Saturn, Sun, and Moon revolutions of the Earth Period, and the
"nights" between, the Holy Spirit with all the Creative Hierarchies
worked in the Great Deep perfecting THE INWARD parts of the earth and men,
removing the dead weight of the moon. Then the earth emerged from its watery
stage of development in the middle Atlantean Epoch, and so did "Jonah, the
Spirit Dove," accomplish the salvation of the greater part of mankind.
Neither the earth nor its inhabitants were
capable of maintaining their equilibrium in space, and the Cosmic Christ
therefore commenced to work with and on us, finally at the baptism descending AS
A DOVE (not in the form of a dove but AS a dove) upon the man Jesus. And as
Jonah, the dove of the Holy Spirit, was three Days and three Nights in the Great
Fish (the earth submerged in water), so at the end of our involutionary
pilgrimage must the other dove, the Christ, enter THE HEART of the earth for the
coming three revolutionary Days and Nights to give us the needed impulse on our
evolutionary journey. He must help us to etherealize the earth in preparation
for the Jupiter Period.
Thus Jesus become at his baptism, "a
Son of the Dove," and was recognized by another, "Simon
Bar-Jonah," (Simon, son of the dove). At that recognition, by the sign of
the dove, the Master calls the other "a rock," a foundation Stone, and
promises him the "Keys to Heaven." These are not idle words nor
haphazard promises. These are phases of soul development involved which each
must undergo if he has not passed them.
What then is the "sign of Jonah"
which the Christ bore about with Him, visible to all who could see, other than
the "house from heaven" wherewith Paul longed to be clothed; the
glorious treasure house wherein all the noble deeds of many lives glitter and
glisten as precious pearls? Everybody has a little "house from
heaven." Jesus, holy and pure beyond the rest, probably was a splendid
sight, but think how indescribably effulgent must have been the vehicle of
splendor in which the Christ descended; then we shall have some conception of
the "blindness" of those who asked for "a sing." Even among
His other disciples He found the same spiritual cataract. "Show us the
Father," said Philip, oblivious to the mystic Trinity in Unity which ought
to have been obvious to him. Simon, however, was quick to perceive, because he
himself had by spiritual alchemy made this spiritual petros or "stone"
of the philosopher which entitled him to the "Keys of the Kingdom"; an
Initiation making usable the latent powers of the candidate evolved by service.
We find that these "stones" for
the "temple made without hands" undergo an evolution or process of
preparation. There is first the "petros," the diamond in the rough, so
to speak, found in nature. When read with the heart, such passages as 1st Cor.,
10:4, "And did all drink the same spiritual drink; for they drank of that
spiritual Rock (Petros) that followed them: and that Rock was Christ," are
illuminating in this connection. Gradually, very gradually, we have become
impregnated with the WATER OF LIFE which sprang from the Great Rock. We have
also become polished as "lithoi zontes" (LIVING STONES), destined to
be grouped with that GREAT STONE which the Builder rejected; and when we have
wrought well to the end, we shall finally receive in the Kingdom the diadem, the
most precious of all, the "psiphon leuken," (the white stone) with its
New Name.
There are three steps in the evolution of
"THE STONE OF THE SAGE": PETROS, the hard rough rock; LITHON, the
stone polished by service and ready to be written on; and PSIPHON LEUKEN, the
soft white stone that draws to itself all who are weak and heavy laden. Much is
hidden in the nature and composition of the stone at each step which cannot be
written; it must be read between the lines.
If we hope to build the Living Temple with
Christ in the Kingdom, we would do well to prepare ourselves that we may fit in,
and then we shall know the Master and the Sign of the Master.
WHAT IS SPIRITUAL WORK?
In this connection we will give some
extracts from the wonderful poem by Longfellow which is called "The Legend
Beautiful."
"In his chamber all alone,
Kneeling on the floor of stone
Prayed the Monk in deep contrition
For his sins of indecision,
Prayed for greater self-denial
In temptation and in trial;
It was noonday by the dial,
And the Monk was all alone.
"Suddenly, as if it lightened,
An unwonted splendor brightened
All within him and without him
In that narrow cell of stone;
And he saw the Blessed Vision
Of our Lord, with Light Elysian
Like a vesture wrapped about him,
Like a garment round him thrown."
This was not the suffering Savior, however,
but the Christ feeding the hungry and healing the sick.
"In an attitude imploring,
Hands upon his bosom crossed,
Wondering, worshiping, adoring,
Knelt the Monk in rapture lost.
* * * * * *
"Then amid his exaltation,
Loud the convent bell appalling,
From its belfry calling, calling,
Rang through court and corridor
With persistent iteration
He had never heard before."
This was his call to the duty of feeding the
poor as Christ had done, for he was the almoner of the Brotherhood.
"Deep distress and hesitation
Mingled with his adoration;
Should be go, or should he stay?
Should he leave the poor to wait
Hungry at the convent gate,
Till the Vision passed away?
Should be slight his radiant guest,
Slight his visitant celestial,
For a crowd or ragged, bestial
Beggars at the convent gate?
Would the Vision there remain?
Would the Vision come again?
Then a voice within his breast
Whispered, audible and clear
As if to the outward ear:
'Do they duty; that is best;
Leave unto they Lord the rest!'
Straightaway to his feet he started,
And with longing look intent
On the Blessed Vision bent,
Slowly from his cell departed,
Slowly on his errand went.
"At the gate the poor were waiting,
Looking through the iron grating,
With that terror in the eye
That is only seen in those
Who amid their wants and woes
Hear the sound of doors that close,
And of feet that pass them by;
Grown familiar with disfavor,
Grown familiar with the savor
Of the broad by which men die!
But today, they knew not why,
Like the gate of Paradise
Seemed the convent gate to rise,
Like a sacrament divine
Seemed to them the bread and wine.
In his heart the Monk was praying,
Thinking of the homeless poor,
What they suffer and endure;
What we see not, what we see;
And the inward voice was saying:
'Whatsoever thing thou doest
To the least of mine and lowest,
That doest unto me!'
"Unto me! but had the Vision
Come to him in beggar's clothing,
Come to mendicant imploring,
Would he then have knelt adoring,
Or have listened with derision,
And have turned away with loathing?
"Thus his conscience put the question,
Full of troublesome suggestion,
As at length, with hurried pace,
Towards his cell he turned his face,
And beheld the convent bright
With supernatural light,
Like a luminous cloud expanding
Over floor and wall and ceiling.
"But he passed with awe-struck feeling
At the threshold of this door,
For the Vision still was standing
As he left it there before,
When the convent bell appalling,
From its belfry calling, calling,
Summoned him to feed the poor.
Through the long hour intervening
It had waited his return,
And he felt his bosom burn,
Comprehending all the meaning,
When the Blessed Vision said,
'Hadst thou stayed, I must have fled!"
Let me tell you a story:
Ages and ages ago--so long ago in fact that
it was almost as far away as yesterday--darkness enveloped the earth, and men
were groping for the light. Some there were who had found it and who undertook
to show men the reflection thereof, and they were eagerly sought. Among them
there was one who had been to the city of light for a little while and had
absorbed some of its brilliancy. Straightway men and women from all over the
land of darkness sought him. They journeyed thousands of miles because they had
heard of this light; and when he heard that a company was traveling towards his
house, he set to work and prepared to give them the very best he had. He planted
poles all around his house and put lights upon them so that his visitors might
not hurt themselves in the darkness. He and his household ministered to their
wants, and he taught them as best he knew.
But soon sine if his visitors murmured. They
had thought to find him seated upon a pedestal radiant with celestial light. In
fancy they had seen themselves worshiping at his shrine; but instead of the
spiritual light they had expected they had caught him in the very act of
stringing electric lights to illuminate the place. He did not even wear a turban
or a robe, because, THE ORDER TO WHICH HE BELONGED HAD AS ONE ITS FUNDAMENTAL
RULES THAT IS MEMBERS MUST WEAR THE DRESS OF THE COUNTRY IN WHICH THEY LIVED.
So the visitors came to the conclusion that
they had been tricked and swindled and that he had no light. They took up stones
and stoned him and his household; they would have killed him had it not been
that they feared the law, which in that land required an eye for an eye and a
tooth for a tooth. Then they went away again into the land of the darkness, and
whenever they saw a soul headed towards the light, they help up their hands in
horror and said, "Do not go there; that is not a true light, it is as a
jack-o-lantern and it will lead you astray. We know there is absolutely no
spirituality there." Many believed them, and thus came to pass in that
case, as so many times before, the saying that was written in one of their old
books: "This is the condemnation, that light has come into the world but
men love darkness rather than light."
As it was in that far-away yesterday, so
also it is today. Men are running hither and thither seeking for light. Often
like Sir Launfal they travel to the ends of the earth, wasting their whole lives
seeking for the thing that they call Spirituality," but melting
disappointment after disappointment. But just as Sir Launfal, having spent his
whole life in vain search away from his home, finally found in the HOLY GRAIL
right at his own castle gate, so every honest seeker after spirituality will,
shall, and must find it in his own heart. The only danger is that like the
company of seekers mentioned, he may miss it because he does not recognize it.
NO ONE CAN RECOGNIZE TRUE SPIRITUALITY IN OTHERS UNTIL HE HAD IN A MEASURE
EVOLVED IT IN HIS OWN SELF.
It may therefore be well to try to settle
definitely, "WHAT IS SPIRITUALITY?" to give a guide whereby we may
find this great Christ attribute. In order to do this we must leave our
preconceived ideas behind, or we shall certainly fail. The idea most commonly
held is that spirituality manifests through prayer and meditation; but if we
look at our Savior's life, we shall find that it was not an idle one. He was not
a recluse, He did not go away and hide Himself from the world. He went among
people, He ministered to their daily wants; He fed them when that was necessary;
He healed them whenever He had the opportunity, and He also taught them. Thus He
was in the very truest sense of the word A SERVANT OF HUMANITY.
The monk in "THE LEGEND BEAUTIFUL"
saw Him thus when he was engaged in prayer, rapt in spiritual ecstasy. But just
then the convent bell struck the hour of twelve, and IT WAS HIS DUTY TO GO AND
IMITATE THE CHRIST, feeding the poor who had gathered around the convent gate.
Great indeed was the temptation to stay, to bathe in the heavenly vibrations,;
but there came the voice, "DO THY DUTY, THAT IS BEST; LEAVE UNTO THY LORD
THE REST" How could he have adored the Savior whom he saw feeding the poor
and healing the sick while at the same time leaving the hungry poor to stand
outside the convent gate waiting for him to perform his duties? It would have
been positively wicked for him to have stayed there; and so the Vision said to
him upon his return: "HAST THOU STAYED, I MUST HAVE FLED."
Such self-indulgence would have been
absolutely subversive of the purpose he had in view. If he had not been faithful
in little things pertaining to earthly duties, how could it be expected that he
would be faithful in the greater spiritual work? Naturally, unless ABLE TO STAND
THE TEST, he could not be given greater powers.
There are many people who seek spiritual
powers, wandering from one so-called occult center to another; who enter
monasteries and like places of seclusion, hoping by running away from the
world's clamor and glamour to cultivate their spiritual nature. They bask in the
sunshine of prayer and meditation from morning till night while the world is
moaning in agony. Then they wonder why they do not progress; why they do not get
further upon the path of aspiration. Truly prayer and meditation are necessary,
absolutely essential to soul growth. But we are doomed to failure if we depend
for soul growth upon prayers which are only words. TO OBTAIN RESULTS WE MUST
LIVE IN SUCH A MANNER THAT OUR WHOLE LIFE BECOMES PRAYER, AN ASPIRATION. As
Emerson said:
"Although your knees were never bent,
To heaven your hourly prayers are sent,
And be they formed for good or ill,
Are registered and answered still."
It is not the words we speak in moments of
prayer that count, but IT IS THE LIFE THAT LEADS UP TO THE PRAYER.
What is the use of praying for peace on
earth on Sunday when we are making bullets during the whole week? How can we
pray God to forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against
us when we carry hate in our hearts?
THERE IS ONLY ONE WAY TO SHOW OUR FAITH, AND
THAT IS BY OUR WORKS; It does not matter in what department of life we have been
placed, whether we are high or low, rich or poor, it is immaterial whether we
are engaged in stringing electric lights to save our fellows a physical fall, or
whether it is our privilege to stand upon a platform to give out the spiritual
light and point out to others the way of the soul. It is absolutely unessential
whether our hands are grimy with the lowest labor, perhaps digging a sewer to
maintain the health of our community, or whether they are soft and white as
required when nursing the sick.
The determining factor which decides whether
any class of work is spiritual or material is our attitude in the matter. The
man who strings the electric lights may be far more spiritual than the one who
stands upon the platform; for alas, there are many who go to that sacred duty
with the desire to tickle the ears of their congregation by fine oratory rather
than to give heart-felt love and sympathy. It is must more noble work to clean
out the clogged sewer, as did THE DESPISED BROTHER in Kennedy's "Servant in
the House," than it is to live falsely in the dignity of a teacher's
office, implying a spirituality that is not actually there. EVERYONE WHO TRIES
TO CULTIVATE THIS RARE QUALITY OF SPIRITUALITY MUST ALWAYS BEGIN BY DOING
EVERYTHING TO THE GLORY OF THE LORD; FOR WHEN WE DO ALL THINGS AS UNTO THE LORD,
IT DOES NOT MATTER WHAT KIND OF WORK WE DO. DIGGING A SEWER, INVENTING A LABOR
SAVING DEVICE, PREACHING A SERMON, OR ANYTHING ELSE IS SPIRITUAL WORK WHEN IT IS
DONE IN LOVE TO GOD AND MAN.
THE WAY OF WISDOM
It is now several years since the teaching
of the Elder Brothers was first published in THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION,
and we have since added to our literature. It now seems appropriate that we take
stock of our work to see what we have don with the talents entrusted to our
care.
In the first place let us realize that the
reason why we are in the Rosicrucian Fellowship is because at some time we have
been dissatisfied with the explanations of the problems of life given elsewhere.
We have all sought light upon the riddle, and some among us, like the man spoken
of in the Bible saw a pearl of great price and went and sold all we had and
bought the pearl, which symbolizes knowledge of the Kingdom of Heaven. In other
words, some among us have been so anxious to find light and so overjoyed when it
was found that we have given our whole life, thought, and energy to this work.
Previously assumed obligations prevent the majority from enjoying this great
privilege, but everyone of us, if we have been helped, is bound under the law of
compensation to make some return, for interchange and circulation are everywhere
correlative to life, as stagnation is to death.
We know that we cannot continue to gorge
ourselves upon physical good and retain what we have eaten, and that unless
elimination maintains the equilibrium, death soon follows. Neither can we with
impunity gorge ourselves with a mental diet. We must share our treasure with
others and use our knowledge in the world's work or run the danger of stagnation
in the quagmire of metaphysical speculation.
During the years which have elapsed since
THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION was published, students have had ample time to
familiarize themselves with its teachings. We can no longer excuse ourselves by
saying we do not know the philosophy because we have had no time to study it and
therefore cannot explain it to others. Even those who have had the least time to
study because of the duties which call them in their work in the world ought now
to be sufficiently posted to "GIVE A REASON FOR THE FAITH" which is
within them, as Paul exhorted us all to do. Even if we do not succeed in showing
the light to everyone who asks for it, we owe it to ourselves, to the Elder
Brothers, and to humanity to make the attempt. Our own soul growth depends upon
the share we have in the growth of the movement wherewith we have connected
ourselves, and it is therefore expedient that we should realize thoroughly WHAT
THE MISSION OF THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP IS.
This you will find thoroughly and clearly
elucidated in the introductory chapter of the "COSMO." Briefly stated,
it is TO GIVE AN EXPLANATION OF THE PROBLEM OF LIFE WHICH WILL SATISFY BOTH THE
MIND AND THE HEART, and thus solve the perplexities of the two classes of people
who are now groping in the dark for want of this unifying knowledge, and who may
be broadly spoken of for the purposes of our discussion as THE CHURCH PEOPLE and
the SCIENTISTS. By the first term we will designate all who are led by sincere
devotion or kindliness of nature, whether belonging to a church or not. IN the
second class we mean to include all who are looking at life from the purely
mental viewpoint, whether they class themselves as scientists or not. It is the
aim and object of THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION to widen the spiritual scope
of rapidly increasing number among these two classes who realize more or less
clearly that there is a lack of something vitally important in their present
view of life and being.
You will remember that when David desired to
build a temple for the Lord he was denied the privilege because had had been a
man of war. There are organizations in the world today which are always fighting
other organizations, always finding fault and striving to tear down, thus
warring just as much as David did in ancient days. They cannot with such a state
of mind be permitted to build the temple which is made with living stones of men
and women, that temple which Manson in "The Servant in the House"
speaks of in such beautiful terms. Therefore, when we go about endeavoring to
spread the truths of the Rosicrucian teachings, let us always bear in mind that
we may not with impunity decry the religion of anyone else nor antagonize him,
and that it is not our mission to war against his error, which will manifest
itself in due time.
Do you remember that when David had passed
out and Solomon reigned in his stead, the latter saw the Lord in a dream, and
asked for wisdom? He was given the choice of whatever he might ask, and he asked
for wisdom to guide the people. This answer, in effect, was given him: Because
it was in your heart to ask wisdom, because you have not asked for riches or
long life or for victory over your enemies or anything like that but have prayed
for wisdom, therefore that wisdom shall be given you and much more than that.
Therefore it may be well for us at this time to devote ourselves to heartfelt
prayers for wisdom, and in order that we may recognize it, it will be well to
discuss what true wisdom is.
It is said, and truly, that KNOWLEDGE is
power. Knowledge, though in itself neither good nor evil, may be used either for
one purpose or the other. Genius merely shows the bent of knowledge, but genius
also may be good or evil. We speak of a military genius, one who has a wonderful
knowledge of the tactics of war, but such a man cannot be truly good, FOR HE IS
BOUND TO BE HEARTLESS AND DESTRUCTIVE in the expression of his genius.
A man of war, whether he be a Napoleon or a
common soldier, can never be WISE, because he must deliberately crush all finer
feelings of which we take the heart as a symbol. On the other hand, A WISE RULER
IS BIG-HEARTED as well as having a powerful intellect, so that one balances the
other in promoting the interests of his people. Even the deepest KNOWLEDGE along
religious or occult lines is not wisdom, as we are taught by Paul in that
wonderful thirteenth chapter of first Corinthians, where he says in effect:
Though I have all the knowledge so that I could solve all mysteries, and have
not love, I am nothing. ONLY WHEN KNOWLEDGE HAS WED LOVE, DO THEY MERGE INTO
WISDOM, the expression of Christ principle, the second phase of Deity.
We should be very careful to discriminate
properly at this point. We may have discrimination between what is expedient for
the attainment of a certain end AND WHAT HINDERS and we may choose present ills
for future attainment, but even in this we do not necessarily express wisdom.
Knowledge, prudence, discretion, and discrimination are all born of the mind;
all by themselves alone are snares of evil from which Christ in the Lord's
prayer taught us to pray that we might be delivered. Only when these mind-born
faculties are tempered by the heart-born faculty of love does the blended
product become wisdom. If we read the thirteenth chapter of first Corinthians,
substituting the word WISDOM for the word CHARITY or LOVE, we shall understand
what this great faculty is that we ought so ardently to desire.
It is, then, the mission of the Rosicrucian
Fellowship to promulgate a combined doctrine of the head and the heart, which is
the only true wisdom, for no teaching that lacks either of these complements can
really be called WISE, any more than we can strike a chord of music on one
string; for as the nature of man is complex, the teaching which is to assist him
to cleanse, purify, and elevate this nature must be multiplex in aspect. Christ
followed this principle when He gave us that wonderful prayer, which in its
seven stanzas touches the keynote of each of the seven human vehicles and blends
them into that master chord of perfection which we call the Lord's Prayer.
But how shall we teach the world this
wonderful doctrine received from the Elder Brothers? The answer to this question
is first, last, and all the time: BY LIVING THE LIFE. It is said to the
everlasting credit of Mohammed that his wife became his first disciple, and it
is certain that it was not his teaching alone but the life which he lived in the
home, day in and day out, year in and year out, which won the confidence of his
companion to such an extent that she was willing to trust her spiritual fate in
his hands. It is comparatively easy to stand before strangers who know nothing
bad about us and to whom our shortcomings are therefore not patent, and preach
for an hour or two each week, but it is totally different thing to preach
twenty-four hours a day in the home as Mohammed must have done by living the
life. It we would have the success in our propaganda that he had in his, we
must, each and everyone of us, begin in the hone, begin by demonstrating to
those with whom we live that the teachings which guide us are truly wisdom
teachings. It is said that charity begins at home. This is the word that should
have been translated "love" in the thirteenth chapter of first
Corinthians. Change this also into wisdom and let it read, WISDOM PROPAGANDA
BEGINS AT HOME. Then let this be our motto throughout the years: "By living
the life AT HOME we can advance the cause better than in any other way."
Many skeptical families have been converted by husbands or wives in the
Rosicrucian Fellowship. May the rest follow.
THE SECRET OF SUCCESS
This is a subject which ought to interest
everybody, for surely we all desire to be successful; but the question is what
constitutes success? And to this question perhaps each individual would have a
different answer. But a little thought will soon make it clear that whatever
path we pursue in our desire to attain success, that path must be follow the
evolutionary tread of mankind. Therefore there must be a general answer as to
what constitutes success and what is the secret thereof. It would be a mistake,
however, to try to find the solution of this problem just by examining the life
of man during our present age. Paying regard to what he has been before and with
an eye also to the future development of humanity is the only way to obtain the
perspective which is necessary to arrive at the proper answer to this momentous
question.
We do not need to go into details to a great
extent. We may mention that in the earlier epochs of our evolution when
man-in-the-making was coming down from the spiritual world into his present
material existence, the secret of success lay in a knowledge of the physical
world and the conditions therein. It was not necessary at that time to tell
humanity about the spiritual world and our finer vehicles, for these were facts
patent to everybody. We saw and lived in the spiritual realms. But we were then
coming into the physical world, and therefore the schools of Initiation taught
the pioneers of mankind the laws which govern the physical world and initiated
them into the arts and crafts whereby they might conquer the material realm.
From that time until a comparatively recent date humanity has been working to
perfect itself in these branches of knowledge, which reached their highest
expression in the centuries just prior to the discovery of steam and are now in
their decadence.
At first thought this may seem an
unwarranted statement, but a careful examination of the facts will very quickly
develop the truth thereof. In the so-called "dark ages" there were no
factories, but every town and village was full of small shops in which the
master, sometimes alone and at other times with a few journeymen and
apprentices, wrought the works of his trade from the raw material to the
finished product, exercising his skill and creative instinct and putting his
heart and soul into every piece of work that left his hands. If he were a
blacksmith, he knew how to produce ornamental ironwork fit for signs, gates, and
other things which went to make up the quaint beauty of those medieval villages
and towns. Nor did his handiwork ever leave him entirely; as he walked about the
town he might look upon this, that, or the other ornament, and pride himself
upon the beauty thereof,; pride himself also in the knowledge of how he had won
the respect and admiration of his fellow townsmen by his artistic and
conscientious work. The joiner who made the framework of the chairs, also
upholstered them and made those artistic designs which we are today seeking to
follow. The shoemaker, the weaver, and all other craftsmen without exception
produced the finished article from the raw material, and each took pride in his
handiwork. Also they toiled long hours, but there was no murmur or complaint,
for each found a satisfaction in this exercise of his creative instinct. The
song of the blacksmith to the accompaniment of the hammer on the anvil was a
fact in every shop, and the journeymen and apprentices felt themselves not
slaves but MASTERS IN THE MAKING.
Then came the age of steam and machinery and
with it a new system of labor. Instead of the production of the finished article
from the raw material by one man, which gave satisfaction to his creative
instinct, the new plan was to make men tenders of machines which produced only
parts of the finished articles. These parts were then assembled by others. While
this plan decreased the cost of production and increased the output, it left no
scope for the creative instinct of a man. He became merely a cog in some great
machine. In the medieval shop money was indeed a minor consideration; the joy of
production was everything; time mattered not. But under the new system men
commenced to work FOR MONEY AND AGAINST TIME, with the result that the souls of
both master and men are now starved. They have lost the substance and retained
only the shadow of all that makes life worth living, for they are laboring for
something which they can neither use nor enjoy. This applies to both master and
men.
What would we say of a young man who should
set himself the goal of accumulating a million handkerchiefs which he could
never by any possible change use? Surely we should call him a fool; and why
should we not place the man who spends all his energy and foregoes all the
comforts of life to become a millionaire, in the same category? This system
cannot continue, for it is giving man a stone when he asks for bread, and there
must be some other development in store for him. New standards must be in the
process of development, new ideals must be looming up to give us a wider vision.
For hints as to the trend of evolution we must look to those among us who are
most gifted with inspiration, the poets and seers. James Russell Lowell sounds
perhaps the clearest note in his VISION OF SIR LAUNFAL. A knight leaving his
castle imbued with a desire to do great and valiant things for God, is going to
join the Crusaders and seek the Holy Grail in far distant Palestine. He leaves
his castle self-satisfied, proud, and arrogant, bent on his mission. At the
castle gate he meets a poor beggar, a leper, who stretches out his hands asking
for alms. Sir Launfal, however, has no compassion, but in order to be rid of the
loathsome thing, he throws him a golden coin and endeavors to forget him.
"But the leper raised not the gold from
the dust, 'Better to me the poor man's crust, Better the blessing of the poor,
Though I turn empty for his door. That is not true alms which the hand can hold;
He gives only the worthless gold Who gives from a sense of duty; But he who
gives from a slender mite, And gives to that which is out of sight--That thread
of all-sustaining beauty Which runs through all and doth all unite--The hand
cannot clasp the whole of his aims, The heart outstretches its eager palms, For
a god goes with it and makes it store To the soul that was starving in darkness
before.'"
But what of Sir Launfal? Could he be
expected in such a frame of mind to attain success and find the Grail? Certainly
not. So disappointment after disappointment meets him, and finally he returns to
his castle, discouraged and humbled in heart. There he again meets the leper,
and at the sight of him,
"The heart within him was ashes and dust;
He parted in twain his single crust,
He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
And gave the leper to eat and drink."
Then, having fulfilled the task of mercy, the reward comes with it:
"The leper no longer crouched by his side'
But stood before him glorified,
* * * * * * *
And the Voice that was softer than silence said,
'Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
In many lands, without avail,
Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail;
Behold, it is here--this cup which thou
Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now!
This crust is my body broken for thee,
This water the blood I shed on the tree;
The Holy Supper is kept, indeed,
In whatso we share with another's need;
Not what we give, but what we share--
For the gift without the giver is bare;
Who gives HIMSELF with his aims feeds three:
Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me.'"
In these words lies the secret of success,
which consists in doing the little things, the perhaps seemingly disagreeable
things which are close to our hands, instead of going afar and seeking for
chimerical phantasms which never develop into anything definite or tangible.
What will doing the former accomplish for
us? may be pertinently inquired. Again we may take the answer from a poet,
Oliver Wendell Holmes, who tells us of the little chambered nautilus. It first
builds a small cell only large enough to hold it. Then as it grows, it adds
another chamber which is larger and which it them occupies for the next period
of growth, and so on until it has made a spiral shell as large as it can, which
it then leaves. This idea he puts into the following lines:
"Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul,
As the swift seasons roll!
Leave thy low vaulted past!
Let each new temple, nobler than the last,
Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,
Till thou at length art free,
Leaving thine outgrown shell by life's unresting sea!"
When we have come to this point, we have
obtained success--all the success that we can get in our present world--and we
are entering a new sphere of larger opportunities.
THE DEATH OF THE SOUL
From time to time, seemingly following a law
of periodicity, the same difficulties crop up in the minds of students. At the
same time a number of letters from different parts of the world ask for
information on a subject, at another time on a different one, but after years
the same subjects are revived. While help is given the individuals who ask, it
may be that many more are interested in the same subject at the same time, hence
this lesson on the death of the soul, which seems to exercise the mind perhaps
because death of the body is so common and frequent.
Some years ago we published a lesson on
"The Unpardonable Sin and Lost Souls" in connection with the
sacraments which we were them explaining. It was there stated that all the
sacraments have to do with the transmission of the seed atoms, which form the
nuclei of our various bodies. The germ for our earthly body must be properly
placed in fruitful soil to grow a suitable dense vehicle, and for this reason,
as stated in Genesis, 1:27, "Elohim created man male and female." The
Hebrew words are SACR VA N'CABAH. These are names of the sex organs. Literally
translated, SACR means the bearer of the germ; and thus MARRIAGE is a SACRament,
for it opens the way for the transmission of the physical seed atom from the
father to the mother and tends to preserve the race against the ravages of
death.
BAPTISM as a SACRament signifies the
germinal urge of the soul for higher life, the planting of a spiritual seed.
COMMUNION is the SACRament in which we
partake of bread made from the seed of chaste plants, and in which the cup
symbolizing the passionless seed pod points to the age to come, an age when
marriage will be unnecessary to transmit the seed through a father and mother,
but when we may feed directly upon cosmic life and thus conquer death.
Finally, EXTREME UNCTION is the SACRament
which marks the loosing of the silver cord and the extraction of the sacred
germ, until it shall again be planted in another N'cabah, or mother.
As the seed and ovum are the root and basis
of racial development, it is easy to see that no sin can be more serious than
that which abuses the creative function, for by the SACRilege we stunt future
generations and transgress against the Holy Spirit, Jehovah, who is the warden
of the creative lunar force. His angels herald birth, as in the case of Isaac,
John the Baptist, and Jesus. When He wanted to reward His most faithful
follower, Abraham, He promised to make his seed as numerous as the sands on the
seashore. He also meted out the most terrible punishment to the Sodomites, who
committed sacrilege by misdirecting the seed; and the sin of Onan who wasted it
is also a pointer in the same direction.
We are told in the Bible that mankind were
forbidden to eat of the Tree of Knowledge under pain of death. But instead of
patiently waiting for the periods of propitious interplanetary conditions Adam
KNEW Eve, and since then she has borne her children in pain and suffering
subject to premature death. Therefore the abuse of this sacred function for
gratification of the passional nature, and particularly perversion, is
recognized by esotericists as the unpardonable sin. It is to this James refers
when he says, "There is a sin unto death. I do not say that ye shall pray
for that."
But occult investigations have proved in
this case, as with all other forms of hell preaching, that God and nature are
much more lenient and merciful to man than man is to his fellows. Though the
retributive justice meted out to those who have lived lives of sin and vice was
found in all cases to be severe, nothing nearly as serious as the "death of
the soul" occurs. So far as we have been able to learn, ONLY THE BLACK
MAGICIAN WHO CONSCIOUSLY MISUSES THE SEED FOR MALICIOUS PURPOSES faces anything
so serious as that implied in the phrase; and there would really be no need of
going into the subject at all except that it throws side lights upon other
matters of value to the student.
To understand this properly we must first
call to the mind the sharp definitions of the terms spirit, soul and body as
given in the "Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception." It is there stated that
in the beginning of manifestation the Virgin Spirit, a spark from the Divine,
involved itself in a three-fold veil of spirit-matter and thus became the Ego.
The threefold spirit cast a threefold shadow
into the realm of matter, and thus the DENSE BODY was evolved as a counterpart
of the Divine Spirit, the VITAL BODY as a replica of the Life Spirit, and the
DESIRE BODY as the image of the Human Spirit. Finally, and most important of
all, the link of MIND was formed between the threefold spirit and its threefold
body. This was the beginning of individual consciousness, and marks the point
where the involution spirit into matter is finished and the evolutionary process
whereby the spirit is lifted out of matter begins. Involution involves the
crystallization of spirit into bodies, but evolution depends upon the
dissolution of the bodies, the extraction of the soul-substance from them, and
the alchemical amalgamation of this soul with the spirit.
At the beginning of evolution man consisted
only of spirit and body,--he was soulless; but since them each life lived on
earth in the great school of experience had made him more and more soulful
according to the use which he has made of his opportunities. This is shown in
the different gradation between the savage and the saint which we see all about
us. It is the loss of the soul which is involved in the experience we describe
as the death of the soul. The spirit itself can of course never die seeing that
it is a spark from the Divine, without beginning and without end. How then can
the death of the soul be brought about, and what is the real meaning of the
phrase? This is a subject the writer does not like to dwell upon, but for the
sake of the important side light it throws upon spiritual advancement, as
already said, the facts will be given.
In the foregoing we have seen that the
threefold spirit has projected a threefold body and that the purpose of
evolution is the extraction of the threefold soul from his threefold body and
the amalgamation thereof with the threefold spirit. Now mark this point for this
is the important crux of the whole matter, a very valuable and important piece
of information which will help the student to a more definite understanding of
the subject than has hitherto been given: Much is said in occult literature
about "THE PATH"; but though to the initiated who already know, the
statements of what it is and where it is are plentiful, this information has
never before been given to the exoteric student. Paul tells us that to be
carnally MINDED is death, but to be spiritual MINDED is life and peace. This is
the exact truth, for the MIND, WHICH IS THE LINK BETWEEN THE SPIRIT AND THE
BODY, IS THE PATH OR BRIDGE, THE ONLY MEANS OF TRANSMISSION OF SOUL TO SPIRIT.
So long as man is carnally minded and turns his attention to worldly successes,
cherishing as his motto proverb, "Let us eat, drink, and be merry for
tomorrow we die," all his activities are centered in the lower part of his
being, the personality, and he lives and dies like the animals, unconscious of
the magnetic drawings of the spirit. But at length there comes a time when the
yearnings of the spirit are felt, and the personality sees the light and sets
out to seek its Higher Self across the bridge of mind. And as flesh and blood
cannot inherit the Kingdom of God, the body is crucified that the soul may be
liberated and joined to its Father in Heaven, the threefold spirit, the Higher
Self.
That at least is the general tendency, the
higher elevates the lower. But unfortunately there are examples of the opposite
where the lower personality becomes so strong in its materialism and where the
mind becomes so firmly enmeshed with the lower vehicles that the personality
refuses to sacrifice itself for the spirit, with the result that THE BRIDGE OF
MIND IS FINALLY BROKEN. The soulless personality may then continue to live for
many years after this separation has taken place, and may perpetrate the most
outrageous acts of cruelty and cunning until it succumbs. Black Magic which
involves the perverted use of seed obtained from others is generally used by
these soulless personalities for the purpose of satisfying their demoniac
desires. Often they obtain power in a nation or a society, which they then
delight in wrecking.
Meanwhile the spirit stands naked; it has
no seed atoms wherewith to create further bodies, and it therefore automatically
gravitates to the planet Saturn and thence to Chaos, where it must retain until
the dawn of a new creative day. It may seen unjust at first sight that the
spirit should be thus made to suffer though it has committed no wickedness; but
on further thought it will be understood that as the personality is the creature
of the Higher Self, the responsibility exists and cannot be evaded. Fortunately,
however, such cases grow increasingly rare as we advance upon the pathway of
evolution. Nevertheless, it behooves all to set their faces earnestly towards
the goal so that the light on the path that leads toward our spiritual ideal,
the union with the Higher Self, may grow brighter day by day.
THE NEW SENSE OF THE NEW AGE
At the end of the Taurean age, about 4,000
years ago, "God's people" fled from the wrath to come when they left
Egypt, the land where they worshiped the Bull. They were led in their flight to
the promised land by Moses, whose head in ancient esoteric pictures is adorned
with wreathed ram's horns, symbolical of the fact that he was herald of the
Aryan age of 2100 years, during which each Easter morning the vernal sun colored
the doorposts red as with the blood of the lamb, when it passed over the equator
in the CONSTELLATION (not the SIGN) of the ram Aries. Similarly, when the sun by
precession was approaching the watery constellation Pisces, the Fishes, John
immersed the converts to the Messianic religion in the waters of Jordan, and
Jesus called his disciples "fishers" of men. As the "lamb"
was slain at the Passover while the sun went through the constellation Aries,
the Ram, so the faithful have in obedience to the command of their church fed on
fishes during Lent in the present cycle of Pisces, the Fishes.
At the time when the sun by precession left
the constellation Taurus, the Bull, the people who worshiped that animal were
pronounced heathen and idolaters. A new symbol of the Savior, or Messias, was
found in the lamb, which correspond to the constellation Aries; but when the sun
by precession left that sign, Judaism became a religion of the past, and
thenceforth the bishops of the new Christian religion wore a miter shaped like a
fish's head to designate their standing as ministers of the church during the
Piscean Age, which is now drawing to a close.
By viewing the future through the
perspective of the past, it is evident that a new age is to be ushered in when
the sun enters the constellation Aquarius, the Water-bearer, a few hundred years
hence. Judging by the events of the past it is reasonable to expect that a new
phase of religion will supersede our present system, revealing higher and nobler
ideals than our present conception of the Christian religion. It is therefore
certain that if in that day we would not be classed among the idolaters and
heathen, we must prepare to align ourselves with these new ideals.
John the Baptist, preached the gospel of
preparedness in no uncertain words, warning people that the ax had been laid at
the root of the tree. He cautioned them also to flee from the wrath to come,
when the Son (Sun) of God should come, fan in hand, to separate the wheat from
the chaff and burn it up. Christ likened the gospel to a little leaven which
leavened a measure of flour.
At first sight the method of John seems to
be most drastic, laying the ax at the root of the whole social structure, while
the leavening process mentioned by Christ appears to be more gentle; but in
reality it is even more thoroughgoing and drastic, as will be evident if we
consider carefully what takes place when we make a loaf. It is a chemical
revolution, a miniature war, involving an entire transformation of every atom of
flour in the vessel; none can escape the action of the leaven, and there is a
sound as of continual cannonading, explosion of bombs and shells, until the
force of the leaven is spent and the dough transformed to a light sponge. But
this war of the atoms, this chemical revolution, is absolutely indispensable in
the process of bread making, for if the leavening process were omitted, the
result would be a heavy, unpalatable, indigestible loaf. It is the transmutation
wrought by the leaven which makes the loaf wholesome and nutritious.
The process of preparation for the Aquarian
Age has already commenced, and as Aquarius is an airy, scientific, and
intellectual sign, it is a foregone conclusion that the new faith must be rooted
in reason and able to solve the riddle of life and death in a manner that will
satisfy both the mind and the religious instinct.
Such is the Western Wisdom Religion
promulgated by the Rosicrucian Fellowship; like the leaven in the loaf, it is
breaking down the fear of death engendered by the uncertainty surrounding the
post-mortem existence. It is showing that life and consciousness continue under
the laws as immutable as God, which tends to raise man to increasingly higher,
nobler, and loftier states of spirituality. It kindles the beacon light of hope
in the human heart by the assertion that as we have in the past evolved the five
senses by which we contact the present visible world, so shall we in the not
distant future evolve another sense which will enable us to see the denizens of
the etheric region, as well as those of our dear ones who have left the physical
body and inhabit the ether and lower desire world during the first stage of
their career in the spiritual realms. The mission of Aquarius is aptly
represented by the symbol of man emptying the water urn.
Aquarius is an airy sign having special
rule over the ether. The Flood partly dried the air by depositing most of the
moisture it held in the sea. But when the sun enters Aquarius by precession, the
rest of the moisture will be eliminated and visual vibrations, which are most
easily transmitted by a dry etheric atmosphere, will become more intense; thus
conditions will be particularly conducive to production of the slight extension
of our present sight necessary to open our eyes to the etheric region.
California's production of physics is an instance of this effect of a dry,
electric atmosphere, though, of course, it is not nearly so dry as the air of
the Aquarian Age will be.
Thus faith will be swallowed up in
knowledge and we shall all be able to utter the triumphant cry, "O death,
where is thy sting; O grave, where is thy victory?" But it is well to
realize that by aspiration and meditation to those who are longingly looking for
that day are taking time by the forelock and may quite easily outstrip their
fellows who are unaware of what is in store. The latter, on the other hand, may
delay the development of extended vision by the belief that they are suffering
from hallucinations when they begin to get their first glimpses of the etheric
entities, and the fear that if they tell others what they see, they will be
adjudged insane.
Therefore the Rosicrucian Fellowship has
been charged by the Elder Brothers with the mission of promulgating the gospel
of the Aquarian Age, and of conducting a campaign of education and
enlightenment, so that the world may be prepared for what is in store. The world
must be leavened with those ideas:
(1) Conditions in the land of the living
dead are not shrouded in mystery, but knowledge regarding them is as available
as knowledge concerning foreign countries from the tales of travelers.
(2) We now stand close to the threshold
where we shall all know these truths.
(3) And, most important of all, we shall
hasten the day in our own case by acquiring knowledge of the facts concerning
the post-mortem existence and the things we may expect to see, for then we shall
know what to look for, and neither be frightened, astonished nor incredulous
when we commence to obtain glimpses of these things.
Students should also realize that a serious
responsibility goes with the possession of knowledge: "to who much is
given, of him much shall be required." If we hide or bury our
"talent," may we not expect a merited condemnation? The Rosicrucian
Fellowship can only fulfill its mission in so far as each member does his duty
in spreading the teachings, and therefore it is to be hoped that this may serve
to call the attention of the student to the fact of his individual duty.
The etheric sight is similar to the X-ray
in that it enables its possessor to see right through all objects, but it is
much more powerful and renders everything as transparent as glass. Therefore in
the Aquarian Age many things will be different from now, for instance, it will
be extremely easy to study anatomy and to detect a morbid growth, a dislocation,
or a pathological condition of the body. At present medical men of the highest
standing admit regretfully that their diagnosis are only too frequently
erroneous as shown by post-mortem observation; but when we have evolved the
etheric sight, they will be able to study both anatomical structures and
physiological processes without hindrance.
The etheric vision will not enable us to
see one another's thoughts, for they are formed in still finer stuff, but it
will make it largely impossible for us to live double lives and to act
differently in our homes than we do in public. If we were aware that invisible
entities now throng our houses, we should often feel ashamed of the things we
do; but in the Aquarian Age there will be no privacy which may not be broken
into by anyone who desires to see us. It will avail nothing that we send the
office boy or maid out to tell an unwelcome visitor that we are "not
in." This means that in the new age honesty and straightforwardness will be
the only policies worth while, for we cannot then do wrong and hope to escape
detection. There will be people whose base characters will lead them into ways
of wickedness then as now, but they will at least be marked so that they may be
avoided.
The student can easily conjecture a number
of other conditions that will result from the extension of sight which will come
with the Aquarian Age, and by living as near to that state as possible, he will
be placing himself in a position to become one of the pioneers of that age when
"there shall be no night," and when the "tree of life" shall
bloom unceasingly by the transparent etheric "sea of glass" which
permeates all things.
GOD'S CHOSEN PEOPLE
When we read the history of the Hebrews as
recorded in the Bible and chronicled in medieval and modern records of the
various peoples inhabiting the Western world, one inescapable fact stands out
with startling clearness, to wit, that they have been led into exile and
slavery, hated in every country where they have been scattered, and persecuted
wherever the temperament of the nations among whom the Jews dwelt would allow
them to resort to such measures. According to the Bible, esteemed the "Word
of God" by the Western peoples, the Jews are "God's chosen
people" in a peculiar sense, yet among these very nations the Jews are
despised and discredited. When we investigate the reason of this tragedy, two
salient facts present themselves:
(1) Everywhere the Jews have proclaimed
themselves God's chosen people, destined by divine favor in time to become
masters of the world, to whom all nations will eventually have to pay homage and
tribute.
(2) Their dealings with the gentiles have
almost invariably been marked by such sharp practices that in public mind
Shakespeare's Shylock, exacting his "pound of flesh," agrees with the
general conception of their nature.
Thus, unconsciously, there has grown up in
the mind of the other nations a resentment toward the Jews' claim to be divinely
favored children of God, while they class all others as stepchildren, heathen,
and gentiles reserved for the day of wrath when Israel shall triumphantly rule
them with a rod of iron. This resentment is accentuated by contemplation of the
present day practices of the Jews.
If the Jews had backed up their claim of
being divine favorites by lives of noble and lofty conduct, they would probably
have inspired the admiration of many of the people among whom they have dwelt.
They would have stirred some to emulation; even those who were envious of their
preferment would probably have respected them. But because their high
professions and their practices are so widely divergent, it is sad but not to be
wondered at that they are hated and persecuted on every hand.
The student is warned not to view the
foregoing merely as a criticism of the Jews,; it is wrong to expose the faults
of others and to criticize them unless we have a constructive end in view. It is
always so easy to see the mote in our brother's eye, but far easier to overlook
the beam in our own. The reason for bringing up the subject of the Jews with
their high professions and divergent practices is but to inquire if, by turning
the searchlight upon the mote in their eye, we shall not find a large beam in
our own. If so, we shall have accomplished something worth while and put
ourselves in line to remove the beam.
So long as we live at the level of the
world, doing the things others do, good, bad and indifferent, no one takes
particular notice of us; but the moment we, like the Jews, make professions to
be something different, the searchlight of society at once singles us out as
objects of observation to determine what ratio of agreement there is between our
professions and our practices. We are watched wherever we go and whatever we do;
hence a great responsibility rests upon us to acquit ourselves well in order
that we may do credit to the teachings of our Elder Brothers and stimulate in
others a desire to embrace these teachings.
Therefore let us pause and take stock of
our actions and accomplishments in the past year; then let us make such
resolutions as we feel will make the future more profitable from the standpoint
of the soul.
In the first place let us acknowledge that
we have been especially favored, far beyond our merit, by receiving the
Rosicrucian teachings from our Elder Brothers. Let us hope that we have
expressed our gratitude to them through all the past year, and let us at this
time send them special thoughts of love and gratitude. Needless to say they do
not crave our gratitude, they are beyond that; but we may make more soul growth
by being grateful.
Then let us consider how we have used these
precious teachings during the past year: have we dealt justly with our fellows,
have we been lenient in our judgments and criticisms of others, have we striven
to curb our temper, cultivate equipoise, and overcome whatever may be our
particular besetting sin?
What measure of success have we had? Let us
hope our accomplishments have been at least moderate, for as the sincerity of
the Jews' high professions have been judged by their performance, so, right or
wrong, the teachings of the Elder Brothers will be rated in the community by the
actions of those who profess to be their followers.
But it is a foregone conclusion that we
shall have to admit at the end of our retrospection that we have fallen far
short of the lofty ideals placed before us. This is always a critical point
where our spiritual career is in danger of shipwreck upon the rock of
faintheartedness, that is, if we are of the temperament that broods over or
magnifies failure. Such an attitude of mind precipitates disaster by robbing us
of the will to win; it makes us believe that there is not use in struggling,
that the odds against us are too great. Excuses are found in the antagonism of
friends and family to our belief, duties that take our time, etc. But, as a
matter of fact, the trouble is within ourselves, and if we yield, we shall find
that our friends will despise us in their hearts even if they do not show it
openly as in the case of the Jews.
Instead, so far from causing us to forsake
the path of progress, our failures should act as a spur to greater efforts, and
we should make our resolution with greater determination so that during the
coming year we may be invincible with respect to the matter covered by it.
We all know our own particular
shortcomings, "the sin which doth so easily beset us," and each will
naturally have to formulate the proper resolutions for himself. But in carrying
these resolutions into effect so that they may be productive of soul growth and
help to weave the glorious GOLDEN WEDDING GARMENT, it will undoubtedly help us
immensely to fasten our eyes and thoughts upon one who possessed the virtue we
are seeking to cultivate. Such a great example we have in Christ, who "was
tempted in all things like ourselves, yet without sin." Let us therefore
keep Him closely before our mind's eye during the coming year, and we shall
surely make great soul growth. This is also the best propaganda we can make for
the Rosicrucian teachings, for by living close to them we shall surely evoke in
others a desire to share in their blessings.
MYSTIC LIGHT ON THE WORLD WAR
PART I--SECRET SPRINGS
It is well known to students of the
Rosicrucian teachings that we as spirits are immortal, without beginning and
without end; that we have gone to the great school of experience many life-days
in the past each time clad in a new child's body of finer texture, in which we
lived for a time varying from a few hours to a lifetime, and when a day at
life's school had been completed, we shuffled off this mortal coil, worn out and
decrepit, to return to our heavenly home for rest and assimilation during the
night of death of the lessons learned; later to be reborn and take up our
lessons where we left them when we were called home from the previous session of
the school of life.
During each day at life's school we met
other spirits and formed ties of love and hate. In later lives we met again so
that the debts of destiny thus incurred might be liquidated. And so our friends
of today are those we befriended yester-life, and our enemies are those with
whom we were at variance in the forgotten past. Thus we are continually weaving
the web of destiny on the loom of time, and creating for ourselves a garment of
glory or gloom according to whether we have worked well or ill.
But we do not work out our INDIVIDUAL
destiny only, for as the proverb says, "No man liveth unto himself."
We are grouped in families, tribes, races, and nations, and in addition to our
individual destiny we are tied by the family and national destinies because we
are under the guardianship of the angels and archangels who act as family and
race spirits respectively. It is these great spirits who imprint on our seed
atoms the racial form and features of the physical body. They also implant the
national loves and hates on the seed atoms of our finer vehicles, because the
race spirit broods like a cloud over the land inhabited by its wards, and the
latter draw all the materials for their finer bodies from this atmosphere. In
this race spirit, as a matter of actual fact, they live and move and have their
being. From it their vehicles are formed. Yea, with every breath in this race
spirit, so that it is absolutely true that it is nearer than hands and feet. It
is this race spirit which imbues them with love or hate for other nations, thus
determining between certain nations and the trust and confidence which exists
between others.
According to the teachings of the
Rosicrucians, every spirit is reborn twice during the time it takes the sun by
precession to go through a sign of the zodiac, once as man and once as woman.
This is done in order that it may gain the experiences to be had in that sign
from the viewpoint of both sexes. There are many modifications to this rule
according to the necessities of individual spirits, for the law is not blind but
it is under the administration of great beings called the Recording Angels in
the Christian terminology. It is their duty to watch the Clock of Destiny and
see when the time is ripe to reap the harvest of the past, and this applies both
to individuals and to nations. Therefore if we study the characteristics of the
nations recently locked in a titanic struggle, together with the aims for which
they were fighting, and look back over the pages of history, it needs no
seership, scarcely even intuition, to place them and thus see how the springs of
the recent war were generated in the distant past.
It has, in fact, been suggested by
historians that the sons of Albion are a reembodiment of the ancient Romans. In
the light of occult investigations this is not quite true, for there are a
number of alien strains present. But they have been so fused in the dominant
race that it may be said to be practically a fact.
Let us recall the history of Rome and
remember that the democratic spirit, after the first seven kings had reigned,
manifested itself in the formation of a republic, which then began a war of
aggression to obtain the mastery of the world, and in the course of this
campaign it became engaged with Carthage in a mighty struggle for the mastery of
the Mediterranean Sea. To gain expansion westward the Romans endeavored to expel
the Carthaginians from Sicily. Carthage at that time was a great sea power, but
she was defeated by the Romans in 260 B.C. on her own element. Following up this
advantage Rome transferred the war to Africa and was at first successful, but
Regulus, the consul whom she left behind, was finally worsted and made prisoner.
A series of naval disasters to Rome ensued, and Carthage was about to regain
more than she had lost of Sicily when Tetulus, the Roman Consul, gained another
decisive victory over the Carthaginians in 241 B.C., who there upon undertook to
evacuate Sicily and the adjacent islands. This ended in the first Punic War,
which was twenty-two years in duration.
But Carthage was not to be so easily
conquered. Finding Rome her match at sea, she resumed hostilities by acquiring a
foothold in Spain, and the great Carthaginian general, Hannibal, who heartily
hated Rome, attempted the conquest of that city during the second Punic War,
which was declared in 218 B.C. His plans, nurtured in secret, were carried on
with unexampled celerity. He crossed the Pyrenees from Spain to France, fought
his way over the Alps against every obstacle, and descended upon Cisalpine Gaul
with but twenty-six thousand survivors of his army of fifty-nine thousand men.
After several defeats of the Romans came the great battle of Cannae in 216 B.C.,
where Hannibal's victory was complete. Macedonia and Sicily declared for the
conquerors, and Hannibal marched even to the Colline gate of Rome. But finding
this city too strong for him, he withdrew to southern Italy, where he was
finally defeated and Carthage forced to sue for peace. Thus Rome became the
mistress of the Mediterranean.
But the hate of Hannibal was unabated, and
when he and his compatriots, the Carthaginians, were reborn in landlocked
Prussia, while the ancient Romans occupied the British Islands as mistresses of
the seas, it was inevitable that in time a great conflict must take place. As
the ancient Punic Wars generated the recent conflict, so will this war in due
time bring its renewal of the struggle unless we shown a spirit of kindness in
dealing with the vanquished foe, instead of dealing with them as Rome did in
that ancient past, without mercy and without consideration. The power to harm
others must be taken from the militarist of the Central Empires. It is
absolutely imperative that the world should be made safe from a repetition of
this catastrophe, BUT THE MEASURES TAKEN TO SECURE THIS DESIRABLE END SHOULD BE
SUCH THAT NOT ONLY DO THEY ENSURE PEACE FOR THE PRESENT LIFE, BUT ALSO FOR THOSE
FUTURE LIFE-DAYS WHEN WE SHALL MEET IN ANOTHER GUISE THOSE WITH WHOM WE WERE
RECENTLY AT WAR.
Justice ought to be done, but it should be
tempered with mercy in order to avoid perpetuating hate, and therefore such
harsh measures as, for instance, the industrial boycott are wrong. It should be
sufficient to see that the Central Empires get no more than a fair share of the
world's trade. The new American nation, which is not yet under the domination of
any race spirits, sees more impartially and therefore more clearly than any
other what is right. Therefore it is to be hoped that the American ideas of
justice will prevail. Let us remember that one wrong never can and never will
right another, and that we must live and let live.
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