5154 lines
282 KiB
Plaintext
5154 lines
282 KiB
Plaintext
[PAGE 1] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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BY
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MAX HEINDEL
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[1865-1919]
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A SERIES OF ESSAYS ON
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PRACTICAL MYSTICISM
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THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
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INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
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MT. ECCLESIA
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P.O. BOX 713
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OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA, 92054 U.S.A.
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[PAGE 3] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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FORWARD
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The contents of this book are among the last writings of Max Heindel, the
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mystic. They contain some of his deepest thoughts, and are the result of
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years of research and occult investigation. He, too, could say as did
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Parsifal: "Through error and through suffering I came, through many failures
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and through countless woes." At last he was given the living water with
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which he was able to quench the spiritual thirst of many souls. He also de-
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veloped to their depths pity and love, and could feel the heart throbs of
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suffering humanity.
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Strong souls are usually endowed with great energy and impulse, and
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through these very forces, they forge to the front ranks though they often
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suffer much. As a result they are filled with compassion for others. The
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writer of these lessons sacrificed his physical body on the altar of ser-
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vice.
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In writing the books and monthly lessons of the Fellowship, in his lec-
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tures and class work, and in the arduous pioneer work of establishing Head-
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quarters within the short span of ten years, Max Heindel accomplished more
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than many who are blessed with perfect health could have accomplished in a
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lifetime. His first book, his masterpiece, " The Rosicrucian Cosmo-
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[PAGE 4] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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Conception," was written under the direct guidance of the Elder Brothers of
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the Rose Cross. It carries a vital message to the world. It satisfies not
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alone the intellect, but also the heart. His "Freemasonry and Catholicism,"
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has found its way into many Masonic libraries. The occultist has received
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much from the book entitled, "The Web of Destiny," which is a mine of mysti-
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cal knowledge and helpful occult truths. It is also a guide to the investi-
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gator, establishing danger signals for the venturesome ones who wish to take
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heaven by storm. To the science of astrology he has given more in a few
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years than has previously been discovered for centuries. His two valuable
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works, "Simplified Scientific Astrology" and "The Message of the Stars,"
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deal largely with the spiritual and medical aspects of astrology. The lat-
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ter gives methods of diagnosis and healing which form a valuable addition to
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the works of other authors, both ancient and modern. These books may be
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found in the libraries of many doctors of the old school.
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In "Gleanings of a Mystic" are found twenty-four lessons which were for-
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merly sent out to students. It is the wish of the writer of this introduc-
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tion that these lessons may carry a message of love and cheer to the
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soul-hungry reader and hope to the disconsolate one.
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Augusta Foss Heindel
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[PAGE 5] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Chapter I.
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Initiation: What It Is and Is Not--Part I. 7
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Chapter II
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Initiation: What It Is and Is Not--Part II. 14
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Chapter III.
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The Sacrament of Communion--Part I. 21
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Chapter IV.
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The Sacrament of Communion--Part II. 28
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Chapter V.
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The Sacrament of Baptism. 37
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Chapter VI.
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The Sacrament of Marriage 46
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Chapter VII.
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The Unpardonable Sin and Lost Souls. 54
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Chapter VIII.
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The Immaculate Conception. 61
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Chapter IX.
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The Coming Christ. 69
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Chapter X.
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The Coming Age. 77
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Chapter XI.
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Meat and Drink as Factors of Evolution. 85
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[PAGE 6] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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Chapter XII.
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A Living Sacrifice. 94
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Chapter XIII.
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Magic, White and Black. 101
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Chapter XIV.
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Our Invisible Government. 108
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Chapter XV.
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Practical Precepts for Practical People. 114
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Chapter XVI.
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Sound, Silence, and Soul Growth. 121
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Chapter XVII.
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The "Mysterium Magnum" of the Rose Cross 130
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Chapter XVIII.
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Stumbling Blocks 138
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Chapter XIX.
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The Lock of Upliftment. 147
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Chapter XX.
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The Cosmic Meaning of Easter--Part I. 153
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Chapter XXI.
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The Cosmic Meaning of Easter--Part II. 160
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Chapter XXII.
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The Newborn Christ. 167
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Chapter XXIII.
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Why I am a Rosicrucian. 173
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Chapter XXIV.
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The Object of the Rosicrucian Fellowship. 180
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[PAGE 7] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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CHAPTER I
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INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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PART I
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IT IS NO rare occurrence to receive questions relating to Initiation, and
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we are also frequently asked to state whether this order or that society is
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genuine, and whether the initiations they offer to all comers who have the
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price are BONA FIDE. For that reason it seems necessary to write a treatise
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on the subject so that students of the Rosicrucian Fellowship may have an
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official statement for reference and guidance in the future.
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In the first place let it be clearly understood that we consider it repre-
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hensible to express condemnation of any society or order, no matter what it
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practices. It may be perfectly sincere and honest ACCORDING TO ITS LIGHT.
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We do not believe that we rise in the opinion of discriminating men and
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women by speaking in disparaging terms of others; neither are we laboring
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under the delusion that WE have all the truth and the other societies are
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plunged in Egyptian darkness. We reiterate what we have often said before,
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[PAGE 8] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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that all religions have been given to mankind by the Recording Angels, who
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know the spiritual requirements of each class, nation, and race, and have
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the intelligence to give each a form of worship perfectly suited to its par-
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ticular need; that thus Hinduism is suited to the Hindu, Mohammedanism to
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the Arab, and the Christian religion to those born in the Western Hemi-
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sphere.
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The Mystery Schools of each religion furnish to the more advanced members
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of the race or nation embracing its higher teaching, which IF LIVED, ad-
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vances them into a higher sphere of spirituality than their brethren. But
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as the religion of the backward races is of a lower order than the religion
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of the pioneers, the Christian nations, so also the MYSTERY TEACHING OF THE
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EAST IS MORE ELEMENTARY THAN THAT OF THE WEST, and the Hindu or Chinese Ini-
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tiate is on a correspondingly lower rung of the ladder of attainment than
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the Western Mystic. Please ponder this well so that you may not fall a vic-
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tim to misguided people who try to persuade others that the Christian reli-
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gion is crude compared with oriental cults. Ever westward in the wake of
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the shining sun, the light of the world, has gone the star of empire, and is
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it not reasonable to suppose that the spiritual light has kept pace with
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civilization, or even preceded it as thought precedes action? We hold that
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such is the case, that the Christian religion is the loftiest yet given to
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man, and that to repudiate the Christian religion, esoteric or exoteric, for
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any of the older systems is analogous to preferring the older textbooks of
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[PAGE 9] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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science to the newer ones which embrace discoveries to date.
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Neither are the practices of Eastern aspirants to the higher life to be
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imitated by Westerners; we refer particularly to the breathing exercises.
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They are both beneficial and necessary to the unfoldment of the Hindu, but
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it is otherwise with the Western aspirant. To him it is dangerous to prac-
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tice breathing exercises for soul unfoldment; they will even prove subver-
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sive of soul growth, and they are, moreover, absolutely unnecessary. The
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reason is this:
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During involution the threefold spirit has become gradually incrusted in
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a threefold body. In the Atlantean Epoch man was at the nadir of material-
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ity. We are just now rounding the lowest point on the arc of involution,
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and starting upward on the arc of evolution. At this point, then, all man-
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kind is immured in this earthly prison house to such a degree that spiritual
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vibrations are almost killed. This is, of course, particularly true of the
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backward races and the lower classes in the Western world. The atoms in
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such backward race bodies are vibrating at an exceedingly low rate, and when
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in the course of time one of these people develops to a point where it is
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possible to further him upon the path of attainment, it is necessary to
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raise this vibratory pitch of the atom so that the vital body, which is the
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medium of occult growth, may to a certain extent be liberated from the dead-
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ening forces of the physical atom. This result is attained by means of
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[PAGE 10] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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breathing exercises, which in time accelerate the vibration of the atom, and
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allow the spiritual growth necessary to the individual to take place.
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These exercises may also be used by a great number of people in the West-
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ern world, particularly those who are not at all concerned about their
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spiritual advancement. But even among those who desire soul growth there
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are many who are not yet at the point where the atoms of their bodies have
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evolved to such a pitch of vibration that acceleration beyond the usual mea-
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sure would injure them. Here the breathing exercises would do no harm; but
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if given to a person who is really at the point where he can enter the path
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of advancement ordinarily mapped out for the Hindu's precocious brothers and
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sisters in the West, in other words, when he is nearly ready for Initiation
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and when he would be benefited BY SPIRITUAL EXERCISES, then the case is far
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otherwise.
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During the aeons which we have spent in evolution since the time when we
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were in Hindu bodies, our atoms have accelerated their vibratory pitch enor-
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mously, and as said in the case of one who is really nearly ready for Ini-
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tiation, the pitch of vibration is higher than that of the average man or
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woman. Therefore he does not need breathing exercises to ACCELERATE this
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pitch, but certain spiritual exercises suited to him individually which will
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advance him on the proper path. If such a person at this critical period
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[PAGE 11] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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meets some one who ignorantly or unscrupulously gives him breathing exer-
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cises, and if he follows the instructions accurately in the hope of GETTING
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QUICK RESULTS, he will get them quickly but in a manner he has not looked
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for, since the vibratory rate of the atoms in his body will in a very short
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time become accelerated to such a pitch that it will seem to him as if he
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were walking on air; then also an improper cleavage of the vital body may
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take place, and either consumption or insanity follows. Now please put this
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down where it will burn itself into your consciousness in letters of fire:
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INITIATION IS A SPIRITUAL PROCESS, AND SPIRITUAL PROGRESS CANNOT BE ACCOM-
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PLISHED BY PHYSICAL MEANS, BUT ONLY BY SPIRITUAL EXERCISES.
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There are many orders in the West which profess to INITIATE ANYONE WHO
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HAS THE PRICE. Some of these orders have names closely resembling our own,
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and we are constantly asked by students whether they are affiliated with us.
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In order to settle this once and for all, please note that the Rosicrucian
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Fellowship has constantly taught that NO SPIRITUAL GIFT MAY EVER BE TRADED
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FOR MONEY. If you bear this in mind, you may know we have no connection
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with any order which demands money for the transference of spiritual power.
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He who has something to give of a truly spiritual nature will not barter it
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for money. I received a particular injunction to this effect from the Elder
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Brothers in the Rosicrucian Temple, when they told me to go to the English
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speaking world as their messenger, a claim I do not expect you to believe
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[PAGE 12] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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SAVE AS YOU SEE IT JUSTIFIED BY FRUITS.
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Now, however, about Initiation: What it is? Is it ceremony as claimed by
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these other orders? If so, any order can certainly invent ceremonies of a
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more or less elaborate kind. They may by flowing robes and clashing swords
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appeal to the emotions; they may appeal to the sense of wonder and awe by
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rattling chains and by deep sounding gongs, and thus produce in their mem-
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bers an "OCCULT FEELING." Many revel in the adventures and experiences of
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the hero in "The Brother of the Third Degree," thinking that this is surely
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Initiation, but I tell you that it is very far from being the case. NO CE-
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REMONY CAN EVER GIVE TO ANY ONE THAT INWARD EXPERIENCE which constitutes I-
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nitiation, no matter how much is charged or how fearful the oaths, how awful
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or beautiful the ceremony, or how gorgeous the robes, any more than passing
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through a ceremony can convert a sinner and make him a saint, for conversion
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is to the exoteric religionist exactly what Initiation is in the higher mys-
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ticism. Please consider this point thoroughly, and you will have the key to
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the problem.
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Do you think that any one could go to a person of depraved character and
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agree to convert him for a certain sum and carry out his part of the agree-
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ment? Surely you know that no amount of money could bring about that change
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in a man's character. Ask a true convert where he got his religion and how
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he got it. One may tell you that he received it upon the road as he was
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[PAGE 13] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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walking along; another says that the light and the change came to him in the
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solitude of his room; another that the LIGHT STRUCK him as it struck Paul
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upon the road to Damascus, and forced him to change. Every one has a dif-
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ferent experience, and the outward manifestation of that inward experience
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is that IT CHANGES THE MAN'S WHOLE LIFE from the very least to the very
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greatest aspect.
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So it is with Initiation; it is an inward experience, entirely SEPARATE
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AND APART FROM ANY CEREMONIAL WHATEVER, and therefore it is an absolute im-
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possibility that any one could sell it to any one else. Initiation changes
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a man's whole life. It gives him a confidence that he never possessed be-
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fore. It clothes him with a mantle of authority that never can be taken
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from him. No matter what the circumstances in life, it sheds a light upon
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his whole being that is simply wonderful. Nor can any ceremony effect such
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a change. We therefore hold that anyone who offers initiation into an oc-
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cult order by ceremonials to everyone who has the price, brands himself as
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an imposter. For the true teacher, if he were approached by an aspirant
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with an offer of money for spiritual attainment, would answer indignantly in
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the words used by Peter to Simon the sorcerer, who offered him money for
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spiritual powers: "Thy silver perish with thee."
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[PAGE 14] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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CHAPTER II
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INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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PART II
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TO OBTAIN a better understanding of what constitutes Initiation and what
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the prerequisites are, let the student fix firmly in his mind the fact that
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humanity as a whole is slowly progressing upon the path of evolution, thus
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very slowly, almost inperceptibly, attaining higher and higher states of
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consciousness. The path of evolution is a spiral when we regard it from the
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physical side only, but a lemniscate when viewed in both its physical and
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spiritual phases. (See the diagram of chemical caduceus in THE ROSICRUCIAN
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COSMO-CONCEPTION, page 410.) In the lemniscate, or figure 8, there are two
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circles which converge to a central point, which circles may be taken to
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symbolize the immortal spirit, the evolving ego. One of the circles signi-
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fies its life in the physical world from birth to death. During this span
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of time it sows a seed by every act and should reap in return a certain
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amount of experience. But as we may sow seed in the field and lose return
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on that which falls on stony ground, among thorns, et cetera, so also may
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the seed of opportunity be wasted because of neglect to till the soil and
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[PAGE 15] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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the life will then be barren of fruit. Conversely, as diligence and care
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in cultivation increase the productive power of garden seed enormously, so
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earnest application to the business of life--improvement of opportunities to
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learn life's lessons and extract from our environment the experience it
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holds--brings added opportunities; and at the end of the life-day the ego
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finds itself at the door of death laden with the richest fruits of life.
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The objective work of physical existence over, the race run, and the day
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of action spent, the ego enters upon the subjective work of assimilation ac-
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complished during its sojourn in the invisible worlds, which it traverses
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during the period from death to birth, symbolized by the other ring of the
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lemniscate. As the method of accomplishment this assimilation has been most
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minutely described in various parts of our literature, it is needless to re-
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peat it here. Suffice it to say that at the time when an ego arrives at
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thecentral point in the lemniscate, which divides the physical from the psy-
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chic worlds and which we call the gate of birth or death according to
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whether the ego is entering or leaving the realm where we, ourselves, happen
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to be at the time, it has with it an aggregate of faculties or talents ac-
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quired in all its previous lives, which it may then put to usury or bury
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during the coming life-day as it sees fit; but upon the use it makes of what
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it has, depends the amount of soul growth it makes.
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[PAGE 16] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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If for many lives it caters mainly to the lower nature, which lives to
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eat, drink and be merry, or if it dreams its life away in metaphysical
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speculations upon nature and God, sedulously abstaining from all unnecessary
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action, it is gradually passed and left behind by the more active and
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progressive. Great companies of these idlers form what we know as "backward
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races"; while the active, alert, and wide-awake who improve a larger per-
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centage of their opportunities, are the pioneers. Contrary to the commonly
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accepted idea, this applies also to those engaged in industrial work. Their
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money-getting is only an incident, an incentive, and entirely apart from
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this phase their work is as spiritual as or even more so than that of those
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who spend their time in prayer to the prejudice of useful work.
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From what has been said, it will be clear that the method of soul growth
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as accomplished by the process of evolution requires ACTION in the physical
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life, followed in the post-mortem state by a RUMINATING PROCESS, during
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which the lessons of life are extracted and thoroughly incorporated into the
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consciousness of the ego, though the experiences themselves are
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forgotten--as we forget our labor in learning the multiplication table,
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though the faculty of using it remains.
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This exceedingly slow and tedious process is perfectly suited to the
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needs of the masses; but there are some who habitually exhaust the experi-
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ences commonly given, thus requiring and meriting a larger scope for their
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[PAGE 17] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
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energies. Difference of temperament is responsible for their division into
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two classes.
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One class, led by their devotion to Christ, simply follow the dictates of
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the heart in their work of live for their fellows--beautiful characters,
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beacon lights of love in a suffering world, never actuated by selfish mo-
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tives, always ready to forego personal comfort to aid others. Such were the
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saints; they worked as they prayed; they never shirked in either direction.
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Nor are they dead today. The earth would be a barren wilderness in spite of
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all its civilization did not their beautiful feet circle it on errands of
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mercy, were not the lives of sufferers made brighter by the light of hope
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which radiates from their beautiful faces. Had they but the knowledge pos-
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sessed by the other class they would indeed outdistance all in the race for
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the Kingdom.
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Mind is the predominating feature of the other class. In order to aid it
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in its efforts toward attainment, mystery schools were early established
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wherein the world drama was played to give the aspiring soul while he was
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entranced, answers to the questions of the origin and destiny of humanity.
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When awakened, he was instructed in the sacred science of how to climb
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higher by following the method of nature--which is meditating upon the expe-
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rience, and incorporating the essential moral to make thereby commensurate
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soul growth; also with this important feature, that whereas in the ordinary
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[PAGE 18] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
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course of things a whole life is devoted to sowing and a whole post-mortem
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existence to ruminating and incorporating the soul substance, this cycle of
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a thousand years, more or less, may be reduced to a day, as held by the mys-
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tic maxim, "A day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day."
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To be explicit, whatever work has been done during a single day, if rumi-
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nated over at night before crossing the neutral point between waking and
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sleeping, may thus be incorporated into the consciousness of the spirit as
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usable soul power. When that exercise is faithfully performed, the sins of
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each day thus reviewed are actually blotted out, and the man commences each
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day as if it were a new life, with the added soul power gained in all the
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preceding days of his probationary life.
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But!--yes, there is a great big BUT; NATURE IS NOT TO BE CHEATED; God is
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not to be mocked. "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap." Let
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no one think that the mere perfunctory review of the happenings of a day
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||
with perhaps the light-hearted admission of, "I wish I had not done that,"
|
||
when reviewing a scene where he did something palpably wrong, will save him
|
||
from the wrath to come. When we pass out of the body into purgatory at
|
||
death and the panorama of our past life unfolds in reverse order to show us
|
||
first the effects and then the causes which produced them, we feel in inten-
|
||
sified measure the pain we gave others; and unless we perform our exercises
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 19] INITIATION: WHAT IT IS AND IS NOT
|
||
|
||
in a similar manner SO THAT WE LIVE EACH EVENING OUR HELL as merited that
|
||
day, acutely sensible of every pang we have inflicted, it will avail noth-
|
||
ing. We must also endeavor to feel in the same intense manner, gratitude
|
||
for kindness received from others, and approbation on account of the good we
|
||
ourselves have done.
|
||
|
||
Only thus are we really living the post-mortem existence and advancing
|
||
scientifically towards the goal of Initiation. The greatest danger of the
|
||
aspirant upon this path is that he may become enmeshed in the snare of ego-
|
||
tism, and his only safeguard is to cultivate the faculties of faith, devo-
|
||
tion, and an all-embracing sympathy. It is difficult, but it can be done,
|
||
and when it has been accomplished the man or woman becomes a wonderful power
|
||
for good in the world.
|
||
|
||
Now, if the student has pondered the preceding argument well, he has
|
||
probably grasped the analogy between the LONG CYCLE of evolution and the
|
||
short CYCLES or steps used upon the path of preparation. It should be quite
|
||
clear that no one can do this post-mortem work for him and transmit to him
|
||
the resulting soul growth. You think it preposterous when a priesthood of-
|
||
fers to shorten the sojourn of a soul in purgatory. How, then, can you be-
|
||
lieve that anyone else can--no matter what the consideration--obviate the
|
||
necessity of a number of purgatorial existences for your benefit and trans-
|
||
mit to you at once the usable soul power you would have acquired had you
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 20] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
pursued the ordinary course of life to the day you are ready for Initiation?
|
||
Yet this is what the offer to initiate a person not yet upon the threshold
|
||
means. You must have the soul power requisite for Initiation or no one can
|
||
initiate you. If you have it, you are upon the threshold by your own ef-
|
||
forts, beholden to no one, and may demand Initiation as a right which none
|
||
would dare dispute or withhold. If you have it not and could buy it, it
|
||
would be cheap at twenty-five million dollars, and the man who offers it for
|
||
twenty-five dollars is as ridiculous as his dupe. Please remember that if
|
||
anyone offers to initiate you into an occult order, no matter if he calls it
|
||
"Rosicrucian" or by any other name, his demand of an initiation fee at once
|
||
stamps him as an imposter; explanations ot the effect that the fee is used
|
||
to purchase regalia, et cetera, are only added evidence of the fraudulent
|
||
nature of the order for it is said, "Initiation is most emphatically not an
|
||
outward ceremony, but an inward experience." I may further add that the
|
||
Elder Brothers of the Rose Cross in the Mystic Temple where I received the
|
||
Light made it a condition that their SACRED SCIENCE MUST NEVER BE PUT IN THE
|
||
BALANCE AGAINST A COIN. Freely had I received, and freely was I required to
|
||
give. This injunction I have obeyed, both in spirit and to the letter, as
|
||
all know who have had dealings with the Rosicrucian Fellowship.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 21] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER III
|
||
|
||
THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
PART I
|
||
|
||
|
||
TO OBTAIN a thorough understanding of the deep and far-reaching sig-
|
||
nificance of the manner in which the Sacrament of Communion was instituted,
|
||
it is necessary to consider the evolution of our planet and of composite
|
||
man, also the chemistry of foods and their influence on humanity. For the
|
||
sake of lucidity we will briefly recapitulate the Rosicrucian teachings on
|
||
the various points involved. They have been given at length in the
|
||
ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION and our other works.
|
||
|
||
The Virgin Spirits, which are now mankind, commenced their pilgrimage
|
||
through matter in the dawn of time, that by the friction of concrete exist-
|
||
ence their latent powers might be transmuted to kinetic energy as usable
|
||
soul power. Three successive veils of increasingly dense matter were ac-
|
||
quired by the involving spirits during the Saturn, Sun and Moon Periods.
|
||
Thus each spirit was separated from all other spirits, and the consciousness
|
||
which could not penetrate the prison wall of matter and communicate with
|
||
others was forced to turn inwards, and in so doing it discovered--ITSELF.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 22] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Thus self-consciousness was attained.
|
||
|
||
A further crystallization of the before mentioned veils took place in the
|
||
Earth Period during the Polarian, Hyperborean, and Lemurain Epochs. In the
|
||
Atlantean Epoch, the mind was added as a focusing point between the spirit
|
||
and body, completing the constitution of composite man, who was then
|
||
equipped to conquer the world and generate soul power by endeavor and expe-
|
||
rience, each having free will and choice except as limited by the laws of
|
||
nature and his own previous acts.
|
||
|
||
During the time man-in-the-making was thus evolving, great creative Hier-
|
||
archies guided his every step. Absolutely nothing was left to chance. Even
|
||
the food he ate was chosen for him so that he might obtain the appropriate
|
||
material wherewith to build the various vehicles of consciousness necessary
|
||
to accomplish the process of soul growth. The Bible mentions the various
|
||
stages, though it misplaces Nimrod, making him to symbolize the Atlantean
|
||
kings who lived BEFORE the Flood.
|
||
|
||
In the Polarian Epoch pure mineral matter became a constituent part of
|
||
man; thus ADAM was made of earth, that is, so far as his dense body was
|
||
concerned.
|
||
|
||
In the Hyperborean Epoch the vital body was added, and thus his constitu-
|
||
tion became plantlike, and CAIN, the man of that time, lived on the fruits
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 23] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
of the soil.
|
||
|
||
The Lemurian Epoch saw the evolution of a desire body, which made man
|
||
like the present animals. Then milk, the product of living animals, was
|
||
added to human diet. ABEL was a shepherd, but it is nowhere stated that he
|
||
killed an animal.
|
||
|
||
At that time mankind lived innocently and peacefully in the misty atmo-
|
||
sphere which enveloped the earth during the latter part of the Lemurian Ep-
|
||
och, as described in the chapter on "Baptism" Men were then like children
|
||
under the care of a common father, until the mind was given to all in the
|
||
beginning of Atlantis. Thought activity breaks down tissue which must be
|
||
replaced; the lower and more material the thought, the greater the havoc and
|
||
the more pressing the need for albumen wherewith to make quick repairs.
|
||
Hence necessity, the mother of invention, inaugurated the loathsome practice
|
||
of flesh eating, and so long as we continue to think along purely business
|
||
or material lines we shall have to go on using our stomachs as receptacles
|
||
for the decaying corpses of our murdered animal victims. Yet we shall see
|
||
later that flesh food has enabled us to make the wonderful material progress
|
||
achieved in the Western World, while the vegetarian Hindus and Chinese have
|
||
remained in an almost savage state. It seems sad to contemplate that they
|
||
will be forced to follow in our steps and shed the blood of our fellow crea-
|
||
tures when we shall have outgrown the barbarous practice as we have ceased
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 24] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
cannibalism.
|
||
|
||
The more spiritual we grow, the more our thoughts will harmonize with the
|
||
rhythm of our body, and the less albumen will be needed to build tissue.
|
||
Consequently, a vegetable diet will suffice our needs. Pythagoras advised
|
||
abstinence from legumes to ADVANCED scholars because they are rich in albu-
|
||
men and apt to revive lower appetites. Let not every student who reads this
|
||
rashly conclude to eliminate legumes from his diet. Most of us are not yet
|
||
ready for such extremes; we would not even advise all students to abstain
|
||
entirely from meat. The change should come from within. It may be safely
|
||
stated, however, that most people eat entirely too much meat for their good;
|
||
but this is in a certain sense a digression, so we will revert to the fur-
|
||
ther evolution of humanity in so far as it has a bearing upon the Sacrament
|
||
of Communion.
|
||
|
||
In due time the dense mist which enveloped the earth cooled, condensed,
|
||
and flooded the various basins. The atmosphere cleared, and concurrently
|
||
with this atmospheric change a physiological adaptation in man took place.
|
||
The gill clefts which had enabled him to breathe in the dense water-laden
|
||
air (and which are seen in the human foetus to this day) gradually atro-
|
||
phied, and their function was taken over by the lungs, the pure air passing
|
||
to and from them through the larynx. This allowed the spirit, hitherto
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 25] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
penned up within the veil of flesh, to express itself in word and act.
|
||
|
||
There in the middle of Atlantis the sun first shone upon MAN as we know
|
||
him; there he was FIRST BORN into the world. Until then he had been under
|
||
the absolute control of great spiritual Hierarchies, mute, without voice or
|
||
choice in matters pertaining to his education, as a child is now under the
|
||
control of its parents.
|
||
|
||
But one day when he finally emerged from the dense atmosphere of
|
||
Atlantis; when he first beheld the mountains silhouetted in clear, sharp
|
||
contours against the azure vault of heaven; when he first saw the beauties
|
||
of moor and meadow, the moving creatures, birds in the air, and his fellow
|
||
man; when his vision was undimmed by the partial obscuration of the mist
|
||
which had previously hampered perception; above all, when he perceived HIM-
|
||
SELF as SEPARATE and APART FROM ALL OTHERS, there burst from his lips the
|
||
glorious triumphant cry, "I AM."
|
||
|
||
At that point he had acquired faculties which equipped him to enter the
|
||
school of experience, the phenomenal world, as a free agent to learn the
|
||
lessons of life, untrammeled save by the LAWS OF NATURE, which are his safe-
|
||
guards, and the reaction of his own previous acts, which become DESTINY.
|
||
|
||
The diet containing an excess of albumen from the flesh wherewith he
|
||
gorged himself, taxed his liver beyond the capacity and clogged the system,
|
||
making him morose, sullen, and brutish. He was fast losing the spiritual
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 26] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
sight which revealed to him the guardian angels whom he trusted, and he say
|
||
only the FORMS of animals and men. The spirits with whom he had lived in
|
||
love and brotherhood during early Atlantis were obscured by the veil of
|
||
flesh. It was all so strange, and he FEARED them.
|
||
|
||
Therefore it became necessary to give him a NEW FOOD that could aid his
|
||
spirit to overpower the highly individualized molecules of flesh (as ex-
|
||
plained in the ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION, chapter on Assimilation, p.
|
||
457), brace it for battle with the world, and spur it on to self-assertion.
|
||
|
||
As our visible bodies composed of chemical compounds can thrive only upon
|
||
chemical aliment, so it requires spirit to act upon spirit to aid in break-
|
||
ing up the heavy proteid and in stimulating the drooping human spirit.
|
||
|
||
The emergence from flooded Atlantis, the liberation of humanity from the
|
||
absolute rulership of visible superhuman guardians, their placement under
|
||
THE LAW OF CONSEQUENCE AND THE LAWS OF NATURE, and THE GIFT OF WINE are de-
|
||
scribed in the stories of Noah and Moses, which are different accounts of
|
||
the same event.
|
||
|
||
Both Noah and Moses led their followers through the water. Moses calls
|
||
heaven and earth to witness that he has placed before them the blessing and
|
||
the curse, exhorts them to choose the good or take the consequences of their
|
||
actions; then he leaves them.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 27] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
The phenomenon of the rainbow requires that the sun be near the horizon,
|
||
the nearer the better; also a clear atmosphere, and a dark rain cloud in the
|
||
opposite quarter of the heavens. When under such conditions an observer
|
||
stands with back to the sun, drops as a rainbow. In early Atlantean times
|
||
when a warm, moist fog through which the sun appeared as one of our arc
|
||
lamps on a foggy day, the phenomenon of the rainbow was an impossibility.
|
||
It could not have made its appearance until the mist had condensed to rain,
|
||
flooded the basins of the earth, and Noah, which thus points TO THE LAW OF
|
||
ALTERNATING CYCLES that brings day and night, summer and winter, in
|
||
unvarying sequence, and to which man is subject in the present age.
|
||
|
||
Noah cultivated the vine and provided a spirit to stimulate man. Thus,
|
||
equipped with a composite constitution, a composite diet appropriate
|
||
thereto, and divine laws to guide them, mankind were left to their own de-
|
||
vices in the battle of life.
|
||
[PAGE 28] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IV
|
||
|
||
THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
"IN REMEMBRANCE OF ME."
|
||
|
||
PART II
|
||
"THE LORD JESUS, the same night in which he was betrayed took bread; and
|
||
when he had given thanks, he brake it and said, Take, eat; This is MY body,
|
||
which is broken for you. This do in remembrance of me. After the same man-
|
||
ner also he took the cup, when he had supped, saying, This cup is the New
|
||
Testament in MY blood. This do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of
|
||
me. For as often as ye eat This bread, and drink This cup, ye do shew the
|
||
Lord's death till he come. Wherefore, whosoever shall eat This bread, and
|
||
drink This cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood
|
||
of the Lord . . . . For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and
|
||
drinketh damnation to himself . . . . For this cause many are weak and
|
||
sickly among you, and many sleep."--I Cor 11:23-30.
|
||
|
||
In the foregoing passages there is a deeply hidden esoteric meaning which
|
||
is particularly obscured in the English translation, but in the German,
|
||
Latin and Greek, the student still has a hint as to what was really intended
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 29] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
by that last parting injunction of the Savior to His disciples. Before ex-
|
||
amining This phase of the subject, let us first consider the words, "in re-
|
||
membrance of me." We shall then perhaps be in better condition to under-
|
||
stand what is meant by the "cup" and the "bread."
|
||
|
||
Suppose a man from a distant country comes into our midst and travels
|
||
about from place to place. Everywhere he will see small communities gather-
|
||
ing around the Table of the Lord to celebrate This most sacred of all Chris-
|
||
tian rites, and should he ask why, he would be told that they do This in re-
|
||
membrance of One who lived a life nobler than any other has lived upon This
|
||
earth; One who was kindness and love personified; One who was the servant of
|
||
all, regardless of gain or loss to self. Should This stranger then compare
|
||
the attitude of these religious communities on Sunday at the celebration of
|
||
This rite, with their civic lives during the remainder of the week, what
|
||
would he see?
|
||
|
||
Every one among us goes out into the world to fight the battle of exist-
|
||
ence. Under the law of necessity we forget the love which should be the
|
||
ruling factor in Christian lives. Every man's hand is against his brother.
|
||
Every one strives for position, wealth, and power that goes with these at-
|
||
tributes. We forget on Monday what we reverently remembered on Sunday, and
|
||
all the world is poor in consequence. We also make a distinction between
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 30] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the bread and wine which we drink at the so-called "Lord's Table," and the
|
||
food of which we partake during the intervals between attendance at
|
||
Communion. But there is no warrant in the Scriptures for any such distinc-
|
||
tion, as anyone may see, even in the English version, by leaving out the
|
||
words printed in italics which have been inserted by the translators to give
|
||
what they thought was the sense of a passage. On the contrary, we are told
|
||
that whether we eat or drink, or whatever we do, all should be done to the
|
||
glory of God. Our every act should be a prayer. The perfunctory "grace" at
|
||
meals is in reality a blasphemy, and the silent thought of gratitude to the
|
||
Giver of daily bread is far to be preferred. When we remember at each meal
|
||
that it has been drawn from the substance of the earth, which is the body of
|
||
the indwelling Christ Spirit, we can properly understand how that body is
|
||
being broken for us daily, and we can appreciate the loving kindness which
|
||
prompted Him thus to give Himself for us; for let us also remember that
|
||
there is not a moment, day or night, that He is not suffering because bound
|
||
to earth. When we thus eat and thus realize the true situation, we are in-
|
||
deed declaring to ourselves the death of the Lord, whose spirit is groaning
|
||
and travailing, waiting for the day of liberation when there shall be no
|
||
need of such a dense environment as we now require.
|
||
|
||
But there is another, a greater and more wonderful mystery hidden in
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 31] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
these words of the Christ. Richard Wagner, with the rare intuition of the
|
||
master musician, sensed This idea when he sat in meditation by the Zurich
|
||
Sea on a Good Friday, and there flashed into his mind the thought, "What
|
||
connection is there between the death of the Savior and the millions of
|
||
seeds sprouting forth from the earth at this time of the year?" If we
|
||
meditate upon that life which is annually poured out in the spring, we wee
|
||
it as something gigantic and awe-inspiring; a flood of life which transforms
|
||
the glove from one of frozen death to rejuvenated life in a short space of
|
||
time; and the life which thus diffuses itself in the budding of millions and
|
||
millions of plants is the life of the Earth Spirit.
|
||
|
||
From that come both the wheat and the grape. They are the body and blood
|
||
of the imprisoned Earth Spirit, given to sustain mankind during the present
|
||
phase of its evolution. We repudiate the contention of people who claim
|
||
that the world owes them a living, regardless of their own efforts and with-
|
||
out MATERIAL responsibility on their part, but we nevertheless insist that
|
||
there is a SPIRITUAL responsibility connected with the bread and wine given
|
||
at the Lord's Supper; IT MUST BE EATEN WORTHILY, OTHERWISE, UNDER PAIN OF
|
||
ILL HEALTH AND EVEN DEATH. This from the ordinary manner of reading would
|
||
seem far-fetched, but when we bring the light of esotericism to bear, exam-
|
||
ine other translations of the Bible, and look at conditions in the world as
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 32] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
we find them today, we shall see that it is not so far-fetched after all.
|
||
|
||
To begin with, we must go back to the time when man lived under the
|
||
guardianship of the angels, unconsciously building the body which he now
|
||
uses. That was in ancient Lemuria. A brain was needed for the evolution of
|
||
thought, and a larynx for verbal expression of the same. Therefore, half of
|
||
the creative force was turned upwards and used by man to form these organs.
|
||
Thus mankind became single-sexed and was forced to seek a complement when it
|
||
was necessary to create a new body to serve as an instrument in a higher
|
||
phase of evolution.
|
||
|
||
While the act of love was consummated under the wise guardianship of the
|
||
angels, man's existence was free from sorrow, pain and death. But when, un-
|
||
der the tutelage of the Lucifer Spirits, he ate of the Tree of Knowledge and
|
||
perpetuated the race without regard for interplanetary lines of force, he
|
||
transgressed the law, and the bodies thus formed crystallized unduly, and
|
||
became subject to death in a much more perceptible manner than had hitherto
|
||
been the case. Thus he was forced to create new bodies more frequently as
|
||
the span of life in them shortened. Celestial warders of the creative force
|
||
drove him from the garden of LOVE into the wilderness of the world, and he
|
||
was made responsible for his actions under the cosmic LAW which governs the
|
||
universe. Thus for ages he struggled on, seeking to work out his own salva-
|
||
tion, and the earth in consequence crystallized more and more.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 33] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
Divine hierarchies, the Christ Spirit included, worked upon the earth
|
||
from without as the group spirit guides the animals under tis protectorate;
|
||
but as Paul truly says, none could be justified under the law, for under the
|
||
law all sinned, and all must die. There is in the old covenant no hope be-
|
||
yond the present, save a foreshadowing of ONE WHO IS TO COME and restore
|
||
righteousness. Thus John tells us that the LAW was given by Moses, and GRACE
|
||
came by the Lord Jesus Christ. But WHAT IS GRACE? Can grace work contrary
|
||
to the law and abrogate it entirely? Certainly not. The laws of God are
|
||
steadfast and sure, or the universe would become chaos. The law of gravity
|
||
keeps our houses in position relative to other houses, so that when we leave
|
||
them we may know of a surety that we shall find them in the same place upon
|
||
returning. Likewise all other departments in the universe are subject to
|
||
immutable laws.
|
||
|
||
As LAW, APART FROM LOVE, GAVE BIRTH TO SIN, SO THE CHILD OF LAW, TEMPERED
|
||
WITH LOVE, IS GRACE. Take an example from our concrete social conditions:
|
||
We have laws which decree a certain penalty for a specified offense, and
|
||
when the law is carried out, we call it JUSTICE. But long experience is be-
|
||
ginning to teach us that justice, pure and simple, is like the Colchian
|
||
dragon's teeth, and breeds strife and struggle in increasing measure. The
|
||
criminal, so-called, remains criminal and becomes more and more hardened
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 34] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
under the ministrations of law; but when the milder regime of the present
|
||
day allows one who has transgressed to go under suspended sentence, then HE
|
||
IS UNDER GRACE and not under law. Thus, also the Christian, who aims to
|
||
follow in the Master's steps, is emancipated from the law of sin by grace,
|
||
provided he foresake the path of sin.
|
||
|
||
It was the sin of our progenitors in ancient Lemuria that THEY SCATTERED
|
||
THEIR SEED regardless of law and without love. But it is the privilege of
|
||
the Christian to redeem himself by purity of life in remembrance of the
|
||
Lord. John says, "His seed remaineth in him," and This is the hidden mean-
|
||
ing of the bread and wine. In the English version we read simply: "This is
|
||
the CUP of the New Testament," but in the German the word for cup is
|
||
"Kelch," and in the Latin, "Calix," both meaning the outer covering of the
|
||
seed pod of the flower. In the Greek we have a still more subtle meaning,
|
||
not conveyed in other languages, in the word "poterion," a meaning which
|
||
will be evident when we consider the etymology of the word "pot." This at
|
||
once gives us the same idea as the chalice or calix--a receptacle; and the
|
||
Latin "POTARE" (to drink) also shows that the "cup" is a receptacle capable
|
||
of holding a fluid. Our English words "potent" and "impotent" meaning to
|
||
possess or to lack virile strength, further show the meaning of this Greek
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 35] THE SACRAMENT OF COMMUNION
|
||
|
||
word, which foreshadows the evolution from man to superman.
|
||
|
||
We have already lived through a mineral, plant and an animal-like exist-
|
||
ence before becoming human as we are today, and beyond us lie still further
|
||
evolutions where we shall approach the Divine more and more. It will be
|
||
readily conceded that it is our animal passions which restrain us upon the
|
||
path if attainment; the lower nature is constantly warring against the
|
||
higher self. At least in those who have experienced a spiritual awakening,
|
||
a war is being fought silently within, and is all the more bitter for being
|
||
suppressed. Goethe with masterly art voiced that sentiment in the words of
|
||
Faust, the aspiring soul, speaking to his more materialistic friend, Wagner:
|
||
|
||
"Thou by one sole impulse art possessed,
|
||
Unconscious of the other still remain.
|
||
Two souls, alas, are housed within my breast,
|
||
And struggle there for undivided reign.
|
||
One, to the earth with passionate desire,
|
||
And closely clinging organs still adheres;
|
||
Above the mists the other doth aspire
|
||
With sacred ardor unto purer spheres."
|
||
|
||
It was the knowledge of this absolute necessity of chastity (save when
|
||
procreation is the object) upon the part of those who have had a spiritual
|
||
awakening which dictated the words of Christ, and the Apostle Paul stated
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 36] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
an esoteric truth when he said that THOSE WHO PARTOOK OF THE COMMUNION WITH-
|
||
OUT LIVING THE LIFE WERE IN DANGER OF SICKNESS AND DEATH. For just as under
|
||
a spiritual tutelage, purity of life may elevate the disciple wonderfully,
|
||
so also unchastity has a much stronger effect upon his more sensitized bod-
|
||
ies than upon those who are yet under the law, and have not become partakers
|
||
of grace by the cup of the New Covenant.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 37] THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V
|
||
|
||
THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
|
||
HAVING studied the esoteric significance of our Christian festivals, such
|
||
as Christmas and Easter, and having also studied the doctrine of the Im-
|
||
maculate Conception, it may be well now to devote attention to the inner
|
||
meaning of the sacraments of the church which are administered to the indi-
|
||
vidual in all Christian lands from the cradle to the grave, and are with him
|
||
at all important points in his life journey.
|
||
|
||
As soon as he has entered upon the journey of life, the church admits him
|
||
into its fold by the rite of BAPTISM which is conferred upon him at a time
|
||
when he himself is irresponsible; later, when his mentality has been some-
|
||
what developed, he ratifies that contract and is admitted to COMMUNION,
|
||
where BREAD is broken and WINE is sipped in memory of the Founder of our
|
||
faith. Still further upon life's journey comes the sacrament of MARRIAGE;
|
||
and at last when the race has been run and the spirit again withdraws to God
|
||
who gave it, the earth body is consigned to the dust, whence it was derived,
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 38] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
accompanied by the blessings of the church.
|
||
|
||
In our Protestant times the spirit of protest is rampant in the extreme,
|
||
and dissenters everywhere raise their voices in rebellion against the fan-
|
||
cied arrogance of the priesthood and deprecate the sacraments as mere mum-
|
||
mery. On account of that attitude of mind these functions have become of
|
||
little or no effect in the life of the community; dissensions have arisen
|
||
even among churchmen themselves, and sect after sect has divorced itself
|
||
from the original apostolic congregation.
|
||
|
||
Despite all protests the various doctrines and sacraments of the church
|
||
are, nevertheless, the very keystones in the arch of evolution, for they in-
|
||
culcate morals of the loftiest nature; and even materialistic scientist,
|
||
such as Huxley, have admitted that while self-protection brings about "the
|
||
survival of the fittest" in the animal kingdom and is therefore the basis of
|
||
animal evolution, self-sacrifice is the fostering principle of human ad-
|
||
vancement. When that is the case among mere mortals, we may well believe
|
||
that it must be so to a still greater extent in the Divine Author of our be-
|
||
ing.
|
||
|
||
Among animals might is right, but we recognize that the weak have a claim
|
||
to the protection of the strong. The butterfly lays its eggs on the under-
|
||
side of a green leaf and goes off without another care for their well-being.
|
||
In mammals the MOTHER instinct is strongly developed, and we see the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 39] THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
the lioness caring for her cubs and ready to defend them with her life; but
|
||
not until the kingdom is reached does the FATHER commence to share fully in
|
||
the responsibility as a parent. Among savages the care of the young practi-
|
||
cally ends with the higher we ascend in civilization the longer the young
|
||
receive care from their parents, and the more stress is laid upon mental
|
||
rather than from the physical point of vantage; for the further we proceed
|
||
along the path of development the more we shall experience the power of mind
|
||
over matter. By the more and more prolonged self-sacrifice of parents, the
|
||
race is becoming more delicate, but what we lose in material ruggedness we
|
||
gain in spiritual perceptibility.
|
||
|
||
As this faculty grows stronger and more developed, the craving of the
|
||
spirit immured in This earthly body voices itself more loudly in a demand
|
||
for understanding of the spiritual side of development. Wallace and Darwin,
|
||
Haxley and Spencer, pointed out how evolution of FORM is accomplished in na-
|
||
ture; Earnest Haeckel attempted to solve the riddle of the universe, but no
|
||
one of them could satisfactorily explain away the DIVINE AUTHOR of what we
|
||
see. The great goddess, NATURAL SELECTION, is being forsaken by one after
|
||
another of her devotees as the years go by. Even Haeckel, the arch materi-
|
||
alist, in his last years showed an almost hysterical anxiety to make a place
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 40] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
for God in his system, and the day will come in a not far distant future
|
||
when science will have become as thoroughly religious as religion itself.
|
||
The church, on the other hand, though still extremely conservative is never-
|
||
theless slowly abandoning its autocratic dogmatism and becoming more scien-
|
||
tific in its explanations. Thus in time we shall see the union of science
|
||
and religion as it existed in the ancient mystery temples, and when that
|
||
point has been reached, THE DOCTRINES AND SACRAMENTS of the church will be
|
||
found to REST UPON IMMUTABLE COSMIC LAWS OF NO LESS IMPORTANCE THAN THE LAW
|
||
OF GRAVITY which maintains the marching orbs in their paths around the sun.
|
||
As the points of the equinoxes and solstices are turning points in the cy-
|
||
clic path of a planet, marked by festivals such Christmas and Easter, so
|
||
birth into the physical world, admission to the church, to the state of mat-
|
||
rimony, and finally the exit from physical life, are points in the cyclic
|
||
path of the human spirit around its central source--God, which are marked by
|
||
the sacraments of BAPTISM, COMMUNION, MARRIAGE, and THE LAST BLESSING.
|
||
|
||
We will now consider the rite of baptism. Much has been said by dissent-
|
||
ers, against the practice of taking an INFANT INTO CHURCH AND PROMISING FOR
|
||
IT A RELIGIOUS LIFE. Heated arguments concerning SPRINKLING VERSUS PLUNGING
|
||
have resulted in division of churches. If we wish to obtain the true idea
|
||
of baptism, we must revert to the early history of the human race as re-
|
||
corded in the Memory of Nature. All that has ever happened is indelibly
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 41] THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
pictured in the ether as a moving picture is imprinted upon a sensitized
|
||
film, which picture can be reproduced upon a screen at any moment. The
|
||
picutes in the Memory of Nature may be viewed by the trained seer, even
|
||
though millions of years have elapsed since the scenes there portrayed were
|
||
enacted in life.
|
||
|
||
When we consult that unimpeachable record it appears that there was a
|
||
time when that which is now our earth came out of chaos, dark and unformed,
|
||
as the Bible states. The currents developed in This misty mass by spiritual
|
||
agencies, generated HEAT, and the mass ignited at the time when we are told
|
||
that God said, "Let there be light." The heat of the fiery mass and the
|
||
cold space surrounding it generated MOISTURE; the fire mist became sur-
|
||
rounded by water which boiled, and steam was projected into the atmosphere;
|
||
thus "God divided the waters . . . . from the waters . . . . "--the dense
|
||
water which was nearest the fire mist from the steam (which is water in sus-
|
||
pension), as stated in the Bible.
|
||
|
||
When water contained sediment is boiled over and over it deposits scale,
|
||
and similarly the water surrounding our planet finally formed a crust around
|
||
the fiery core. The Bible further informs us that a MIST went up from the
|
||
ground, AND WE MAY WELL CONCEIVE how the moisture was gradually evaporated
|
||
from our planet in those early days.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 42] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Ancient myths are usually regarded as superstitions nowadays, but in re-
|
||
ality each of them contains a great spiritual truth in pictorial symbols.
|
||
These fantastic stories were given to infant humanity to teach them moral
|
||
lessons which their newborn intellects were note yet fitted to receive.
|
||
They were taught by myths--much as we teach our children by picture books
|
||
and fables--lessons beyond their intellectual comprehension.
|
||
|
||
One of the greatest of these folk stories is "THE RING OF THE NIEBELUNG,"
|
||
which tells of a wonderful treasure hidden under the waters of the Rhine.
|
||
It was a lump of gold in its natural state. Placed upon a high rock, it il-
|
||
luminated the entire submarine scenery where water nymphs sported about in-
|
||
nocently in gladsome frolic. But one of the Neibelungs, imbued with greed,
|
||
stole the treasure, carried it out of the water, and fled. It was impos-
|
||
sible for him, however, to shape it until he had forsworn love. Then he
|
||
fashioned it into a ring which gave him power over all the treasures of
|
||
earth, but at the same time it inaugurated dissension and strife. For its
|
||
sake, friend betrayed friend, brother slew brother, and everywhere it caused
|
||
oppression, sorrow, sin and death, until it was at last restored to the wa-
|
||
tery element and the earth was consumed in flames. But later there arose,
|
||
like the new phoenix from the ashes of the old bird, a new heaven and a new
|
||
earth where righteousness were re-established.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 43] THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
That old folk story gives a wonderful picture of human evolution. The
|
||
name NIEBELUNGEN is derived from the German words, NIEBEL (which means
|
||
mist), and UNGEN (which means children). Thus the word NIEBELUNGEN means
|
||
CHILDREN OF THE MIST, and it refers back to the time when humanity lived in
|
||
the foggy atmosphere surrounding our earth at the stage n its development
|
||
previously mentioned. There infant humanity lived in one vast brotherhood,
|
||
innocent of all evil as the babe of today, and illuminated by the Universal
|
||
Spirit symbolized as the Rhinegold which shed its light upon the water
|
||
nymphs of our story. But in time the earth cooled more and more; the fog
|
||
condensed and flooded depressions upon the surface of the earth with water;
|
||
the atmosphere cleared; the eyes of man were opened and he perceived himself
|
||
as a separate ego. Then the Universal Spirit of LOVE and SOLIDARITY was su-
|
||
perseded by egotism and self-seeking.
|
||
|
||
That was the rape of the Rhinegold, and sorrow, sin, strife, treachery,
|
||
and murder have taken the place of the childlike love which existed among
|
||
humanity in that primal state when they dwelt in the watery atmosphere of
|
||
long ago. Gradually This tendency is becoming more and more marked, and the
|
||
curse of selfishness grows more and more apparent. "Man's inhumanity to
|
||
man" hangs like a funeral pall over the earth, and must inevitably bring
|
||
about destruction of existing conditions. The whole creation is groaning
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 44] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
and travailing, waiting for the day of redemption, and the Western Religion
|
||
strikes the keynote of the way to attainment when it exhorts us to love our
|
||
neighbor as we love ourselves; for then egotism will be abrogated for uni-
|
||
versal brotherhood and love.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, when a person is admitted to the church, which is a SPIRITUAL
|
||
institution where love and brotherhood are the mainsprings of action, it is
|
||
appropriate to carry him UNDER THE WATERS of baptism in symbol of the beau-
|
||
tiful condition of childlike innocence and love which prevailed when mankind
|
||
dwelt UNDER THE MIST in that bygone period. At that time the eyes of infant
|
||
man had not yet been opened to the MATERIAL advantages of This world. The
|
||
little child which is brought into the church has not yet become aware of
|
||
the allurements of life either, and others obligate themselves to guide it
|
||
to lead a holy life according to the best of their ability, because experi-
|
||
ence gained since the Flood has taught us that the broad way of the world is
|
||
strewn with pain, sorrow, and disappointment; that only by following the
|
||
straight and narrow way can we escape death and enter into life everlasting.
|
||
|
||
Thus we see that there is a wonderfully deep, mystic significance behind
|
||
the sacrament of baptism; that it is to remind us of the blessings attendant
|
||
upon those who are members of a BROTHERHOOD where self-seeking is put into
|
||
the background and where SERVICE to others is the keynote and mainspring of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 45] THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM
|
||
|
||
action. While we are in the world, he is the greatest who can most success-
|
||
fully dominate others. In the church we have Christ's definition, "HE WHO
|
||
WOULD BE THE GREATEST AMONG YOU, LET HIM BE THE SERVANT OF ALL."
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 46] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VI
|
||
|
||
THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHEN STRIPPED of nonessentials the argument of the orthodox Christian re-
|
||
ligion may be said to be as follows:
|
||
|
||
First, that tempted by the devil, our first parents sinned and were ex-
|
||
iled form their previous state of celestial bliss, placed under the law,
|
||
made subject to death, and became incapable of escaping by their own ef-
|
||
forts.
|
||
|
||
Second, that God so loved the world that He gave Christ, His only begot-
|
||
ten Son, for its redemption and to establish the kingdom of heaven. Thus
|
||
death will finally be swallowed up in immortality.
|
||
|
||
This simple creed has provoked the smiles of atheists, and of the purely
|
||
intellectual who have studied transcendental philosophies with their nice-
|
||
ties of logic and argument; and even of some among those who study the West-
|
||
ern Mystery Teaching.
|
||
|
||
Such an attitude of mind is entirely gratuitous. We might know that the
|
||
divine leaders of mankind would not allow millions to continue in error for
|
||
millennia. When the Western Mystery Teaching is stripped of its exceedingly
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 47] THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
|
||
|
||
illuminating explanations and detailed descriptions, when its basic teach-
|
||
ings are stated, they are found to be in exact agreement with the orthodox
|
||
Christian teachings.
|
||
|
||
There was a time when mankind lived in a sinless state; when sorrow,
|
||
pain, and death were unknown. Neither is the PERSONAL TEMPTER of Christian-
|
||
ity a myth, for the Lucifer Spirits may very well be said to be fallen an-
|
||
gels, and their temptation of man resulted in focusing his consciousness
|
||
upon the material phase of existence where he is under the law of de-
|
||
crepitude and death. Also it is truly the mission of Christ to aid mankind
|
||
by elevating them to a more ethereal state where dissolution will no longer
|
||
be necessary to free them from vehicles that have grown too hard and set for
|
||
further use. For This is indeed a "body of death," where only the smallest
|
||
quantity of material is really alive, as part of its bulk is nutrient matter
|
||
that has not yet been assimilated, another large part is already on its way
|
||
to elimination, and only between these two poles may be found the material
|
||
which is thoroughly quickened by the spirit.
|
||
|
||
We have in other chapters considered the sacraments of baptism and com-
|
||
munion, sacraments that have to do particularly with the spirit. We will
|
||
now seek to understand the deeper side of the sacrament of marriage, which
|
||
has to do particularly with the body. Like the other sacraments the insti-
|
||
tution of marriage had its beginning and will also have its end. The com-
|
||
mencement was described by the Christ when He said, "Have ye not read that
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 48] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
He which made them at the beginning made them male and female, and said:
|
||
For This cause shall a man leave his father and mother and cleave to his
|
||
wife; and they twain shall be one flesh? Wherefore they are no more twain,
|
||
but one flesh." Matt. 19:4-6. He also indicated the end of marriage when
|
||
he said: "In the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage,
|
||
but are as the angels of God in heaven." Matt. 22:30
|
||
|
||
In This light the logic of the teaching is apparent, for MARRIAGE became
|
||
necessary in order that BIRTH might provide new instruments to take the
|
||
place of those which had been ruptured by DEATH; and when death has once
|
||
been swallowed up in immortality and there is no need of providing new in-
|
||
struments, marriage also will be unnecessary.
|
||
|
||
Science with admirable audacity has sought to solve the mystery of fecun-
|
||
dation, and has told us how invagination takes place in the walls of the
|
||
ovary; how the little ovum is formed in the seclusion of its dark cavity;
|
||
how it emerges therefrom and enters the Fallopian tube; is pierced by the
|
||
spermatozoon of the male, and the nucleus of a human body is complete. We
|
||
are thus supposed to be "at the fount and origin of life!" But life has
|
||
neither beginning nor end, and what science mistakenly considers the foun-
|
||
tain of life is really the source of death, as all that comes from the womb
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 49] THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
|
||
|
||
is destined sooner or later to reach the tomb. The MARRIAGE feast which
|
||
prepares for BIRTH, at the same time provides food for the insatiable jaws
|
||
of DEATH, and so long as marriage is necessary to generation and birth, dis-
|
||
integration and death must inevitably result. Therefore, it is of prime im-
|
||
portance to know the history of marriage, the laws and agencies involved,
|
||
the duration of This institution, and how it may be transcended.
|
||
|
||
When we obtained our vital bodies in Hyperborea, the sun, moon and earth
|
||
were still united, and the solar-lunar forces permeated each being in even
|
||
measure so that all were able to perpetuate their kind by buds and spores as
|
||
do certain plants of today. The efforts of the vital body to soften the
|
||
dense vehicle and keep it alive were not then interfered with, and was these
|
||
primal, plantlike bodies lived for ages. But man was then unconscious and
|
||
stationary like a plant; he made no effort or exertion. The addition of a
|
||
desire body furnished incentive and desire, and consciousness resulted from
|
||
the war between the vital body, which builds, and the desire body, which de-
|
||
stroys the dense body.
|
||
|
||
Thus dissolution became only a question of time, particularly as the con-
|
||
structive energy of the vital body was also necessarily divided, one part or
|
||
pole being used in the vital functions of the body, the other to replace a
|
||
vehicle lost by death. But as the two poles of a magnet or dynamo are re-
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 50] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
quisite to manifestation, so also two single-sexed beings became necessary
|
||
for generation; thus marriage and birth were necessarily inaugurated to off-
|
||
set the effect of death. DEATH, THEN, IS THE PRICE WE PAY FOR CONSCIOUSNESS
|
||
IN THE PRESENT WORLD; marriage and repeated births are our weapons against
|
||
the king of terrors until our constitution shall change and we become as
|
||
angels.
|
||
|
||
Please mark that it is not stated that we are to become angels, but that
|
||
we are to become AS ANGELS. For the angels are the humanity of the Moon Pe-
|
||
riod; they belong to an entirely different stream of evolution, as different
|
||
as are human spirits from those of our present animals. Paul states in his
|
||
letter to the Hebrews that man was made FOR A LITTLE WHILE inferior to the
|
||
angels; he descended lower into the scale of materiality during the Earth
|
||
Period, while the angels have never inhabited a globe denser than ether.
|
||
This substance is the direct avenue of all life forces, and when man has
|
||
once become as the angels and has learned to build his body of ether,
|
||
naturally there will be no death and no need of marriage to bring about
|
||
birth.
|
||
|
||
But looking at marriage from another point of view, looking upon it as a
|
||
union of souls rather than as a union of the sexes, we contact the wonderful
|
||
mystery of Love. Union of the sexes might serve to perpetuate the race, of
|
||
course, but the true marriage is a companionship of souls also, which
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 51] THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
|
||
|
||
altogether transcends sex. Yet those really able to meet upon that lofty
|
||
plane of spiritual intimacy gladly offer their bodies as living sacrifices
|
||
upon the altar of LOVE OF THE UNBORN, to woo a waiting spirit into an im-
|
||
maculately conceived body. Thus humanity may be saved from the reign of
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
This is readily apparent as soon as we consider the gentle action of the
|
||
vital body and contrast it with that of the desire body in a fit of temper,
|
||
where it is said that a man has "lost control" of himself. Under such con-
|
||
ditions the muscles become tense, and nervous energy is expended at a sui-
|
||
cidal rate, so that after such an outbreak the body may sometimes be pros-
|
||
trated for weeks. The hardest labor brings no such fatigue as a fit of
|
||
temper; likewise a child conceived in passion under the crystallizing ten-
|
||
dencies of the desire nature is naturally short-lived, and it si a regret-
|
||
table fact that LENGTH OF LIFE is nowadays almost a misnomer; in view of the
|
||
appalling infant mortality it ought to be called BREVITY OF EXISTENCE.
|
||
|
||
The building tendencies of the vital body, which is the vehicle of love,
|
||
are not so easily watched, but observation proves that contentment lengthens
|
||
life of any one who cultivates this quality, and we may safely reason that a
|
||
child conceived under conditions of harmony and love stands a better chance
|
||
of life than one conceived under conditions of anger, inebriety, and pas-
|
||
sion.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 52] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
According to Genesis it was said to the woman, "In sorrow shalt thou bear
|
||
children," and it has always been a sore puzzle to Bible commentators what
|
||
logical connection there may be between eating of fruit and the pains of
|
||
parturition. But when we understand the chaste references of the Bible to
|
||
the act of generation, the connection is readily perceived. While the in-
|
||
sensitive Negro or Indian mother may bear her child and shortly afterward
|
||
resume her labors in the field, the western woman, more acutely sensitive
|
||
and of high-strung nervous temperament, is year by year finding it more dif-
|
||
ficult to go through the ordeal of motherhood, though aided by the best and
|
||
most skilled scientific help.
|
||
|
||
The contributory reasons are various: In the first place, while we are
|
||
exceedingly careful in selecting our horses and cattle for breeding, while
|
||
we insist upon pedigree for the animals in order that we may bring out the
|
||
very best strain of stock upon our farms, we exercise no such care with re-
|
||
spect to the selection of a father and mother for our children. We mate
|
||
upon impulse and regret it at our leisure, aided by laws which make it all
|
||
to easy to enter or leave the sacred bonds of matrimony. The words pro-
|
||
nounced by minister or judge are taken to be a license for unlimited indul-
|
||
gence, as if any man-made law could license the contravention of the law of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 53] THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE
|
||
|
||
God. While animals mate only at a certain time of the year and the mother
|
||
is undisturbed during the period of pregnancy, this is not true of the human
|
||
race.
|
||
|
||
In view of these facts is it to be wondered at that we find such a dread
|
||
of maternity, and is it not time that we seek to remedy the matter by a more
|
||
sane relation between marriage partners? Astrology will reveal the temper
|
||
and tendencies of each human being; it will enable two people to blend their
|
||
characters in such a manner that a love live may be lived, and it will indi-
|
||
cate the periods when interplanetary lines of force are most nearly condu-
|
||
cive to painless parturition. Thus it will enable us to draw from the bosom
|
||
of nature, children of love, capable of living long lives in good health.
|
||
Finally the day will come when these bodies will have been made so perfect
|
||
in their ethereal purity that they may last throughout the coming Age, and
|
||
thus make marriage superfluous.
|
||
|
||
But if we can love now when we see one another "through a glass darkly,"
|
||
through the mask of personality and the veil of misunderstanding , we may be
|
||
sure that the love of soul for soul, purged of passion in the furnace of
|
||
sorrow, will be our brightest gem in heaven as its shadow is on earth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--- END OF FILE ---
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 54] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VII
|
||
|
||
THE UNPARDONABLE SIN AND LOST SOULS
|
||
|
||
SOME OF OUR students have been exercised about the unpardonable sin, and
|
||
as this subject has a certain connection with the subject of marriage, one
|
||
being a sacrilege and the other a sacrament, it might be well to elucidate
|
||
the matter from a different point of view than has been formerly taken in
|
||
our literature.
|
||
|
||
First let us see what is meant by a sacrament, and why the rites of bap-
|
||
tism, communion, marriage, and extreme unction are properly so called; then
|
||
we shall be in a position to understand what sacrilege is and why it is
|
||
unpardonable.
|
||
|
||
The Rosicrucians teach, only with more detail, the same doctrine that
|
||
Paul preached in the 15th Chapter of 1st Corinthians, starting at the
|
||
thirty-fifth verse, that in addition to the body of flesh and blood we have
|
||
a soul body, SOMA PSUCHICON (mistranslated "natural" body) and a spiritual
|
||
body; that each of these bodies is grown from a different SEED atom and that
|
||
there are THREE stages of unfoldment for Adam, or man. The first Adam was
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 55] THE UNPARDONABLE SIN
|
||
|
||
taken from the ground and was without sentient life. Soul was added to the
|
||
SECOND ADAM; thus he had life within, a leaven laboring to elevate the clod
|
||
to God. When the potential of the soul extracted from the physical body has
|
||
been raised to the spiritual, the LAST ADAM will become a life GIVING
|
||
spirit, capable of transmitting the life impulse to others directly as flame
|
||
from one candle can be communicated to many without diminishing the magni-
|
||
tude of the original light.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime the germ for our early body had to be properly placed in
|
||
fruitful soil to grow a suitable vehicle, and generative organs were pro-
|
||
vided from the beginning to accomplish this purpose. It is stated in Gen-
|
||
esis 1:27 that Elohim created them MALE and FEMALE. The Hebrew words are
|
||
"SACRE VA N'CABAH." THESE ARE NAMES OF THE SEX ORGANS. Literally trans-
|
||
lated, SACR means "bearer of the germ." Thus marriage is a sacr-ament, for
|
||
it opens the way for transmission of a 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 the
|
||
higher life. Holy Communion, in which we partake of bread (made from the
|
||
SEED of chaste plants), and of wine (the cup symbolizing the passionless
|
||
SEE-pod), points to the age to come, and age wherein it will be unnecessary
|
||
to TRANSMIT the seed through a father and mother , but where we may feed di-
|
||
rectly upon cosmic life and thus conquer death. Finally, extreme unction is
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 56] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the SACRament which marks the loosening of the silver cord, and the extrac-
|
||
tion of the sacred germ, freeing it 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 cre-
|
||
ative function, for by that SACR-ilege we stunt future generations and
|
||
transgress against the Holy Spirit, Jehovah, who is warder of the creative
|
||
lunar forces. His angels herald births, as in the cases of Isaac, John the
|
||
Baptist, and Jesus. When he wanted to reward his most faithful follower, he
|
||
promised to make his seed as numerous as the sands on the seashore. He also
|
||
meted out a most terrible punishment to the Sodomites who committed
|
||
SACR-ilege by misdirecting the seed. He even visits the sins of the fathers
|
||
upon the children to the third and fourth generations, for under his regime
|
||
LAW reigns supreme. Man has not yet evolved to the point where he can re-
|
||
spond to LOVE. He requires from his enemies an eye for an eye, and with the
|
||
same measure that he metes, it is meted unto him.
|
||
|
||
Though this seems very cruel to us who are each day evolving more and
|
||
more the faculties of love and mercy, we must remember that this retributive
|
||
justice relates purely to the physical body, which is under the laws of Na-
|
||
ture just as much as any other chemical composition in the universe. When
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 57] THE UNPARDONABLE SIN
|
||
|
||
abuses have weakened it, it is incapable of fulfilling its mission and meet-
|
||
ing our demands in any respect, just as is the case with any other machinery
|
||
which we have made from materials around us. There are no miracles such as
|
||
would be required to generate a sound and healthy body from parents who have
|
||
transgressed the laws of nature by their abuses; therefore but when time and
|
||
care have restored the necessary strength and vigor, the body will again
|
||
perform its functions in a normal and healthy manner.
|
||
|
||
Thus we understand that under the law there is no mercy, for mercy is
|
||
dictated by love. Therefore, it was perfectly in consonance with cosmic or-
|
||
der when CHRIST, THE LORD OF LOVE, said that all things would be forgiven to
|
||
men which they did against Him, as LOVE is the reigning feature in His king-
|
||
dom; but whatsoever was done contrary to the LAW of Jehovah must meet its
|
||
full retribution. We cannot be sufficiently thankful for the wonderful re-
|
||
ligion which He gave us, particularly if we compare it with those under
|
||
which less evolved peoples are now struggling. Take the Buddhists, for in-
|
||
stance; grand and beautiful though their leader was, he saw only SORROW, a
|
||
constant struggle against the law of nature. He aimed to teach his follow-
|
||
ers to transcend that condition by perfect obedience such as that whereby we
|
||
have conquered the laws of electricity and other forces in nature. The
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 58] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Buddhist sees nothing but the cold and merciless law; on the other hand, we
|
||
of the Western World have before our eyes from the cradle to the grave a
|
||
beautiful picture of One who said, "Come unto me all ye that labor and are
|
||
heavy laden, and I will give you rest."
|
||
|
||
But it may be asked, "What about LOST SOULS; are they a figment of the
|
||
imagination also?" To this question may be answered, "yes", although it
|
||
needs some qualification. We shall best understand the case if we go back
|
||
into the history of mankind and view the experiences of some who have trans-
|
||
gressed , for they will furnish us an example of what may happen. In order
|
||
to establish the point properly we shall reiterate a few of the Rosicrucian
|
||
teachings regarding the genesis of the earth and of man upon it. Three
|
||
great stages of unfoldment have preceded the present Earth Period. THE FA-
|
||
THER is the highest Initiate of the Saturn Period, inhabiting particularly
|
||
the Spiritual Sun. THE SON, the cosmic Christ, is the highest initiate of
|
||
the Sun period, inhabiting the Central Sun and guiding the planets in their
|
||
orbits by a ray from Himself, which becomes the indwelling spirit of each
|
||
planet when it has been sufficiently ripened to contain such a great Intel-
|
||
ligence. Jehovah, the HOLY SPIRIT, is the highest Initiate of the Moon Pe-
|
||
riod and dwelling in the physical, visible sun. He is regent of the various
|
||
moons thrown off by the different planets for the purpose of giving beings
|
||
who have fallen behind in the march of evolution more rigid discipline under
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 59] THE UNPARDONABLE SIN
|
||
|
||
a firmer law, to awaken them and spur them on in the proper direction if
|
||
possible.
|
||
|
||
When we look into space, we perceive that some planets have a number of
|
||
moons and others have none; but as there are laggards in any large company,
|
||
and as moons are required to aid these stragglers to retrieve their lost es-
|
||
tate if possible, we may be sure that these planets which have no moons now
|
||
have had them in the past. Those Great Beings of whom the ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
COSMO-CONCEPTION speaks as "Lords of Venus" and "Lords of Mercury" were, in
|
||
fact, stragglers from those two planets. In the dim distant past they in-
|
||
habited moons which encircled their respective planets, and were successful
|
||
in retrieving their loss in a large measure under the discipline given them
|
||
there. Later they received the opportunity to serve to secure a return to
|
||
the home planet whence they had been exiled. They were LOST under the LAW,
|
||
but REDEEMED BY LOVE; and thus we may infer that opportunities for service
|
||
will also bring to other beings, who may become "lost" the opportunity to
|
||
retrieve the past.
|
||
|
||
Since it may puzzle the student as to what becomes of the moons upon
|
||
which such beings dwell for a time, we may say that the solar system is to
|
||
regarded as the body of the Great Spirit whom we call God, and as any growth
|
||
caused by an abnormal process pains us when it occurs in our body, so also
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 60] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
such crystallizations as moons are sources of discomfort to that Great Be-
|
||
ing. Furthermore, as our own systems endeavor to eliminate such abnor-
|
||
malities as growths, so also the universe endeavors to expel moons which
|
||
have served their purpose. While the beings who have been exiled to a moon
|
||
are there, the Planetary Spirit of the primary planet by his care for these
|
||
beings, hold the moon in its orbit, and we speak of his love for them as the
|
||
Law of Attraction; but when they have returned to the parent planet, the
|
||
Planetary Spirit has no further interest in their cinder-like habitation.
|
||
Then slowly the orbit of the vacated moon widens, it commences to disinte-
|
||
grate, and it is finally expelled into interstellar space. The asteroids
|
||
are remnants of moons which once encircled Venus and Mercury. There are
|
||
also other seeming moons and lunar fragments in our solar system, but the
|
||
ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION does not concern itself with them as they are
|
||
outside the pale of evolution.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 61] THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VIII
|
||
|
||
THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE PERIODICAL ebb and flow of the material and spiritual forces which
|
||
invest the earth are the invisible causes of the physical, moral, and mental
|
||
activities upon our globe.
|
||
|
||
According to the hermatic axiom, "As above so below," a similar activity
|
||
must take place in man, who is but a minor edition of Mother Nature.
|
||
|
||
The animals have twenty-eight pairs of spinal nerves and are now in their
|
||
Moon stage, perfectly attuned to the twenty-eight days in which the moon
|
||
passes around the zodiac. In their wild state the group spirit regulates
|
||
their mating. Therefore there is no overflow with them. Man, on the other
|
||
hand, is in a transition stage; he is too far progressed for the lunar vi-
|
||
brations for he has thirty-one pairs of spinal nerves. But he is not yet
|
||
attuned to the solar month of thirty-one days, and he mates at all times of
|
||
the year; hence the periodical flow in woman, which under proper conditions
|
||
is utilized to form part of the body of a child more perfect than its par-
|
||
ents. Similarly, the periodical flow in mankind becomes the sinew and
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 62] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
backbone of racial advancement; and the periodical flow of the earth's
|
||
spiritual forces, which occurs at Christmas, results in birth of Saviors who
|
||
from time to time give renewed impetus to the spiritual advancement of the
|
||
human race.
|
||
|
||
There are two parts to our Bible, the Old and the New Testaments. After
|
||
briefly reciting how the world came into being, the former tells the story
|
||
of the "Fall" In view of what has been written in our literature we under-
|
||
stand the Fall to have been occasioned by man's impulsive and ignorant use
|
||
of the sex forces at times when the interplanetary rays were inimical to
|
||
conception of the purest and best vehicles. Thus man became gradually im-
|
||
prisoned in a dense body crystallized by sinful passion and consequently an
|
||
imperfect vehicle, subject to pain and death.
|
||
|
||
Then commenced the pilgrimage through matter, and for millennia we have
|
||
been living in this hard and flinty shell of body, which obscures the light
|
||
of heaven from the spirit within. The spirit is like a diamond in its rough
|
||
coat, and the celestial lapidaries, the Recording Angels, are constantly en-
|
||
deavoring to remove the coating so that the spirit may shine through the ve-
|
||
hicle which it ensouls.
|
||
|
||
When the lapidary holds a diamond to the grindstone, the diamond emits a
|
||
screech like a cry of pain and the opaque covering is removed; but gradually
|
||
by many successive applications to the grindstone the rough diamond may
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 63] THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
|
||
|
||
become a gem of transcendent beauty and purity. Similarly, the celestial
|
||
beings in charge of our evolution hold us closely to the grindstone of expe-
|
||
rience. Pain and suffering result, which awaken the spirit sleeping within.
|
||
The man hitherto content with material pursuits, indulgent discontent which
|
||
impels him to seek the higher life.
|
||
|
||
The gratification of that aspiration, however, is not usually accom-
|
||
plished without a severe struggle upon the part of the lower nature. It was
|
||
while wrestling thus that Paul exclaimed with all the anguish of a devout
|
||
aspiring heart: "Oh wretched man that I am * * * * The good that I would, I
|
||
do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do * * * * I delight in the
|
||
law of God after the inward man; but I see another law in my members warring
|
||
against the law of my mind and bringing it into captivity to the law of sin
|
||
which is in my members." (Rom. 7:19-24)
|
||
|
||
When the flower is crushed, its scent is liberated and fills the sur-
|
||
roundings with grateful fragrance, delighting all who are fortunate enough
|
||
to be near. Crushing blows of fate may overwhelm a man or woman who has
|
||
reached the stage of efflorescene; they will but serve to bring out the
|
||
sweetness of the nature and enhance the beauty of the soul till it shines
|
||
with an effulgence that marks the wearer as with a halo. Then he is upon
|
||
the path of Initiation. He is taught how unbridled use of sex regardless of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 64] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the stellar rays has imprisoned him in the body, how it fetters him, and how
|
||
by the proper use of that same force in harmony with the stars he may
|
||
gradually improve and etherealize his body and finally attain liberation
|
||
from concrete existence.
|
||
|
||
A shipwright cannot build a staunch oak ship from spruce lumber; " men do
|
||
not gather grapes of thorns;" like always begets like, and an incoming ego
|
||
of a passionate nature is drawn to parents of like nature, where its body is
|
||
conceived upon the impulse of the moment in a gust of passion.
|
||
|
||
The soul who has tasted the cup of sorrow incident to the abuse of the
|
||
creative force and has drunk to the dregs the bitterness thereof, will
|
||
gradually seek parents of less and less passionate natures, until at length
|
||
it attains to Initiation.
|
||
|
||
Having been taught in the process of Initiation the influence of the
|
||
stellar rays upon parturition, the next body provided will be generated by
|
||
Initiate parents without passion, under the constellation most favorable to
|
||
the work which the ego contemplates. Therefore the Gospels (which are for-
|
||
mulae of Initiation) commence with the account of the immaculate conception
|
||
and end with the crucifixion, both wonderful ideas to which we must some
|
||
time attain, for each of us is a Christ-in-the-making, and will sometime
|
||
pass through both the mystic birth and the mystic death adumbrated in the
|
||
Gospels. By knowledge we may hasten the day, intelligently co-operating
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 65] THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
|
||
|
||
instead of as now often stupidly frustrating through ignorance the ends of
|
||
spiritual development.
|
||
|
||
In connection with the immaculate conception misunderstandings prevail at
|
||
every point; the perpetual virginity of the mother even after the birth to
|
||
other children; the lowly station of Joseph, the supposed foster-father,
|
||
etc. We will briefly view them in the light of facts as revealed in the
|
||
Memory of Nature:
|
||
|
||
In some parts of Europe people of the higher classes are addressed as
|
||
"wellborn," or even as "highwellborn," meaning that they are the offspring
|
||
of cultured parents in high station. Such people usually look down with
|
||
scorn upon those in modest positions. We have nothing against the expres-
|
||
sion "wellborn;" we would that every child were well born, born to parents
|
||
of high moral standing no matter what their station in life. There is a
|
||
virginity of soul that is independent of the state of the body, a purity of
|
||
mind which will carry its possessor through the act of generation without
|
||
the taint of passion and enable the mother to carry the unborn child under
|
||
her heart in sexless love.
|
||
|
||
Previous to the time of Christ that would have been impossible. In the
|
||
earlier stages of man's career upon earth quantity was desirable and quality
|
||
a minor consideration, hence the command was given to "go forth, be fruit-
|
||
ful, and multiply." Besides, it was necessary that man should temporarily
|
||
forget his spiritual nature and concrete his energies upon material
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 66] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
conditions. Indulgence of the sex passion furthers that object, and the de-
|
||
sire nature was given full sway. Polygamy flourished, and the larger the
|
||
number of their children, the more a man and a woman were honored, while
|
||
barrenness was looked upon as the greatest possible affliction.
|
||
|
||
In other directions the desire nature was being curbed by God-given laws,
|
||
and obedience to divine commands was enforced by swift punishment of the
|
||
transgressor, such as war, pestilence or famine. Rewards for dutiful obser-
|
||
vance of the mandates of the law were not wanting either; the "righteous"
|
||
man's children, his cattle and crops were numerous; he was victorious over
|
||
his enemies and the cup of his happiness was full.
|
||
|
||
Later when the earth had been sufficiently peopled after the Atlantean
|
||
Flood, polygamy became gradually more and more obsolete, with the result
|
||
that the quality of the bodies improved, and at the time of Christ the de-
|
||
sire nature had become so far amenable to control in the case of the more
|
||
advanced among humanity that the act of generation could be performed with-
|
||
out passion, out of pure love, so that the child could be immaculately con-
|
||
ceived.
|
||
|
||
Such were the parents of Jesus. Joseph is said to have been a carpenter,
|
||
but he was not a worker in wood. He was a "builder" in a higher sense. God
|
||
is the Grand Architect of the universe. Under Him are many builders of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 67] THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION
|
||
|
||
varying degrees of spiritual splendor, down even to those whom we know as
|
||
Freemasons. All are engaged in building a temple without sound of hammer,
|
||
and Joseph was no exception.
|
||
|
||
It is sometimes asked why Initiates are always men. They are not; in the
|
||
lower degrees there are many women, but when an Initiate is able to choose
|
||
his sex he usually takes the positive masculine body, as the life which
|
||
brought him to Initiation has spiritualized his vital body and made it
|
||
positive under all conditions, so that he has then an instrument of the
|
||
highest efficiency.
|
||
|
||
There are times, however, when the exigencies of a case require a female
|
||
body, such as, for instance, providing a body of the highest type to receive
|
||
an ego of superlatively high degree. Then a high Initiate may take a female
|
||
body and go through the experience of maternity again, after perhaps having
|
||
eschewed it for several lives, as was the case with the beautiful character
|
||
we know as Mary of Bethlehem.
|
||
|
||
In conclusion, then, let us remember the points brought out, that we are
|
||
all Christs-in-the-making; that sometime we must cultivate characters so
|
||
spotless that we may be worthy to inhabit bodies that are immaculately con-
|
||
ceived; and the sooner we commence to purify our minds of passionate
|
||
thoughts, the sooner we shall attain. In the final analysis it only depends
|
||
upon the earnestness of our purpose, the strength of our wills. Conditions
|
||
are such now that we can live pure lives whether married or single, and
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 68] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
cold, sister-and-brother relationships are not necessary either.
|
||
|
||
Is the life of absolute purity beyond some of us yet? Be not discour-
|
||
aged; Rome was not built in a day. Keep on aspiring though you fail again
|
||
and again, for the only real failure consists in ceasing to try.
|
||
|
||
So may God strengthen your aspirations to purity.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 69] THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IX
|
||
|
||
THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
|
||
WE HAVE previously seen how infant humanity in Atlantis lived in unity
|
||
under direct guidance of divine leaders, and how they were eventually
|
||
brought out of the water into a clear atmosphere where the separateness of
|
||
each individual from all others became obvious at once.
|
||
|
||
"God is Light"--the Light which became life in man. It was dim and
|
||
achromatically diffused in the misty atmosphere of early Atlantis, as color-
|
||
less as the air on a densely foggy day in the present age, hence the unity
|
||
of all beings who lived in that light. But when man rose above the waters,
|
||
when he emerged into the aire where the godly manifestation, Light, was re-
|
||
fracted in multitudinous hues, this variously colored light was differently
|
||
absorbed by each. Thus diversity was inaugurated, when mankind went through
|
||
the mighty arch of the rainbow with its variegated and beautiful colors.
|
||
That bow may therefore be considered an entrance gate to "the promised
|
||
land," the world as now constituted. Here the light of God is no longer an
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 70] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
insipid single tint as in early Atlantis. The present dazzling play of
|
||
color tells us that THE WATCHWORD OF THE PRESENT AGE IS SEGREGATION, and
|
||
therefore so long as we remain in the present condition under the law of al-
|
||
ternating cycles, where summer and winter, ebb and flow, succeed each other
|
||
in unbroken sequence, so long as God's bow stands in the sky, an emblem of
|
||
diversity, it is yet the day of the kingdoms of men, and the kingdom of God
|
||
is held in abeyance.
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, as surely as the Edenic conditions upon the fire girt is-
|
||
lands of ancient Lemuria ended in separation into sexes, each expressing one
|
||
element of the creative fire, and making the union of man and woman as nec-
|
||
essary to the generation of a body as is the union of hydrogen and oxygen to
|
||
the production of water; and as surely as emergence from the watery atmo-
|
||
sphere of Atlantis into the airy environment of ARYANA, the world of today,
|
||
promoted further segregation into separate nations and individuals, who war
|
||
and prey upon one another (because the sharply differentiated forms which
|
||
they behold blind them to the inalienable unity of each soul with all oth-
|
||
ers); just as certainly will this world condition give place to a "new
|
||
heaven and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness."
|
||
|
||
In early Atlantis we lived in the deepest basins of the earth where the
|
||
mist was densest; we breathed by means of gills and would have been unable
|
||
to live in an atmosphere such as we have now. In the course of time desire
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 71] THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
to explore beyond caused the invention of airships, which were propelled by
|
||
the expansive force of sprouting grain. The "ark" story is a perverted
|
||
remembrance of that fact. Those ships actually did founder upon mountain
|
||
tops where the atmosphere was too rare to sustain them. Today our ships
|
||
float upon the element in which the Atlantean ships were at one time im-
|
||
mersed. We have now contrived various means of propulsion able to carry us
|
||
over the highlands of the earth which we occupy at present, and are commenc-
|
||
ing to reach out into the atmosphere to conquer that element as we have sub-
|
||
jected the waters; and as surely as our Atlantean ancestors made a highway
|
||
of the watery element which they breathed AND THEN ROSE ABOVE IT TO LIVE IN
|
||
A NEW ELEMENT, just as certainly shall we conquer the air and then rise
|
||
above it into the newly discovered element which we call ether.
|
||
|
||
Thus each age has its own peculiar conditions and laws; the beings who
|
||
evolve have a physiological constitution suited to the environment of that
|
||
age, but are dominated by the nature forces then prevailing until they learn
|
||
to conform to them. Then these forces become most valuable servants, as for
|
||
instance, steam and electricity, which we have partially harnessed. The law
|
||
of gravity still holds us in its powerful grip, although by mechanical means
|
||
we are trying to escape into the new element. We shall at a not distant
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 72] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
time attain to mastery of the air, but as the ships of the Atlanteans foun-
|
||
dered upon the mountains of the earth because their buoyancy was insuffi-
|
||
cient to enable them to rise higher in the light mist of those altitudes,
|
||
and because respiration was difficult, so also will the increasing rarity of
|
||
our present atmosphere prevent us from entering the "new heaven and the new
|
||
earth," which are to be the scene of the New Dispensation.
|
||
|
||
Before we can reach that state, physiological as well as moral and
|
||
spiritual changes must take place. The Greek text of the new New Testament
|
||
does not leave us in doubt as to this, though lack of knowledge of the mys-
|
||
tery teachings prevented the translators from bringing it out in the English
|
||
version. Did we but believe the Bible even as we have it, we should be
|
||
spared many delusions and much uneasiness concerning the time of this.
|
||
Whole sects have disposed of their belongings in anticipation of the advent
|
||
of Christ or even as God, have married, raised families, and died, leaving
|
||
their sons, who were supposed to be Christs, to fight for the kingdom. A
|
||
temporal government was forced to banish one of these militant "Christs" to
|
||
an island of the Mediterranean, and another to an Asiatic city where he is
|
||
now under military supervision. Nor is there any sign that the future will
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 73] THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
lack similar claimants; rather, the sacrilegious imposture is spreading.
|
||
|
||
WE MAY REST ASSURED THAT THE DIVINE LEADERS OF EVOLUTION MADE NO MISTAKE
|
||
WHEN THEY GAVE THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION TO THE WESTERN WORLD-- THE MOST AD-
|
||
VANCED TEACHING TO THE MOST PRECOCIOUS AMONG MANKIND. It may therefore be
|
||
regarded as a detriment when an organization undertakes to graft a Hindu re-
|
||
ligion (which is excellent for the people to whom it was divinely given)
|
||
upon our people. The imported Hindu breathing exercises have certainly sent
|
||
may people to insane asylums.
|
||
|
||
If we believe Christ's words: "My kingdom is not of this world,"
|
||
(KOSMOS, the Greek word used for "world" meaning " order of things" rather
|
||
than our planet, the earth, which is called GAEA), we shall know better than
|
||
to look for Christ today.
|
||
|
||
"Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God." any more than the
|
||
gill-breathing creature of early Atlantean times was fit to live under the
|
||
natural conditions prevailing in the present age where "the resurrection,
|
||
does not say as in the English translation, "There is a natural body and
|
||
there is a spiritual body." I Cor. 15:44. He affirms that there is a "SOMA
|
||
PSUCHICON," a soul body, and tells in the preceding verses how this is gen-
|
||
erated from a "SEED" in the same way as explained in the Rosicrucian teach-
|
||
ings. The Bible affirms that our bodies are corruptible. (It also teaches
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 74] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
that one organ, the heart, is an exception. This has reference to the seed
|
||
atom in the heart. Ps. 22:26) Therefore our bodies must be changed before
|
||
Christ can come.
|
||
|
||
If these things were believed, few would run after impostors, and the
|
||
latter would have their labors for their pains. But Western papers unfortu-
|
||
nately give notoriety to such schemers, though regarding them as a joke as
|
||
well they may, for it would be preposterous to believe that the great and
|
||
wise Being who guides evolution could be so shortsighted as not to know that
|
||
the Western World would never accept the scion of what it regards as a
|
||
semi-barbaric race for its Savior.
|
||
|
||
When preparations were made 2000 years ago, for the embodiment of the
|
||
Savior of the world, Galilee was the Mecca for roving spirits. Thither
|
||
flocked people from Asia, Africa, Greece, Italy, and all other parts of the
|
||
world of that day. Conditions there were exceptionally congenial and at-
|
||
tractive so that, as declared by various scholars who have investigated the
|
||
matter, Galilee was as cosmopolitan as Rome itself. It was, in fact, the
|
||
"melting pot' of that day. Among others, Joseph and Mary, the parents of
|
||
Jesus, had emigrated from Judea to Nazareth in Galilee before the advent of
|
||
their firstborn, and the body generated in that environment was different
|
||
from the ordinary Jewish race body.
|
||
|
||
It is an incontrovertible fact that environment plays a great part in
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 75] THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
evolution. We have today upon earth THREE GREAT RACES. One, the Negro, has
|
||
hair which is FLAT in section, and the head is long, narrow and FLATTENED on
|
||
the sides. The orbit of the eye is also long and narrow. The Negroes are
|
||
descendants of the Lemurain Race.
|
||
|
||
The Mongols and kindred peoples have ROUND heads. Their hair is round in
|
||
section, and orbits of their eyes are also round. They are the remnants of
|
||
the Atlantean Race.
|
||
|
||
The ARYAN RACE have oval hair, oval skulls, and oval orbits of the eyes,
|
||
these features being especially pronounced in the Anglo-Saxons, who are the
|
||
flower of the race at present.
|
||
|
||
In America, the Mecca of nations today, these various races are of course
|
||
represented. Here is the "melting pot" in which they are being amalgamated.
|
||
It has been ascertained that there is a difference in children belonging to
|
||
the same family. The SKULLS OF YOUNGER CHILDREN BORN IN AMERICA ARE MORE
|
||
NEARLY OVAL THAN THE HEADS OF THEIR OLDER BROTHERS AND SISTERS BORN ABROAD.
|
||
|
||
From this fact and from others which need not be mentioned here, it is
|
||
evident that a new race is being born on the American continent; and reason-
|
||
ing from the known fact that the Christ came from the most cosmopolitan part
|
||
of the civilized world of 2000 years ago, it would be but logical to expect
|
||
that if a new embodiment were sought for that exalted Being, His body would
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 76] THE COMING CHRIST
|
||
|
||
more likely be taken from the new race than from an ancient one. Otherwise,
|
||
if there is virtue in obtaining a Savior from the older races, why not get a
|
||
Bushman or a Hottentot?
|
||
|
||
But we may be sure that though impostors deceive for a time, they are
|
||
found out sooner or later, and their plans come to naught. Meanwhile, pro-
|
||
gression continues to bring us nearer the Aquarian Age, and A TEACHER IS
|
||
COMING to give the Christian Religion impetus in a new direction.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 77] THE COMING AGE
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER X
|
||
|
||
THE COMING AGE
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHEN WE speak of the "Coming Age," of the "New Heaven and the New Earth"
|
||
mentioned in the Bible, and also of the "Aquarian Age," the differences may
|
||
not be quite clear in the minds of our students. Confusion of terms is one
|
||
of the most fertile seed grounds of fallacy, and the Rosicrucian teachings
|
||
aim to avoid it by a particularly definite nomenclature. Sometimes an extra
|
||
effort seems necessary to disperse the haze engendered by current cloudy
|
||
conceptions of others as sincere as the present writer, but not so fortunate
|
||
in having access to the incomparable Western Wisdom Teachings.
|
||
|
||
It has been taught in our literature that four great epochs of unfoldment
|
||
preceded the present order of things; that the destiny of the earth, its at-
|
||
mospheric conditions, and the laws of nature prevailing in one epoch were as
|
||
different from those of the other epochs as was the corresponding
|
||
physiological constitution of mankind in one epoch different from those in
|
||
he others.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 78] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
The bodies of ADM (the name means RED EARTH), the humanity of fiery
|
||
Lemuria, were formed of the "dust of the ground," the red, hot, volcanic
|
||
mud, and were just suited to their environment. Flesh and blood would have
|
||
shriveled up in the terrible heat of that day, and though suited to present
|
||
conditions, Paul tells us that they cannot inherit the Kingdom of God. It
|
||
is therefore manifest that before a new order of things can be inaugurated,
|
||
the physiological constitution of mankind must be radically changed to say
|
||
nothing of the spiritual attitude. Aeons will be required to generate the
|
||
whole human race and fit them to live in ethereal bodies.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, neither does a new environment come into existence in
|
||
a moment, but land and people are evolved together from the smallest and
|
||
most primitive beginnings. When the mists of Atlantis commenced to settle,
|
||
some of our forbears had grown embryonic lungs and were forced to highlands
|
||
ages before their compeers. They wandered in "the wilderness" while " the
|
||
promised land" was emerging from the lighter fogs, and at the same time
|
||
their growing lungs were fitting them to live under present atmospheric con-
|
||
ditions.
|
||
|
||
Two more races were born in the basins of the earth before a succession
|
||
of floods drove them to the highlands; the last flood took place at the time
|
||
when the sun entered the watery sign Cancer, about ten thousand years ago as
|
||
told Plato by the Egyptian priests. Thus we see there is NO SUDDEN change
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 79] THE COMING AGE
|
||
|
||
of constitution or environment for the whole human race when a new epoch is
|
||
ushered in, but an overlapping of conditions which makes it possible for
|
||
most of the race by gradual adjustment to enter the new condition, though
|
||
the change may seem sudden to the individual when the preparatory change has
|
||
been accomplished unconsciously. The metamorphosis of a tadpole from a
|
||
denizen of the watery element to one of the airy gives an analogy of the
|
||
past, and the transformation of the caterpillar to a butterfly soaring in
|
||
the air is an apt simile of the coming age. When the heavenly time marker
|
||
came into Aries by precession, a new cycle commenced, and the "glad tidings"
|
||
were preached by Christ. He said by implication that the new heaven and
|
||
earth were not ready then when He told His disciples: Whither I go you can-
|
||
not NOW follow, but you shall follow afterwards. I go to prepare a place
|
||
for you and will come again and receive you.
|
||
|
||
Later John saw in a vision the new Jerusalem descending from heaven, and
|
||
Paul taught the Thessalonians "BY THE WORD OF THE LORD" that those who are
|
||
Christ's at His coming shall be caught up IN THE AIR to meet Him and be with
|
||
Him FOR THE AGE.
|
||
|
||
But during this change there are pioneers who enter the kingdom of God
|
||
before their brethren. Christ, in Matt. 11:12, said that " the kingdom of
|
||
heaven suffereth violence, and the violent take it by force." This is not a
|
||
correct translation. It ought to be: The kingdom of the heavens HAS BEEN
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 80] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
INVADED (BIAXETAI), and invaders seize on her. Men and women have already
|
||
learned through holy, helpful lives to lay aside the body of flesh and
|
||
blood, either intermittently or permanently, and to walk the skies with
|
||
winged feet, intent upon the business of their Lord, clad in the ethereal
|
||
"wedding garment" of the new dispensation. This change may be accomplished
|
||
through a life of simple helpfulness and prayer as practiced by devoted
|
||
Christians, no matter with what church they affiliate, as well as by the
|
||
specific exercises given in the Rosicrucian Fellowship. The latter will
|
||
prove barren of results, unless accompanied by constant ACTS of love for
|
||
LOVE will be the keynote of the coming age as LAW is of the present order.
|
||
The intense expression of the former quality increases the phosphorescent
|
||
luminosity and density of the ethers in our vital bodies, the fiery streams
|
||
sever the tie to the mortal coil, and the man, once BORN OF WATER upon his
|
||
emergence from Atlantis, is now born OF THE SPIRIT into the kingdom of God.
|
||
The dynamic force of his love has opened a way to the land of love, and in-
|
||
describable is the rejoicing among those already there when new invaders ar-
|
||
rive, for each new arrival hastens the coming of the Lord and the definite
|
||
establishment of the Kingdom.
|
||
|
||
Among the religiously inclined there is a definite unceasing cry: How
|
||
long, O Lord; how long? And despite the emphatic statement of Christ that
|
||
the day and hour are unknown, even to Himself, prophets continue to gain
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 81] THE COMING AGE
|
||
|
||
credence when they predict His coming on a certain day, though each is dis-
|
||
comfited when the day passes without development. The question has also
|
||
been mooted among our students, and the present chapter is an attempt to
|
||
show the fallacy of looking for the Second Advent in a year or fifty or five
|
||
hundred. The Elder Brothers decline to commit themselves further than to
|
||
point out what must first be accomplished.
|
||
|
||
At the time of Christ the sun was in about seven degrees of Aries. Five
|
||
hundred years were required to bring the precession to the thirtieth degree
|
||
of Pisces. During that time the new church lived through a stage of offen-
|
||
sive and defensive violence well justifying the words of Christ: "I came
|
||
not to bring peace but a sword." Fourteen hundred years more have elapsed
|
||
under the negative influence of PISCES, which has fostered the power of the
|
||
church and bound the people by creed and dogma.
|
||
|
||
In the middle of the last century the sun came within orb of influence of
|
||
the scientific sign AQUARIUS, and although it will take about seven hundred
|
||
years before the Aquarian Age commences, it is highly instructive to note
|
||
what changes the mere touch has wrought in the world. Our limited space
|
||
precludes enumeration of the wonderful advances made since then; but it is
|
||
not too much to say that science, invention, and resultant industry have
|
||
completely changed the world, its social life, and economic conditions. The
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 82] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
great strides made in means of communication have done much to break down
|
||
barriers of race prejudice and prepare us for conditions of Universal Broth-
|
||
erhood. Engines of destruction have been made so fearfully efficient that
|
||
the militant nations will be forced ere long to "beat their swords into
|
||
plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks." THE SWORD HAS HAD ITS
|
||
REIGN during the Piscean Age, but SCIENCE WILL RULE in the Aquarian Age.
|
||
|
||
In the land of the setting sun we may expect to first see the ideal con-
|
||
ditions of the Aquarian Age: A blending of religion and science, forming a
|
||
religious science and a scientific religion, which will promote the health,
|
||
happiness and the enjoyment of life in abundant measure.
|
||
|
||
SUGAR FOR ALCOHOL
|
||
|
||
In the chapter elucidating the Law of Assimilation in the ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
COSMO-CONCEPTION, we stated that minerals cannot be assimilated because they
|
||
lack a vital body, which lack makes it impossible for man to raise their vi-
|
||
bratory rate to his own pitch. Plants have a vital body and no
|
||
self-consciousness, hence are most easily assimilated and remain with man
|
||
longer than cells of animal flesh, which is permeated by a desire body. The
|
||
vibratory rate of the latter is high, and much energy is required in as-
|
||
similation; its cells also quickly escape and make it necessary for the
|
||
flesh eater to forage often.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 83] THE COMING AGE
|
||
|
||
We are aware that alcohol is a "foreign spirit" and a "spirit of decay"
|
||
because IT IS GENERATED BY FERMENTATION OUTSIDE the consumer's system. Be-
|
||
ing "spirit," it vibrates with such intense rapidity that the human spirit
|
||
is incapable of tuning it down and controlling it as food must be, hence me-
|
||
tabolism is out of the question. Nay, more, as we cannot reduce its vibra-
|
||
tory rate to that of our bodies, this foreign spirit may accelerate their
|
||
vibratory pitch and control us as happens in the state of intoxication.
|
||
Thus alcohol is a great danger to mankind and one from which we must be
|
||
emancipated ere we can realize our divine nature.
|
||
|
||
A stimulant spirit is necessary while we live on a DIET OF FLESH or
|
||
progress would stop, and A FOOD has been provided for the pioneers of the
|
||
West that answers all requirements; its name is "sugar." FROM SUGAR THE EGO
|
||
ITSELF GENERATES ALCOHOL INSIDE the system by the very processes of me-
|
||
tabolism. This product is therefore both food and stimulant, perfectly
|
||
keyed to the vibratory pitch of the body. It has all the good qualities of
|
||
alcohol in enhanced measure and none of its drawbacks. To perceive properly
|
||
the effect of this food, consider the peoples of eastern Europe where little
|
||
sugar is consumed. They are slavish; they speak of themselves in terms of
|
||
depreciation; the pronoun "I" is always spelled with small letters but "you"
|
||
with a capital. England consumes five times as much sugar per capita as
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 84] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Russia. In the former we meet a different spirit, the big "I" and the
|
||
little "you." In America the candy store becomes a most dangerous rival of
|
||
the saloon, for THE MAN WHO EATS SWEETS WILL NOT DRINK, and there is no
|
||
surer cure for alcoholism than to induce the sufferer to eat freely of
|
||
sweets. The drunkard abhors sugar, however, while his system is under the
|
||
sway of the "foreign spirit."
|
||
|
||
The temperance movement was begun in the land where MOST SUGAR IS CON-
|
||
SUMED, and has GENERATED "THE SPIRIT OF SELF-RESPECT."
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 85] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XI
|
||
|
||
MEAT AND DRINK AS FACTORS IN EVOLUTION
|
||
|
||
|
||
IN PREVIOUS chapters we saw how infant humanity was cared for by superhu-
|
||
man guardians, provided with appropriate food, led out of danger's way, and
|
||
sheltered in all respects until grown to human stature and fit to enter the
|
||
school of experience to learn the lessons of life in the phenomenal world.
|
||
We saw also how the rainbow points to natural laws peculiar to the present
|
||
age, how man was given free will under these laws, and how the spirit of
|
||
wine was given to cheer and to stimulate his own timid, fearful spirit, to
|
||
nerve it for the war of the world.
|
||
|
||
In an analogous manner the irresponsible little child who has been
|
||
brought under the waters of baptism by its natural guardians is cared for
|
||
through the years of childhood while its various vehicles are being orga-
|
||
nized. When the parental blood stored in the thymus gland has been ex-
|
||
hausted and the child thus emancipated from the parents, it awakens to indi-
|
||
viduality, to the feeling of "I AM." It has then been prepared with a
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 86] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
knowledge of good and evil with which to fight the battle of life; and at
|
||
that time the youth is taken to the church and given the bread and wine to
|
||
nerve and nourish him spiritually, also as a symbol that henceforth he is a
|
||
free agent, only responsible to the laws of God. A blessing or a curse,
|
||
this freedom, according to the way it is used.
|
||
|
||
In early Atlantis mankind was a universal brotherhood of submissive chil-
|
||
dren with no incentive to war or strife. Later they were segregated into
|
||
nations, and wars inculcated loyalty to kin and country. Each sovereign was
|
||
an absolute autocrat with power over life and limb of his subjects, who were
|
||
numbered in hundreds of millions, and who yielded ungrudging and slavish
|
||
submission, an attitude maintained to the present day among millions of Asi-
|
||
atics, who are vegetarians and consequently need no alcohol.
|
||
|
||
As flesh eating came into vogue, wine became a more and more common bev-
|
||
erage. In consequence of flesh eating much material progress was made im-
|
||
mediately preceding the advent of Christ, and because of the practice of
|
||
drinking wine an increasing number of men asserted themselves as leaders,
|
||
with the result that instead of a few large nations such as people Asia,
|
||
many small nations were formed in the southwestern portion of Europe and
|
||
Asia Minor.
|
||
|
||
But though the great mass of people who formed these various nations were
|
||
ahead of their Asiatic brethren as craftsmen, they continued submissive to
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 87] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
their rulers and lived as much in their traditions as did the latter.
|
||
Christ upbraided them because they gloried in being Abraham's seed. He told
|
||
them that "before Abraham was, I AM," that is, the ego has always existed.
|
||
|
||
It is His mission to emancipate humanity from Law and lead it to LOVE, to
|
||
destroy "the kingdoms of men" with all their antagonism to one another, and
|
||
to build upon their ruins " the kingdom of God." An illustration will make
|
||
the method clear:
|
||
|
||
If we have a number of brick buildings and desire to amalgamate them into
|
||
one large structure, it is necessary to break them down first and free each
|
||
brick from the mortar which binds it. Likewise each human being must be
|
||
freed from the fetters of family, hence Christ taught, " Unless a man leaves
|
||
his father and mother he cannot be my disciple." He must outgrow religious
|
||
partisanship and patriotism and learn to say with the much misunderstood and
|
||
maligned Thomas Paine: "THE WORLD IS MY COUNTRY, AND TO DO GOOD IS MY RELI-
|
||
GION."
|
||
|
||
Christ did not mean that we are to foresake those who have a claim upon
|
||
our help and support, but that we are not to permit the suppression of our
|
||
individuality out of deference to family traditions and beliefs.
|
||
|
||
Consequently He came "not to bring peace, but a sword;" and whereas the
|
||
eastern religions discourage the use of wine, CHRIST'S FIRST MIRACLE WAS TO
|
||
CHANGE WATER TO WINE. The sword and the wine cup are signature of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 88] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Christian religion, for by them nations have been broken to pieces and the
|
||
individual emancipated. Government by the people, for the people, is a fact
|
||
in northwestern Europe, the rulers being that principally in name only.
|
||
|
||
But the fostering of the martial spirit as prevails in Europe was only a
|
||
means to an end. The segregation which it has caused must give place to a
|
||
regime of brotherhood such as professed by Paine. A new step was necessary
|
||
to bring this about; A NEW FOOD must be found which would act upon the
|
||
spirit in such a way as to foster individuality through ASSERTION OF SELF
|
||
WITHOUT OPPRESSION OF OTHERS AND WITHOUT LOSS OF SELF-RESPECT. We have
|
||
enunciated it as a law that only spirit can act upon spirit, and therefore
|
||
that food must be a spirit but differing in other respects from intoxicants.
|
||
|
||
Before describing this let us see what flesh has done for the evolution
|
||
of the world.
|
||
|
||
We have noted previously that during the Polarian Epoch man had only a
|
||
dense body; he was like the present minerals in this respect, and by nature
|
||
he was inert and passive.
|
||
|
||
By absorbing the crystalloids prepared by plants he evolved a vital body
|
||
during the Hyperborean Epoch and became plant-like both in constitution and
|
||
by nature, for he lived without exertion and as unconsciously as the plants.
|
||
|
||
Later he extracted milk from the then stationary animals. Desire for
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 89] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
this more readily digestible food spurred him on to exertion, and gradually
|
||
his desire nature was evolved during the Lemurian Epoch. Thus he became
|
||
constituted like the present day HERBIVORA. Though possessed of a passional
|
||
nature, he was docile and could not be induced to fight save to defend him-
|
||
self, his mate, and family. Hunger alone had the power to make him aggres-
|
||
sive.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, when animals began to move and sought to elude this ruthless
|
||
parasite, increasing difficulty of obtaining the coveted food aroused his
|
||
craving to such an extent that when he had hunted and caught an animal, he
|
||
was no longer content to suck its udders dry but commenced to feed upon its
|
||
blood and flesh. Thus he became as ferocious as our present day CARNIVORA.
|
||
|
||
Digestion of flesh food requires much more powerful chemical action and
|
||
speedy elimination of the waste than that of a vegetable diet as proved by
|
||
chemical analysis of the gastric juices from animals, and by the fact that
|
||
the intestines of Herbivora are many times longer than those of a car-
|
||
nivorous animal of even size. Carnivora easily become drowsy and averse to
|
||
exertion.
|
||
|
||
When prodded by the pangs of hunger the ferocious wolf does indeed pursue
|
||
its prey with unwavering perseverance, and the spring of the crouching king
|
||
of beasts overmatches the speed of the wing-footed deer. By ambush the fe-
|
||
line family foil the fleetest in their attempts to escape. The cunning of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 90] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the fox is proverbial, and the slinking nocturnal habits of the hyena and
|
||
kindred scavengers illustrate the depth of depravity resulting from a diet
|
||
of decayed flesh.
|
||
|
||
The vices generated by flesh eating may be said to be lassitude, feroc-
|
||
ity, low cunning, and depravity. We may tame the herbivorous ox and el-
|
||
ephant. Their diet makes them docile and stores enormous power which they
|
||
obediently use in our service to perform prolonged and arduous labor. The
|
||
flesh food required by the constitutional peculiarities of Carnivora makes
|
||
them dangerous and incapable of thorough domestication. A cat may scratch
|
||
at any moment, and the muzzling ordinances of large cities are ample proof
|
||
of the danger of dogs. Besides, energy contained in the diet of Carnivora
|
||
is so largely expended in digestion that they are drowsy and unfitted for
|
||
sustained labor like the horse or elephant.
|
||
|
||
The drowsiness following a heavy meal of meat is too well known to re-
|
||
quire arguement, and the custom of taking stimulants with food is an out-
|
||
growth of the desire to counteract the deadening effect of dead flesh. The
|
||
intensified effect of feasting upon FLESH IN AN ADVANCED STATE OF DECAY is
|
||
well illustrated in "society," where banquets of game that is "high" are ac-
|
||
companied by orgies of the wildest nature and followed by indulgence of the
|
||
vilest instincts.
|
||
|
||
The Westerner who can live upon a clean, sweet, wholesome diet of veg-
|
||
etables, cereals and fruit, does not become drowsy from his food; he needs
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 91] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
no stimulant. THERE ARE NO VEGETARIAN DRUNKARDS. The soothing effects of
|
||
vegetable food manifest as finer feelings, which replace the ferocity fos-
|
||
tered by flesh food. Many need the mixed diet yet, for the practice of
|
||
flesh eating has furthered the progress of the world as nothing else except
|
||
perhaps its companion vice--drunkenness; and though we cannot say that they
|
||
have been a blessing in disguise, they have at least not been unmitigated
|
||
curses, for in the Father's kingdom all seeming evil nevertheless works for
|
||
good in some respect, though it may not be apparent upon the surface. We
|
||
shall see how presently.
|
||
|
||
A private corporation, the East India Company, commenced and practically
|
||
achieved the subjugation of India with her three hundred million people, for
|
||
the English are voracious flesh eaters, while the Hindu's diet fosters do-
|
||
cility. But when England fought the flesh eating Boers, Greek met Greek,
|
||
and the valor displayed by both sides is a matter of brilliant record.
|
||
Courage, physical as well as moral, is a virtue and cowardice a vice. Flesh
|
||
has fostered self-assertion and helped us to develop backbone, though unfor-
|
||
tunately often at the expense of others who still retain the wishbone. It
|
||
has done more as will be illustrated:
|
||
|
||
As said previously, the crouching cat is forced to employ strategy to
|
||
save strength when procuring its prey, so that it may retain sufficient en-
|
||
ergy to digest the victim. Thus brain becomes the ally of brawn. In
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 92] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
ancient Atlantis DESIRE FOR FLESH DEVELOPED THE INGENUITY OF PRIMITIVE MAN
|
||
AND LED HIM to trap the elusive denizens of field and forest. The hunter's
|
||
snare was among the first LABOR-SAVING DEVICES--which mark the beginning of
|
||
the evolution of mind, and of the uncompromising, unflagging struggle of the
|
||
meat fed mind for supremacy over matter.
|
||
|
||
We say "THE MEAT FED MIND," and we reiterate it, because we wish to em-
|
||
phasize that it is by the nations which have adopted flesh food that the
|
||
most noteworthy progress has been made. The vegetarian Asiatics remain upon
|
||
the lower rungs of civilization. The further west we travel, THE MORE THE
|
||
CONSUMPTION OF MEAT INCREASES AS DOES THE DISINCLINATION FOR BODILY EXER-
|
||
CISE, AND CONSEQUENTLY THE ACTIVITY OF THE MIND IS INCREASED TO A HIGHER AND
|
||
HIGHER PITCH IN THE INVENTION OF LABOR-SAVING DEVICES. The American
|
||
agriculturists' acres are counted by thousands, and they harvest large crops
|
||
with less labor than the peasant of the East who has only a small patch of
|
||
ground. The reason is that the poor, plodding grain fed Easterner has only
|
||
his hands and his hoe, which he keeps in motion all day and day after day,
|
||
while the meat fed, progressive Westerner turns power-driven implements into
|
||
his fertile fields and sits down in a comfortable seat to watch them work.
|
||
One uses muscle, the other mind.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 93] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
Thus the indomitable courage and energy which have transformed the face
|
||
of the Western World are virtues directly traceable to flesh food, which
|
||
also fosters love of ease and invention of labor-saving devices; while alco-
|
||
hol stimulates enterprise in execution of schemes thus hatched to procure
|
||
the maximum of comfort with a minimum of labor.
|
||
|
||
But the spirit of alcohol is obtained by a process of fermentation. It
|
||
is a SPIRIT OF DECAY, altogether different from the SPIRIT OF LIFE in man.
|
||
This counterfeit spirit lures man on and on, always holding before his vi-
|
||
sion the dreams of FUTURE grandeur, and goading him to strenuous efforts of
|
||
body and mind in order to attain and obtain. Then when he has achieved and
|
||
attained, he awakens to the utter worthlessness of his prize. Possession
|
||
soon shatters illusion as to the worth of whatever he may have acquired;
|
||
NOTHING THE WORLD HAS TO GIVE CAN FINALLY SATISFY. Then again the lethal
|
||
draught drowns disappointment, and the mind conjures up a new illusion.
|
||
This he pursues with fresh zeal and high hopes, to meet disappointment again
|
||
and again, for lives and lives, until at last he learns that "wine is a
|
||
mocker," and that "all is vanity but to serve God and to do His will."
|
||
[PAGE 94] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XII
|
||
|
||
|
||
A LIVING SACRIFICE
|
||
|
||
VOLUMES, OR RATHER libraries, have been written to explain the nature of
|
||
God, but it is probably a universal experience that the more we read of
|
||
other people's explanations, the less we understand. There is one descrip-
|
||
tion, given by the inspired apostle John when he wrote "GOD IS LIGHT," which
|
||
is as illuminating as the others are befogging to the mind. Anyone who
|
||
takes this passage for meditation occasionally will find a rich reward wait-
|
||
ing, for no matter how many times we take up this subject, our own develop-
|
||
ment in the passing years assures us each time a fuller and better under-
|
||
standing. Each time we sink ourselves in these three words we lave in a
|
||
spiritual fountain of inexhaustible depth, and each succeeding time we sound
|
||
more thoroughly the divine depths and draw more closely to our Father in
|
||
heaven.
|
||
|
||
To get in touch with our subject, let us go back in time to get our bear-
|
||
ing and the direction of our future line of progress.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 95] A LIVING SACRIFICE
|
||
|
||
The first time our consciousness was directed towards the Light was
|
||
shortly after we had become endowed with mind and had entered definitely
|
||
upon our evolution as human beings in Atlantis, the land of the mist, deep
|
||
down in the basins of the earth, where the warm mist emitted from the cool-
|
||
ing earth hung like a dense fog over the land. Then the starry heights of
|
||
the universe were never seen, nor could the silvery light of the moon pen-
|
||
etrate the dense, foggy atmosphere which hung over that ancient land. Even
|
||
the fiery splendor of the sun was almost totally extinguished, for when we
|
||
look in the Memory of Nature pertaining to that time, it appears very much
|
||
as an arc lamp on a high pole looks to us when it is foggy. It was exceed-
|
||
ingly dim, and had an aura of various colors, very similar to those which we
|
||
observe around an arc light.
|
||
|
||
But this light had a fascination. The ancient Atlanteans were taught by
|
||
the divine Hierarchs who walked among them, to aspire to the light, and as
|
||
the spiritual sight was then already on the wane (even the messengers, or
|
||
Elohim, being perceived with difficulty by the majority), they aspired all
|
||
the more ardently to the new light, for they feared the darkness of which
|
||
they had become conscious through the gift of mind.
|
||
|
||
Then came the inevitable flood when the mist cooled and condensed. The
|
||
atmosphere cleared, and the "CHOSEN PEOPLE" were saved. Those who had
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 96] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
worked within themselves and learned to build the necessary organs required
|
||
to breathe in an atmosphere such as we have today, survived and came to the
|
||
light. It was not an arbitrary choice; THE WORK OF THE PAST CONSISTED OF
|
||
BODY BUILDING. Those who had only gill clefts, such as the foetus still
|
||
uses in its prenatal development, were unfit physiologically to enter the
|
||
new era as the foetus would be to be born were it to neglect to build lungs.
|
||
It would die as those ancient people died when the rare atmosphere made gill
|
||
clefts useless.
|
||
|
||
Since the day when we came out of ancient Atlantis our bodies have been
|
||
practically complete, that is to say, no new vehicles are to be added; but
|
||
from that time and from now on THOSE WHO WISH TO FOLLOW THE LIGHT MUST
|
||
STRIVE FOR SOUL GROWTH. The bodies which we have crystallized about us must
|
||
be dissolved, and the quintessence of experience extracted, which as "soul"
|
||
may be amalgamated with the spirit to nourish if from impotence to om-
|
||
nipotence. Therefore, the Tabernacle in the Wilderness was given to the an-
|
||
cients, and THE LIGHT OF GOD DESCENDED UPON THE ALTAR OF SACRIFICE. This is
|
||
of great significance: The ego had just descended into its tabernacle, the
|
||
body. We all know the tendency of the primitive instinct towards selfish-
|
||
ness, and if we have studied the higher ethics we also know how subversive
|
||
of good the indulgence of the egotistic tendency is; therefore, God immedi-
|
||
ately placed before mankind the Divine Light upon the Altar of Sacrifice.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 97] MEAT AND DRINK
|
||
|
||
Upon this altar they were forced by dire necessity to offer their cher-
|
||
ished possessions for every transgression, God appearing to them as a hard
|
||
taskmaster whose displeasure it was dangerous to incur. But still the Light
|
||
drew them. They knew then that it was futile to attempt to escape from the
|
||
hand of God. They had never heard the words of John, "God is Light," but
|
||
they had already learned from the heavens in a measure the meaning of in-
|
||
finitude, as measured by the realm of light, for we hear David exclaim:
|
||
"Whither shall I go from thy Spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy pres-
|
||
ence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell,
|
||
thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the ut-
|
||
termost part of the sea, even there shall thy hand lead me and thy might
|
||
hand shall hold me. If I say, surely the darkness shall cover me, even the
|
||
night shall be light about me. Yea, the darkness hideth not from thee, but
|
||
the night shineth as the day, for the darkness and the light are both alike
|
||
to thee."
|
||
|
||
With every year that passes, with the aid of the greatest telescopes
|
||
which the ingenuity and mechanical skill of man have been able to construct
|
||
to pierce the depths of space, it becomes more evident that the infinitude
|
||
of light teaches us the infinitude of God. When we hear that "men loved
|
||
darkness rather than Light because their deed were evil," that also rings
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 98] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
true to what we unfortunately know as present day facts, and illumines the
|
||
nature of God for us; for is it not true that we always feel endangered in
|
||
the dark, but that the light gives us a sense of safety which is akin to the
|
||
feeling of a child who feels the protecting hand of its father?
|
||
|
||
To render permanent this condition of being in the Light was the next
|
||
step in God's work with us, which culminated in the birth of Christ, who as
|
||
the bodily presence of the Father, bore about in Himself that Light, for the
|
||
Light came into the world that whosoever should believe in Christ should not
|
||
perish, but have everlasting life. He said, "I am the Light of the World."
|
||
The altar in the Tabernacle had illustrated the principle of sacrifice as
|
||
the medium of regeneration, so Christ said to His disciples: Greater love
|
||
hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends. Ye are my
|
||
friends. And forthwith He commenced a sacrifice, which, contrary to the ac-
|
||
cepted orthodox opinion was not consummated in a few hours of physical suf-
|
||
fering upon a material cross, but is as perpetual as were the sacrifices
|
||
made upon the altar of the Tabernacle in the Wilderness, for it entails an
|
||
annual descent into the earth and an endurance of all that the cramping
|
||
earth conditions must mean to such a great spirit.
|
||
|
||
This must continue till a sufficient number have evolved who can bear the
|
||
burden of this dense lump of DARKNESS which we call the earth, and which
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 99] A LIVING SACRIFICE
|
||
|
||
hangs as a millstone about the neck of humanity, an impediment to further
|
||
spiritual growth. Until we learn to follow "in His steps," we can rise no
|
||
higher towards the Light.
|
||
|
||
It is related that when Leonardo da Vinci had completed his famous paint-
|
||
ing "The Last Supper," he asked a friend to look at it and tell him what he
|
||
thought of it.
|
||
|
||
The friend looked at it critically for a few minutes and then said:
|
||
|
||
"I think you have made a mistake in painting the goblets from which the
|
||
apostles drink so ornamental and to resemble gold. People in their posi-
|
||
tions would not drink from such expensive vessels."
|
||
|
||
Da Vinci then drew his brush through the entire set of vessels which had
|
||
drawn the criticism of his friend, but he was heartbroken, for he had
|
||
painted that picture with his soul rather than with his hands, and he had
|
||
prayed over it that it might speak a message to the world. He had put all
|
||
the greatness of his art and the whole-hearted devotion of his soul into
|
||
that effort to paint a Christ who should speak the word that would lead men
|
||
to emulate His deeds.
|
||
|
||
Can you see Him as He sits there at that festive board, THE EMBODIMENT OF
|
||
LIGHT, and speaks those wonderful, mystic words: THIS IS MY BODY, THIS IS
|
||
MY BLOOD, GIVEN FOR YOU-- a living sacrifice.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 100] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
In the past period of our spiritual career we have been looking for a
|
||
Light EXTERIOR to ourselves, but now we have arrived at the point where we
|
||
must look for the Christ light within and emulate Him by making of ourselves
|
||
"living sacrifices" as He is doing. Let us remember that when the sacrifice
|
||
which lies before our door seems pleasant and to our liking, when we seem
|
||
able to pick and choose our work in His vineyard and do what pleases us, we
|
||
are not making a real sacrifice as He did, nor are we when we are seen of
|
||
men and applauded for our benevolence. But when we are ready to follow Him
|
||
from that festive board where He was the honored one among friends, into the
|
||
garden of Gethsemane WHERE HE WAS ALONE and wrestled with the great problem
|
||
before Him while His friends slept, then are we making a living sacrifice.
|
||
|
||
When we are content to follow "in His steps" to that point of
|
||
self-sacrifice where we can say from the bottom of our hearts, "THY WILL,
|
||
NOT MINE," then we have surely THE LIGHT WITHIN, and there will never hence-
|
||
forth be for us that which we feel as darkness. WE SHALL WALK IN THE LIGHT.
|
||
|
||
This is our glorious privilege, and the meditation upon the words of the
|
||
apostle, "God is Light," will help us to realize this ideal provided we add
|
||
to our faith, WORKS, and say by our deeds as did the Christ of da Vinci,
|
||
"THIS IS MY BODY AND THIS IS MY BLOOD," a living sacrifice upon the altar of
|
||
humanity.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 101] MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIII
|
||
|
||
MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK
|
||
|
||
|
||
FROM TIME to time as occasion requires we warn students of the
|
||
Rosicrucian Fellowship in our private individual letters not to attend
|
||
spirit seances, hypnotic demonstrations, or places where incense is burned
|
||
by dabblers in occultism. Black Magic is practiced by both consciously and
|
||
unconsciously to an extent that is almost unbelievable. "Malicious animal
|
||
magnetism," which is only another name for the Black Force, is responsible
|
||
for more failures in business, loss of health, and unhappiness in homes than
|
||
most people are aware of. Even the perpetrators of such outrages are, as
|
||
said, often unconscious of what harm they have done. Therefore it seems ex-
|
||
pedient to devote a chapter to an explanation of some of the laws of magic,
|
||
which are the same for the white as for the black. There is only one force,
|
||
but it may be used for good or evil; and according to the motive behind it
|
||
and the use that is made of it, it becomes either black or white.
|
||
|
||
It is a scientific axiom that "EX NIHIL, NIHIL FIT" (out of nothing noth-
|
||
ing comes). There must be a seed before there can be a flower, but where
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 102] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the first seed came from is something which science has failed to explain.
|
||
The occultist knows that all things have come from ARCHE, the infinite es-
|
||
sence of chaos, used by God, the Grand Architect, for the building of our
|
||
universe; and , given the nucleus of anything, the accomplished magician can
|
||
draw upon the same essence for a further supply. Christ, for instance, had
|
||
some loaves and some fishes; by means of that nucleus He drew upon the pri-
|
||
mordial essence of chaos for the rest needed in performing the miracle of
|
||
feeding a multitude. A human magician whose power is not so high can more
|
||
easily draw upon things which have already materialized out of chaos. He
|
||
may take flowers or fruit belonging to some one else, miles or hundreds of
|
||
miles away, disintegrate them into their atomic constituents, transport them
|
||
through the air, and cause them to assume their regular physical shape in
|
||
the the room where he is entertaining friends in order to amaze them. Such
|
||
magic is GREY at best, even if he sends sufficient of his coin to pay for
|
||
what he has taken away; if he does not, it is Black Magic to thus rob an-
|
||
other of his goods. Magic to be white must always be used unselfishly, and
|
||
in addition, for a noble purpose--to save a fellow being suffering. The
|
||
Christ, when He fed the multitude from chaos, gave as His reason that they
|
||
had been with Him for several days and if they had to journey back to their
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 103] MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK
|
||
|
||
homes without physical food they would faint by the wayside and suffer pri-
|
||
vation.
|
||
|
||
God is the Grand Architect of the Universe and the Initiates of the White
|
||
Schools are also arche-tektons, builders from the primordial essence in
|
||
their beneficent work for humanity. These Invisible Helpers require a
|
||
nucleus from the patient's vital body, which is, as students of the
|
||
Rosicrucian Fellowship know, given to them in the effluvia from the hand,
|
||
which impregnates the paper when the patient makes application for help and
|
||
healing. With this nucleus of the patient's vital body they are able to draw
|
||
upon virgin matter for whatever they need to restore health by building up
|
||
and strengthening the organism.
|
||
|
||
The Black Magicians are despoilers, actuated by hatred and malice. They
|
||
also need a nucleus for their nefarious operations, and this they obtain
|
||
most easily from the vital body as spiritualistic or hypnotic seances, where
|
||
the sitters relax, put themselves into a negative frame of mind, drop their
|
||
jaws, and sink their individualities by other distinctly mediumistic prac-
|
||
tices. Even people who do not frequent such places are not immune, for
|
||
there are certain products of the vital body which are ignorantly scattered
|
||
by all and which may be used effectively by the Black Magicians. Chief in
|
||
this category are the hair and fingernails. The Negroes in their voodoo
|
||
magic use the placenta for similar evil purposes. One particularly evil
|
||
man, whose practices were exposed a decade ago, obtained from boys the vital
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 104] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
fluid which he used for his demoniac acts. Even so innocent a thing as a
|
||
glass of water placed in close proximity to certain parts of the body of the
|
||
prospective victim, while the Black Magician converses with him can be made
|
||
to absorb a part of the victim's vital body. This will give the Black Magi-
|
||
cian the requisite nucleus, or it may be obtained from a piece of the
|
||
person's clothing. The same invisible emanation contained in the garment,
|
||
which guides the bloodhound upon the track of a certain person, will also
|
||
guide the Magician, white or black, to the abode of that person and furnish
|
||
the Magician with a key to the person's system whereby the former by help or
|
||
hurt according to his inclination.
|
||
|
||
But there are methods of protecting oneself from inimical influences,
|
||
which we shall mention in the latter part of this chapter. We have debated
|
||
much whether it were wise or not to call to call the attention of students
|
||
to these facts, and have come to the conclusion that it does not help anyone
|
||
to imitate the ostrich which sticks its head into a hole in the sand at the
|
||
approach of danger. It is better to be enlightened concerning things that
|
||
threaten so that we may take whatever precautions are necessary to meet the
|
||
emergency. The battle between the good and the evil forces is being waged
|
||
with an intensity that no one not engaged in the actual combat can compre-
|
||
hend. The Elder Brothers of the Rosicrucians and kindred orders which, we
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 105] MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK
|
||
|
||
may say, in their totality represent the Holy Grail, live on the love and
|
||
essence of the unselfish service which they gather and garner as the bees
|
||
gather honey, from all who are striving to live the life. This they add to
|
||
the lustre of the Holy Grail, which in turn grows more lustrous and radiates
|
||
a stronger influence upon all who are spiritually inclined, imbuing them
|
||
with greater ardor, zeal and zest in the good work and in fighting the good
|
||
fight. Similarly the evil forces of the Black Grail thrive on hate, treach-
|
||
ery, cruelty, and every demoniac deed on the calendar of crime. Both the
|
||
Black and White Grail forces require a pabulum, the one of good and the
|
||
other of evil, for the continuance of their existence and for the power to
|
||
fight. Unless they get it, they starve and grow weaker. Hence the relent-
|
||
less struggle that is going on between them.
|
||
|
||
Every midnight the Elder Brothers at their service open their breasts to
|
||
attract the darts of hate, envy, malice, and every evil that has been
|
||
launched during the past twenty-four hours. First, in order that they may
|
||
deprive the Black Grail forces of their food; and secondly, that they may
|
||
transmute the evil to good. Then, as the plants gather the inert carbon di-
|
||
oxide exhaled by mankind and build their bodies therefrom, so the Brothers
|
||
of the Holy Grail transmute the evil within the temple; and as the plants
|
||
send out the renovated oxygen so necessary to human life, so the Elder
|
||
Brothers return to mankind the transmuted essence of evil as qualms of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 106] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
conscience along with the good in order that the world may grow better day
|
||
by day.
|
||
|
||
The Black Brothers, instead of transmuting the evil, infuse a greater dy-
|
||
namic energy into it and speed it on its mission in vain endeavors to con-
|
||
quer the powers of good. They use for their purposes elementals and other
|
||
discarnate entities which, being themselves of a low order, are available
|
||
for such vile practices as required. In the ages when men burned animal oil
|
||
or candles made from tallow of animals, elementals swarmed around them as
|
||
devils or demons, seeking to obsess whoever would offer an occasion. Even
|
||
wax tapers offer food for these entities, but the modern paraffin candles,
|
||
are uncongenial to them. They still flock around our saloons, slaughter
|
||
houses, and similar places where there are passionate animals, and
|
||
animal-like men. They also delight in places where incense is burned, for
|
||
that offers them an avenue of access, and when the sitters at seances inhale
|
||
the odor of the incense they inhale elemental spirits with it, which affect
|
||
them according to their characters.
|
||
|
||
This is where the protection we spoke about before may be used. When we
|
||
live lives of purity, when our days are filled with service to God and to
|
||
our fellow men, and with thoughts and actions of the highest nobility, then
|
||
we create for ourselves the GOLDEN WEDDING GARMENT, which is a radiant force
|
||
for good. No evil is able to penetrate this armor for the evil then acts as
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 107] MAGIC, WHITE AND BLACK
|
||
|
||
a boomerang and recoils on the one who sent it, bringing to him the evil he
|
||
wished us.
|
||
|
||
But alas, none of us are altogether good. We know only too well the war
|
||
between the flesh and the spirit. We cannot hide from ourselves the fact
|
||
that like Paul, "the good that we would do, we do not, and the evil that we
|
||
would shun, that we do." Far too often our good resolutions come to naught
|
||
and we do wrong because it is easier. Therefore we all have the nucleus of
|
||
evil within ourselves, which affords the open sesame for the evil forces to
|
||
work upon. For that reason it is best for us not unnecessarily to expose
|
||
ourselves at places where seanes are held with spirits invisible to us, no
|
||
matter how fine their teachings may sound to the unsophisticated. Neither
|
||
should we take part even as spectators at hypnotic demonstrations, for there
|
||
also a negative attitude lays one liable to the danger of obsession. We
|
||
should at all times follow the advice of Paul and put on the whole armor of
|
||
God. We should be positive in our fight for the good against the evil and
|
||
never let an occasion slip to aid the Elder Brothers by word or deed in the
|
||
Great War for spiritual supremacy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 108] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIV
|
||
|
||
|
||
OUR INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT
|
||
|
||
|
||
IT IS WELL known to students of the Rosicrucian Philosophy that each spe-
|
||
cies of animals is dominated by a group spirit, which is their guardian and
|
||
looks after these, its wards, with a view to bringing them along the path of
|
||
evolution that is best suited to their development; it does not matter what
|
||
the geographical position of these animals is; the lion in the jungles of
|
||
Africa is dominated by the same group spirit as is the lion in the cage of a
|
||
menagerie in our northern countries. Therefore these animals are alike in
|
||
all their principal characteristics; they have the same likes and dislikes
|
||
with respect to diet, and they act in an almost identical manner under
|
||
similar circumstances. If one wants to study the tribes of lions or the
|
||
tribe of tigers, all that is necessary is to study one individual, for it
|
||
has neither choice nor prerogative, but acts entirely according to the dic-
|
||
tates of the group spirit. The mineral cannot choose whether it will crys-
|
||
tallize or not; the rose is bound to bloom; the lion is compelled to prey;
|
||
and in each case the activity is dictated entirely by the group spirit.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 109] OUR INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT
|
||
|
||
But man is different; when we want to study him we find that each indi-
|
||
vidual is as a species by himself. What one does under any given circum-
|
||
stances is no indication of what another may do; "one man's meat is another
|
||
man's poison"; each has different likes and dislikes. This is because man
|
||
as we see him in the physical world is the expression of an individual
|
||
indwelling spirit, seemingly having choice and prerogative.
|
||
|
||
But as a matter of fact man is not quite as free as he seems; all stu-
|
||
dents of human nature have observed that on certain occasions a large number
|
||
of people will act as though dominated by one spirit. It is also easy to
|
||
see without recourse to occultism that the different nations have certain
|
||
physical characteristics. We all know the German, French, English, Italian,
|
||
and Spanish types. Each of these nations has characteristics which differ
|
||
from those of the other nations, thus indicating that there must be a RACE
|
||
SPIRIT at the root of these peculiarities. The occultist who is gifted with
|
||
spiritual sight knows that such is the case, and that each nation has a dif-
|
||
ferent race spirit which broods as a cloud over the whole country. In it
|
||
the people live and move and having their being; it is their guardian and is
|
||
constantly working for their development, building up their civilization and
|
||
fostering ideals of the highest nature compatible with their capacity for
|
||
progress.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 110] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
In the Bible we read the JEHOVAH, ELOHIM, who was the race spirit of the
|
||
Jews, went before them in a pillar and a cloud, and in the Book of Daniel we
|
||
gain considerable insight into the workings of these race spirits. The im-
|
||
age seen by Nebuchadnezzar with its head of gold and feet of clay showed
|
||
plainly how a civilization built up in the beginning with golden ideals de-
|
||
generated more and more until in the latter part of its existence the feet
|
||
were of unstable, crumbling clay, and the image was doomed to topple. Thus
|
||
all civilizations when started by the different race spirits have great and
|
||
golden ideals, but humanity by reason of having some free will and choice
|
||
does not follow implicitly the dictates of the race spirits as the animals
|
||
follow the commands of the group spirits. Hence in the course of time a na-
|
||
tion ceases to rise, and as there can be no standing still in the cosmos, it
|
||
begins to degenerate until finally the feet are of clay and it is necessary
|
||
to strike a blow to shatter it, THAT ANOTHER CIVILIZATION MAY BE BUILT UP ON
|
||
ITS RUINS.
|
||
|
||
But empires do not fall without a strong physical blow, and therefore an
|
||
instrument of the race spirit of a nation is always raised up at the time
|
||
when that nation is doomed to fall. In the tenth and eleventh chapters of
|
||
Daniel we are given an insight into the workings of the invisible government
|
||
of the race spirits, the powers behind the throne. Daniel is much disturbed
|
||
in spirit; he fasts, for fully THREE WEEKS, praying for light, and at the
|
||
end of that time an arch-angel, a race spirit, appears before him and
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 111] OUR INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT
|
||
|
||
addresses him: "Fear not, Daniel, for from the first day that thou didst set
|
||
thine heart to understand, and to chasten thyself before thy God, thy words
|
||
were heard, and I am come for thy words. But the prince of the kingdom of
|
||
Persia withstood me ONE AND TWENTY DAYS, but lo, Michael, one of the chief
|
||
princes, came to help me; and I remained there with the king of Persia."
|
||
After he explains to Daniel what is to happen, he says: "Knowest thou where-
|
||
fore I came unto thee? AND NOW WILL I RETURN TO FIGHT WITH THE PRINCE OF
|
||
PERSIA: AND WHEN I AM GONE FORTH, LO, THE PRINCE OF GRECIA SHALL COME, and
|
||
there is none that holdeth with me in these things, but Michael, your
|
||
prince." The archangel also says: "In the first year of Darius the Mede,
|
||
even I stood to confirm and to strengthen him."
|
||
|
||
So when the handwriting is on the wall, some one is raised up to adminis-
|
||
ter the blow; it may be a Cyrus, a Darius, an Alexander, a Caesar, a Napo-
|
||
leon, or a kaiser. Such a one may think himself a prime mover, a free indi-
|
||
vidual acting by his own choice and prerogative, but as a matter of fact he
|
||
is only the instrument of the invisible government of the world, the power
|
||
behind thrones, the race spirits, who see the necessity of breaking up
|
||
civilizations that have outlived their usefulness, so that humanity may get
|
||
a new start and evolve under a new and a higher ideal than that which
|
||
ensouled it before.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 112] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Christ himself when upon earth, said: "I came not to bring peace, but a
|
||
sword," for it was evident to Him that as long as humanity was divided into
|
||
races and nations there could be no "peace on earth and good will among
|
||
men." Only when the nations have become united in a universal brotherhood
|
||
is peace possible. The barriers of nationalism must be done away with, and
|
||
to this end the United States of America has been made a melting pot where
|
||
all that is best in the old nations is being brought together and amalgam-
|
||
ated, so that A NEW RACE WITH HIGHER IDEALS AND FEELINGS OF UNIVERSAL BROTH-
|
||
ERHOOD MAY BE BORN FOR THE AQUARIAN AGE. In the meantime the barriers of
|
||
nationalism have been partially broken down in Europe by the terrible con-
|
||
flict just past. This brings nearer the day of universal amity and the re-
|
||
alization of the Brotherhood of Man.
|
||
|
||
There is also another object to be gained. Of all the terrors to which
|
||
mankind is subjected, there is none so great as DEATH, which separates us
|
||
from those we love, because we are unable to see them after they have
|
||
stepped out of their bodies. But just as surely as the day follows the
|
||
night, so will every teardrop wear away some of the scale that now blinds
|
||
the eyes of man to the unseen land of the living dead. We have said repeat-
|
||
edly and we now reaffirm that one of the greatest blessings which will come
|
||
from the war will be the spiritual sight which a great number of people will
|
||
evolve. The intense sorrow of millions of people, the longing to see again
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 113] OUR INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT
|
||
|
||
the dear ones who have so suddenly and ruthlessly been torn from us, are a
|
||
force of incalculable strength and power. Likewise those who have been
|
||
snatched by death in the prime of life and who are now in the invisible
|
||
world are equally intense in their desires to reunite with those near and
|
||
dear to them, so that they may speak the word of comfort and assure them of
|
||
their well being. Thus it may be said that two great armies comprising mil-
|
||
lions upon millions are tunneling with frantic energy and intensity of pur-
|
||
pose through the wall that separates the invisible from the visible. Day by
|
||
day this wall or veil is growing thinner, and sooner or later the living and
|
||
the living dead will meet in the middle of the tunnel. Before we realize
|
||
it, communication will have been established, and we shall find it a common
|
||
experience that when our loved ones step out of their worn and sick bodies,
|
||
we shall feel neither sorrow nor loss because we shall be able to see them
|
||
in their ethereal bodies, moving among us as they used to do. So out of the
|
||
great conflict we shall come as victors over death and be able to say: "O
|
||
death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory?"
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 114] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XV
|
||
|
||
PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FOR PRACTICAL PEOPLE
|
||
|
||
|
||
"IF I WERE to do business on the principles laid down in the Sermon on
|
||
the Mount I would be down and out in less than a year," said a critic re-
|
||
cently. "Why, the Bible is utterly impracticable under our present economic
|
||
conditions; it is impossible to live according to it."
|
||
|
||
If that is true there is a good reason for the unbelief of the world, but
|
||
in a court the accused is always allowed a fair trial, and let us examine
|
||
the Bible thoroughly before we judge. What are the specific charges? "Why,
|
||
they are countless," answered the critic, "but to mention only a few, let us
|
||
take such passages as, 'Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the
|
||
Kingdom of Heaven;' 'Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth;'
|
||
'Take no thought for the morrow, what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink.'
|
||
Such ideas point the way to the poorhouse."
|
||
|
||
"Very well," says the apologist, "let us take the last charge first.
|
||
King James' version says: 'No man can serve two masters. Ye cannot serve
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 115] PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FOR PRACTICAL PEOPLE
|
||
|
||
God and mammon, therefore I say unto you, take no thought for your life,
|
||
what ye shall eat or what ye shall drink, nor yet for your body what ye
|
||
shall put on. Is not the life more than food and the body than raiment?
|
||
Behold the fowls of the air: they sow not, neither do they reap nor gather
|
||
into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better
|
||
than they? Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stat-
|
||
ure? And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the
|
||
field, how they grow: they toil not, neither do they spin. And yet I say
|
||
unto you that Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
|
||
Wherefore, if God so clothe the grasses of the field, which today is and to-
|
||
morrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ye of
|
||
little faith? Therefore take no thought saying, What shall we eat? or, What
|
||
shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed? for after all these
|
||
things do the Gentiles seek; your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need
|
||
of all these things. But seek ye first the Kingdom of God and His righ-
|
||
teousness and all these things shall be added unto you.'"
|
||
|
||
If this is intended to mean that we should wastefully squander all we
|
||
have in prodigal or riotous living, then it is of course not only impracti-
|
||
cal but demoralizing. Such an interpretation is, however, out of keeping
|
||
with the tenor and teaching of the whole Book, and it does not say so. The
|
||
Greek word MERIMNON means being overly careful or anxious, and if we read
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 116] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the passage with this alteration we shall find that it teaches a different
|
||
lesson which is entirely practical. Mammon is the Syriac word for riches,
|
||
desired by foolish people. In the preceding paragraph Christ exhorted them
|
||
not to become servants or slaves to riches, which they must leave behind
|
||
when the silver cord is broken and the spirit returns to God, but seek
|
||
rather to live lives of love and service and lay up treasures of good deeds,
|
||
which they might take with them into the Kingdom of Heaven. In the mean-
|
||
time, He exhorted, be not overly anxious regarding what you shall eat and
|
||
drink and clothe yourself with. Why worry? You cannot add a hairbreadth to
|
||
your height or a hair to your head by worrying. Worry is the most wasteful
|
||
and depleting of all our emotions, and it does no good whatever. Your heav-
|
||
enly Father knows you need material things, therefore seek first His kingdom
|
||
and righteousness and all else needed will be added. On at least two occa-
|
||
sions when multitudes came to Christ in places far from their homes and dis-
|
||
tant from towns where refreshment was obtainable, He demonstrated this; He
|
||
gave them first the spiritual food they sought and then ministered to their
|
||
bodily needs direct from a spiritual source of supply.
|
||
|
||
Does it work out in these modern days? Surely there have been so many
|
||
demonstrations of this that it is not at all necessary to recount any spe-
|
||
cial one. When we work and pray, pray and work, and make our lives a living
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 117] PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FOR PRACTICAL PEOPLE
|
||
|
||
prayer for opportunities to serve others, then all earthly things will come
|
||
of their own accord as we need them, and they will keep coming in larger
|
||
measure according to the degree to which they are used in the service of
|
||
God. If we regard ourselves only as stewards and custodians of whatever
|
||
earthly goods we possess, then we are really "POOR IN SPIRIT" so far as the
|
||
evanescent earthly treasures are concerned, but rich in the more lasting
|
||
treasures of the Kingdom of Heaven; and if we are not out and out material-
|
||
ists, surely this is a practical attitude.
|
||
|
||
It is not so long ago that "CAVEAT EMPTOR," "Let the buyer beware," was
|
||
the slogan of the merchants who sought after earthly treasures and regarded
|
||
the buyer as their legitimate prey. When they had sold their wares and re-
|
||
ceived the money, it did not matter to them whether the buyer was satisfied
|
||
or not. They even prided themselves on selling an inferior article which
|
||
would soon wear out, as evident in the short-sighted motto, "The weakness of
|
||
the goods is the strength of the trade." But gradually even people who
|
||
would scorn the idea of introducing religion into their business are dis-
|
||
carding this CAVEAT EMPTOR as a motto, and are unconsciously adopting the
|
||
precept of Christ, "HE THAT WOULD BE THE GREATEST AMONG YOU, LET HIM BE THE
|
||
SERVANT OF ALL." Everywhere the best business men are insistent in their
|
||
claim to patronage on the ground of the service they give to the buyer,
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 118] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
because it is a policy that pays, and may therefore be classed as another of
|
||
the practical precepts of the Bible.
|
||
|
||
But it sometimes happens that in spite of their desire to serve their
|
||
customers, something goes wrong and an angry, dissatisfied customer comes
|
||
blustering in, decrying their goods. Under the old shortsighted regime of
|
||
CAVEAT EMPTOR the merchant would have merely laughed or thrown the buyer out
|
||
of the door. Not so the modern merchant, who takes his Bible into business.
|
||
He remembers the wisdom of Solomon that "a soft answer turneth away wrath,"
|
||
and the assertion of Christ that "THE MEEK SHALL INHERIT THE EARTH," so he
|
||
apologizes for the fault in the goods, offers restitution, and sends the
|
||
erstwhile dissatisfied customer away smiling and eager to sing the praises
|
||
of the concern that treats him no nicely. Thus by obeying the practical
|
||
precepts of the Bible, keeping his temper in meekness, the business man
|
||
gains additional customers who come to him in full faith of fair treatment,
|
||
and the added profit in sales made to them soon overbalances the loss on
|
||
goods which may have caused the dissatisfaction of other customers.
|
||
|
||
It pays dividends in dollars and cents to keep one's temper and be meek;
|
||
it pays greater dividends from the moral and spiritual standpoints. What
|
||
better business motto can be found than in Ecclesiastes: "Wisdom is better
|
||
than weapons of war. Be not rash in thy mouth, be not hasty in thy speech
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 119] PRACTICAL PRECEPTS FOR PRACTICAL PEOPLE
|
||
|
||
to be angry, for anger reseth in the bosom of fools." Tact and diplomacy
|
||
are always better than force; as the Good Book says: "If the iron be blunt
|
||
we must use more strength, but wisdom is profitable to direct." The line of
|
||
least resistance, so long as it is clean and honorable, is always best.
|
||
Therefore, "LOVE YOUR ENEMIES, DO GOOD TO THEM THAT DESPITEFULLY USE YOU."
|
||
It is good practical business policy to try to reconcile those who do us
|
||
harm lest they do more; and it is better for us to get over our ill feeling
|
||
than to nurse it, for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap, and
|
||
if we sow spite and meanness, we breed and beget in others the same feel-
|
||
ings. Furthermore, all these things will apply in private life and in so-
|
||
cial intercourse just as in ordinary business. How many quarrels could be
|
||
avoided if we cultivated the virtue of meekness in our homes; how much plea-
|
||
sure would be gained; how much happiness would come into our lives if in so-
|
||
cial and business relations we learned to DO UNTO OTHERS AS WE WOULD THAT
|
||
THEY SHOULD DO UNTO US!
|
||
|
||
There is no need for the great mental strain that so many of us are work-
|
||
ing under concerning what we shall eat and what we shall drink. Our Father
|
||
in Heaven does own the earth and the fullness thereof; the cattle on a thou-
|
||
sand hills are His. If we learn truly to cast our cares upon Him, there is
|
||
no doubt that the way out of our difficulties will be provided.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 120] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
It is a fact, acknowledged by all authorities who have investigated the
|
||
subject, that comparatively few people die from lack of necessities of life,
|
||
but a great many die because of overindulgence of the appetites. It is the
|
||
practical experience of the writer and numerous others that if we do our
|
||
work day by day as it appears before us, faithfully and to the best of our
|
||
ability, the wherewithal for the morrow will always be provided. If we go
|
||
according to the instruction of the Bible, doing all "as unto the Lord," it
|
||
does not matter what line of honest work we follow; we are then at the same
|
||
time seeking the Kingdom of God. But if we are only time servers, working
|
||
for fear or favor, we cannot expect to succeed in the long run; health,
|
||
wealth, and happiness may attend us for a little while, but outside the
|
||
solid foundation of the Bible there can be no lasting joy in life and no
|
||
real prosperity in business.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 121] SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVI
|
||
|
||
|
||
SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
SINCERE STUDENTS of the Science of the Soul are naturally anxious to grow
|
||
in grace that they may serve so much better in the Great Work of Human
|
||
Upliftment. Being humble and modest they are only too painfully aware of
|
||
their shortcomings, and frequently while casting about for means to fa-
|
||
cilitate progress they ask themselves, "WHAT HINDERS?" Some, particularly
|
||
in bygone ages when life was lived less intensely than now, realized that
|
||
the everyday life among ordinary humanity had many drawbacks. To overcome
|
||
these and further their soul growth they withdrew from the community to a
|
||
monastery or to the mountains where they could give themselves over to the
|
||
spiritual life undisturbed.
|
||
|
||
We know, however, that that is not the way. It is too well established
|
||
in the minds of most of our students that if we run away from an experience
|
||
today, it will confront us again tomorrow, and that the victor's palm is
|
||
earned by overcoming the world, not by running away from it. The environ-
|
||
ment in which we have been placed by the Recording Angels was our own choice
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 122] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
when we were at the turning point of our life cycle in the Third Heaven, we
|
||
then being pure spirit unblinded by the matter which now veils our vision.
|
||
Hence it is undoubtedly the one that holds lessons needed by us, and we
|
||
should make a serious mistake if we tried to escape from it altogether.
|
||
|
||
But we have received a mind for a definite purpose--to reason about
|
||
things and conditions so that we may learn to discriminate between essen-
|
||
tials and non-essentials, between that which is designed to hinder for the
|
||
purpose of teaching us a virtue by overcoming it, and that which is an out
|
||
and out hindrance, which jars our sensibilities and wrecks our nerves with-
|
||
out any compensating spiritual gain. It will be of the greatest benefit if
|
||
we can learn to differentiate for the conservation of our strength, accept-
|
||
ing only that which we must endure for the sake of our spiritual well-being.
|
||
We shall then save much energy and having much more zest in profitable di-
|
||
rections than now. The details of that problem are different in every life;
|
||
however, there are certain general principles which it will benefit us all
|
||
to understand and apply to our lives, and among them is the effect of si-
|
||
lence and sound on soul growth.
|
||
|
||
At first blush it may surprise us when the statement is made that sound
|
||
and silence are very important factors in soul growth, but when we examine
|
||
the matter we shall soon see that it is not a far-fetched notion. Consider
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 123] SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
first the graphic expression, "War is hell," and then call up in imagination
|
||
a war scene. The sight is appalling, even more so to those who see it with
|
||
the undimmed spiritual vision than to those who are limited to physical
|
||
sight, for the latter can at least shut their eyes to it if they want to,
|
||
but the whole horror lies heavily upon the heart of the Invisible Helper who
|
||
not only hears and sees but FEELS in his own being the anguish and pain of
|
||
all the surrounding suffering as Parsifal felt in his heart the wound of
|
||
Amfortas, the stricken Grail king; in fact, without that intensely intimate
|
||
feeling of oneness with the suffering there could be no healing or help
|
||
given. But there is one thing which no one can escape, the terrible noise
|
||
of the shells, the deafening roar of the cannon, the vicious spitting of the
|
||
machine guns, the groans of the wounded, and the oaths of a certain class
|
||
among the participants. We shall need no further arguement to agree that it
|
||
is really a "hellish noise" and as subversive of soul growth as possible.
|
||
The battle field is the last place anyone with a sane mind would choose for
|
||
the purpose of soul growth, though it is not to be forgotten that much of
|
||
this has been made by noble deeds of self-sacrifice there; but such results
|
||
have been achieved IN SPITE of the condition and not because of it.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, consider a church filled with the noble strain of a
|
||
Gregorian chant or a Handel oratorio upon which the prayers of the aspiring
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 124] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
soul wing their way to the Author of our Being. That music may surely be
|
||
termed "HEAVENLY" and the church designated as offering an ideal condition
|
||
for soul growth, but if we stayed there permanently to the neglect of our
|
||
duties we should be failures in spite of the ideal condition.
|
||
|
||
There remains, therefore, only one safe method for us, namely, to stay in
|
||
the din of the battle field of the world, endeavoring to wrest from even the
|
||
most unpromising conditions the material of soul growth by unselfish ser-
|
||
vice, and at the same time TO BUILD WITHIN OUR OWN INNER SELVES A SANCTUARY
|
||
filled with that silent music which sounds ever in the serving soul as a
|
||
source of upliftment above all the vicissitudes of earthly existence. Hav-
|
||
ing that "living church" WITHIN, being in fact under that condition "LIVING
|
||
TEMPLES," we may turn at any moment when our attention is not legitimately
|
||
required by temporal affairs to that spiritual house not made with hands and
|
||
lave in its harmony. We may do that many times a day and thus restore con-
|
||
tinually the harmony that has been disturbed by the discords of terrestrial
|
||
intercourse.
|
||
|
||
How then shall we build that temple and fill it with the heavenly music
|
||
we so much desire? What will help and what will hinder? are questions which
|
||
call for a practical solution, and we shall try to make the answer as plain
|
||
and practical as possible, for this is a very vital matter. The LITTLE
|
||
THINGS are particularly important, for the neophyte needs to take even the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 125] SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
slightest things into account. If we light a match in a strong wind it is
|
||
extinguished ere it has gained a fair start, but if the little flame is laid
|
||
on a brush heap and given a chance to grow in comparative calm, a rising
|
||
wind will fan the flame instead of extinguishing it. Adepts of Great Souls
|
||
may remain serene under conditions which would upset the ordinary aspirant,
|
||
hence he should use discrimination and not expose himself unnecessarily to
|
||
conditions subversive of soul growth; what he needs more than anything is
|
||
POISE, and nothing is more inimical to that condition than NOISE.
|
||
|
||
It is undeniable that our communities are "Bedlams," and that we have a
|
||
legitimate right to escape some noises if possible, such as the screeching
|
||
made by street cars rounding a curve. We do not need to live on such a cor-
|
||
ner to the detriment of our nerves or endeavors at concentration, but if we
|
||
have a sick, crying child that requires our attention day and night, it does
|
||
not matter how if affects our nerves, we have no right in the sight of God
|
||
or man to run away or neglect it in order to concentrate. These things are
|
||
perfectly obvious and produce instant assent, but the things that help or
|
||
hinder most are, as said, the things that are so small that they escape our
|
||
attention entirely. When we now start to enumerate them, they may provoke a
|
||
smile of incredulity, but if they are pondered upon and practiced they will
|
||
soon win assent, for judged by the formula that "by their fruits ye shall
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 126] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
know them," they will show results and vindicate our assertion that "Silence
|
||
is one of the greatest helps in soul growth," and should therefore be culti-
|
||
vated by the aspirant in his home, his personal demeanor, his walk, his hab-
|
||
its, and paradoxical as it seems, even his speech.
|
||
|
||
It is a proof of the benefit of religion that it makes people happy, but
|
||
the greatest happiness is usually too deep for outward expression. It fills
|
||
our whole being so full that it is almost awesome, and a boisterous manner
|
||
never goes together with that true happiness for it is the sign of superfi-
|
||
ciality. The loud voice, the coarse laugh, the noisy manner, the hard heels
|
||
that sound like sledge hammers, the slamming of doors, and the rattling of
|
||
dishes are the signatures of the unregenerate, for they love noise, the more
|
||
the merrier, as it stirs their desire bodies. For their purpose church mu-
|
||
sic is anathema; a blaring brass band is preferable to any other form of en-
|
||
tertainment, and the wilder the dance, the better. But it is otherwise, or
|
||
should be, with the aspirant to the higher life.
|
||
|
||
When the infant Jesus was sought by Herod, with murderous intent, his
|
||
only safety lay in flight, and by that expedient were preserved his life and
|
||
power to grow and fulfill his mission. Similarly, when the Christ is born
|
||
within the aspirant he can best preserve this spiritual life by fleeing from
|
||
the environment of the unregenerate where these hindering things are
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 127] SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
practiced, and seek a place among others of kindred ambitions provided he is
|
||
free to do so; but if placed in a position of responsibility to a family; it
|
||
is his duty to strive to alter conditions by precept and example, par-
|
||
ticularly by example, so that in time that refined, subdued atmosphere which
|
||
breathes harmony and strength may reign over the whole house. It is not es-
|
||
sential to the happiness of children that they be allowed to shout at the
|
||
top to their voices or to race pell-mell through the house, slamming doors
|
||
and wrecking furniture in their mad race; it is indeed decidedly detrimen-
|
||
tal, for it teaches them to disregard the feelings of others in
|
||
self-gratification. They will benefit more than mother by being shod with
|
||
rubber heels and taught to reserve their romps for outdoors and to play qui-
|
||
etly in the house, closing doors easily, and speaking in a moderate tone of
|
||
voice such as mother uses.
|
||
|
||
In childhood we begin to wreck the nerves that bother us in later years,
|
||
so if we teach our children the lessons above indicated, we may save them
|
||
much trouble in life as well as further our own soul growth now. It may
|
||
take years to reform a household of these seemingly unimportant faults and
|
||
secure an atmosphere conducive to soul growth, especially if the children
|
||
have grown to adult age and resent reforms of that nature, but it is well
|
||
worth while. We can and MUST at least cultivate the virtue of silence in
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 128] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
ourselves, or our own soul growth will be very small. Perhaps if we look at
|
||
the matter from its occult point of view in connection with that important
|
||
vehicle, THE VITAL BODY, the point of this necessity will be more clear.
|
||
|
||
We know that the vital body is ever storing up power in the physical body
|
||
which is to be used in this "School of Experience," and that during the day
|
||
the desire body is constantly dissipating this energy in actions which con-
|
||
stitute experience that is eventually transmuted to soul growth. So far so
|
||
good, but the desire body has the tendency to run amuck if not held in with
|
||
a tight reign. It revels in UNRESTRAINED motion, whistle, sing, jump,
|
||
dance, and do all the other unnecessary and undignified things which are so
|
||
etrimental to soul growth. While under such a spell of in harmony and dis-
|
||
cord the person is dead to the spiritual opportunities in the physical
|
||
world, and at night when he leaves his body the process of restoration of
|
||
that vehicle consumes so much time that very little, if any, time is left
|
||
for work, even if the person has the inclination to think seriously of doing
|
||
such work.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, we ought by all means to flee from noises which we are not
|
||
obliged to hear, and cultivate personally the quiet yet kindly demeanor, the
|
||
modulated voice, the silent walk, the unobtrusive presence, and all the
|
||
other virtues which make for harmony, for then the restorative process is
|
||
quickly accomplished and we are free the major part of the night to work in
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 129] SOUND, SILENCE, AND SOUL GROWTH
|
||
|
||
the invisible worlds to gain more soul growth. Let us in this attempt at
|
||
improvement remember to be undaunted by occasional failures, remembering
|
||
Paul's admonition to continue in well-doing with patient persistence.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--- END OF FILE ---
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 130] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVII
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE "MYSTERIUM MAGNUM" OF THE ROSE CROSS
|
||
|
||
|
||
Occasionally we get letters from students voicing their regret that they
|
||
are alone in the study of the Rosicrucian Philosophy, that their husbands,
|
||
wives, children or other relatives are unsympathetic or even antagonistic to
|
||
the teachings, despite all efforts of the said student to interest favorably
|
||
these friends and thus obtain companionship in their studies, or at least
|
||
freedom from their bent. This friction causes them a certain amount of un-
|
||
happiness according to their various temperments, and we are asked by these
|
||
students to advise them how to overcome the antagonism and convert their
|
||
relatives. This we have done by personal letters and have been privileged
|
||
to help conditions in not a few homes when our advice has been followed; but
|
||
we know that frequently those who suffer most acutely are silent, and we
|
||
have therefore decided to devote a little time to a discussion of the sub-
|
||
ject.
|
||
|
||
It is truly said, very truly, that "a little knowledge is a dangerous
|
||
thing," and this applies with the same force to the Rosicrucian teachings as
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 131] THE "MYSTERIUM MAGNUM"
|
||
|
||
to any other subject. Therefore, the very first step is to find out IF YOU
|
||
HAVE ENOUGH KNOWLEDGE to be on the safe side. So let me ask the question:
|
||
What is the Rosicrucian teaching which you are so anxious to have others
|
||
share and to which they object? Is it the twin laws of "CAUSATION" and "RE-
|
||
BIRTH?" They are excellent for explaining a great many problems of life,
|
||
and they are a great comfort when the grim reaper appears and robs our home
|
||
of some one near and dear. But then you must remember that there are many
|
||
who do not feel the need of any explanation whatever. They are constitu-
|
||
tionally as unfit to apply it as a deaf mute is to use the telephone. It is
|
||
true that we work to better advantage when conscious of the law and its pur-
|
||
pose, but let us take comfort from the fact that these laws work for good to
|
||
all whether they know it or not, and therefore THIS KNOWLEDGE IS NOT ESSEN-
|
||
TIAL. They will suffer no great loss because they do not embrace this doc-
|
||
trine, and they may escape the danger incident to the possession of "a
|
||
little knowledge."
|
||
|
||
In India where these truths are known and believed by millions, people
|
||
make little effort at material progress because they know that they have
|
||
endless time, and what they do not accomplish in this life may wait till the
|
||
next or a later life. Many Westerners who have embraced the doctrine of re-
|
||
birth have ceased to be useful members of their community by adopting a life
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 132] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
of indolence, thereby bringing reproach on these so-called higher teachings.
|
||
If your friends will have none of this teaching, leave them alone. Making
|
||
converts is by no means the essential point of the Rosicrucian teaching.
|
||
The Guardian of the Gate will not examine them as to knowledge, and he may
|
||
admit some who are entirely ignorant of this matter and shut the door in the
|
||
face of others who have devoted their lives to studying, lecturing on, and
|
||
teaching these laws.
|
||
|
||
Then if the doctrines of "Causation" and "Rebirth" are unessential, what
|
||
about the COMPLEX CONSTITUTION OF MAN? Surely it is essential to know that
|
||
we are not merely this visible body, but have a vital body to charge it with
|
||
energy, a desire body to spend this force, a mind to guide our exertions in
|
||
channels of reason, and that we are virgin spirits enmeshed in a threefold
|
||
veil as egos. Is it not essential to know that the physical body is the ma-
|
||
terial counterpart of the Divine Spirit, that the vital body is a replica of
|
||
the Life Spirit, and that the desire body is the shadow of the Human Spirit,
|
||
the mind forming the link between the threefold spirit and the threefold
|
||
body?
|
||
|
||
No, IT IS NOT ESSENTIAL TO KNOW THESE THINGS. Properly used, this knowl-
|
||
edge is an advantage, but it may also be a very decided disadvantage in the
|
||
case of those who have only "a little knowledge" in that direction. There
|
||
are many such who are always meditating on "the higher self" while entirely
|
||
forgetful of the many "lower selves" groaning in misery at their very doors.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 133] THE "MYSTERIUM MAGNUM"
|
||
|
||
There are many who dream day and night of the time when they will take their
|
||
daily SOUL FLIGHTS as "invisible helpers" and ease the sufferings of the
|
||
sick and sorrowful, yet would not spend a five cent car fare and an hour's
|
||
time to bring a poor, friendless soul in a city hospital a flower and a word
|
||
of cheer. Again I say that the Guardian of the Gate is more likely to admit
|
||
him who did what he could than him who dreamed much and did nothing to help
|
||
his suffering fellow man.
|
||
|
||
If you could get people to study the Rosicrucian teachings about death
|
||
and the life after, you would feel it important that they should also know
|
||
about the silver cord remaining unbroken for a period approximately three
|
||
and one-half days after the spirit has left the body, and that it must be
|
||
left undisturbed while the panorama of its past life is being etched into
|
||
the desire body to serve as arbiter of its life in the invisible world. You
|
||
would like them to know all about the spirit's life in purgatory--how the
|
||
evil acts of its life react upon it as pain to create conscience and keep it
|
||
from repeating in a later life the acts that cause the suffering. You would
|
||
have them know how the good acts of life are transmuted into virtues usable
|
||
in later lives as set forth in our philosophy.
|
||
|
||
You have no doubt been surprised at the assertion that a knowledge of the
|
||
great twin laws in unessential. Probably the next assertion that it is
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 134] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
immaterial whether others learn about the constitution of man as we know it
|
||
may have scandalized you; and you will undoubtedly feel shocked to have it
|
||
stated that the Rosicrucian teachings concerning death and the passing of
|
||
the spirit into the unseen worlds are also comparatively unnecessary to the
|
||
purpose we aim to accomplish. It really does not matter whether your
|
||
relatives understand or believe in these teachings. So far as your own
|
||
passing is concerned, an earnest request that they leave your body quiet and
|
||
undisturbed for the proper period will probably be carried out to the let-
|
||
ter, for people have an almost superstitious regard for such "last
|
||
requests"; and if any of your friends pass over, YOU are there with your
|
||
knowledge and can do the right thing for them. So never mind if they refuse
|
||
to take up that part of the Rosicrucian teaching.
|
||
|
||
But the student may say, "If a knowledge of the before mentioned subjects
|
||
which seems of such practical value is immaterial to advancement, then it
|
||
follows that study of the Periods, Revolutions, World Globes, etc., is en-
|
||
tirely so. That disposes of everything taught in the 'COSMO,' and there is
|
||
nothing left of the Rosicrucian teaching which we have embraced and to which
|
||
we have pinned our faith!
|
||
|
||
IS NOTHING LEFT? Yes, indeed, ALL IS LEFT, for those things mentioned
|
||
are only the husks which you must remove to get at THE MEAT IN THE NUT, the
|
||
kernel of it all. You have read the "COSMO" many times perhaps. Maybe you
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 135] THE "MYSTERIUM MAGNUM"
|
||
|
||
have studied it and feel proud of your knowledge of the world mystery, but
|
||
HAVE YOU EVER READ THE MYSTERY HIDDEN IN EVERY LINE? That is the great and
|
||
essential teaching, the one teaching to which your friends will respond, if
|
||
you can find it and give it to them. The "COSMO" preaches on every page THE
|
||
GOSPEL OF SERVICE.
|
||
|
||
For our sakes Deity manifested the universe. The great creative Hierar-
|
||
chies have all been and some of them still are OUR SERVANTS. The luminous
|
||
star angels, whose fiery bodies we see whirling through space, have worked
|
||
with us for ages, and in due time Christ came to bring us the spiritual im-
|
||
petus needed at that time. It is also significant in the extreme that in
|
||
the parable of the last judgment Christ does not say, "Well done, thou great
|
||
and erudite PHILOSOPHER, who knoweth the Bible, the Kabala, the "COSMO" and
|
||
all the other mysterious literature which reveals the intricate workings of
|
||
nature" but He says, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant: * * * enter
|
||
thou into the joy of thy lord. * * * * For I was an hungered, and you gave
|
||
me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink; * * * ." Not one single word
|
||
about knowledge; THE WHOLE EMPHASIS WAS LAID UPON FAITHFULNESS AND SERVICE.
|
||
|
||
There is a deep occult reason for this: SERVICE BUILDS THE SOUL BODY,
|
||
the glorious wedding garment without which no man can enter into the kingdom
|
||
of the heavens, occultly termed "THE NEW GALILEE," and it does not matter
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 136] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
whether we are aware of what is going on, so long as we accomplish the work.
|
||
Moreover, as the luminous soul body grows in and around a person, this light
|
||
will teach him or her about the Mysteries without the need of books, and one
|
||
who is thus God taught knows more than all the books in the world contain.
|
||
In due time the inner vision will be opened and the way to the Temple shown.
|
||
If you want to teach your friends, no matter how skeptical they may be, they
|
||
will believe you if you preach the gospel of service.
|
||
|
||
But you must PREACH BY PRACTICE. You must become a servant of men your-
|
||
self if you would have them believe in you. If you want them to follow, you
|
||
must lead, or they will have the right to question your sincerity. Remem-
|
||
ber, "ye are a city upon a hill," and when you make professions they have a
|
||
right to judge you by your fruits; therefore SAY LITTLE, SERVE MUCH.
|
||
|
||
There are many who love to discuss the harmless, peaceful life at dinner,
|
||
oblivious of the fact that the red roast on the table and the cigar in the
|
||
mouth dull the effect. There are others who make a god of the stomach and
|
||
would rather study dietetics than the Bible; they are always ready to but-
|
||
tonhole their friends and discourse upon the latest food fad. I knew one
|
||
man who was at the head of an esoteric group. His wife was antagonistic to
|
||
occultism and the meatless diet. He forced her to cook his vegetables at
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 137] THE "MYSTERIUM MAGNUM"
|
||
|
||
home, and told her that if she ever dared to bring meat into HIS kitchen or
|
||
contaminate HIS dishes with it, he would pitch her and the dishes into the
|
||
street, adding that if she must make a pig of herself she could go and get
|
||
flesh food in a restaurant.
|
||
|
||
IS IT TO BE WONDERED AT THAT SHE JUDGED THE RELIGION BY THE MAN AND WOULD
|
||
HAVE NONE OF IT? Surely he was to blame, being "his brother's keeper," and
|
||
though this is an extreme case, it makes the lesson more obvious. It is to
|
||
the everlasting praise of Mahomet that his wife became his first disciple,
|
||
and it speaks volumes for his kindness and consideration in the home. His
|
||
is an example we should all do well to follow if we would win our friends to
|
||
the higher life, for though all religious systems differ outwardly THE KER-
|
||
NEL OF ALL IS LOVE.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 138] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVIII
|
||
|
||
|
||
STUMBLING BLOCKS
|
||
|
||
|
||
Not infrequently the remark is made by people who have no sympathy with
|
||
our aspirations to live the higher life, that it unfits people for the
|
||
world's work. Unfortunately it cannot be denied that there is seeming jus-
|
||
tification for the assertion, though in reality the very first requisite for
|
||
living the higher life involves an obligation to comport oneself irreproach-
|
||
ably in dealing with material matters, for unless we are faithful in the
|
||
little things, how can we expect to be trusted with greater responsi-
|
||
bilities? It has therefore been deemed expedient to devote a lesson to the
|
||
discussion of some of the things which act as stumbling blocks in the life
|
||
of aspirants.
|
||
|
||
In the Bible story where the king sent out his servants with invitations
|
||
to the feast he had prepared, we are told that his invitations were refused
|
||
on various grounds. Each one had material cares, buying, selling, marrying,
|
||
therefore they could not attend to the spiritual things, and such people we
|
||
may say represent the greater number of humanity today, who are too
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 139] STUMBLING BLOCKS
|
||
|
||
engrossed in the cares of the world to devote even a thought to aspiration
|
||
in the higher direction. But there are others who become so enthusiastic
|
||
upon the first taste of the higher teachings that they are ready to give up
|
||
all work in the world, repudiate every obligation, and devote their time to
|
||
what they are pleased to call "helping humanity." They will readily admit
|
||
that it takes time to learn how to be a watchmaker, a shoemaker, an engi-
|
||
neer, or a musician, and they would not for a moment dream of giving up
|
||
their present material business to establish themselves as shoemaker, watch-
|
||
maker, or music teacher just because they felt enthusiastic about or in-
|
||
clined to take up such work. They would know that lacking the proper
|
||
preparation and training they would be doomed to failure, and yet they think
|
||
that just because they have become enthusiastic over the higher world's work
|
||
and devote their time to service similar, even though in a lesser degree, to
|
||
that rendered by the Christ in His ministry.
|
||
|
||
One writes to Headquarters: "I have given up flesh eating, and I long to
|
||
live the ascetic life, far from the world's noise that jars upon me. I want
|
||
to give my life for humanity." Another says: "I want to live the spiritual
|
||
life, but I have a wife who needs my care and support. Do you think I would
|
||
be justified in leaving her to help my fellow men?" Still another says: " I
|
||
am in a business which is unspiritual; every day I must do things which are
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 140] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
against my higher nature, but I have a daughter dependent upon me for an
|
||
education. What shall I do: continue or give up?" There are of course many
|
||
other problems presented to us, but these serve as fair samples, for they
|
||
represent a class which is ready to give up the world at the slightest word
|
||
of encouragement, and rush off to the hills in the expectation of sprouting
|
||
wings immediately. If the people who are in that class have any ties, they
|
||
break them without a scruple or a moment's consideration.
|
||
|
||
Another class still feels some obligation, but could be easily persuaded
|
||
to repudiate it in order that they might live what they call " the spiritual
|
||
life." It cannot be denied that when people get into this state of mind,
|
||
when they lose their ambition to work in the world, when they become shift-
|
||
less and neglectful of their duties, they merit the reproach of the commu-
|
||
nity.
|
||
|
||
But as already said such conduct is based upon a misunderstanding of the
|
||
higher teachings and is not at all sanctioned by the Bible or the Elder
|
||
Brothers.
|
||
|
||
It is a step in the right direction when a person ceases to feed on flesh
|
||
because he feels compassion for the suffering of the animals. There are
|
||
many people who abstain from flesh foods for health's sake, but theirs being
|
||
selfish motive, the sacrifice carries with it no merit. Where the aspirant
|
||
to the higher life is prompted to abstain from flesh food because he
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 141] STUMBLING BLOCKS
|
||
|
||
realizes that the refining influence of a meatless diet upon the body will
|
||
aid him in his quest by making the body more sensitive to spiritual influ-
|
||
ences, there is no real merit either. Truly, the person who abstains from
|
||
flesh foods for the sake of health will be much benefited, and the person
|
||
who abstains to make his body more sensitive will also get his reward in
|
||
that respect, but from the spiritual point of view neither will be very much
|
||
better. On the other hand, whoever abstains from flesh food because he re-
|
||
alizes that God's life is immanent in every animal just as in himself, that
|
||
in the final analysis God feels all suffering felt by the animal, that it is
|
||
a divine law, "Thou shalt not kill," and that he must abstain out of compas-
|
||
sion, this person is not only benefited in health and by making his body
|
||
more sensitive to spiritual impacts, but because of the motive which prompts
|
||
him he reaps a reward in soul growth immeasurably more precious than any
|
||
other consideration. Therefore we would say by all means abstain from flesh
|
||
food, but be sure to do so prompted by the right spiritual motive or it will
|
||
not affect your spiritual interests one iota.
|
||
|
||
When the enthusiast says that he wants to get away from the world and the
|
||
noise that jars upon him to live the ascetic life, it is truly a strange
|
||
idea of service. The reason why we are here in this world is that we may
|
||
gather experience, which is then transmuted into soul growth. If a diamond
|
||
in the rough were laid away in a drawer for years and years, it would be no
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 142] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
different than before, but when it is placed against the gridstone by the
|
||
lapidary the harsh grinding process removes the last atom of the rough coat-
|
||
ing and brings out the beautiful, luminous gem. Every one of us is a
|
||
diamond in the rough, and God, the Great Lapidary, uses the world as a
|
||
grindstone which rubs off the rough and ugly coating, allowing our spiritual
|
||
selves to shine forth and become luminous. The Christ was a living example
|
||
of this. He did not go away from the centers of civilization, but moved
|
||
constantly among the suffering and the poor, teaching, healing, and helping
|
||
until by the glorious service rendered, His body was made luminous on the
|
||
Mount of Transfiguration, and He who had trodden the Way exhorted His fol-
|
||
lowers to be "in the world but not of it." That is the great lesson that
|
||
every aspirant has to learn.
|
||
|
||
It is one thing to go out in the mountains where there is no one to con-
|
||
tradict or to jar upon our sensibilities and keep our poise there; it is an-
|
||
other thing entirely to maintain our spiritual aspirations and keep our bal-
|
||
ance in the world where everything jars upon us; but when we stay on this
|
||
path, we gain a self-control which is unattainable in any other manner.
|
||
|
||
However, though we are careful to prepare our food well and to abstain
|
||
from flesh eating or any other contaminating OUTWARD influence, though we
|
||
want to get away to the mountains to escape the sordid things of city life,
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 143] STUMBLING BLOCKS
|
||
|
||
and we want to rid ourselves of every outward thing that may prove a
|
||
stumbling block to our progress, still what about the things that come from
|
||
WITHIN, the thoughts we have in our minds and our mental food? It will
|
||
avail us not one iota of good if we could feed our bodies upon nectar and
|
||
ambrosia, the ethereal food of the gods, when the mind is a charnel house, a
|
||
habitat of low thoughts, for then we are only as whited sepulchres, beauti-
|
||
ful to behold from without but inwardly full of a nauseating stench; and
|
||
this mental delinquency can be maintained just as easily and perhaps it is
|
||
even more apt to be maintained in the solitude of the mountains or in a
|
||
so-called spiritual retreat than in a city where we are busy with the work
|
||
of our vocation. It is indeed a true saying that "an idle brain is the
|
||
devil's workshop," and the safest way to attain to interior purity and
|
||
cleanliness is to keep the mind busy all the time, guiding our desires,
|
||
feelings, and emotions toward the practical problems of life, and working,
|
||
each one in his own immediate environment, to find the poor and the needy
|
||
that he may give them whatever help their cases require and merit. That
|
||
class which has not ties of its own may profitably make ties of love and
|
||
friendship with those who are loveless and friendless.
|
||
|
||
Or if it is the care of a relative--wife, daughter, husband, or anyone
|
||
else that claims us, let us remember the words of Christ when He said, "Who
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 144] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
are my mother and my brother?" and answered the question by saying, "Those
|
||
who do the will of my Father." This saying has been misconstrued by some to
|
||
mean that Christ repudiated His physical relationships for the spiritual,
|
||
but it is only necessary to remember that in the last moments of His life on
|
||
earth He called to His mother, giving him to her as a son and charging the
|
||
disciple to care for His parent. Love is the unifying force in life, and
|
||
according to the higher teachings we are required to love our kin, but also
|
||
to extend our love natures so that they may also include everyone else. It
|
||
is good that we love our own mother and father, but we should also learn to
|
||
love other people's mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, for universal
|
||
brotherhood can never become a fact so long as our love is confined only to
|
||
the family. It must be made all inclusive.
|
||
|
||
There was one among the disciples of Christ whom He loved especially, and
|
||
following His example we also may bestow a particular affection upon certain
|
||
ones, though we ought to love everyone and do good even to them that de-
|
||
spitefully use us. These are high ideals and difficult of accomplishment at
|
||
our present stage of development, but as the mariner steers his ship by a
|
||
guiding star and reaches his desired haven though never the star itself, so
|
||
also by setting our ideals high we shall live nobler and better lives than
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 145] STUMBLING BLOCKS
|
||
|
||
if we do not aspire, and in time and through many births we shall eventually
|
||
attain, because the inherent divinity in ourselves makes it imperative.
|
||
|
||
Finally then, to sum up, it does not really matter where we are placed in
|
||
life, whether in a high station or a low. Present environment with its op-
|
||
portunities and limitations is such as suits our individual requirements as
|
||
determined by our self-made destinies in previous existences. Therefore it
|
||
holds for us the lesson we must learn in order to progress properly. If we
|
||
have a wife, a daughter, or other family relations to hold us to that envi-
|
||
ronment, they must be considered as part of what we have to reckon with, and
|
||
by doing our duty to them we learn the required lesson. If they are an-
|
||
tagonistic to our belief, if they have no sympathy with our aspirations, if
|
||
we have on their account to stay in a business and do things which we are
|
||
not pleased with, it is because we must learn something from these things,
|
||
and the proper way for the earnest aspirant is to look conditions squarely
|
||
in the face with a view to finding out just what it is that is needed. This
|
||
may not be an easy matter. It may take weeks, months, or years to solve the
|
||
problem, but so long as the aspirant applies himself prayerfully to the
|
||
task, he may be sure that the light will shine some day, and then he will
|
||
see what is required and why these conditions were imposed upon him. Then
|
||
having learned the lesson or found out it purpose, he will if he has the
|
||
right spirit prayerfully bear the burden, for he will know that he is upon
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 146] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the right road and that it is an absolute certainty that as soon as the les-
|
||
son of that environment has been learned a new way will be opened up showing
|
||
him the next step upon the path of progress. Thus the "stumbling blocks"
|
||
will have been turned into "stepping stones," which would never have hap-
|
||
pened if he had run away from them. In this connection we would quote the
|
||
beautiful poem.
|
||
|
||
"Let us not waste our time in longing
|
||
For bright but impossible things.
|
||
Let us not sit supinely waiting
|
||
For the sprouting of angel wings.
|
||
Let us not scorn to be rush-lights,
|
||
Everyone can't be a star,
|
||
But let us fulfill our mission
|
||
By shining just where we are.
|
||
|
||
"There is need of the tiniest candle
|
||
As well as the garish sun;
|
||
And the humblest deed is ennobled
|
||
When it is worthily done.
|
||
|
||
We may never be called on to brighten
|
||
Those darkened regions afar,
|
||
So let us fulfill our mission
|
||
By shining just where we are."
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 147] THE LOCK OF UPLIFTMENT
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIX
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE LOCK OF UPLIFTMENT
|
||
|
||
|
||
HAVE YOU ever seen how ships going up a canal or river are lifted from
|
||
one level to another? It is a very interesting and instructive process.
|
||
First the ship is floated into a small enclosure where the water level is
|
||
the same as that of the lower part of the river where the ship has previ-
|
||
ously been sailing. Then the gates of the enclosure are shut and the ship
|
||
is cut off from the outside world by the high wall of the lock. It cannot
|
||
go back to the river without; even the light is dimmed around it, but ABOVE
|
||
the moving clouds or the brightest sunshine are seen beckoning. The ship
|
||
cannot rise without assistance, and the law of gravity make it impossible
|
||
for the water in that part of the river where the ship has been sailing to
|
||
float it to a higher level, hence no help may be looked for from that
|
||
source.
|
||
|
||
There are also gates in the upper part of the lock which prevent the wa-
|
||
ters on the higher levels from rushing into the lock from above, otherwise
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 148] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the inrushing water would flood the lock in a moment and crush the ship ly-
|
||
ing at the bottom level because acting in conformity with that same law of
|
||
gravitation. It is from ABOVE, nevertheless, that the power must come if
|
||
the ship is ever to be lifted to the higher level of the river, and so to do
|
||
this safely a SMALL STREAM is conducted to the bottom of the lock, which
|
||
lifts the ship VERY SLOWLY AND GRADUALLY BUT SAFELY to the level of the
|
||
river above. When that level has been reached, the upper gates may be
|
||
opened without danger to the ship, and it may sail forth upon the expansive
|
||
bosom of the higher waterway. Then the lock is SLOWLY emptied and the water
|
||
it contained added to the water at the lower level, which is thereby raised
|
||
even if but slightly. The lock is then ready to raise another vessel.
|
||
|
||
This is, as said in the beginning, a very interesting and instructive
|
||
physical operation, showing how human skill and ingenuity overcome great ob-
|
||
stacles by the use of nature's forces. But it is a source of still greater
|
||
enlightenment in a spiritual matter of vital importance to all who aspire
|
||
and endeavor to live the higher life, for it illustrates the only safe
|
||
method whereby man can rise from the temporal to the spiritual world, and it
|
||
confutes those false teachers who for personal gain play upon the too ardent
|
||
desires of the unripe, and who profess ability to unlock the gates of the
|
||
unseen worlds for the consideration of an initiation fee. Our illustration
|
||
shows that this is impossible, because the immutable laws of nature forbid.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 149] THE LOCK OF UPLIFTMENT
|
||
|
||
For the purpose of elucidation we may call our river the river of life,
|
||
and we as individuals are the ships sailing upon t; the lower river is the
|
||
temporal world, and when we have sailed its length and breadth for many
|
||
lives, we inevitably come to the lock of upliftment which is placed at the
|
||
end. We may for a long time cruise about the entrance and look in, impelled
|
||
by an inner urge to enter but drawn by another impulse towards the broad
|
||
river of life without. For a long time this lock of upliftment with its
|
||
high, bare walls looks forbidding and solitary, while the river of life is
|
||
gay with bunting and full of kindred craft gaily cruising about; but when
|
||
the inner urge has become sufficiently intense, it imbues us with a determi-
|
||
nation not to go back to the river of worldly life. But even at that stage
|
||
there are some who falter and fear to shut the gate behind them; they aspire
|
||
to ardently at times to the life on the higher level, but it makes them feel
|
||
less alone to look back upon the river of worldly life, and sometimes they
|
||
stay in this condition for lives, wondering why they do not progress, why
|
||
they experience no spiritual downpouring, why there is no uplift in their
|
||
lives. Our illustration makes the reason very plain; no matter how hard the
|
||
captain might beg, the lock keeper would never think of releasing the stream
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 150] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
of water from above until the gate had been closed behind the ship, for it
|
||
could never lift the ship, for it could never lift the ship an inch under
|
||
such conditions but would flow through the open gates to waste in the lower
|
||
river. Neither will the guardians of the gates of the higher worlds open
|
||
the stream of upliftment for us, no matter how hard we pray, until we have
|
||
shut the door to the world behind us, and shut it very tight with respect to
|
||
the lust of the eyes and the pride of life, the sins that so easily beset us
|
||
and are fostered by us in the careless worldly days. We must shut the door
|
||
on them all before we are really in a condition to receive the stream of
|
||
upliftment, but once we have thus shut the door and irrevocably set our
|
||
faces forward, the downpouring begins, slowly but surely as the stream of
|
||
the lock keeper which lifts the vessel.
|
||
|
||
But having left the temporal world with all its deed behind and having
|
||
set his face towards the spiritual worlds, the yearning of the aspirant be-
|
||
comes more intense. As time passes he feels in increasing measure the void
|
||
on both sides of himself. The temporal world and its deeds have dropped
|
||
from him as a garment; he may be bodily in that world, performing his du-
|
||
ties, but he has lost interest; he is in the world but not of it, and the
|
||
spiritual world where he aspires to citizenship seems equally distant. He
|
||
is all alone and his whole being cries and writhes in pain, longing for
|
||
light.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 151] THE LOCK OF UPLIFTMENT
|
||
|
||
Then comes the turn of the tempter: "I have a school of initiation, and
|
||
am able to advance my pupils quickly for a fee," or words to that effect,
|
||
but usually more subtle; and who shall blame the poor aspirants who fall be-
|
||
fore the wiles of these pretenders? Lucky are they if, as is generally the
|
||
case, they are merely put through a ceremonial and given an empty degree,
|
||
but occasionally they meet one who has really dabbled in magic and is able
|
||
to open the flood gates from the higher level. Then the inrush of spiritual
|
||
power shatters the system of the unfortunate dupe as the waters of the river
|
||
above would wreck a vessel at the bottom of the lock is an ignorant or mali-
|
||
cious person were to open the gates. The vessel must be lifted slowly for
|
||
safety's sake, and so must the aspirant to spiritual upliftment; patience
|
||
and unwavering persistence in well-doing are absolutely indispensable, and
|
||
the door to the pleasures of the world must be kept closed. If that is done
|
||
we shall surely and certainly accomplish the ascent to the heights of the
|
||
unseen world with all the opportunities for further soul growth there found,
|
||
for it is a natural process governed by natural laws, just as is the eleva-
|
||
tion of a ship to the higher levels of a river by a system of locks.
|
||
|
||
But how can I stay in the lock of upliftment and serve my fellow man? If
|
||
soul growth comes only by service, how can I gain by isolation? These are
|
||
questions that may not unnaturally present themselves to students. To
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 152] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
answer them we must again emphasize that no one can lift another who is not
|
||
himself upon a higher level, not so far above as to be unreachable, but suf-
|
||
ficiently close to be within grasp of the reaching hand. There are, alas,
|
||
too many who profess the higher teachings but live lives on the level with
|
||
ordinary men and women of the world or even below that level. Their profes-
|
||
sions make the higher teachings a byword and call down the scorn of scoff-
|
||
ers. But those who live the higher teachings have no need to profess them
|
||
orally; they are isolated and marked in spite of themselves, and though
|
||
handicapped by the misdeeds of the "professors," they do in time win the
|
||
respect and confidence of those about them; eventually they call out in
|
||
their associates the desire of emulation, they convert them in spite of
|
||
themselves, reaping in return for this service a commensurate soul growth.
|
||
|
||
Now is the time of the year (Christmas) when the crest wave of spiritual
|
||
power envelops the world. It culminates at the winter solstice, when the
|
||
Christ is reborn into our planet, and though hampered by the present (from
|
||
the limited viewpoint) deplorable war conditions, His life given for us may
|
||
be most easily drawn upon by the aspirant at this season to further
|
||
spiritual growth; therefore all who are desirous of attaining the higher
|
||
levels would do well to put forth special efforts in that direction during
|
||
the winter season.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 153] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XX
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
|
||
ON THE MORNING of Good Friday, 1857, Richard Wagner, the master artist of
|
||
the nineteenth century, sat on the verandah of a Swiss villa by the Zurich
|
||
Sea. The landscape about him was bathed in the most glorious sunshine;
|
||
peace and good will seemed to vibrate through nature. All creation was
|
||
throbbing with life; the air was laden with the fragrant perfume of budding
|
||
pine forests--a grateful balm to a troubled heart or a restless mind.
|
||
|
||
Then suddenly, as a bolt from an azure sky, there came into Wagner's
|
||
deeply mystic soul a remembrance of the ominous significance of that
|
||
day--the darkest and most sorrowful in the Christian year. It almost over-
|
||
whelmed him with sadness, as he contemplated the contrast. There was such a
|
||
marked incongruity between the smiling scene before him, the plainly observ-
|
||
able activity of nature, struggling to renewed life after winter's long
|
||
sleep, and the death struggle of a tortured Savior upon a cross; between the
|
||
full throated chant of life and love issuing from the thousands of little
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 154] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
feathered choristers in forest, moor and meadow, and the ominous shouts of
|
||
hate issuing from an infuriated mob as they jeered and mocked the noblest
|
||
ideal the world has ever known; between the wonderful creative energy ex-
|
||
erted by nature in spring, and the destructive element in man, which slew
|
||
the noblest character that ever graced our earth.
|
||
|
||
While Wagner meditated thus upon the incongruities of existence, the
|
||
question presented itself: Is there any connection between the death of the
|
||
Savior upon the cross at Easter, and the vital energy which expresses itself
|
||
so prodigally in spring when nature begins the life of a new year?
|
||
|
||
Though Wagner did not consciously perceive and realize the full sig-
|
||
nificance of the connection between the death of the Savior and the rejuve-
|
||
nation of nature, he had, nevertheless, unwittingly stumbled upon the key to
|
||
one of the most sublime mysteries encountered by the human spirit in its
|
||
pilgrimage from clod to God.
|
||
|
||
In the darkest night of the year, when earth sleeps most soundly in
|
||
Boreas' cold embrace, when material activities are at the very lowest ebb, a
|
||
wave of spiritual energy carries upon its crest the divine creative "Word
|
||
from Heaven" to a MYSTIC BIRTH at Christmas; and as a luminous cloud the
|
||
spiritual impulse broods over the world that "knew it not," for it "shines
|
||
in the darkness" of winter when nature is paralyzed and speechless.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 155] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
This divine creative "Word" has a message and a mission. It was born to
|
||
"save the world," and "to give its life for the world." It must of neces-
|
||
sity sacrifice its life in order to accomplish the rejuvenation of nature.
|
||
Gradually it BURIES ITSELF IN THE EARTH and commences to infuse its own vi-
|
||
tal energy into the millions of seeds which lie dormant in the ground. It
|
||
whispers "the word of life" into the ears of beast and bird, until the gos-
|
||
pel or good news has been preached to every creature. The sacrifice is
|
||
fully consummated by the time the sun crosses its Easter (n) node at the
|
||
spring equinox. Then the divine creative Word expires. IT DIES UPON THE
|
||
CROSS AT EASTER in a mystical sense, while uttering a last triumphant cry,
|
||
"It has been accomplished" (consummatum est).
|
||
|
||
But as an echo returns to us many times repeated, so also the celestial
|
||
song of life is re-echoed from the earth. The whole creation takes up the
|
||
anthem. A legion-tongued chorus repeats it over and over. The little seeds
|
||
in the bosom of Mother Earth commence to germinate; they burst and sprout in
|
||
all directions, and soon a wonderful mosaic of life, a velvety green carpet
|
||
embroidered with multicolored flowers, replaces the shroud of immaculate
|
||
wintry white. From the furred and feathered tribes "the word of life"
|
||
re-echoes as a song of love, impelling them to mate. Generation and multi-
|
||
plication are the watchwords everywhere--THE SPIRIT HAS RISEN to more abun-
|
||
dant life.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 156] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Thus, mystically, we may note the annual birth, death, and resurrection
|
||
of the Savior as the ebb and flow of a spiritual impulse which culminates at
|
||
the winter solstice, Christmas, and has egress from the earth shortly after
|
||
Easter when the "word" ASCENDS TO HEAVEN" on Whitsunday. But it will not
|
||
remain there forever. We are taught that "thence it shall return," "at the
|
||
judgement." Thus when the sun descends below the equator through the sign
|
||
of the scales in October, when the fruits of the year are harvested,
|
||
weighed, and assorted according to their kind, the descent of the spirit of
|
||
the new year has its inception. This descent culminates in birth at Christ-
|
||
mas.
|
||
|
||
Man is a miniature of nature. What happens on a large scale in the life
|
||
of a planet like our earth, takes place on a smaller scale in the course of
|
||
human events. A planet is the body of a wonderfully great and exalted Be-
|
||
ing, one of the Seven Spirits before the Throne (of the parent Sun). Man
|
||
isalso a spirit and "made in their likeness." As a planet revolves in its
|
||
cyclic path around the sun whence it emanated, so also the human spirit
|
||
roves in an orbit around its central source--God. Planetary orbits, being
|
||
ellipses, have points of closest approach to and extreme deviation from
|
||
their solar centers. Likewise the orbit of the human spirit is elliptical.
|
||
We are closest to God when our cyclic journey carries us into the celestial
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 157] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
sphere of activity--heaven, and we are farthest removed from Him during
|
||
earth life. These changes are necessary to our soul growth. As the festi-
|
||
vals of the year mark the recurring events of importance in the life of a
|
||
Great Spirit, so our births and deaths are events of periodical recurrence.
|
||
It is as impossible for the human spirit to remain perpetually in heaven or
|
||
upon earth as it is for a planet to stand still in its orbit. The same im-
|
||
mutable law of periodicity which determines the unbroken sequence of the
|
||
seasons, the alternation of day and night, the tidal ebb and flow, governs
|
||
also the progression of the human spirit, both in heaven and upon earth.
|
||
|
||
From realms of celestial light where we live in freedom, untrammeled by
|
||
limitations of time and space, where we vibrate in tune with infinite har-
|
||
mony of the spheres, we descend to birth in the physical world where our
|
||
spiritual sight is obscured by the mortal coil which binds us to this lim-
|
||
ited phase of our existence. We live here awhile; we die and ascend to
|
||
heaven, to be reborn and to die again. Each earth life is a chapter in a
|
||
serial life story, extremely humble in its beginnings, but increasing in in-
|
||
terest and importance as we ascend to higher and higher stations of human
|
||
responsibility. No limit is conceivable, for in essence we are divine and
|
||
must therefore have the infinite possibilities of God dormant within. When
|
||
we have learned all that this world has to teach us, a wider orbit, a larger
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 158] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
sphere of super-human usefulness, will give scope to our greater capa-
|
||
bilities.
|
||
|
||
"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."
|
||
|
||
Thus says Oliver Wendell Holmes, comparing the spiral progression in the
|
||
widening coil of a chambered nautilus to the expansion of consciousness
|
||
which is the result of soul growth in an evolving human being.
|
||
|
||
"But what of Christ?" someone will ask. "Don't you believe in Him? You
|
||
are discoursing upon Easter, the feast which commemorates the cruel death
|
||
and the glorious, triumphant resurrection of the Savior, but you seem to be
|
||
alluding to Him more from an allegorical point of view than as an actual
|
||
fact."
|
||
|
||
Certainly we believe in the Christ; we love Him with our whole heart and
|
||
soul, but we wish to emphasize the teaching that Christ is the first fruits
|
||
of the race. He said that we shall do the things He did, "and greater."
|
||
Thus we are Christs-in-the-making.
|
||
|
||
"Though Christ a thousand times in Bethlehem be born,
|
||
And not within thyself, thy soul will be forlorn.
|
||
The cross on Golgotha thou lookest to in vain,
|
||
Unless within thyself it be set up again."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 159] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
Thus proclaims Angelus Silesius, with true mystic understanding of the
|
||
essentials of attainment.
|
||
|
||
We are too much in the habit of looking to an outside Savior while har-
|
||
boring a devil within; but till Christ be formed IN US, as Paul says, we
|
||
shall seek in vain, for as it is impossible for us to perceive light and
|
||
color, though they be all about us, unless our optic nerve registers their
|
||
vibrations, and as we remain unconscious of sound when the tympanum of our
|
||
ear is insensitive, so also must we remain blind in the presence of Christ
|
||
and deaf to His voice until we arouse our dormant spiritual natures within.
|
||
But once these natures have become awakened, they will reveal the Lord of
|
||
Love as a prime reality; this on the principle that when a tuning fork is
|
||
struck, another of identical pitch will also commence to sing, while tuning
|
||
forks of different pitches will remain mute. Therefore the Christ said that
|
||
His sheep knew the SOUND of His voice and responded, but the voice of the
|
||
stranger they heard not (John 10:5). No matter what our creed, we are all
|
||
brethren of Christ, so let us rejoice, the Lord has risen! Let us seek Him
|
||
and forget our creeds and other lesser differences.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 160] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXI
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
|
||
ONCE MORE we have reached the final act in the cosmic drama involving the
|
||
descent of the solar Christ Ray into the matter of our earth, which is com-
|
||
pleted at the Mystic Birth celebrated at Christmas, and the Mystic Death and
|
||
Liberation, which are celebrated shortly after the vernal equinox when the
|
||
sun of the new year commences its ascent into the higher spheres of the
|
||
northern heavens, having poured out its life to save humanity and give new
|
||
life to everything upon earth. At this time of the year a new life, an aug-
|
||
mented energy, sweeps with an irresistible force through the veins and ar-
|
||
teries of all living beings, inspiring them, instilling new hope, new ambi-
|
||
tion, and new life, impelling them to new activities whereby they learn new
|
||
lessons in the school of experience. Consciously or unconsciously to the
|
||
beneficiaries, this outdwelling energy invigorates everything that has life.
|
||
Even the plant responds by an increased circulation of sap, which results in
|
||
additional growth of the leaves, flowers, and fruits whereby this class of
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 161] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
life is at present expressing itself and evolving to a higher state of con-
|
||
sciousness.
|
||
|
||
But wonderful though these outward physical manifestations are, and glo-
|
||
rious though the transformation may be called which changes the earth from a
|
||
waste of snow and ice into a beautiful, blooming garden, it sinks into sig-
|
||
nificance before the spiritual activities which run side by side therewith.
|
||
The salient features of the cosmic drama are identical in point of time with
|
||
the material effects of the sun in the four cardinal signs, Aries, Cancer,
|
||
Libra and Capricorn, for the most significant events occur at the
|
||
equinoctial and solstitial points.
|
||
|
||
It is really and actually true that "IN God we live and move and have our
|
||
being." Outside Him we could have no existence; we live by and through His
|
||
life; we move and act by and through His strength; it is His power which
|
||
sustains our dwelling place, the forts the universe itself would disinte-
|
||
grate. Now we are taught that man was made in the likeness of God, and we
|
||
are given to understand that according to the law of analogy we are pos-
|
||
sessed of certain powers latent within us which are similar to those we see
|
||
so potently expressed in the labor of Deity in the universe. This gives us
|
||
a particular interest in the annual cosmic drama involving the death and
|
||
resurrection of the sun. The life of the GOD MAN, CHRIST JESUS was moulded
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 162] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
in conformity with the solar story, and it foreshadows in a similar manner
|
||
all that may happen to the MAN GOD of whom this Christ Jesus prophesied when
|
||
He said: The works that I do shall ye do also; and greater works shall ye
|
||
do; whither I go thou canst not follow me now, but thou shalt follow me af-
|
||
terwards.
|
||
|
||
Nature is the symbolic expression of God. She does nothing in vain or
|
||
gratuitously, but there is a purpose behind every thing and every act.
|
||
Therefore we should be alert and regard carefully the signs in the heavens
|
||
for they have a deep and important meaning concerning our own lives. The
|
||
intelligent understanding of their purpose enables us to work so much more
|
||
efficiently with God in His wonderful efforts for the emancipation of our
|
||
pace from bondage to the laws of nature, and for its liberation into a full
|
||
measure of the stature of the sons of God--crowned with glory, honor, and
|
||
immortality, and free from the power of sin, sickness, and suffering which
|
||
now curtail our lives by reason of our ignorance and nonconformity to the
|
||
laws of God. The divine purpose demands this emancipation, but whether it
|
||
is to be accomplished by the long tedious process of evolution or by the im-
|
||
mensely quicker pathway of Initiation depends upon whether or not we are
|
||
willing to lend our cooperation. The majority of mankind go through life
|
||
with unseeing eyes and with ears that do not hear. They are engrossed in
|
||
their material affairs, buying and selling, working and playing, without an
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 163] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
adequate understanding or appreciation of the purpose of existence, and were
|
||
it unfolded to them it is scarcely to be expected that they would conform
|
||
and co-operate because of the sacrifice it involves.
|
||
|
||
It is no wonder that the Christ appeals particularly to the poor and that
|
||
He emphasizes the difficulty of the rich entering the kingdom of heaven, for
|
||
even to this day when humanity has advanced in the school of evolution for
|
||
two millenia since His day, we find that the great majority still value
|
||
their houses and lands, their pretty hats and gowns, the pleasures of soci-
|
||
ety, dances, and dinners more than the treasurers of heaven which are gar-
|
||
nered by service and self-sacrifice. Although they may intellectually per-
|
||
ceive the beauty of the spiritual life, its desirability fades into
|
||
insignificance in their eyes when compared with the sacrifice involved in
|
||
attaining. Like the rich young man they would willingly follow Christ were
|
||
there no such sacrifice involved. They prefer rather to go away when they
|
||
realize that sacrifice is the one condition upon which they may enter dis-
|
||
cipleship. So for them Easter is simply a season of joy because it is the
|
||
end of winter and the beginning of the summer season with its call of out-
|
||
door sports and pleasures.
|
||
|
||
But for those who have definitely chosen the path of self-sacrifice that
|
||
leads to Liberation, Easter is the annual sign given them as evidence of the
|
||
cosmic basis of their hopes and aspirations. As Paul properly states in
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 164] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
that glorious fifteenth chapter of 1st Corinthians, "If Christ be not risen,
|
||
then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain.
|
||
|
||
"Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God, because we have testified
|
||
of God that He raised up Christ, whom He raised not up if so be that the
|
||
dead rise not.
|
||
|
||
"For if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised.
|
||
|
||
"And if Christ be not raised your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins.
|
||
|
||
"If after the manner of men I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what
|
||
advantageth it me if the dead rise not?
|
||
|
||
"But now is Christ risen from the dead, and become the first fruits of
|
||
them that slept."
|
||
|
||
But in the Easter sun which at the vernal equinox commences to soar into
|
||
the northern heavens after having laid down its life for the earth, we have
|
||
the cosmic symbol of the verity of resurrection. When taken as a cosmic
|
||
fact in connection with the law of analogy that connects the macrocosm with
|
||
the microcosm, it is an earnest that some day we shall all attain the cosmic
|
||
consciousness and know positively for ourselves by our own experience that
|
||
there is no death, but that what seems so is only a transition into a finer
|
||
sphere.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 165] THE COSMIC MEANING OF EASTER
|
||
|
||
It is an annual symbol to strengthen our souls in the work of well-doing
|
||
that we may grow the golden wedding garment required to make us sons of God
|
||
in the highest and holiest sense. It is literally true that unless we walk
|
||
in the light as God is in the light, we are not in fellowship; but by making
|
||
the sacrifices and rendering the services required of us to aid in the eman-
|
||
cipation of our race we are building the soul body of radiant golden light
|
||
which is the special substance emanated from and by the Spirit of the Sun,
|
||
the Cosmic Christ. When this golden substance has clothed us with suffi-
|
||
cient density, then we shall be able to imitate the Easter sun and soar into
|
||
the higher spheres.
|
||
|
||
With these ideals firmly fixed in our minds, Easter time becomes a season
|
||
when it is in order to review our life during the preceding year and make
|
||
new resolutions for the coming season to serve in furthering our soul
|
||
growth. It is a season when the symbol of the ascending sun should lead us
|
||
up to a keen realization of the fact that we are but pilgrims and strangers
|
||
upon earth, that our real home as spirits is in heaven, and that we ought to
|
||
endeavor to learn the lessons in this life school as quickly as is consis-
|
||
tent with proper service, so that as Easter Day marks the resurrection and
|
||
liberation of the Christ Spirit from the lower realms, so we also may con-
|
||
tinually look for the dawn of that day which shall permanently free us from
|
||
the meshes of matter, from the body of sin and death, together with our
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 166] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
brethren in bondage, for no true aspirant would conceive of a liberation
|
||
that did not include all who were similarly placed.
|
||
|
||
This is a gigantic task; the contemplation of it may well daunt the brav-
|
||
est heart, and were we alone it could not be accomplished; but the divine
|
||
hierarchies who have guided humanity upon the path of evolution from the be-
|
||
ginning of our career are still active and working with us from their side-
|
||
real worlds, and with their help we shall eventually be able to accomplish
|
||
this elevation of humanity as a whole and attain to an individual realiza-
|
||
tion of glory, honor, and immortality. Having this great hope within our-
|
||
selves, this great mission in the world, let us work as never before to make
|
||
ourselves better men and women, so that by our example we may waken in oth-
|
||
ers a desire to lead a life that brings liberation.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 167] THE NEWBORN CHRIST
|
||
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXII
|
||
|
||
|
||
THE NEWBORN CHRIST
|
||
|
||
|
||
IT HAS OFTEN been said in our literature that the sacrifice of Christ
|
||
wass not an event which, taking place on Golgotha, was accomplished in a few
|
||
hours once and for all time, but that the mystic births and deaths of the
|
||
Redeemer are continual cosmic occurrences. We may therefore conclude that
|
||
this sacrifice is necessary for our physical and spiritual evolution during
|
||
the present phase of our development. As the annual birth of the Christ
|
||
Child approaches, it presents a never old, ever new theme for meditation,
|
||
from which we may profit by pondering it with a prayer that it may create in
|
||
our hearts a new light to guide us upon the path of regeneration.
|
||
|
||
The inspired apostle gave us a wonderful definition of Deity when he said
|
||
that "God is Light," and therefore "light" has been used to illustrate the
|
||
nature of the Divine in the Rosicrucian teachings, especially the mystery of
|
||
the Trinity in Unity. It is clearly taught in the Holy Scriptures of all
|
||
times that God is one and indivisible. At the same time we find that as the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 168] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
one white light is refracted into three primary colors, red, yellow, and
|
||
blue, so God appears in threefold role during manifestation by the exercise
|
||
of the three divine functions of CREATION, PRESERVATION, AND DISSOLUTION.
|
||
|
||
When He exercises the attribute of CREATION, God appears as Jehovah, the
|
||
HOLY SPIRIT; He is the Lord of law and generation and projects the solar
|
||
fertilizing principle INDIRECTLY through the lunar satellites of all planets
|
||
where it is necessary to furnish bodies for their evolving beings.
|
||
|
||
When He exercises the attribute of PRESERVATION for the purpose of sus-
|
||
taining the bodies generated by Jehovah under the laws of nature, God ap-
|
||
pears as the Redeemer, CHRIST, and radiates the principles of love and re-
|
||
generation DIRECTLY into any planet where the creatures of Jehovah require
|
||
this help to extricate themselves from the meshes of mortality and egotism
|
||
in order to attain to altruism and endless life.
|
||
|
||
When God exercises the divine attribute of DISSOLUTION, He appears as THE
|
||
FATHER who calls us back to our heavenly home to assimilate the fruits of
|
||
experience and soul growth garnered by us during the day of manifestation.
|
||
This Universal Solvent, the ray of the Father, emanates from the Invisible
|
||
Spiritual Sun.
|
||
|
||
These divine processes of creation and birth, preservation and life, and
|
||
dissolution, death and return to the Author of our being we see everywhere
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 169] THE NEWBORN CHRIST
|
||
|
||
about us, and we recognize the fact that they are activities of the Triune
|
||
God in manifestation. But have we ever realized that in the spiritual world
|
||
there are no definite events, no static conditions; that the beginning and
|
||
the end of all adventures of all ages are present in the eternal "here" and
|
||
"now"? From the bosom of the Father there is an everlasting outdwelling of
|
||
the essence of things and events, which enters the realms of "time" and
|
||
"space." There it gradually crystallizes and becomes inert, necessitating
|
||
dissolution that there may be room for other things and other events.
|
||
|
||
There is no escape from this cosmic law; it applies to everything in the
|
||
realm of time and space, the Christ ray included. As the lake which empties
|
||
itself into the ocean is replenished when the water that left it has been
|
||
evaporated and returns to it as rain, to flow again ceaselessly toward the
|
||
sea, so the Spirit of Love is eternally born of the Father, day by day, hour
|
||
by hour, endlessly flowing into the solar universe to redeem us in its death
|
||
grip. Wave upon wave is thus impelled outward from the sun to all the plan-
|
||
ets, giving a rhythmic urge to the evolving creatures there.
|
||
|
||
And so it is in the very truest and most literal sense A NEWBORN CHRIST
|
||
that we hail at each approaching Yule-feast, and Christmas is the most vital
|
||
annual event for all humanity whether we realize it or not. It is not
|
||
merely a commemoration of the birth of our beloved Elder Brother, Jesus, but
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 170] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
the advent of the rejuvenating love of life of our Heavenly Father, sent by
|
||
Him to redeem the world from the wintry death grip. Without this new infu-
|
||
sion of divine life and energy we should soon perish physically, and our
|
||
orderly progress would be frustrated so far as our present lines of develop-
|
||
ment are concerned. This is a point we should endeavor to realize thor-
|
||
oughly in order that we may learn to appreciate Christmas as keenly as we
|
||
should.
|
||
|
||
We may learn a lesson in this respect as in many others from our children
|
||
or from reminiscences of our own childhood. How keen were our anticipations
|
||
of the approaching feast! How eagerly we waited for the hour when we should
|
||
receive the gifts which we knew would be forthcoming from Santa Claus, the
|
||
mysterious universal benefactor who brought the toys for the coming year!
|
||
How would we have felt had our parents given us the dismembered dolls and
|
||
broken drums of yesteryear? It would surely have been felt as an overwhelm-
|
||
ing misfortune and would have left a deep sense of broken trust which even
|
||
time would have found it difficult to heal; yet it would have been as noth-
|
||
ing compared with the cosmic calamity that would befall mankind if our Heav-
|
||
enly Father should fail to provide the newborn Christ for our cosmic Christ-
|
||
mas gift.
|
||
|
||
The Christ of last year cannot save us from physical famine any more than
|
||
last year's rain can drench the soil again and swell the millions of seeds
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 171] THE NEWBORN CHRIST
|
||
|
||
that slumber in the earth awaiting the germinal activities of the Father's
|
||
life to begin their growth; the Christ of last year cannot kindle anew in
|
||
our hearts the spiritual aspirations which urge us onward in the Quest any
|
||
more than last summer's heat can warm us now. The Christ of last year gave
|
||
us His love and His life to the last breath without stint or measure; when
|
||
He was born into the earth last Christmas, He endued with life the sleeping
|
||
seeds which have grown and gratefully filled our granaries with the bread of
|
||
physical life; He lavished the love given Him by the Father upon us, and
|
||
when He had wholly spent His life, He died at Eastertide to rise again to
|
||
the Father, as the river by evaporation rises to the sky.
|
||
|
||
But endlessly wells the divine love; as a father pities his children, so
|
||
does our Heavenly Father pity us, for He knows our physical and spiritual
|
||
frailty and dependence. Therefore we are now confidently awaiting the mys-
|
||
tic birth of the Christ of another year, laden with new life and love sent
|
||
by the Father to preserve us from the physical and spiritual famine which
|
||
would ensue were it not for this annual love offering.
|
||
|
||
Younger souls usually find it difficult to disabuse their minds of the
|
||
personality of God, of Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, and some can only
|
||
love Jesus, the man. They forget Christ, the Great Spirit, who ushered in a
|
||
new era in which the nations established under the regime of Jehovah will be
|
||
broken to pieces that the sublime structure of Universal Brotherhood may be
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 172] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
built upon their ruins. In time all the world will realize that "God is
|
||
spirit, to be worshiped in spirit and truth." It is well to love Jesus and
|
||
to imitate him; we know of no nobler ideal and none more worthy. Could a
|
||
cobler one have been found, Jesus would not have been chosen as a vehicle of
|
||
that Great One, the Christ, in whom dwelt the Godhead. We shall therefore
|
||
do well to follow "in His steps."
|
||
|
||
At the same time we shall exalt God in our own consciousness by taking
|
||
the word of the Bible that He is spirit, and that we cannot make any like-
|
||
nesses which will portray Him for He is like nothing in heaven or on earth.
|
||
We can see the physical vehicles of Jehovah circling as satellites around
|
||
the various planets; we can also see the sun, which is the visible vehicle
|
||
of the Father and the source of all, appears to the greatest of human seers
|
||
only as a higher octave of the photosphere of the sun, a ring of violet-blue
|
||
luminosity behind the sun. But we do not need to see; we can feel His love,
|
||
and that feeling is never so great as at Christmas time when He is giving us
|
||
the greatest of all gifts, the Christ of the new year.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 173] WHY I AM A ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIII
|
||
|
||
Why I Am A Rosicrucian
|
||
|
||
Not infrequently we find that some one takes the platform to explain why
|
||
he is a Baptist, Methodist, or Christian Scientist, and what his particular
|
||
faith may be. We have often been asked by our students for something which
|
||
would help make plain to their associates why they had embraced the teach-
|
||
ings of the Elder Brothers given through the Rosicrucian Fellowship, in
|
||
preference to the faith which they had left. We will, therefore, endeavor
|
||
to give a succinct resume of reasons which appeal to us as sufficient, but
|
||
students will doubtless find many other reasons equally good or better,
|
||
which they may add verbally to what is here said.
|
||
|
||
It should be made clear in the very beginning that students in the
|
||
Rosicrucian Fellowship do not call themselves Rosicrucians. That title ap-
|
||
plies alone to the Elder Brothers, who are the hierophants of the Western
|
||
Wisdom Teaching. They are as far beyond the greatest living saint in the
|
||
spiritual development as that saint is above the lowest fetish worshiper.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 174] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
When the bark of our life sails lightly upon smooth summer seas, wafted
|
||
along by the fair winds of health and prosperity, when friends are present
|
||
on every hand, eager to help us plan pleasures which will increase our en-
|
||
joyment of this world's goods, when social favors or political powers come
|
||
to us to gratify our every wish in whatever sphere our inclinations seek ex-
|
||
pression, then, indeed, we may say and seem justified in saying with our
|
||
whole heart and soul: "This world is good enough for me." But when we come
|
||
to the end of the smiling sea of success; when the whirlwind of adversity
|
||
has blown us upon the rocky shores of disaster, and a wave of suffering
|
||
threatens to engulf us; when friends have failed and every human help is as
|
||
far off as it is unavailing, then we must look for guidance to the skies as
|
||
does the mariner when he steers his ship over the waste of waters.
|
||
|
||
But when the skipper scans the sky in search of a star whereby to steer
|
||
the ship safely, he finds that the whole heavens are in motion. Therefore
|
||
to follow almost any one of the myriad of wandering stars visible to the eye
|
||
would be disastrous. To meet the requirements the guiding star must be per-
|
||
fectly steadfast and immovable, and there is only one such, namely, the
|
||
North Star. By its guiding light the mariner may steer in full confidence
|
||
and bring his ship to a haven of rest and safety. Likewise one who is look-
|
||
ing for a guide which he may trust in days of sorrow and trouble should
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 175] WHY I AM A ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
|
||
embrace a religion founded on eternal laws and immutable principles, able to
|
||
explain the mystery of life in a logical manner so that his intellect may be
|
||
satisfied, and at the same time containing a system of devotion that may
|
||
satisfy the heart, so that these twin factors in life may receive equal sat-
|
||
isfaction. Only when man has a clear intellectual conception of the scheme
|
||
of human development is he in a position to range himself in line therewith.
|
||
When it is made clear to him that this scheme is beneficient and benevolent
|
||
in the very highest degree, that all is truly ruled by divine love, then
|
||
this understanding will sooner or later call out in him a true devotion and
|
||
heartfelt acquiescence which will awaken in him a desire to become a
|
||
co-worker with God is the world's work. When seeking souls come to the door
|
||
of the church to seek surcease from sorrow, they cannot be satisfied with
|
||
the platitudes that it is the will of God that sorrow and suffering have
|
||
come to them, that in His divine providence He has seen fit to scourge them,
|
||
and that they must take it as an indication that He regards them as His be-
|
||
loved children and be satisfied no matter what happens. They cannot see
|
||
that Deity does justice when He makes some rich and many poor, a few healthy
|
||
and many sickly; and it is only too often in evidence that iniquity is pros-
|
||
perous while rectitude is in rags.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 176] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
The Rosicrucian Teaching gives clear and logical information concerning
|
||
the world and man; it invites questions instead of discouraging them, so
|
||
that the seeker after spiritual truth may receive full satisfaction intel-
|
||
lectually; and its explanations are as strictly scientific as they are rev-
|
||
erently religions. It refers us for information regarding life's problems
|
||
to laws that are unchangeable and immutable in their realm of action as the
|
||
North Star is in the heavens.
|
||
|
||
Though the world whirls upon its axis at the rate of one thousand miles
|
||
an hour, we stand safely anywhere upon its surface because the principle of
|
||
gravity prevents us from being hurled into space by the terrific speed. We
|
||
know that the law of gravity is eternal; it will not act today and suspend
|
||
action tomorrow. When we enter a hydraulic elevator we rest safely upon a
|
||
column of water because that fluid is more incompressible that most solids,
|
||
and this property is the same yesterday, today, and forever. Were its ac-
|
||
tion suspended for even a few moments, thousands of people would fall to
|
||
their death; but it is steadfast and sure, therefore we trust in implicitly.
|
||
|
||
The law of cause and effect is also immutable; if we throw a stone into
|
||
the air, the act is not complete until by gravitation it has returned to
|
||
earth. "Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap," is the way this
|
||
law is expressed in the realm of morals. "The mills of God grind slowly,
|
||
but they grind exceedingly small," and once an act has been done, the reac-
|
||
tion will come some time, some where, as surely as the stone that was thrown
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 177] WHY I AM A ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
|
||
into the air will return to the earth.
|
||
|
||
But it is manifest that all of the causes that we set going in life do
|
||
not ripen in the present existence, and it therefore follows that they must
|
||
find their fruition somewhere else at some other time, or the law would be
|
||
invalidated, a proposition that would be as absolutely impossible as that
|
||
the law of gravitation could be suspended, for either would make chaos out
|
||
of cosmos. The Rosicrucian Teachings explain this by a statement that man
|
||
is a spirit attending the School of Life for the purpose of unfolding latent
|
||
spiritual power, and that for this purpose he lives many lives in earthly
|
||
bodies of increasingly finer texture, which enable him to express himself
|
||
better and better. In the lower grades of this school of evolution man has
|
||
few faculties. Each life-day he comes to school in the morning of child-
|
||
hood, and is given lessons to learn, and at night when old and gray the
|
||
nurse maid of nature, "Death," puts him to sleep that he may rest from his
|
||
labors until the dawn of another life-day, when he is given a new child body
|
||
and new lessons. Each day "Experience," the teacher of the school helps him
|
||
to learn some of the lessons of life, and gradually he becomes more and more
|
||
proficient. Some day he will have learned the entire curriculum of the
|
||
school, which includes building of bodies as well as using them.
|
||
|
||
Thus when we see one who has few faculties, we know that he is a young
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 178] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
soul who has gone to life's school only a few days; and when we find a beau-
|
||
tiful character, we recognize an old soul who has spent much time in master-
|
||
ing its lessons. Therefore we do not despair of God's love when we see the
|
||
inequalities of life, for we know that in time all will be perfect as our
|
||
Father in Heaven is perfect.
|
||
|
||
The Rosicrucian teachings also take the sting of sorrow out of the great-
|
||
est of all trials, the loss of loved ones, even if they have been what is
|
||
called wayward or black sheep; for we know that it is an actual fact that IN
|
||
GOD WE LIFE AND MOVE AND HAVE OUR BEING; hence, if one single soul were
|
||
lost, a part of God would be lost, and such a proposition is absolutely im-
|
||
possible. Under the immutable law of cause and effect we are bound to meet
|
||
these loved ones some time in the future under other circumstances, and
|
||
there the love that binds us together must continue until it has found its
|
||
fullest expression. The laws of nature would be violated if a stone thrown
|
||
from the earth were to remain suspended in the atmosphere, and under the
|
||
same immutable laws those who pass into the higher spheres must return.
|
||
Christ said, "Ye must be born again," and "If I go to my Father, I will re-
|
||
turn."
|
||
|
||
But although our reason may reach into the mysteries of life, there is
|
||
still a higher stage, actual firsthand knowledge. As a matter of fact the
|
||
foregoing propositions are capable of verification by each one, for we all
|
||
have a sixth sense latent in our being, which will sometime enable us to
|
||
view the spiritual world with the same distinctness as that with which we
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 179] WHY I AM A ROSICRUCIAN
|
||
|
||
see the temporal. This sixth sense will be developed by all in the course
|
||
of evolution, and there are certain means whereby it may be developed now by
|
||
all who care to take the necessary time and trouble to do so. Some have
|
||
done this, and they have told us of their travels in the land of the soul.
|
||
We believe their testimony concerning that place just as we believe what
|
||
people who have traveled in Africa or Australia tell us of those countries.
|
||
And just as we say that we know the earth rotates upon its axis and revolves
|
||
in its orbit around the sun because we have been thus informed by scientists
|
||
who have made the investigations and calculations that establish these
|
||
facts, so also we say that we know the dead live, and that whether dead or
|
||
alive, in the body or out of it, we are all enfolded in the love of our Fa-
|
||
ther in Heaven, without whose Will not the smallest sparrow falls to the
|
||
ground, and that He cares for all and orders our steps in harmony with His
|
||
plans to develop our spiritual powers to the highest possible degree.
|
||
|
||
So because of the logical, soul-satisfying philosophy of life given by
|
||
the Rosicrucians, we follow their teachings in preference to other systems,
|
||
and invite others who wish to share the blessings thereof to investigate.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 180] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIV
|
||
|
||
THE OBJECT OF THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
|
||
|
||
The object of the Rosicrucian Fellowship has been clearly stated in our
|
||
literature, as have the means whereby it is hoped to attain the end in view,
|
||
but in response to requests for a succinct summary we devote this chapter to
|
||
that subject.
|
||
|
||
The world is God's training school. During the past we have learned to
|
||
build different vehicles, among other the physical body. By this work we
|
||
are promoted from class to class, each with its particular scope of con-
|
||
sciousness. We evolved eyes that we might see, ears that we might hear, and
|
||
other organs that we might taste, smell, and feel. But not all egos were
|
||
promoted at every step. When the mist in the air at the time of Atlantis
|
||
condensed and filled the basins of the earth with oceans of water, driving
|
||
men to the highlands, many perished by asphyxiation because they had not
|
||
evolved lungs. They could not pass through the portal of the rainbow, which
|
||
was, so to speak, the entrance gate to the new age with its dry atmospheric
|
||
conditions.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 181] THE OBJECT OF THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
|
||
|
||
Another great world transformation is coming, we know not when; even the
|
||
Christ confessed His ignorance of the day and the hour; but He warned us
|
||
that the day would come as a thief in the night, and He prophesied that the
|
||
conditions in the world would then be similar to those prevailing in the
|
||
days of Noah; they were living then in carefree enjoyment of life when sud-
|
||
denly the floodgates of heaven were opened, and death and destruction spread
|
||
before them.
|
||
|
||
Christ told us that it is possible to take the kingdom of God by storm
|
||
and attain to the consciousness and conditions there prevailing. But Paul
|
||
informs us that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; he states
|
||
that we have a soul body (SOME PSUCHICON-1 Cor. 15: 44), and that we shall
|
||
meet the Lord in the air when He comes. This soul body is therefore as nec-
|
||
essary to entrance into the new age of the kingdom of God, as a body
|
||
equipped with lungs was to the Atlanteans who desired to enter into the age
|
||
in which we are now living. Therefore it is necessary that we make our
|
||
calling and election sure by preparing the GOLDEN WEDDING GARMENT, the soul
|
||
body, which alone can secure our admission to the mystic marriage.
|
||
|
||
The multitude is slowly moving in the right direction as led by the dif-
|
||
ferent churches, but there is an ever growing class that, so to speak, feels
|
||
the wings of the soul body sproating, people who feel an inner urge to take
|
||
the kingdom of God by storm. Though unaware of any definite ideal, they
|
||
sense a greater truth and more certain light than those which the Church
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 182] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
radiates; they are tired of parables and long to learn the underlying facts
|
||
at the very feet of Christ.
|
||
|
||
The Rosicrucian Fellowship was started for the purpose of reaching this
|
||
class, to show them the way to illumination, to help them build their soul
|
||
body and evolve the soul powers which will enable them to enter consciously
|
||
into the kingdom of God and obtain first-hand knowledge.
|
||
|
||
This is a large undertaking, none greater and even under the most favor-
|
||
able existing conditions progress must be slow, but if the aspirant will
|
||
continue with patient perseverance in well doing, it can be done.
|
||
|
||
The methods are definite, scientific, and religious; they have been
|
||
originated by the Western School of the Rosicrucian Order, and are therefore
|
||
specially suited to western people. Sometimes, but very rarely, they bring
|
||
results in a short time; generally it requires years and even lives before
|
||
the aspirant attains, but the following system will in the end bring all to
|
||
their heart's desire.
|
||
|
||
The Tabernacle in the Wilderness was a symbolic representation of the way
|
||
to God, and, as Paul says, held a shadow of better things to come. Every-
|
||
thing in it had its spiritual meaning. The table of shewbread gives us an
|
||
important lesson germane to our present consideration. Students will remem-
|
||
ber that the ancient Israelites were commanded to bring the shewbread to the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 183] THE OBJECT OF THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
|
||
|
||
tabernacle at stated intervals. The grain from which this was made was
|
||
given them by God but they must prepare the soil in which it was to grow,
|
||
they must plant and cultivate, they must weed and water, so as to secure the
|
||
greatest possible increase; they must harvest and thresh, grind and bake,
|
||
ere they had the loaves which they brought to the tabernacle as bread to
|
||
shew for their toil. Similarly, God gives to all the grain of opportunity
|
||
to serve, but it is our duty to cultivate these opportunities and nurse and
|
||
nourish them in the soil of loving kindness so that they may bring a great
|
||
increase. We must always bear in mind the words of Christ that He came to
|
||
minister and to serve. Therefore anyone aspiring to follow in His steps and
|
||
to be great in the kingdom of god must ever be on the lookout for opportuni-
|
||
ties to serve his fellows. Each day must be filled as full as possible with
|
||
kind and considerate deeds, for they are the warp and woof of which the
|
||
golden wedding garment is woven. Without these "works" no amount of prayer,
|
||
fasting, or other religious exercise will avail. It is useless to repair to
|
||
the temple without this bread to shew that we have really worked in the
|
||
Master's service.
|
||
|
||
The foregoing is also the teaching of the exoteric churches; but the fol-
|
||
lowing is the exclusively Rosicrucian scientific teaching and method, based
|
||
upon the deepest knowledge of spiritual facts whereby the aspirant is en-
|
||
abled to gain the maximum soul growth in each life, so that his spiritual
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 184] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
advancement is accelerated beyond his very wildest dreams. Therefore this
|
||
is the most important spiritual teaching that has been given to man in mod-
|
||
ern times, and no one who tries honestly to follow this simple method can
|
||
fail to be enormously benefited:
|
||
|
||
Ether is the medium of transmission light, that which etches a picture on
|
||
the photographic film. It permeates the air, and with every breath we draw
|
||
from birth to death ether enters our system and etches a picture of our sur-
|
||
roundings and actions on a little atom in the heart. Thus each carries with
|
||
him a complete record of his life, which is assimilated after death. Ex-
|
||
piation of the evil deeds causes paid and anguish in purgatory. These are
|
||
thus transmuted to conscience to prevent repetition of the same mistakes in
|
||
succeeding lives: the good deeds are transmuted to love and benevolence.
|
||
Instead of waiting for this post-mortem transmutation of the shrewbread of
|
||
life, the aspirant who desires to take heaven by storm may assimilate the
|
||
fruits of each day after retiring and before going to sleep by running over
|
||
the deeds done. The events of the day are considered in reverse order so
|
||
that that which happened in the evening is taken first, then the happenings
|
||
of the afternoon, forenoon, and morning. This is important for it conforms
|
||
to the way the life panorama acts after death, taking first the events just
|
||
prior to death, last the events of infancy. The object is to show the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 185] THE OBJECT OF THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
|
||
|
||
effects and then refer them to their antecedent causes.
|
||
|
||
In this retrospection it will do the aspirant no good to run over the
|
||
events of the day and mildly blame himself where he did wrong-he is usually
|
||
sure enough to praise himself sufficiently for his good deeds. But he must
|
||
remember the altar of burnt offerings where the sacrifices for sin were of-
|
||
fered. They were first rubbed with salt and then placed on the altar to be
|
||
consumed by a divinely enkindled fire. Anyone knows what an intense pain is
|
||
caused when salt is rubbed into a wound, and this rubbing with salt is sym-
|
||
bolic of the pain the aspirant must feel for his wrongdoing. Now mark that
|
||
it was not permissible to place the sacrifice on the altar until it had thus
|
||
rubbed with salt. God would not accept it before, but WHEN IT HAD BEEN
|
||
SALTED IT WAS CONSUMED BY A FIRE KINDLED BY GOD HIMSELF.
|
||
|
||
This tells us that unless we have washed our evil deeds of the day in the
|
||
salt of our tears and heartfelt contrition, God will not accept our sacri-
|
||
fice of repentance; but when we have really repented, our sins will be
|
||
washed away and our recording atom will be clean as the driven snow. With
|
||
respect to our good deeds we may remember that there were two little piles
|
||
of frankincense of the top of the shew bread. These were offered upon the
|
||
altar of incense, where the smoke ascended as a sweet savor to the Lord, so
|
||
different from the nauseating stench that went up from the altar where the
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 186] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
sin offerings were burned. Is it any wonder that God took no delight in the
|
||
sacrifice of bulls and calves, but delighted in a contrite heart and repen-
|
||
tant spirit?
|
||
|
||
It is this spiritual aromatic extract of our good deeds that builds our
|
||
soul body. By the ordinary natural process it takes about one-third as many
|
||
years in our post-mortem existence as we lived in the body, to reap what we
|
||
have sowed. But when an aspirant has assimilated the fruits of life by
|
||
faithful retrospection at the end of each day, he is free as soon as he
|
||
leaves the body and may use the years spent by others in purgatory and the
|
||
first heaven as he pleases. Furthermore, as he needs neither food, shelter,
|
||
nor sleep, he may spend twenty-four hours a day doing good. Thus he has
|
||
practically as many years of service and soul growth after death as the num-
|
||
ber of his earth life; and being trained and schooled in this work his at-
|
||
tainments are probably greater than could be made in a number of lives in
|
||
the ordinary way.
|
||
|
||
To aid deserving aspirants, still deeper and more definite teachings are
|
||
given by the Elder Brothers through the Rosicrucian Fellowship. Students
|
||
who feel the inner urge may ask for information concerning these teachings.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 187] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
INDEX
|
||
|
||
Abel, man of Lemuria, 23.
|
||
Action, desirability of, 16.
|
||
Action, good, required for soul body, 183.
|
||
A. D. M., red earth, 78.
|
||
Adam, a Polarian, 22.
|
||
Airships of Atlantis, 71.
|
||
Albumen not needed by spiritual, 24.
|
||
Alcohol, action, 83.
|
||
Altar of sacrifice, 96.
|
||
America, the melting pot, 112.
|
||
Angels, humanity of Moon Period 50.
|
||
lived in etheric world 50.
|
||
trusted guardians, 26
|
||
wisely guided man 32.
|
||
Anglo-Saxons, pioneers of race, 75.
|
||
Animals ruled by group spirits 108.
|
||
Aquarian Age, science to rule in 82.
|
||
seven hundred years until 81
|
||
teacher of 76.
|
||
Arche-Tektons, Initiates are 103.
|
||
Ark, airship of Atlantis, 71.
|
||
Aryan Age, invaders of 80.
|
||
Aryana, national segregation of 70.
|
||
Assimilation of life experiences 184.
|
||
Asteroids, remnants of Moons 60.
|
||
Astrology, value of in marriage 53.
|
||
Atlantis, destruction of 180.
|
||
Atlantean epoch, the nadir of materiality 9.
|
||
Atlanteans aspired to light 95
|
||
divinely guided 69.
|
||
Atlantis, airships of 71.
|
||
atmosphere of 69.
|
||
man becomes man in 25.
|
||
peaceful conditions of 86.
|
||
Atmosphere, changes of 180.
|
||
Attainment, method of 171.
|
||
|
||
Baptism, soul's urge for higher life 55.
|
||
Bible, only solid foundation 120; two parts of 126.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 188] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Black Brothers, increase evil 106.
|
||
Black magic, frequent practice of 101.
|
||
golden wedding garment protects against 106.
|
||
practices of 103.
|
||
Blood hound, follows invisible emanation 104.
|
||
Born of water and spirit 80.
|
||
Brain gained at sacrifice of creative force 32.
|
||
Breathing exercises, danger of 9.
|
||
use of 10.
|
||
Brotherhood, all members of 44.
|
||
"Brother of the Third Degree"--NOT Initiation 12.
|
||
|
||
Cain, a Hyperborean 23.
|
||
Candles, tallow, attract elementals 106.
|
||
Causation 177.
|
||
Children, training of 127.
|
||
Chosen people 95.
|
||
Christ, annual coming of 171.
|
||
bodily presence of the Father 98.
|
||
forgiveness of 57.
|
||
Inhabits central sun 58.
|
||
man a Christ-in-the-making 158.
|
||
mission of 47, 87.
|
||
power of 158, 159.
|
||
preservation, principle of 168.
|
||
sacrifice of 98.
|
||
Christ, SEE ALSO Earth Spirit.
|
||
Church, doctrines of, keystones of evolution 38.
|
||
Civilization, evolution of 111.
|
||
Communication with dead 113.
|
||
Communion, points to age to come 55.
|
||
worthy celebration of 31.
|
||
Conscience gained in purgatory 184.
|
||
Consciousness result of ware between vital and desire bodies 49.
|
||
Conservation of strength 122.
|
||
Contentment lengthens life 41.
|
||
Contrition, importance of 185.
|
||
Conversion and Initiation 12.
|
||
inner experience 13.
|
||
Converts, making of 132.
|
||
Courage 91.
|
||
Creations, principle of Jehovah 168.
|
||
Creative hierarchies guide man 22.
|
||
Crystalloids aid in evolving vital body 88.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 189] INDEX
|
||
|
||
Dead, communication with 113.
|
||
Death, care of body after 134.
|
||
conquest of 56.
|
||
price of consciousness 50.
|
||
Dense body, care of after death 134.
|
||
crystallized state of 47
|
||
raising vibrations of 10.
|
||
restoration of in sleep 128.
|
||
spiritualization of 74.
|
||
under laws of nature 57.
|
||
Desire body, control of 128.
|
||
destroys dense body 49.
|
||
evolution of, in Lemuria 23
|
||
reaction of man's acts 25.
|
||
Dietetics, albumen not needed by spiritual 24.
|
||
legumes not to be rashly eliminated 24.
|
||
Diplomacy and force 119.
|
||
Dissolution the Father's power 168.
|
||
Divine hierarchies work upon man 22.
|
||
Divine leaders abolish religious errors 46.
|
||
Divine spirit and physical body 132.
|
||
|
||
Earth conditions cramp humanity 99.
|
||
crystallization of due to man 32.
|
||
Earth Spirit body and blood 31.
|
||
Earth Spirit, SEE ALSO Christ.
|
||
Earthly goods, use of 177.
|
||
Easter, Christ's liberation 160.
|
||
vital, force of 161.
|
||
Effort brings opportunities 15.
|
||
Ego chooses work of life 64.
|
||
Egotism, protection from 19.
|
||
Elder Brothers hierophants of western wisdom teaching 173;
|
||
high status of 173.
|
||
injunction to Max Heindel 11, 20.
|
||
not mercenary 20.
|
||
transmute evil 105.
|
||
Elementals inhaled with incense 106.
|
||
Emancipation, God's purpose 162.
|
||
Environment chosen by ego 64, 122.
|
||
power of 74.
|
||
Epochs, changes of 77.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 190] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ether etches pictures on seed atom 184.
|
||
medium of transmission of light 184.
|
||
new element 71.
|
||
Evolution 177; Evolution of man 35.
|
||
spiral path of 14; slow, tedious process 16.
|
||
Exercises: Breathing practices 9, 10.
|
||
Experience, a grindstone 63.
|
||
Extreme unction 56.
|
||
|
||
Faculties, evolution of 177.
|
||
Fall, unchastity 62.
|
||
Family, duty to 127.
|
||
Father, The, dissolution principle of 168.
|
||
highest Initiate of Saturn period 58.
|
||
inhabits spiritual sun 58.
|
||
Finger nails used in Black Magic 103.
|
||
Flesh, difficult to digest, 90.
|
||
material progress result of 23, 86, 92.
|
||
necessitated by materialism 23.
|
||
sins of 90.
|
||
Flood, sun in Cancer 78.
|
||
Food, significance of 22.
|
||
Forgiveness of Christ 57.
|
||
Free Will 22.
|
||
of Initiate in choice of environment 64.
|
||
in Atlantis 25.
|
||
|
||
Galilee, melting pot 74.
|
||
Gill clefts replaced by lungs 24.
|
||
Gills of early Atlantis 70.
|
||
Blass of water in Black Magic 104.
|
||
God, immanence of 161.
|
||
Golden wedding garment 165, 185. SEE ALSO Soul Body.
|
||
Good Friday 153.
|
||
Gospels formulae of Initiation 64.
|
||
Grace and forgiveness of sin 34.
|
||
Grail, SEE holy Grail.
|
||
Group Spirit 108.
|
||
|
||
Hair used in Black Magic 103.
|
||
Healing, Rosicrucian method of 103.
|
||
Heaven, Third, turning point of life cycle 122.
|
||
Help, practical 133.
|
||
Hierarchies, service of 145.
|
||
still active 166.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 191] INDEX
|
||
|
||
Hindu breathing exercises 73,
|
||
Holy Grail, many orders constitute 105.
|
||
two forces of 105.
|
||
Holy Spirit SEE Jehovah.
|
||
Human spirit and desire body 132.
|
||
Humanity, salvation of 160.
|
||
slowly progressing 14.
|
||
Hyperborea, generation in 49.
|
||
Hyperborean epoch, man plantlike in 22.
|
||
vital body gained in 22.
|
||
Hypnotism, danger of 107.
|
||
|
||
I am 25, 85, 87.
|
||
I as pronoun 83.
|
||
Inactivity causes straggling 16.
|
||
Incense, Black Forces use 106.
|
||
Inequalities, harmonizing of 178.
|
||
Initiates, arche-tektons 103.
|
||
bodies of, immaculately conceived 64.
|
||
choose own life work 64.
|
||
purity of 64.
|
||
may be women 67.
|
||
Initiation, changes life, 13.
|
||
confers authority 13.
|
||
free 13.
|
||
inner experience 12.
|
||
money cannot buy 11.
|
||
requirements for 20.
|
||
spiritual process 11.
|
||
spiritualizes vital body 67.
|
||
through spiritual exercises 11.
|
||
tribulation leads to 63.
|
||
Initiation fee, impossibility of 20.
|
||
Inner vision opened 136.
|
||
Intellectual conception of life 175.
|
||
Intensity of feeling 19.
|
||
Invisible Helpers require nucleus 103.
|
||
|
||
Jehovah, creation principle of God, 168.
|
||
dwells in physical sun 58.
|
||
highest Initiate of Moon Period 58.
|
||
race spirit of the Jews 110.
|
||
regent of various moons 58.
|
||
warder of creative forces 56.
|
||
Jesus, race body of 74; noblest ideal 172.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 192] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Judgment, Sun in Libra 156.
|
||
Justice of life 175; with mercy 33.
|
||
|
||
Knowledge, necessity for 131.
|
||
Larynx gained at sacrifice of creative force 32.
|
||
Law, knowledge of 131.
|
||
Law of Consequence given to Atlanteans 26.
|
||
Laws of nature and destiny 25.
|
||
Legumes not needed by ADVANCED scholars 24.
|
||
Lemniscate, meaning of 14.
|
||
Lemurian epoch, evolution of desire body in 23.
|
||
Life Spirit and vital body 132.
|
||
Light Atlanteans aspired to 95
|
||
symbol of God 167.
|
||
Living church within 124.
|
||
Lords of Mercury, stragglers of past 59.
|
||
Lords of Venus, stragglers of past 59.
|
||
Lord's Supper, SEE communion.
|
||
Lost souls 58.
|
||
Love endlessly born 169.
|
||
keynote of coming age 80.
|
||
of soul for soul 53; transcends sex 51.
|
||
Lucifer spirits cause body's crystallization 32
|
||
Lungs related to spirit's freedom 24.
|
||
|
||
Man becomes man in Atlantis 25.
|
||
mineral-like in Polarian Epoch 88.
|
||
Marriage necessitated by disintegration and death 49
|
||
sacrament of 55.
|
||
transcends sex 51.
|
||
Materialism, predominance of 163.
|
||
Matter, limitation of causes self-consciousness 22.
|
||
Materialization, varieties of 102.
|
||
Meat non-permanent as food 82.
|
||
Meat eating, SEE Flesh eating.
|
||
Michael, race spirit 111.
|
||
Milk aid in evolving desire boyd 89.
|
||
given in Lemuria 23.
|
||
Mind, effect of meat upon 93.
|
||
given during Atlantean epoch 22.
|
||
given for discrimination 122.
|
||
link between spirit and matter 132.
|
||
Minerals, assimilation impossible 82.
|
||
Moderation in food 136.
|
||
Mongols, descendents of Atlanteans 75.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 193] INDEX
|
||
|
||
Moons, discipline stragglers 59.
|
||
physical vehicles of Jehovah 172.
|
||
tumors of universe 60.
|
||
Moses led followers through water 26.
|
||
Motive, importance of 101.
|
||
Mysteries, soul body teaches 136.
|
||
Mystery schools furnish higher teaching 8.
|
||
|
||
Nationalism must pass 112.
|
||
Nations, rise and fall of 110.
|
||
Negroes, descendants of Lemurians 75.
|
||
New Galilee 135.
|
||
New Heaven and new earth, SEE Aquarian Age.
|
||
New race 75.
|
||
Niebulungen ring 42.
|
||
Nimrod, misplaced in Bible 22.
|
||
Noah 27.
|
||
Noise, evil effects of 125.
|
||
stirs desire bodies 126.
|
||
Nucleus in magic practices 108.
|
||
|
||
Orthodoxy, arguments of 46.
|
||
Panorama etched into desire body 133.
|
||
Passion, crystallizing power of 32.
|
||
Periodic flow of earth 62.
|
||
Philosophy, hidden meaning in 135.
|
||
Physical body, SEE Dense body.
|
||
Pioneers the active workers 16.
|
||
two classes of 17.
|
||
Pisces, creed and dogma of 81.
|
||
Planet, body of Great Spirit 156.
|
||
evolution of 41.
|
||
orbit of 156.
|
||
Poise, necessity for 125.
|
||
Polarian had only dense body 88.
|
||
Polarian epoch, dense body in 22.
|
||
mineral-like state of man in 22.
|
||
Polygamy 66.
|
||
Possession cures desire 93.
|
||
Post mortem experience 15.
|
||
Post mortem state 16.
|
||
Preservation, Christ principle 168.
|
||
Progress, impossible to unworthy 150.
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 194] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Proselyting unnecessary 132.
|
||
Providence of God 120.
|
||
Purity, redemption of 35.
|
||
Race spirits cause racial characteristics 109.
|
||
high ideals of 110.
|
||
Racial characteristics 109.
|
||
Rainbow, advent of 27.
|
||
emblem of diversity 70.
|
||
entrance to new age 180.
|
||
gates to promised land 69.
|
||
Rebirth and Causation 132.
|
||
Reconciliation, desirability of 119.
|
||
Recording angels give religions 7.
|
||
Religion, happiness from 126.
|
||
Religion given by Recording Angels 7.
|
||
suited to nations 8.
|
||
Religious errors, not long permitted 46.
|
||
Responsibility not to be shirked 127.
|
||
Resurrection, Easter Sun symbolizes 163.
|
||
Retrospection, good gained by; most important spiritual teaching 184.
|
||
importance of 18.
|
||
Rhine Gold 42.
|
||
Rosicrucian messengers 11.
|
||
methods, definite, scientific, religious 182.
|
||
Sacrament, Hebrew derivation of 55.
|
||
importance of 38.
|
||
Sacrifice, evolution result of 97.
|
||
soul growth from 165.
|
||
Sanctuary, inner 124.
|
||
Saints, 17.
|
||
Salt, 185.
|
||
Science becomes religious 40.
|
||
to rule Aquarian Age 82.
|
||
Seances, danger of 107.
|
||
Seasons symbolize diversity 70.
|
||
Self-Sacrifie, advancement from 38.
|
||
of Christ 100.
|
||
Selfishness bane of race 43.
|
||
Separation of sexes 32.
|
||
Service builds soul body 135.
|
||
essential in life 135.
|
||
redemption of stragglers 59.
|
||
the policy that pays 118.
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 195] INDEX
|
||
|
||
Sexes, separation of 32.
|
||
Silence, great help in soul growth 126.
|
||
Sin must be expiated 57.
|
||
Sixth sense 178.
|
||
Sleep, work during, gains soul growth 129.
|
||
Solar system body of God 59.
|
||
Son, SEE Christ.
|
||
Sorrow, keynote of Buddhism 57.
|
||
Soul amalgamates with spirit 96.
|
||
Soul body 54.
|
||
from seed 73.
|
||
light of, teaches man 136.
|
||
of new age 181.
|
||
methods of building 80.
|
||
protects against Black Magic 106.
|
||
wedding garment of new age 80.
|
||
Soul growth dissolves crystallized bodies 96.
|
||
helps in 126.
|
||
method of 17.
|
||
Sound, effect of 124.
|
||
Spinal nerves, animal twenty-eight pairs of 61.
|
||
man thirty-one pairs of 61.
|
||
Spirit orbit of 156.
|
||
Spiritual forces, ebb and flow of 61.
|
||
Spiritual sight result of war 112.
|
||
Spiritual world, time non-existent 169.
|
||
Spring and Earth Spirit 31.
|
||
Stellar ray 64.
|
||
Strength, conservation of 122.
|
||
Sugar, beneficial effects of 83
|
||
cure of alcoholism by 84.
|
||
Sun ascends at Easter 165.
|
||
in Cancer, the flood 78.
|
||
invisible vehicle of God 172.
|
||
visible vehicle of Christ 172.
|
||
|
||
Tact, value of 119.
|
||
Talents of ego 15.
|
||
|
||
Teacher of New Age 76.
|
||
Temple, way to shown 136.
|
||
Though breaks down tissue 23.
|
||
Time, non-existent in spiritual world 169.
|
||
Tolerance for our families 137.
|
||
Tree of knowledge 32.
|
||
|
||
|
||
[PAGE 196] GLEANINGS OF A MYSTIC
|
||
|
||
Tribulation prepares for Initiation 63.
|
||
Trinity, mystery of 167.
|
||
|
||
Unfoldment, three states of 55.
|
||
Universal solvent 168.
|
||
|
||
Vegetarianism, advantages of 91.
|
||
Vegetarian needs no alcohol 91.
|
||
Virgin spirits enmeshed in matter as egos 132.
|
||
self-consciousness attained by 22.
|
||
Vital body charges body with energy 132.
|
||
constructive energy of 49.
|
||
evolved by Hyperborean 22, 88.
|
||
medium of occult growth 9.
|
||
spiritualized by Initiation 67.
|
||
stores up power 128.
|
||
vehicle of love 51.
|
||
|
||
War, spiritual aspects of 123.
|
||
spiritual intensity of 104.
|
||
spiritual sight result of 112.
|
||
Water, Noah and Moses led followers through 26.
|
||
used in Black Magic 104.
|
||
Wedding garment, SEE Soul Body.
|
||
Western Initiates more advanced 8.
|
||
Western Mystery Teaching Christian 47.
|
||
White Magic, unselfish 102.
|
||
Wine, given in Atlantis 26.
|
||
self-assertion from drinking 86.
|
||
stimulates spirit of man 27.
|
||
Word, cosmic meaning of 155.
|
||
Workers, the pioneers 16.
|
||
World, God's training school 180.
|
||
World change to come 181.
|
||
Worry, evil of 116.
|
||
|
||
You as pronoun 83.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--- END OF FILE ---
|
||
|
||
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