2171 lines
106 KiB
Plaintext
2171 lines
106 KiB
Plaintext
[PAGE 1] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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[ T H E R O S I C R U C I A N M Y S T E R I E S ]
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[ ]
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[ BY ]
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[ ]
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[ ]
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[ M A X H E I N D E L ]
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[ [1865-1919] ]
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AN ELEMENTARY EXPOSITION OF THEIR SECRET TEACHINGS
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THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
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Mt. Ecclesia
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P.O. Box 713
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Oceanside, California, 92054, USA
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[PAGE 3] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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LIST OF CONTENTS
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CHAPTER I:
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THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS AND THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP................5
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CHAPTER II:
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THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION...................................16
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Three Theories of Life...............................................20
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We Are Eternal (Poem by the Author)..................................26
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CHAPTER III:
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THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS...................................36
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The Chemical Region..................................................36
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The Etheric Region...................................................41
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The Desire World.....................................................51
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The World of Thought.................................................67
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Creed or Christ (Poem by the Author).................................85
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CHAPTER IV:
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THE CONSTITUTION OF MAN................................................87
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The Vital Body.......................................................89
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The Desire Body......................................................94
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The Mind.............................................................97
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[PAGE 4] LIST OF CONTENTS THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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CHAPTER V:
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LIFE AND DEATH.........................................................99
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Invisible Helpers and Mediums........................................99
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Death...............................................................103
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The Panorama of Past Life...........................................112
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Purgatory...........................................................116
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The First Heaven....................................................127
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The Second Heaven...................................................132
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The Third Heaven....................................................135
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Birth and Child-Life................................................137
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The Mystery of Light, Color and Consciousness.......................139
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Education of Children...................................................143
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[PAGE 5] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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CHAPTER I
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THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS AND THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
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OUR MESSAGE AND MISSION
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A SANE MIND
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A SOFT HEART
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A SOUND BODY
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Before entering upon an explanation of the teachings of the
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Rosicrucians, it may be well to say a word about them and about the place
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they hold in the evolution of humanity.
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For reasons to be given later these teachings advocate the dualistic
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view; they hold that man is a Spirit enfolding all the powers of God as the
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seed enfolds the plant, and that these powers are being slowly unfolded by
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a series of existences in a gradually improving earthy body; also that
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this process of development has been performed under the guidance of ex-
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alted Beings who are yet ordering our steps, though in a decreasing
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measure, as we gradually acquire intellect and will. These exalted
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Beings, though unseen to the physical eyes, are neverthless potent fac-
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tors in all affairs of life, and give to the various groups of humanity les-
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[PAGE 6] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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sons which will most efficiently promote the growth of their spiritual
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powers. In fact, the earth may be likened to a vast training school in
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which there are pupils of varying age and ability as we find it in one of
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our own schools. There are the savages, living and worshipping under most
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primitive conditions, seeing in stick or stone a God. Then, as man pro-
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gresses onwards and upwards in the scale of civilization, we find a
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higher and higher conception of Deity, which has flowered here in our
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Western World in the beautiful Christian religion that now furnishes our
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spiritual inspiration and incentive to improve.
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These various religions have been given to each group of humanity by
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the exalted beings whom we know in the Christian religion as the Recording
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Angels, whose wonderful prevision enables them to view the trend of even
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so unstable a quantity as the human mind, and thus they are enabled to de-
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termine what steps are necessary to lead our unfoldment along the lines con-
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gruous to the highest universal good.
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When we study the history of the ancient nations we shall find that at
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about six hundred years B.C. a great spiritual wave had its inception on
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the Eastern shores of the Pacific Ocean where the great Confucian re-
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ligion accelerated the progress of the Chinese nation, then also the reli-
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gion of the Buddha commenced to win its millions of adherents in India, and
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still further West we have the lofty philosophy of Pythagoras. Each system
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was suited to the needs of the particular people to whom it was sent. Then
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came the period of the Sceptics, in Greece, and later, traveling
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[PAGE 7] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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westward the same spiritual wave is manifested as the Christian religion
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of the so-called "Dark Ages" when the dogma of a dominant church compelled
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belief from the whole of Western Europe.
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It is a law in the universe that a wave of spiritual awakening is always
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followed by a period of doubting materialism; each phase is necessary in or-
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der that the Spirit may receive equal development of heart and intellect
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without being carried too far in either direction. The great Beings afore-
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mentioned, who care for our progress, always take steps to safeguard hu-
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manity against that danger, and when they foresaw the wave of materialism
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which commenced in the sixteenth century with the birth of our modern sci-
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ence, they took steps to protect the West as they had formerly safe-
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guarded the East against the sceptics who were held in check by the Mys-
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tery Schools.
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In the fourteenth century there appeared in central Europe a great spir-
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itual teacher whose symbolical name was
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CHRISTIAN ROSENKREUZ
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or
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CHRISTIAN ROSE CROSS,
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who founded the mysterious Order of the Rosy Cross, concerning which so
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many speculations have been made and so little has become known to the
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world at large, for it is the Mystery School of the West and is open only
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to those who have attained the stage of spiritual unfoldment necessary to be
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initiated in its secrets concerning the Science of Life and Being.
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[PAGE 8] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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If we are so far developed that we are able to leave our dense physical
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body and take a soul flight into interplanetary space we shall find that the
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ultimate physical atom is spherical in shape like our earth; it is a ball.
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When we take a number of balls of even size and group them around one, it
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will take just twelve balls to hide a thirteenth within. Thus the twelve
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visible and the one hidden are numbers revealing a cosmic relationship and
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as all Mystery Orders are based upon cosmic lines, they are composed of
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twelve members gathered around a thirteenth who is the invisible HEAD.
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There are seven colors in the spectrum: red, orange, yellow, green,
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blue, indigo, and violet. But between the violet and the red there are still
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five other colors which are invisible to the physical eye but reveal them-
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selves to the spiritual sight. In every Mystery Order there are also seven
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Brothers who at times go out into the world and there perform whatever work
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may be necessary to advance the people among whom they serve, but five are
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never seen outside the temple. They work with and teach those alone who have
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passed through certain stages of spiritual unfoldment and are able to visit
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the temple in their spiritual bodies, a feat taught in the first initiation
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which usually takes place outside the temple as it is not convenient for all
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to visit that place physically.
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Let not the reader imagine that this initiation makes the pupil a Ro-
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sicrucian, it does not, any more than admission to a high school makes a boy
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[PAGE 9] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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a member of the faculty. Nor does he become a Rosicrucian even after hav-
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ing passed through all the nine degrees of this or any other Mystery School.
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The Rosicrucians are Hierophants of the Lesser Mysteries, and beyond them
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there are still schools wherein greater Mysteries are taught. Those who
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have advanced through the Lesser Mysteries are called Adepts, but even they
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have not reached the exalted standpoint of the twelve Brothers of the
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Rosicrucian Order or the Hierophants of any other Lesser Mystery School
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any more than the freshman at college has attained to the knowledge and
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position of a teacher in the high school from which he has just graduated.
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A later work will deal with initation, but we may say here that the
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door of a genuine Mystery School is not unlocked by a golden key, but is
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only opened as a reward for meritorious service to humanity and any one who
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advertises himself as a Rosicrucian or makes a charge for tuition, by either
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of those acts shows himself to be a chrlatan. The true pupil of any Mystery
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School is far too modest to advertise the fact, he will scorn all titles or
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honors from men, he will have no regard for riches save the riches of love
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given to him by those whom it becomes his privilege to help and teach.
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In the centuries that have gone by since the Rosicrucian Order was first
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formed they have worked quietly and secretly, aiming to mould the thought of
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Western Europe through the works of Paracelsus, Boehme, Bacon, Shakespeare,
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[PAGE 10] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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Fludd and others. Each night at midnight when the physical activities of the
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day are at their lowest ebb, and the spiritual impulse at its highest flood
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tide, they have sent out from their temple soul-stirring vibrations to coun-
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teract materialism and to further the development of soul powers. To their
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activities we owe the gradual spiritualization of our once so materialistic
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science.
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With the commencement of the twentieth century a further step was taken.
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It was realized that something must be done to make religion scientific as
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well as to make science religious, in order that they may ultimately blend;
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for at the present time heart and intellect are divorced. The heart
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instinctively feels the truth of religious teachings concerning such
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wonderful mysteries as the Immaculate Conception (the Mystic Birth), the
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Crucifixion (the Mystic Death), the Cleansing Blood, the Atonement, and
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other doctrines of the Church, which the intellect refuses to believe, as
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they are incapable of demonstration, and seemingly at war with natural law.
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Material advancement may be furthered when intellect is dominant and the
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longings of the heart unsatisfied, but soul growth will be retarded until
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the heart also receives satisfaction.
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In order to give the world a teaching so blended that it will satisfy
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both the mind and heart, a messenger must be found and instructed. Certain
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unusual qualifications were necessary, and the first one chosen failed to
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pass a certain test after several years had been spent to prepare him for
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the work to be done.
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[PAGE 11] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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It is well said that there is a time to sow, and a time to reap, and
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that there are certain times for all the works of life, and in accordance
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with this law of periodicity each impulse in spiritual uplift must also be
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undertaken at an appropriate time to be successful. The first and sixth
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decades of each century are particularly propitious to commence the
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promulgation of new spiritual teachings. Therefore the Rosicrucians were
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much concerned at this failure, for only five years were left of the first
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decade of the twentieth century.
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Their second choice of a messenger fell upon the present writer, though
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he knew it not at the time, and by shaping circumstances about him they made
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it possible for him to begin a period of preparation for the work they
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desired him to do. Three years later, when he had gone to Germany, also
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because of circumstances shaped by the invisible Brotherhood, and was on the
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verge of despair at the discovery that the light which was the object of his
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quest, was only a jack-o-lantern, the Brothers of the Rosicrucian Order
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applied the test to see whether he would be a faithful messenger and give
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the teachings they desired to entrust to him, to the world. And when he had
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passed the trial they gave him the monumental solution of the problem of
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existence first published in THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION IN November,
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1909, more than a year before the expiration of the first decade of the
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twentieth century. This book marked a new era in so-called "occult"
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literature, and the many editions which have since been published as well as
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[PAGE 12] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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the thousands of letters which continue to come to the author, are speaking
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testimonies to the fact that people are finding in this teaching a
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satisfaction they have sought elsewhere in vain.
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The Rosicrucians teach that all great religions have been given to the
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people among whom they are found, by Divine Intelligences who designed each
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system of worship to suit the needs of the race or nation to whom it was
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given. A primitive people cannot respond to a lofty and sublime religion,
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and VICE VERSA. What helps one race would hinder another, and in pursuance
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of the same policy there has been devised a system of soul-unfoldment suited
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especially to the Western people, who are racially and temperamentally unfit
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to undergo the discipline of the Eastern school, which was designed for the
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more backward Hindus.
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THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP
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For the purpose of promulgating the Rosicrucian Teachings in the Western
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World, the Rosicrucian Fellowship was founded in 1909. It is the herald of
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the Aquarian Age, when the Sun by its precessional passage through the
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constellation Aquarius, will bring out all the intellectual and spiritual
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potencies in man which are symbolized by that sign. As heat from a fire
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warms all objects within the sphere of its radiations, so also the Aquarian
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ray will raise the earth's vibrations to a pitch we are as yet unable to
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comprehend, though we have demonstrations of the MATERIAL workings of this
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[PAGE 13] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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force in the inventions which have revolutionized life within the memory of
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the present generation. We have wondered at the X-ray, which sees through
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the human body, but each one has a sense latent which when evolved will
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enable him to see through any number of bodies or to any distance. We marvel
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at the telephone conversations across the continent of America, but each has
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within a latent sense which when evolved will enable him to see through any
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number of bodies or to any distance. We marvel at the telephone
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conversations across the continent of America, but each has within a latent
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sense of speech and hearing that is far more acute; we are surprised at the
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exploits of ships under sea and in the sky, but we are all capable of
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passage under water or through the sky; nay, more we may pass unscathed
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through the solid rock and the raging fire, if we know how, and lightning
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itself is slow compared to the speed with which we may travel. This sounds
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like a fairy tale today, as did Jules Verne's stories a generation ago, but
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the Aquarian Age will witness the realization of these dreams, and ever so
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much more that we still do not even dream of. Such faculties will then be
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the possessions of large numbers of people who will have gradually evolved
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them as previously the ability to walk, speak, hear, and see, were
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developed.
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Therein lies a great danger, for, obviously, anyone endowed with such
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faculties may use them to the greatest detriment of the world at large,
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unless restrained by a spirit of unselfishness and an all-embracing
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altruism. Therefore religion is needed today as never before, to foster love
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and fellow-feeling among humanity so that it may be prepared to use the
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great gifts in store for it wisely and well. This need of religion is
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[PAGE 14] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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specially felt in a certain class where the ether is more loosely knit to
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the physical atoms than in the majority, and on that account they are now
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beginning to sense the Aquarian vibrations.
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This class is again divided in two groups. In one the intellect is
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dominant, and the people in that class therefore seek to grasp the spiritual
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mysteries out of curiosity from the viewpoint of cold reason. They pursue
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the path of knowledge for the sake of knowledge, considering that an end in
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itself. The idea that knowledge is of value only when put to practical
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constructive use does not seem to have presented itself to them. This class
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we may call OCCULTISTS.
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The other group does not care for knowledge, but feels an inner urge
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God-ward, and pursues the path of devotion to the high ideal set before them
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in Christ, doing the deeds that He did as far as their flesh will permit,
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and this in time results in an interior illumination which brings with it
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all the knowledge obtained by the other class, and much more. This class we
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may describe as MYSTICS.
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Certain dangers confront each of the two groups. If the occultist
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obtains illumination and evolves within himeslf the latent spiritual
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faculties, he may use them for the furtherance of his personal objects, to
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the great detriment of his fellow-men. That is black magic, and the
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punishment which it AUTOMATICALLY calls down upon the head of the
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perpetrator is so awful that it is best to draw the veil over it. The mystic
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may also err because of ignorance, and fall into the meshes of nature's law,
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[PAGE 15] THE ORDER OF ROSICRUCIANS
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but being actuated by love, his mistakes will never be very serious, and as
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he grows in grace the soundless voice within his heart will speak more
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distinctly to teach him the way.
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The Rosicrucian Fellowship endeavors to prepare the world in general,
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and the sensitives of the two groups in particular, for the awakening of the
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latent powers in man, so that all may be guided safely through the
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danger-zone and be as well fitted as possible to use these new faculties.
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Effort is made to blend the love without which Paul declared a knowl-
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edge of all mysteries worthless, with a mystic knowledge rooted and
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grounded in love, so that the pupils of this school may become LIVING expo-
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nents of this blended soul-science of the Western Wisdom School, and
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gradually educate humanity at large in the virtues necessary to make the
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possession of higher powers safe.
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[PAGE 16] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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CHAPTER II
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THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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THE PROBLEM OF LIFE
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Among all the vicissitudes of life, which vary in each individual's
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experience, there is one event which sooner or later comes to
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everyone--Death! No matter what our station in life, whether the life lived
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has been a laudable one or the reverse, whether great achievements have
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marked our path among men; whether health or sickness has been our lot,
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whether we have been famous and surrounded by a host of admiring friends or
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have wandered unknown through the years of our life, at some time there
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comes a moment when we stand alone before the portal of death and are
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forced to take the leap into the dark.
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The thought of this leap and of what lies beyond must inevitably force
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itself upon every thinking person. In the years of youth and health, when
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the bark of our life sails upon seas of prosperity, when all appears
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beautiful and bright, we may put the thought behind us, but there will
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surely come a time in the life of every thinking person when the problem of
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life and death forces itself upon his consciousness and refuses to be set
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aside. Neither will it help him to accept the ready-made solution of anyone
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else without thought and in blind belief, for this is a basic problem which
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every one must solve for himself or herself in order to obtain satisfaction.
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[PAGE 17] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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Upon the eastern edge of the Desert of Sahara there stands the
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world-famous Sphinx with its inscrutable face turned toward the
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East, ever greeting the Sun as its rising rays herald the newborn day. It
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was said in the Greek myth that it was the wont of this monster to ask a
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riddle of each traveler. She devoured those who could not answer, but
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when Oedipus solved the riddle she destroyed herself.
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The riddle which she asked of men was the riddle of life and death, a
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query which is as relevant today as ever, and which each one must answer or
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be devoured in the jaws of death. But when onece a person has found the
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solution to the problem, it will appear that in reality there is no death,
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that what appears so, is but a change from one state of EXISTENCE to
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another. Thus, for the man who finds the true solution to the riddle of
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life, the sphinx of death has ceased to exist, and he can lift his voice in
|
|
the triumphant cry, "O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy
|
|
victory?"
|
|
|
|
Various theories of life have been advocated to solve this problem of
|
|
life. We may divide them into two classes, namely THE MONISTIC THEORY, which
|
|
holds that all the facts of life can be explained by reference to this
|
|
visible world wherein we live, and THE DUALISTIC THEORY, which refers part
|
|
of the phenomenon of life to another world which is now invisible to us.
|
|
|
|
Raphael in his famous painting, "The School of Athens," has most aptly pic-
|
|
tured to us the attitude of these two schools of thought. We see upon that
|
|
marvelous painting a Greek Court such as those wherein philosophers were
|
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[PAGE 18] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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once wont to congregate. Upon the various steps which lead into the building
|
|
a large number of men are engaged in deep conversation, but in the center
|
|
at the top of the steps stand two figures, supposedly of Plato and Aris-
|
|
totle, one pointing upwards, the other towards the earth, each looking the
|
|
other in the face, mutely, but with deeply concentrated will; each seeking
|
|
to cinvince the other that his attitude is right, for each bears the con-
|
|
viction in his heart. One holds that he is of the earth earthy, that he
|
|
has come from the dust and that thereto he will return, the other firmly
|
|
advocates the position that there is a higher something which has always ex-
|
|
isted and will continue regardless of whether the body wherein it now dwells
|
|
holds together or not.
|
|
|
|
The question who is right is still an open one with the majority of
|
|
mankind. Millions of tons of paper and printer's ink have been used in
|
|
futile attempts to settle it by argument, but it will always remian open to
|
|
all who have not solved the riddle themselves, for it is a basic problem, a
|
|
part of the life experience of every human being to settle that question,
|
|
and therefore no one can give us the solution ready-made for our acceptance.
|
|
All that can be done by those who have really solved the problem, is to show
|
|
to others the line along which they have found the solution, and thus direct
|
|
the inquirer how he also, by his own efforts, may arrive at a conclusion.
|
|
|
|
That is the aim of this little book; not to offer a solution to the
|
|
problem of life to be taken blindly, on faith in the author's ability of
|
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[PAGE 19] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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investigation. The teachings herein set forth are those handed down by the
|
|
Great Western Mystery School of the Rosicrucian Order and are the result of
|
|
the concurrent testimony of a long line of trained Seers given to the author
|
|
and supplemented by his own independent investigation of the realms
|
|
traversed by the Spirit in its cyclic path from the invisible world to this
|
|
plane of existence and back again.
|
|
|
|
Nevertheless, the student is warned that the writer may have
|
|
misunderstood some of the teachings and that despite the greatest care he
|
|
may have taken a wrong view of that which he believes to have been seen in
|
|
the invisible world where the possibilities of making a mistake are legion.
|
|
Here in the world which we view about us the forms are stable and do not
|
|
easily change, but in the world around us which is perceptible only by the
|
|
spiritual sight, we may say that there is in reality no form, but that all
|
|
is life. At least the forms are so changeable that the metamorphosis
|
|
recounted in fairy stories is discounted there to an amazing degree, and
|
|
therefore we have the surprising revelations of mediums and other untrained
|
|
clairvoyants who, though they may be perfectly honest, are deceived by
|
|
illusions of FORM which is evanescent, because they are incapable of viewing
|
|
the LIFE that is the permanent basis of that form.
|
|
|
|
We must learn to see in this world. The new-born babe has no conception
|
|
of distance and will reach for things far, far beyond its grasp until it has
|
|
learned to gauge its capacity. A blind man who acquires the faculty of
|
|
sight, or has it restored by an operation will at first be inclined to close
|
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[PAGE 20] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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|
his eyes when moving from place to place, and declare that it is easier to
|
|
walk by feeling than by sight; that is because he has not learned to use his
|
|
newly acquired faculty. Similarly the man whose spiritual vision has been
|
|
newly opened requires to be trained; in fact, he is in much greater need
|
|
thereof than the babe and the blind man already mentioned. Denied that
|
|
training, he would be like a new-born babe placed in a nursery where the
|
|
walls are lined with mirrors of different convex and concave curvatures,
|
|
which would distort its own shape and the forms of its attendants. If
|
|
allowed to grow up in such surroundings and unable to see the real shapes of
|
|
itself and its nurses it would naturaly believe that it saw many different
|
|
and distorted shapes, when in reality the mirrors were responsible for the
|
|
illusion. Were the persons concerned in such an experiment and the child
|
|
taken out of the illusory surroundings, it would be incapable of recognizing
|
|
them until the matter had been properly explained. There are similar dangers
|
|
of illusion to those who have developed spiritual sight, until they have
|
|
been trained to discount the refraction and view the LIFE which is permanent
|
|
and stable, disregarding the FORM which is evanescent and changeable. The
|
|
danger of getting things out of focus always remains, however, and is so
|
|
subtle that the writer feels an imperative duty to warn his readers to take
|
|
all statements concerning the unseen world with the provverbial grain of
|
|
salt, for he has no intention to deceive. He is therefore inclined rather to
|
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[PAGE 21] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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|
magnify than to minimize his limitations and would advise the student to
|
|
accept nothing from the author's pen without reasoning it out for himself.
|
|
Thus, if he is deceived, he will be self-deceived and the author is
|
|
blameless.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THREE THEORIES OF LIFE
|
|
|
|
|
|
Only three noteworthy theories have been offered as solutions to the
|
|
riddle of existence and in order that we may be able to make the important
|
|
choice between them, we will state briefly what they are and give some of
|
|
the arguments which lead us to advocate the Doctrine of Rebirth as the
|
|
method which favors soul-growth and the ultimate attainment of perfection,
|
|
thus offering the best solution to the problem of life.
|
|
|
|
1) THE MATERIALISTIC THEORY TEACHES THAT LIFE IS BUT A SHORT JOURNEY
|
|
FROM THE CRADLE TO THE GRAVE; THAT THERE IS NO HIGHER INTELLIGENCE IN THE
|
|
UNIVERSE THAN MAN; THAT HIS MIND IS PRODUCED BY CERTAIN CORRELATIONS OF MAT-
|
|
TER AND THAT THEREFORE DEATH AND DISSOLUTION OF THE BODY TERMINATE EXIST-
|
|
ENCE.
|
|
|
|
There was a day when the arguments of materialistic philosophers seemed
|
|
convincing, but as science advances it discovers more and more that there is
|
|
a spiritual side to the universe. That life and consciousness may exist
|
|
without being able to give us a sign, has been amply proven inthe cases
|
|
where a person who was entranced and thought dead for days has suddenly
|
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|
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|
[PAGE 22] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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|
awakened and told all that had taken place around the body. Such eminent
|
|
scientist as Sir Oliver Lodge, Camille Flammarion, Lombroso, and other
|
|
men of highest intelligence and scientific training, have unequivocally
|
|
stated as the result of their investigations, that the intelligence which we
|
|
call man survives death of the body and lives on in our midst as independ-
|
|
ently of whether we see them or not, as light and color exist all about the
|
|
blind man regardless of the fact that he does not perceive them. These
|
|
scientist have reached their conclusion after years of careful investiga-
|
|
tion. They have found that the so-called dead can, and under certain cir-
|
|
cumstances do, communicate with us in such a manner that mistake is out of
|
|
the question. We maintain that their testimony is worth more than the argu-
|
|
ment of materialism to the contrary, for it is based on years of careful
|
|
investigation, it is in harmony with such well established laws as THE
|
|
LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MATTER and THE LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY. Mind is
|
|
a form of energy, and immune from destruction as claimed by the materialist.
|
|
Therefore we disbar the materialistic theory as unsound because out of har-
|
|
mony with the laws of nataure and with well established facts.
|
|
|
|
2) THE THEORY OF THEOLOGY CLAIMS THAT JUST PRIOR TO EACH BIRTH A SOUL IS
|
|
CREATED BY GOD AND ENTERS INTO THE WORLD WHERE IT LIVES FOR A TIME VARYING
|
|
FROM A FEW MINUTES TO A FEW SCORE YEARS; THAT AT THE END OF THIS SHORT SPAN
|
|
OF LIFE IT RETURNS THROUGH THE PORTAL OF DEATH TO THE INVISIBLE BEYOND,
|
|
WHERE IT REMAINS FOREVER IN A CONDITION OF HAPPINESS OR MISERY ACCORDING TO
|
|
THE DEEDS DONE IN THE BODY DURING THE FEW YEARS IT LIVED HERE.
|
|
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|
|
[PAGE 23] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
Plato insisted upon the necessity of a clear definition of terms as a
|
|
basis of argument and we contend that that is as necessary in discussing the
|
|
problem of life from the Bible point of view as in arguments from the
|
|
platonic standpoint. According to the Bible man is a composite being con-
|
|
sisting of body, soul, and Spirit. The two latter are usually taken to be
|
|
synonymous but we in sist that they are not interchangeable and present the
|
|
following to support our dictum.
|
|
|
|
All things are in a state of vibration. Vibrations from objects in our
|
|
surroundings are constantly impinging upon us and carry to our senses a cog-
|
|
nition of the external world. The vibrations in the ether act upon our eyes
|
|
so that we see, and vibrations in the air transmit sounds to the ear.
|
|
|
|
We also breathe the air and ether which is thus charged with pictures
|
|
of our surroundings and the sounds in our environment, so that by means
|
|
of the breath we receive at each moment of our life, INTERNALLY, an accu-
|
|
rate picture of our external surroundings.
|
|
|
|
That is a scientific proposition. Science does not explain what becomes
|
|
of these vibrations, however, but according to the Rosicrucian Mystery
|
|
Teaching they are transmitted to the blood, and then etched upon a little
|
|
atom in the heart as automatically as a moving picture is imprinted upon the
|
|
sensitized film, and a record of sounds is engraved upon the
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 24] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
phonographic disc. This breath-record starts with the first breath of the
|
|
new-born babe and ends only with the last gasp of the dying man, and "soul"
|
|
is a product of the breath. Genesis also shows the connection between breath
|
|
and soul in the words: "And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the
|
|
ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became a
|
|
living soul" (The same word: NEPHESH, is translated breath and soul in
|
|
the above quotation.)
|
|
|
|
In the post-mortem existence the breath-record is disposed of. The good
|
|
acts of life produce feelings of pleasure and the intensity of attraction
|
|
incorporates them into the Spirit as soul-power. THUS THE BREATH-RECORDS OF
|
|
OUR GOOD ACTS ARE THE SOUL WHICH IS SAVED, for by the union with the Spirit
|
|
they become immortal. As they accumulate life after life, we become more
|
|
soulful and they are thus also the basis of soul-growth.
|
|
|
|
The record of our evil acts is also derived from our breath in the mo-
|
|
ments when they were committed. The pain and suffering they bring cause
|
|
the Spirit to expel the breath-record from it being in Purgatory. As that
|
|
cannot exist independently of the life-giving Spirit, the breath-record of
|
|
our sins disintegrates upon expurgation, and thus we see that "the soul that
|
|
sinneth, it shall die." The memory of the suffering incidental to expurga-
|
|
tion, however, remains with the Spirit as CONSCIENCE, to deter from repeti-
|
|
tion of the same evil in later lives.
|
|
|
|
Thus both our good and evil acts are recorded through the agency of the
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 25] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
breath, which is therefore the basis of the soul, but while the breath-
|
|
record of good acts amalgamates with the Spirit and lives on forever as an
|
|
immortal soul, the breath-record of evil deeds is disintegrated; it is the
|
|
soul that sinneth and dies.
|
|
|
|
While the Bible teaches that immortality of the soul is conditional upon
|
|
well-doing, it makes no distinction in respect of the Spirit. The statement
|
|
is clear and emphatic when...."The silver cord be loosed...then shall the
|
|
dust return to the earth as it was and the spirit shall return to God who
|
|
gave it."
|
|
|
|
Thus the Bible teaches that the body is made of dust and returns
|
|
thereto, that a part of the soul generated in the breath is perishable, but
|
|
that the Spirit survives bodily death and persists forever. Therefore a
|
|
"lost soul" in the common acceptance of that term is not a Bible teach-
|
|
ing, for the Spirit is uncreate and eternal as God Himself, and therefore
|
|
the orthodox theory cannot be true.
|
|
|
|
3) THE THEORY OF REBIRTH: WHICH TEACHES THAT EACH SPIRIT IS AN INTEGRAL
|
|
PART OF GOD, THAT IT ENFOLDS ALL DIVINE POSSIBILITES AS THE ACORN ENFOLDS
|
|
THE OAK; THAT BY MEANS OF MANY EXISTENCES IN AN EARTHLY BODY OF GRADUALLY
|
|
IMPROVING TEXTURE ITS LATENT POWERS ARE BEING SLOWLY UNFOLDED AND BECOME
|
|
AVAILABLE AS DYNAMIC ENERGY; THAT NONE CAN BE LOST BUT THAT ALL WILL ULTI-
|
|
MATELY ATTAIN TO PERFECTION AND REUNION WITH GOD, EACH BRINING WITH IT THE
|
|
ACUMULATED EXPERIENCES WHICH ARE THE FRUITAGE OF ITS PILGRIMAGE THROUGH
|
|
MATTER.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 26] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
Or, as we may poetically express it:
|
|
|
|
WE ARE ETERNAL
|
|
|
|
On whistling stormcloud; on Zephyrus wing,
|
|
The Spirit-choir loud the world-anthems sing;
|
|
Hark! List to their voice: "We have passed through death's door,
|
|
There's no Death; rejoice! life lives evermore."
|
|
|
|
We are, have always been, will ever be.
|
|
We are a portion of Eternity,
|
|
Older than Creation, a part of One Great Whole,
|
|
Is each Individual and immortal Soul.
|
|
|
|
On Time's whirring loom our garments we've wrought,
|
|
Eternally weave we on network of Thought,
|
|
Our kin and our country, by Mind brought to birth,
|
|
Were patterned in heaven ere molded on earth.
|
|
|
|
We have shone in the jewel and danced on the wave,
|
|
We have sparkled in fire, defying the grave;
|
|
Through shapes everchanging, in size, kind and name
|
|
Our individual essence still is the same.
|
|
|
|
And when we have reached to the highest of all,
|
|
The gradations of growth our minds shall recall,
|
|
So that link by link we may join them together
|
|
And trace step by step the way we reached thither.
|
|
|
|
Thus in time we shall know, if only we do
|
|
What lifts, ennobles, is right and true.
|
|
With kindness to all, with malice to none,
|
|
That in and through us God's will may be done.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 27] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
We venture to make the assertion that there is but one sin: IGNORANCE,
|
|
and but one salvation: APPLIED KNOWLEDGE. Even the wisest among us know
|
|
but litte of what may be learned, however, and no one has attained to per-
|
|
fection, or an attain in one single short life, but we note that everywhere
|
|
in nature slow persistent unfoldment makes for higher and higher development
|
|
of everything, and we call this process evolution.
|
|
|
|
One of the chief characteristics of evolution lies in the fact that it
|
|
manifests in alternating periods of activity and rest. The busy summer, when
|
|
all things upon earth are exerting themselves to bring forth, is followed by
|
|
the flood-tide. Thus, as all other things move in cycles, the life that ex-
|
|
presses itself here upon earth for a few years is not to be thought of as
|
|
ended when death has been reached, but as surely as the Sun rises in the
|
|
morning after having set at night, will the life that was ended by the death
|
|
of one body be taken up again in a new vehicle and in a different environ-
|
|
ment.
|
|
|
|
This earth may, in fact, be likened to a school to which we return life
|
|
after life to learn new lessons, as our children go to school day after day
|
|
to increase their knowledge. The child sleeps through the night which inter-
|
|
venes between death and a new birth. There are also different classes in
|
|
this world school which correspond to the various grades from kindergarten
|
|
to college. In the lower classes we find Spirits who have gone to the school
|
|
of life but a few times, they are savages now, but in time they will become
|
|
wiser and better than we are, and we ourselves shall progress in future
|
|
lives to spiritual heights of which we cannot even conceive at the present.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 28] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
If we apply ourselves to learn the lessons of life, we shall of course ad-
|
|
vance much faster in the school of life than if we dilly-dally and idle our
|
|
time away. This, on the same principle which governs in one of our own in-
|
|
stitutions of learning.
|
|
|
|
We are not here then by the caprice of God. He has not placed one in
|
|
clover and another in a desert, nor has He given one a healthy body so that
|
|
he may live at ease from pain and sickness, while He placed another in poor
|
|
circumstances with never a rest from pain. But what we are, we are on ac-
|
|
count of our own diligence or negligence, and what we shall be in the future
|
|
depends upon what we will to be and not upon divine caprice or upon in-
|
|
exorable fate. No matter what the circumstances, it lies with us to master
|
|
them, or to be mastered as we will. Sir Edwin Arnold puts the teaching most
|
|
beautifully in his "Light of Asia:"
|
|
|
|
The Books say well, my Brothers! each man's life
|
|
The outcome of his former living is;
|
|
The bygone wrongs bring forth sorrows and woes,
|
|
The bygone right breeds bliss.
|
|
|
|
Each has such lordship as the loftiest ones,
|
|
Nay, for with powers around, above, below,
|
|
As with all flesh and whatsoever lives ACT maketh joy or woe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Who toiled, a slave, may come anew a prince
|
|
For gentle worthiness and merit won,
|
|
Who ruled, a king, may wander earth in rags
|
|
For things done or undone.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 29] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
|
|
|
|
|
|
Or, as Ella Wheeler Wilcox says:
|
|
|
|
"One ship sails East and another sails West
|
|
With the self same winds that blow.
|
|
'Tis the set of the sail, and not the gale,
|
|
Which determines the way they go.
|
|
|
|
As the winds of the sea are the ways of fate
|
|
As we voyage along through life.
|
|
'Tis the act of the soul, which determines the goal
|
|
And not the calm or the strife."
|
|
|
|
|
|
When we wish to engage someone to undertake a certain mission we choose
|
|
some one whom we think particularly fitted to fulfill the requirements, and
|
|
we must suppose that a Divine Being would use at least as much common sense
|
|
and not choose anyone to do his errand who was not fitted therefor. So when
|
|
we read in the Bible that Samson was foreordained to be the slayer of the
|
|
Philistines and that Jeremiah was predestined to be a prophet, it is but
|
|
logical to suppose that they must have been particularly suited to such oc-
|
|
cupations. John the Baptist, also, was born to be a herald of the coming
|
|
Saviour and to preach the Kingdom of God which is to take the place of the
|
|
kingdom of men.
|
|
|
|
Had these people had no previous training, how could they have developed
|
|
such a fitness to fulfill their various missions, and if they had been fit-
|
|
ted, how else could they have received their training if not in earlier
|
|
lives?
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 30] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Jews believed in the Doctrine of Rebirth or they would not have asked
|
|
John the Baptist if he were Elijah, as recorded in the first chapter of
|
|
John. The Apostles of Christ also held the belief as we may see from the in-
|
|
cident recorded in the Sixteenth chapter of Matthew where the Christ asked
|
|
them the question: "Whom do men say that I, the Son of Man, am?" The
|
|
Apostles replied: "Some say that thou art John the Baptist; some, Elias;
|
|
and others Jeremias or one of the Prophets." Upon this occasion the Christ
|
|
tacitly assented to the teaching of Rebirth because He did not correct the
|
|
disciples as would have been His plain duty in His capacity as teacher, when
|
|
the pupils entertained a mistaken idea.
|
|
|
|
But to Nicodemus He said unequivocally: "Except a man be born again,
|
|
he cannot see the kingdom of God," and in the eleventh chapter of Matthew,
|
|
the fourteenth verse, He said, speaking of John the Baptist: "THIS IS ELI-
|
|
JAH." In the seventeenth chapter of Matthew, the twelfth verse, He said:
|
|
"Elijah is come already and they knew him not, but have done unto him what-
|
|
soever they listed." "Then the disciples understood that he spoke to them
|
|
of John the Baptist."
|
|
|
|
Thus we maintain that the Doctrine of Rebirth offers the only solution
|
|
to the problem of life which is in harmony with the laws of nature, which
|
|
answers the ethical requirements of the case and permits us to love God
|
|
without blinding our reason to the inequalities of life and the varying cir-
|
|
cumstances which give to a few the ease and comfort, the health and wealth,
|
|
which are denied to the many.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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[PAGE 31] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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The theory of heredity advanced by materialists applies only to the
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FORM, for as a carpenter uses material from a certain pile of lumber to
|
|
build a house in which he afterward lives, so does the Spirit take the sub-
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|
stance wherewith to build its house from the parents. The carpenter cannot
|
|
build a house of hard wood from spruce lumber, and the Spirit also must
|
|
build a body which is like those from which the material was taken. But the
|
|
theory of heredity does not apply upon the moral plane, for it is a known
|
|
fact that in the rogues galleries of America and Europe there is no case
|
|
where both father and son are represented. Thus the sons of criminals,
|
|
though they have the tendencies to crime, keep out of the clutches of the
|
|
law. Neither will heredity hold good upon the plane of the intellect, for
|
|
many cases may be cited where a genius and an idiot spring from the same
|
|
stock. The great Cuvier, whose brain was of about the same weight, as Daniel
|
|
Webster's, and whose intellect was as great, had five children who all died
|
|
of paresis; the brother of Alexander the Great was an idiot; and thus we
|
|
hold that another solution must be found to account for the facts of life.
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|
The Law of Rebirth coupled with its companion law, the Law of Causation,
|
|
does that. When we die after one life, we return to earth later, under cir-
|
|
cumstances determined by the manner in which we lived before. The gambler is
|
|
drawn to pool parlors and race tracks to associate with others of like
|
|
taste, the musician is attracted to the concert halls and music studios
|
|
where there are congenial Spirits, and the returning Ego also carries with
|
|
it likes and dislikes which cause it to seek parents among the class to
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|
which it belongs.
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[PAGE 32] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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But then someone will point to cases where we find people of entirely
|
|
opposite tastes living lives of torture, because grouped in the same family,
|
|
and forced by circumstances to stay there contrary to their wills. But that
|
|
does not vitiate the law in the slightest. In each life we contact certain
|
|
obligations which cannot then be fulfilled. Perhaps we have run away from a
|
|
duty such as the care of an invalid relative and have met death without com-
|
|
ing to a realization of our mistake. That relative upon the other hand may
|
|
have suffered severely from our neglect, and have stored up a bitterness
|
|
against us before death terminates the suffering. Death and the subsequent
|
|
removal to another environment does not pay our debts in this life, any more
|
|
than the removal from the city where we now live to another place will pay
|
|
the debts we have contracted prior to our removal. It is therefore quite
|
|
possible that the two who have injured each other as described, may find
|
|
themselves members of the same family. Then, whether they remember the past
|
|
grudge or not, the old enmity will assert itself and cause them to hate anew
|
|
until the consequent discomfort force them to tolerate each other, and per-
|
|
haps later they may learn to love where they hated.
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|
The question also arises in the mind of inquirers: If we have been here
|
|
before why do we not remember? And the answer is that while most people are
|
|
not aware of how their previous existences were spent, there are others who
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[PAGE 33] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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have very distinct recollection of previous lives. A friend of the writer
|
|
for instance, when living in France, one day started to read to
|
|
her son about a certain city where they were then going upon a bicycle tour,
|
|
and the boy exclaimed: "You do not need to tell me about that, Mother. I
|
|
know that city. I lived there and was killed!" He then commenced to de-
|
|
scribe the city and also a certain bridge. Later he took his mother to that
|
|
bridge and showed her the spot where he had met death centuries before. An-
|
|
other friend travelling in Ireland saw a scene which she recognized, and she
|
|
also described to the party the scene around the bend of the road which she
|
|
had never seen in this life, so it must have been a memory from a previous
|
|
life. Numerous other instances could be given where such minor flashes of
|
|
memory reveal to us glimpses from a past life. The verified case in which a
|
|
little three year old girl in Santa Barbara described her life and death has
|
|
been given in THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION. It is perhaps the most
|
|
conclusive evidence as it hinges on the veracity of a child too young to
|
|
have learned deception.
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|
|
This theory of life does not rest upon speculation, however. It is one
|
|
of the first facts of life demonstrated to the pupil of a Mystery School. He
|
|
is taught to watch a child in the act of dying, also, to watch it in the in-
|
|
visible world from day to day, until it comes to a new birth a year or two
|
|
later. Then he knows with absolute certainty that we return to Earth to reap
|
|
in a future life what we now sow.
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[PAGE 34] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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The reason for taking a child to watch in preference to an adult is that
|
|
the child is reborn very quickly, for its short life on Earth has borne but
|
|
few fruits and these are soon assimilated, while the adult who has lived a
|
|
long life and had much experience remains in the invisible worlds for centu-
|
|
ries, so that the pupil could not watch him from death to rebirth. The cause
|
|
of infant mortality will be explained later; here we merely desire to empha-
|
|
size the fact that it is within the range of possibilities of every one
|
|
without exception to become able to know at first hand that which is here
|
|
taught.
|
|
|
|
The average interval between two Earth-lives is about a thousand years.
|
|
IIt is determined by the movement of the Sun known to astronomers as PRE-
|
|
CESSION OF THE EQUINOX, by which the Sun moves through one of the signs of
|
|
the Zodiac in about 2,100 years. During that time the conditions upon Earth
|
|
have changed so much that the Spirit will find entirely new experiences
|
|
here, and therefore it returns.
|
|
|
|
The Great Leaders of evolution always obtain the maximum benefit from
|
|
each condition designed by them, and as the experiences in the same social
|
|
conditions are very different in the case of a man from what they are for a
|
|
woman, the human Spirit takes birth twice during the 2,100 years measured by
|
|
the precession of the equinox, as already explained: it is born once as a
|
|
man and another time as a woman. Such is the rule, but it is subject to
|
|
whatever modifications may be necessary to facilitate reaping what the
|
|
Spirit has sown, as required under the Law of Causation which works hand in
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[PAGE 35] THE PROBLEM OF LIFE AND ITS SOLUTION
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|
hand with the Law of Rebirth. Thus, at times a Spirit may be brought to
|
|
birth long ere the thousand years have expired, in order to fulfill a cer-
|
|
tain mission, or it may be detained in the invisible worlds after the time
|
|
when it should have come to birth according to the strict requirements of a
|
|
blind law. The laws of nature are not that, however. They are Great Intel-
|
|
ligences who always subordinate minor considerations to higher ends, and
|
|
under their beneficent guidance we are constantly progressing from life to
|
|
life under conditions exactly suited to each individual, until in time we
|
|
shall attain to a higher evolution and become Supermen.
|
|
|
|
Oliver Wendell Holmes has so beautifully voiced that aspiration and its
|
|
consummation in the lines:
|
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|
|
"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!"
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[PAGE 36] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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|
THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
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|
|
THE CHEMICAL REGION
|
|
|
|
If one who is capable of consciously using his spiritual body with the
|
|
same facility that we now use our physical vehicles should glide away from
|
|
the Earth into interplanetary space, the Earth and the various other planets
|
|
of our solar system would appear to him or her to be composed of three kinds
|
|
of matter, roughly speaking. The densest matter, which is our visible Earth,
|
|
would appear to him as being the center of the ball as the yolk is in the
|
|
center of an egg. Around that nucleus he or she would observe a finer grade
|
|
of matter similarly disposed in relation to the central mass, as the white
|
|
of the egg is disposed outside the yolk. Upon a little closer investigation
|
|
he would also discover that this second kind of substance permeates the
|
|
solid Earth to the very center, even as the blood percolates through the
|
|
more solid parts of our flesh. Outside both of these mingling layers of mat-
|
|
ter he would observe a still finer, third layer corresponding to the shell
|
|
of the egg, except that this third layer is the finest, most subtle of the
|
|
three grades of matter, and that it interpenetrates both of the two inner
|
|
layers.
|
|
|
|
As already said, the central mass, spiritually seen, is our visible
|
|
world, composed of solids, liquids, and gases. They constitute the Earth,
|
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[PAGE 37] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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|
its atmosphere, and also the ether, of which physical science speaks hypo-
|
|
thetically as permeating the atomic substance of all chemical elements. The
|
|
second layer of matter is called the Desire World and the outermost layer is
|
|
called the World of Thought.
|
|
|
|
A little reflection upon the subject will make clear that just such a
|
|
constitution is necessary to account for facts of life as we see them. All
|
|
forms in the world about us are built from chemical substances: solids, liq-
|
|
uids, and gases, but insofar that they do move, these forms obey a separate
|
|
and distinct impulse, and when this impelling energy leaves, the form be-
|
|
comes inert. The steam engine rotates under the impetus of an invisible gas
|
|
called steam. Before steam filled its cylinder, the engine stood still, and
|
|
when the impelling force is shut off its motion again ceases. The dynamo ro-
|
|
tates under the still more subtle influence of an electric current which may
|
|
also cause the click of a telegraph instrument or the ring of an electric
|
|
bell, but the dynamo ceases its swift whirl and the persistent ring of the
|
|
electric bell becomes mute when the invisible electricity is switched off.
|
|
The forms of the bird, the animal, and the human being also cease their mo-
|
|
tion when the inner force which we call LIFE has winged its invisible way.
|
|
|
|
All forms are impelled into motion by desire: the bird and the animal
|
|
roam land and air in their desire to secure food and shelter, or for the
|
|
purpose of breeding. Man is also moved by these desires, but has in addition
|
|
other and higher incentives to spur him to effort; among them is desire for
|
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[PAGE 38] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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|
rapidity of motion which led him to construct the steam engine and other de-
|
|
vices that move in obedience to HIS desire.
|
|
|
|
If there were no iron in the mountains man could not build machines. If
|
|
there were no clay in the soil, the bony structure of the skeleton would be
|
|
an impossibility, and if there were no Physical World at all, with its so-
|
|
lids, liquids, and gases, this dense body of ours could never have come
|
|
into existence. Reasoning along similar lines it must be at once apparent
|
|
that if there were no Desire World composed of desire-stuff, we should have
|
|
no way of forming feelings, emotions, and desires. A planet composed of the
|
|
materials we perceive with our PHYSICAL eyes and of no other substances,
|
|
might be the home of plants which grow unconsciously, but have no desires to
|
|
cause them to move. The human and animal kingdoms, however, would be impos-
|
|
sibilities.
|
|
|
|
Furthermore, there is in the world a vast number of things, from the
|
|
simplest and most crude instruments, to the most intricate and cunning de-
|
|
vices which have been constructed by the hand of man. These reveal the fact
|
|
of man's thought and ingenuity. Thought must have a source as well as FORM
|
|
and FEELING. We saw that it was necessary to have the requisite material in
|
|
order to build a steam engine or a body and we reasoned from the fact that
|
|
in order to obtain material to express desire there must also be a world
|
|
composed of desire stuff. Carrying our argument to its logical conclusion,
|
|
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[PAGE 39] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
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|
|
|
|
we also hold that unless a World of Thought provides a reservoir of mind
|
|
stuff upon which we may draw, it would be impossible for us to think and in-
|
|
vent the things which we see in even the lowest civilization.
|
|
|
|
Thus it will be clear that the division of a planet into worlds is not
|
|
based on fanciful metaphysical speculation, but is logically necessary in
|
|
the economy of nature. Therefore it must be taken into consideration by any
|
|
one who would study and aim to understand the inner nature of things. When
|
|
we see the street cars moving along our streets, it does not explain to say
|
|
that the motor is driven by electricity of so many amperes at so many volts.
|
|
These names only add to our confusion until we have thoroughly studied the
|
|
science of electricity; and then we shall find that the mystery deepens, for
|
|
while the street car belongs to the world of INERT FORM perceptible to our
|
|
vision, the electric current which moves it is indigenous to the realm of
|
|
FORCE, the invisible Desire World, and the thought which created and guides
|
|
it, comes from the still more subtle World of Thought which is the home
|
|
world of the human Spirit, the Ego.
|
|
|
|
It may be objected that this line of argument makes a simple matter ex-
|
|
ceedingly intricate, but a little reflection will soon show the fallacy of
|
|
such a contention. Viewed superficially any of the sciences seem extremely
|
|
simple; anatomically we may divide the body into flesh and bone, chemically
|
|
we may make the simple divisions between solid, liquid, and gas, but thor-
|
|
oughly to master the science of anatomy it is necessary to spend years in
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
[PAGE 40] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
close application and learn to know all the little nerves, the ligaments
|
|
which bind articulations between various parts of the bony structure, to
|
|
study the several kinds of tissue and their disposition in our system where
|
|
they form the bones, muscles, glands, etc., which in the aggregate we know
|
|
as the human body. To understand properly the science of chemistry we must
|
|
study the valence of the atom which determines the power of combination of
|
|
the various elements, together with other niceties, such as atomic weight,
|
|
density, etc. New wonders are constantly opening up to the most experienced
|
|
chemist, who understands best the immensity of his or her chosen science.
|
|
|
|
The youngest lawyer, fresh from law school, knows more about the most
|
|
intricate cases, in his or her own estimation, than the judges upon the Su-
|
|
preme Court bench who spend long hours, weeks and months, seriously deliber-
|
|
ating over their decisions. But those who, without having studied, think
|
|
they understand and are fitted to discourse upon the greatest of all sci-
|
|
ences, the science of Life and Being, make a greater mistake. After years of
|
|
patient study, of holy life spent in close application, a man is oftentimes
|
|
perplexed at the immensity of the subject he studies. He finds it to be so
|
|
vast in both the direction of the great and small that it baffles
|
|
description, that language fails, and that the tongue must remain mute.
|
|
Therefore we hold (and we speak from knowledge gained through years of close
|
|
study and investigation) that the finer distinctions which we have made, and
|
|
shall make, are not at all arbitrary, but absolutely necessary as are divi-
|
|
sions and distinctions made in anatomy or chemistry.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
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|
|
[PAGE 41] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
No form in the physical world has feeling in the true sense of that
|
|
word. It is the indwelling life which feels, as we may readily SEE from the
|
|
fact that a body which responds to the lightest touch while instinct with
|
|
life, exhibits no sensation whatever even when cut to pieces after the life
|
|
has fled. Demonstrations have been made by scientists, particularly by Pro-
|
|
fessor Bose of Calcutta, to show that there is feeling in dead animal tissue
|
|
and even in tin and other metal, but we maintain that the diagrams which
|
|
seem to support his contentions in reality demonstrate only a response to
|
|
impacts similar to the rebound of a rubber ball, and that must not be con-
|
|
fused with such feelings as LOVE, HATE, SYMPATHY and AVERSION. Goethe also,
|
|
in his novel. "Elective Affinities," (Wahlverwandtschaft), brings out some
|
|
beautiful illustrations wherein he makes it seem as if atoms loved and
|
|
hated, from the fact that some elements combine readily while other sub-
|
|
stances refuse to amalgamate, a phenomenon produced by the different rates
|
|
of speed at which various elements vibrate and an unequal inclination of
|
|
their axes. Only where there is sentient life can there be feelings of
|
|
pleasure and pain, sorrow or joy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE ETHERIC REGION
|
|
|
|
|
|
In addition to the solids, liquids, and gases which compose the CHEMICAL
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
[PAGE 42] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
REGION of the Physical World there is also a finer grade of matter called e-
|
|
ther, which permeates the atomic structure of the earth and its atmosphere
|
|
substantially as science teaches. Scientists have never seen, nor have they
|
|
weighed, measured, or analyzed this substance, but the infer that it must
|
|
exist in order to account for transmission of light and various other pheno-
|
|
mena. If it were possible for us to live in a room from which the air had
|
|
been exhausted, we might speak at the top of our voices, we might ring the
|
|
largest bell, or we might even discharge a cannon close to our ear and ] we
|
|
should hear no sound, for air is the medium which transmits sound vibra-
|
|
tions to the tympanum of our ear, and that would be lacking. But if an elec-
|
|
tric light were lighted, we should at once perceive its rays; it would il-
|
|
lumine the room despite the lack of air. Hence there must be a substance ca-
|
|
pable of being set into vibration, between the electric light and our eyes.
|
|
That medium scientists call ether, but it so subtle that no instrument has
|
|
been devised whereby it may be measured or analyzed, and therefore the sci-
|
|
entists are without much information concerning it, though forced to postu-
|
|
late its existence.
|
|
|
|
We do not seek to belittle the achievements of modern scientists. We
|
|
have the greatest admiration for them and we entertain high expectations of
|
|
what ambitions they may yet realize, but we perceive a limitation in the
|
|
fact that all discoveries of the past have been made by the invention of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
|
[PAGE 43] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
wonderful instruments applied in a most ingenious manner to solve seemingly
|
|
insoluble and baffling problems. The strength of science lies vested in its
|
|
instruments, for the scientist may say to anyone: "Go, procure a number of
|
|
glasses ground in a certain manner, insert them in a tube, direct that tube
|
|
toward a certain point in the sky where now nothing appears to your naked
|
|
eye. You will then see a beautiful star called Uranus." If his directions
|
|
are followed, anyone is QUICKLY AND WITHOUT PREPARATION able to demonstrate
|
|
for himself the truth of the scientist's assertion. But while the instru-
|
|
ments of science are its tower of strength, they also mark the end of its
|
|
field of investigation, for it is impossible to contact the spirit world
|
|
with PHYSICAL instruments; so the research of occultists begins where the
|
|
physical scientist finds his limit and is carried on by SPIRITUAL means.
|
|
|
|
These investigations are as thorough and as reliable as researches by
|
|
material scientists, but not as easily demonstrable to the general public.
|
|
Spiritual powers lie dormant within every human being, and when awakened,
|
|
they compensate for both telescope and microscope, they enable their pos-
|
|
sessor to investigate, instanter, things beyond the veil of matter, but they
|
|
are only developed by a patient application and continuance in well doing
|
|
extended over years, and few are they who have faith to start upon the path
|
|
to attainment to perseverance to go through with the ordeal. Therefore the
|
|
occultist's assertions are not generally credited.
|
|
|
|
We can readily see that long probation must precede attainment, for a
|
|
person equipped with spiritual sight is able to penetrate walls of houses as
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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|
|
[PAGE 44] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
easily as we walk through the atmosphere, able to read at will the in-
|
|
nermost thoughts of those about him, and if not actuated by the most pure
|
|
and unselfish motives, would become a scourge to humanity. Therefore that
|
|
power is safeguarded as we would withhold the dynamite bomb from an anarch-
|
|
ist and from the well-intentioned but ignorant person, or, as we withhold
|
|
match and powder barrel from a child.
|
|
|
|
In the hands of an experienced engineer the dynamite bomb may be used to
|
|
open a highway of commerce, and an intelligent farmer may use gunpowder to
|
|
good account in clearing his field of tree-stumps, but in the hands of an
|
|
ill-intentioned criminal or ignorant child an explosive may wreck much pro-
|
|
perty and end many lives. The force is the same, but used differently, ac-
|
|
cording to the ability or intention of the user, it may produce results of a
|
|
diametrically opposite nature. So it is also with spiritual powers, there is
|
|
a time-lock upon them, as upon a bank safe, which keeps out until they have
|
|
earned the privilege and the time is ripe for its exercise.
|
|
|
|
As already said, the ether is physical matter and responsive to the same
|
|
laws which govern other physical substances upon this plane of existence.
|
|
Therefore it requires but a slight extension of PHYSICAL sight to see ether
|
|
(which is disposed in four grades of density); the blue haze seen in moun-
|
|
tain canyons is in fact ether of the kind known to occult investigators as
|
|
CHEMICAL ETHER. Many people who see this ether unaware that they are pos-
|
|
sessed of a faculty not enjoyed by all. Others, who have developed spiritual
|
|
sight are not endowed with etheric vision, a fact which seems an anomaly un-
|
|
til the subject of clairvoyance is thoroughly understood.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 45] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
The reason is, that as ether is physical matter, etheric sight depends
|
|
upon the sensitiveness of the optic nerve, while spiritual sight is ac-
|
|
quired by developing latent vibratory powers in two little organs situated
|
|
in the brain: the pituitary body and the pineal gland. Even near-sighted
|
|
people may have etheric vision. Though unable to read the print in a book,
|
|
they may be able to "see through a wall," owing to the fact that their op-
|
|
tic nerve responds more rapidly to fine than to coarse vibrations.
|
|
|
|
When anyone views an object with etheric sight he sees THROUGH that ob-
|
|
ject in a manner similar to the way an X-ray penetrates opaque substances.
|
|
If he looks at a sewing machine, he will perceive first, an outer casing;
|
|
then, the works within, and behind both, the casing farthest away from him.
|
|
|
|
If he has developed the grade of spiritual vision which opens the Desire
|
|
World to him and he looks at the same object, he will see it both inside and
|
|
out. If he looks closely, he will perceive every little atom spinning upon
|
|
its axis and no part or particle will be excluded from his perception.
|
|
|
|
But if his spiritual sight has been developed in such a measure that he is
|
|
capable of viewing the sewing machine with the vision peculiar to the World
|
|
of Thought, he will behold a cavity where he had previously seen the form.
|
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[PAGE 46] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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|
Things seen with etheric vision are very much alike in color. They are
|
|
nearly reddish-blue, purple or violet, according to the density of the
|
|
ether, but when we view any object with the spiritual sight pertaining to
|
|
the Desire World, it scintillates and coruscates in a thousand ever changing
|
|
colors so indescribably beautiful that they can only be compared to living
|
|
fire. The writer therefore calls this grade of vision COLOR SIGHT, but when
|
|
the spiritual vision of the World of Thought is the medium of perception,
|
|
the seer finds that in addition to still more beautiful colors, there is-
|
|
sues from the cavity described a constant flow of a certain harmonious TONE.
|
|
Thus this world wherein we now consciously live and which we perceive the
|
|
world of FORM, the Desire World is particularly the world of COLOR, and the
|
|
World of Thought is the realm of TONE.
|
|
|
|
Because of the relative proximity or distance of these worlds, a statue,
|
|
a FORM withstands the ravages of time for millenniums, but the COLORS upon
|
|
a painting fade in far shorter time, for they come from the Desire World;
|
|
and MUSIC, which is native to the world farthest removed from us, the World
|
|
of Thought, is like a will-o-the-wisp which none may catch or hold; it is
|
|
gone again as soon as it has made its appearance. But there is in color and
|
|
music a compensation for this increasing evanescence.
|
|
|
|
The statue is cold and dead as the mineral of which it is composed and
|
|
has attractions for but few though its FORM is a tangible reality.
|
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[PAGE 47] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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|
The forms upon a painting are illusory, yet they express LIFE, on ac-
|
|
count of the COLOR which has come from a region where nothing is inert and
|
|
lifeless. Therefore the painting is enjoyed by many.
|
|
|
|
Music is intangible and ephemeral, but it comes from the home world of
|
|
the Spirit and though so fleeting it is recognized by the Spirit as a
|
|
SOUL-SPEECH fresh from the celestial realms, an echo from the home whence we
|
|
are now exiled. Therefore it touches a chord in our being, regardless of
|
|
whether we realize the true cause or not.
|
|
|
|
Thus we see that there are various grades of spiritual sight, each
|
|
suited to the superphysical realm which it opens to our perception: etheric
|
|
vision, color vision, and tonal vision.
|
|
|
|
The occult investigator finds that ether is of four kinds, or grades of
|
|
density: the CHEMICAL ETHER, the LIFE ETHER, the LIGHT ETHER, and the RE-
|
|
FLECTING ETHER.
|
|
|
|
The CHEMICAL ETHER is the avenue of expression for forces promoting as-
|
|
similation, growth, and the maintenance of form.
|
|
|
|
The LIFE ETHER is the vantage ground of forces active in propagation, or
|
|
the building of new forms.
|
|
|
|
The LIGHT ETHER transmits the motive power of the Sun along the various
|
|
nerves of living bodies and makes motion possible.
|
|
|
|
The REFLECTING ETHER receives an impression of all that is, lives and
|
|
moves. It also records each change, in a similar manner as the film upon a
|
|
moving picture machine. In this record mediums and psychometrists may read
|
|
the past, upon the same principle as, under proper conditions, moving pic-
|
|
tures are reproduced time and again.
|
|
|
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|
[PAGE 48] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
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|
|
|
We have been speaking of ether as an avenue of FORCES, a word which con-
|
|
veys no meaning to the average mind, because force is invisible. But to an
|
|
occult investigator the forces are not merely names such as steam,electric-
|
|
ity, etc. He finds them to be intelligent beings of varying grades, both
|
|
sub- and superhuman. What we call "laws of nature," are great Intelli-
|
|
gences which guide more elemental beings in accordance with certain rules
|
|
designed to further their evolution.
|
|
|
|
In the Middle Ages, when many people were still endowed with a remnant
|
|
of NEGATIVE clairvoyance, they spoke of gnomes, elves, and fairies, which
|
|
roamed about the mountains and forests. These were the EARTH spirits. They
|
|
also told of the undines or WATER sprites, which inhabited rivers and
|
|
streams, and of sylphs which were said to dwell in the mists above moat and
|
|
moor as air spirits. But not much was said of the salamanders, as they are
|
|
fire spirits, and therefore not so easily detected, or so readily accessible
|
|
to the majority of people.
|
|
|
|
The old folk stories are now regarded as superstitions, but as a matter
|
|
of fact, one endowed with etheric vision may yet perceive the little gnomes
|
|
building green chloryphyll into the leaves of plants and giving to flowers
|
|
the multiplicity of delicate tints which delight our eyes.
|
|
|
|
Scientists have attempted time and again to offer an adequate explana-
|
|
tion of the phenomenon of wind and storm but have failed signally, nor can
|
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[PAGE 49] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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|
they succeed while they seek a mechanical solution to what is really a
|
|
manifestation of life. Could they see the hosts of sylphs winging their way
|
|
hither and thither, they would KNOW who and what is responsible for the
|
|
fickleness of the wind; could they watch a storm at sea from the etheric
|
|
viewpoint, they would perceive that the saying "the war of the elements"
|
|
is not an empty phrase, for the heaving sea is truly then a battlefield of
|
|
sylphs and undines and the howling tempest is the war cry of spirits in the
|
|
air.
|
|
|
|
Also the salamanders are found everywhere and no fire is lighted without
|
|
their help. However, they are active mostly underground, being responsible
|
|
for explosions and volcanic eruptions.
|
|
|
|
The classes of beings which we have mentioned are still sub-human, but
|
|
will all at some time reach a stage in evolution corresponding to the human,
|
|
though under different circumstances from those under which we evolve. But
|
|
at present the wonderful Intelligences we speak of as the laws of nature,
|
|
marshal the armies of less evolved entities mentioned.
|
|
|
|
To arrive at a better understanding of what these various beings are and
|
|
their relation to us, we may take an illustration: Let us suppose that a me-
|
|
chanic is making an engine, and meanwhile a dog is watching him. It SEES the
|
|
man at his labor, and how he uses various tools to shape his materials, also
|
|
how, from the crude iron, steel, brass, and other metals the engine slowly
|
|
take shape. The dog is a being from a lower evolution and does not compre-
|
|
hend the purpose of the mechanic but it sees both the workman, his labor,
|
|
and the result thereof which manifests as an engine.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 50] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
Let us now suppose that the dog were able to see the materials which
|
|
slowly change their shape, assemble, and become an engine, but that it is
|
|
unable to perceive the workman and to see the work he does. The dog would
|
|
then be in the same relation to the mechanic as we are to the great Intel-
|
|
ligences we call laws of nature, and their assistants, the nature spirits,
|
|
for we behold the manifestations of their work as FORCE moving matter in
|
|
various ways but always under immutable conditions.
|
|
|
|
In the ether we may also observe the Angels, whose densest body is made
|
|
of that material, as our dense body is formed of gases, liquids, and solids.
|
|
These Beings are one step beyond the human stage, as we are a degree in ad-
|
|
vance of the animal evolution. We have never been animals like our present
|
|
fauna, however, but at a previous stage in the development of our planet we
|
|
had an animal-like constitution. Then the Angels were human, though they
|
|
have never possessed a dense body such as ours, nor ever functioned in any
|
|
material denser than ether. At some time, in a future condition, the Earth
|
|
will again become ethereal. Then man will be like the Angels. Therefore the
|
|
Bible tells us that man was made A LITTLE LOWER than the Angels. (Hebrews
|
|
2:7).
|
|
|
|
As ether is the avenue of vital, creative forces, and as Angels are such
|
|
expert builders of ether, we may readily understand that they are eminently
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
[PAGE 51] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
fitted to be warders of the propagative forces in plant, animal, and man.
|
|
All through the Bible we find them thus engaged: Two ANGELS came to Abraham
|
|
and announcd the birth of Isaac, they promised a child to the man who had
|
|
obeyed God. Later these same Angeles destroyed Sodom for abuse of the cre-
|
|
ative force. ANGELS foretold to the parents of Samuel and Samson the birth
|
|
of these giants of brain and brawn. To Elizabeth came the ANGEL (not
|
|
Arch-angel) Gabriel and announced the birth of John; later he appeard also
|
|
to Mary with the message that she was chosen to bear Jesus.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE DESIRE WORLD
|
|
|
|
|
|
When spiritual sight is developed so that it becomes possible to behold
|
|
the Desire World, many wonders confront the newcomer, for conditions there
|
|
are so widely different from what they are here that a description must
|
|
sound quite as incredible as a fairy tale to anyone who has not himself seen
|
|
them.
|
|
|
|
Many cannot believe that such a world exists, and that other people can
|
|
see that which is invisible to them, yet some people are blind to the beau-
|
|
ties of this world which we see. A man who was born blind, may say to us:
|
|
"I know that this world exists. I can hear, I can smell, I can taste, and
|
|
above all I can feel, but when you speak of light and of color, they are
|
|
non-existent to me. You say that you SEE these things. I cannot believe it
|
|
for I cannot SEE myself. You say that light and color are all about me, but
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 52] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
none of the senses at my command reveal them to me and I do not believe that
|
|
the sense you call sight exists. I think you suffer from hallucinations."
|
|
We might sympathize very sincerely with the poor man who is thus afflicted,
|
|
but his scepticisms, reasonings, objections, and sneers notwithstanding, we
|
|
would be obliged to maintain that we perceive light and color.
|
|
|
|
The man or woman whose spiritual sight has been awakened is in a similar
|
|
position with respect to those who do not perceive the Desire World of which
|
|
he speaks. If the blind man acquires the faculty of sight by an oper-
|
|
ation, his eyes are opened and he will be compelled to assert the existence
|
|
of light and color which he formerly denied, and when spiritual sight is ac-
|
|
quired by anyone, he also perceives for himself the facts related by others.
|
|
Neither is it an argument against the existence of spiritual realms that se-
|
|
ers are at variance in their descriptions of conditions in the invisible
|
|
world. We need but to look into books on travel and compare stories brought
|
|
home by explorers of China, India, or Africa; we shall find them differing
|
|
widely and often contradictory, because each traveler saw things from his
|
|
own standpoint, under other conditions than those met by his brother au-
|
|
thors. We maintain that the man who has read most widely these varying tales
|
|
concerning a certain country AND WRESTLED WITH THE CONTRADICTIONS OF NARRA-
|
|
TORS, will have a more comprehensive idea of the country or people of whom
|
|
he has read, than the man who has read only one story assented to by all the
|
|
authors. Similarly, the varying stories of visitors to the Desire World are
|
|
of value, because giving a fuller view, and more rounded, than if all had
|
|
seen things from the same angle.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 53] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
In this world matter and force are widely different. The chief charac-
|
|
teristic of matter here is INERTIA: the tendency to remain at rest until
|
|
acted upon by a force which sets it in motion. In the Desire World, on the
|
|
contrary, force and matter are almost indistinguishable one from the other.
|
|
We might almost describe desire-stuff as force-matter, for it is in inces-
|
|
sant motion, responsive to the slightest FEELING of a vast multitude of be-
|
|
ings which populate this wonderful world in nature. We often speak of the
|
|
"teeming millions" of China and India, even of our vast cities, London,
|
|
New York, Paris, or Chicago; we consider them overcrowded in the extreme,
|
|
yet even the densest population of any spot on Earth is sparsely inhabited
|
|
compared with the crowded conditions of the Desire World. No inconvenience
|
|
is felt by any of the denizens of that realm, however, for, while in this
|
|
world two things cannot occupy the same space at the same time, it is dif-
|
|
ferent there. A number of people and things may exist IN THE SAME PLACE AT
|
|
THE SAME TIME and be engaged in most diverse activities, regardless of what
|
|
others are doing, such is the wonderful elasticity of desire-stuff. As an
|
|
illustration we may mention a case where the writer, while attending a reli-
|
|
gious service, plainly perceived at the altar certain beings interested in
|
|
furthering that service and working to achieve that end. At the same time
|
|
there drifted through the room and the altar, a table at which four persons
|
|
were engaged in playing cards. They were as oblivious to the existence of
|
|
the beings engaged in furthering our religious service, as though these did
|
|
not exist.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 54] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Desire World is the abode of those who have died, for some time sub-
|
|
sequent to that event, and we may mention in the above connection that the
|
|
so-called "dead" very often stay for a long while among their still living
|
|
friends. Unseen by their relatives they go about the familiar rooms. At
|
|
first they are often unaware of the condition mentioned: THAT TWO PERSONS
|
|
MAY BE IN THE SAME PLACE AT THE SAME TIME, and when they seat themselves in
|
|
a chair or at the table, a living relative may take the supposedly vacant
|
|
seat. The man we mistakenly call dead will at first hurry out of his seat to
|
|
escape being sat upon, but he soon learns that being sat upon does not hurt
|
|
him in his altered condition, and that he may remain in his chair regardless
|
|
of the fact that his living relative is also sitting there.
|
|
|
|
In the lower regions of the Desire World the whole body of each being
|
|
may be seen, but in the highest regions only the head seems to remain.
|
|
Raphael, who like many other people in the Middle Ages was gifted with a
|
|
so-called SECOND SIGHT, pictured that condition for us in his Sistine Ma-
|
|
donna, now in the Dresden Art Gallery, where Madonna and the Christ-child
|
|
are represented as floating in a golden atmosphere and surrounded by a host
|
|
of genie-heads: conditions which the occult investigator knows to be in har-
|
|
mony with actual facts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 55] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Among the entities who are, so to speak, "native" to that realm of na-
|
|
ture, none are perhaps better known to the Christian world than the Archan-
|
|
gels. These exalted Beings were human at a time in the Earth's history when
|
|
we were yet plant-like. Since then we have advanced two steps; through the
|
|
animal and to the human stage of development. The present Archangels have
|
|
also made two steps in progression; one, in which they were similar to what
|
|
the Angels are now, and another step which made them what we call Archan-
|
|
gels.
|
|
|
|
Their densest body, though differing from ours in shape, and made of
|
|
desire-stuff, is used by them as a vehicle of consciousness in the same man-
|
|
ner that we use our body. They are expert manipulators of forces in the De-
|
|
sire World, and these forces, as we shall see, move all the world to action.
|
|
Therefore the Archangels work with humanity INDUSTRIALLY and POLITICALLY as
|
|
arbitrators of the destiny of peoples and nations. The Angels may be said to
|
|
be FAMILY SPIRITS, whose mission is to unite a few Spirits as members of a
|
|
family, and cement them with ties of blood and love of kin, while the Arch-
|
|
angels may be called race and national spirits, as they unite whole nations
|
|
by patriotism or love of home and country. They are responsible for the rise
|
|
and fall of nations, they give war or peace, victory or defeat, as it serves
|
|
the best interest of the people they rule. This we may see, for instance,
|
|
from the book of Daniel, where the Archangel Michael is called the prince of
|
|
the children of Israel. Another Archangel tells Daniel (in the tenth chap-
|
|
ter) that he intends to fight the prince of Persia by means of the Greeks.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 56] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are varying grades of intelligence among human beings; some are
|
|
qualified to hold lofty positions entirely beyond the ability of others. So
|
|
it is also among higher beings. Not all Archangels are fitted to govern a
|
|
nation and rule the destiny of a race, people, or tribe; some are not fitted
|
|
to rule human beings at all, but as the animals also have a desire nature,
|
|
these lower grades of Archangels govern the animals as Group Spirits and
|
|
evolve to higher capacity thereby.
|
|
|
|
The work of the Race Spirit is readily observable in the people it gov-
|
|
erns. The lower in the scale of evolution the people, the more they show a
|
|
certain racial likeness. That is due to the work of the Race Spirit. One
|
|
national Spirit is responsible for the swarthy complexion common to Ital-
|
|
ians, for instance, while another causes the Scandinavians to be blond. In
|
|
the more advanced types of humanity, there is a wider divergence from the
|
|
common type, due to the individualized Ego, which thus expresses in form and
|
|
feature its own particular idiosyncrasies. Among the lower types of
|
|
humanity such as Mongolians, native African Negroes and South Sea Islanders,
|
|
the resemblance of individuals in each tribe makes it almost impossible for
|
|
civilized Westerners to distinguish between them. Among animals, where the
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 57] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
separate Spirit is not individualized and self-conscious, the resemblance is
|
|
not only much more marked physically but extends even to traits and charac-
|
|
teristics. We may write the biography of a man, for the experiences of each
|
|
varies from that of others and his acts are different, but we cannon write
|
|
the biography of an animal, for members of each tribe all act alike under
|
|
similar circumstances. If we desire to know the facts about Edward VII, it
|
|
would profit us nothing to study the life of the Prince-Consort, his father,
|
|
or of George V, his son, as both would be entirely different from Edward.
|
|
In order to find out what manner of man he was, we must study his own indi-
|
|
vidual life. If, on the other hand, we wish to know the characteristics of
|
|
beavers, we may observe any individual of the tribe, and when we have stud-
|
|
ied its idiosyncrasies, we shall know the traits of the whole tribe of bea-
|
|
vers. What we call "instinct" is in reality the dictates of "Group Spirits"
|
|
which govern separate individuals of its tribe telepathically, as it were.
|
|
|
|
The ancient Egyptians knew of these animal Group spirits and sketched
|
|
many of them, in a crude way, upon their temples and tombs. Such figures
|
|
with a human body and an animal head actually live in the Desire World. They
|
|
may be spoken to, and will be found much more intelligent than the average
|
|
human being.
|
|
|
|
That statement brings up another peculiarity of conditions in the Desire
|
|
World in respect of language. Here in this world human speech is so diversi-
|
|
fied that there are countries where people who live only a few miles apart
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 58] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
speak a dialect so different that they understand each other with great dif-
|
|
ficulty, and each nation has its own language that varies altogether from
|
|
the speech of other peoples.
|
|
In the lower regions of the Desire World, there is the same diversity
|
|
of tongues as on Earth, and the so-called "dead" of one nation find it
|
|
impossible to converse with those who lived in another country. Hence lin-
|
|
guistic accomplishments are of great value to the Invisible Helpers, of whom
|
|
we shall hear later, as their sphere of usefulness is enormously extended by
|
|
that ability.
|
|
|
|
Even apart from differences of language our mode of speech is exceed-
|
|
ingly productive of misunderstandings. The same words often convey most op-
|
|
posite ideas to different minds. If we speak of a "body of water," one
|
|
person may think we mean a lake of small dimensions, the thoughts of another
|
|
may be directed to the Great Lakes, and a third person's thoughts may be
|
|
turned towards the Atlantic or Pacific Ocean. If we speak of a "light,"
|
|
one may think of a gaslight, another of an electric arc-lamp, or if we say
|
|
"red," one person may think we mean a delicate shade of pink and another
|
|
gets the idea of crimson. The misunderstandings of what words mean goes even
|
|
farther, as illustrated in the following.
|
|
|
|
The writer once opened a reading room in a large city where he lectured,
|
|
and invited his audience to make use thereof. Among those who availed them-
|
|
selves of the opportunity was a gentleman who had for many years been a
|
|
veritable "metaphysical tramp," roaming from lecture to lecture, hearing
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 59] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
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|
the teachings of everybody and practicing nothing. Like the Athenians on
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Mars' Hill, he was always looking for something "new," particularly in the
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line of phenomena, and his mind was in that seething chaotic state which is
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one of the most prominent symptoms of "mental indigestion."
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Having attended a number of our lectures he knew from the program that:
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"The lecturer does not give readings or cast horoscopes FOR PAY." But see-
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ing on the door of the newly opened reading room, the legend: "Free Read-
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ing Room," his erratic mind at once jumped to the conclusion that although
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we were opposed to telling fortunes for pay, we were now going to give free
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readings of the future in the Free Reading Room. He was much disappointed
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that we did not intend to tell fortunes, either gratis or for a consider-
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ation, and we changed our sign to "Free Library" in order to obviate a
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repetition of the error.
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In the higher Regions of the Desire World the confusion of tongues gives
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place to a universal mode of expression which absolutely prevents misunder-
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standings of our meaning. There each of our thoughts takes a definite form
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and color perceptible to all, and this thought-symbol emits a certain tone,
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which is not a word, but it conveys our meaning to the one we address no
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matter what language we spoke on earth.
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[PAGE 60] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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To arrive at an understanding of how such a universal language becomes
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possible and is at once comprehended by all, without preparation, we may
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take as an illustration the manner in which a musician reads music. A German
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or a Polish composer may write an opera. Each has his own peculiar terminol-
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ogy and expresses it in his own language. When that opera is to be played by
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an Italian bandmaster, or by a Spanish or American musician, it need not be
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translated; the notes and symbols upon the page are a universally understood
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language of symbols which is intelligible to musicians of no matter what na-
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tionality. Similarly with figures, the German counts: ein, zwei, drei; the
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Frenchman says: un, deux, trois, and in English we use the words: one, two,
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three, but the figures: 1,2,3, though differently spoken, are intelligible
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to all and mean the same. There is no possibility of misunderstanding in the
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|
cases of either music or figures. Thus it is also with the universal lan-
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guage peculiar to the higher regions of the Desire World and the still more
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subtle realms in nature, it is intelligible to all, an exact mode of expres-
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sion.
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Returning to our description of the entities commonly met with in the
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lower Desire World, we may note that other systems of religion than the
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EGYPTIAN, already mentioned, has spoken of various classes of beings native
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to these realms. The Zoroastrian religion, for instance, mentions SEVEN
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AMSHASPANDS and the IZZARDS as having dominion over certain days in the
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month and certain months in the year. The Christian religion speaks of Seven
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Spirits before the Throne, which are the same beings the Persians called
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[PAGE 61] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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Amshaspands. Each of them rules over two months in the year while the sev-
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enth: Michael, the highest, is their leader, for he is ambassador from the
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Sun to the Earth; the others are ambassadors from the planets. The Catholic
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religion with its abundant occult information takes most notice of these
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|
"star-angels" and knows considerable about their influence upon the af-
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fairs of the earth.
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The Amshaspands, however, do not inhabit the lower regions of the Desire
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|
World but influence the Izzards. According to the old Persian legend these
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beings are divisible into two groups: one of twenty-eight classes, and the
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other of three classes. Each of these classes has dominion over, or takes
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the lead of all the other classes on one certain day of the month. They
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|
regulate the weather conditions on that day and work with animal and man in
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|
particular. At least the twenty-eight classes do that, the other group of
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three classes has nothing to do with animals, because they have only
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twenty-eight pairs of spinal nerves, while human beings have thirty-one.
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|
Thus animals are attuned to the lunar month of twenty-eight days, while man
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|
is correlated to the solar month of thirty or thirty-one days. The ancient
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Persians were astronomers but not physiologists; they had no means of know-
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|
ing the different nervous constitution of animal and man, but they saw
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clairvoyantly these superphysical beings; they noted and recorded their work
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|
with animal and men, and our own anatomical investigations may show us the
|
|
reason for these divisions of the classes of Izzards recorded in that an-
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cient system of philosophy.
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[PAGE 62] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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Still another class of beings should be mentioned: those who have en-
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tered the Desire World through the gate of death and are now hidden from our
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|
physical vision. These so-called "dead" are in fact much more alive than
|
|
any of us, who are tied to a dense body and subject to all its limitations,
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|
who are forced slowly to drag this clog along with us at the rate of a few
|
|
miles an hour, who must expend such an enormous amount of energy upon pro-
|
|
pelling that vehicle that we are easily and quickly tired, even when in the
|
|
best of health, and who are often confined to a bed, sometimes for years, by
|
|
the indisposition of this heavy mortal coil. But when that is once shed and
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|
the freed Spirit can again function in its spiritual body, sickness is an
|
|
unknown condition, and distance is annihilated, or at least practically so,
|
|
for though it was necessary for the Saviour to liken the freed Spirit to the
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|
wind which blows where it listeth, that simile gives but a poor description
|
|
of what actually takes place in soul flights. Time is non-existent there, as
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|
we shall presently explain, so the writer has never been able to time him-
|
|
self, but has on several occasions timed others when he was in the physi-
|
|
cal body and then speeding through space upon a certain errand. Distances
|
|
such as from the Pacific Coast to Europe, the delivery of a short message
|
|
there and the return to the body has been accomplished in slightly less than
|
|
one minute. Therefore our assertion, that those whom we call dead are in re-
|
|
ality much more alive than we, is well founded in facts.
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[PAGE 63] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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We spoke of the dense body in which we now live, as a "clog" and a
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|
"fetter." It must not be inferred, however, that we sympathize with the
|
|
attitude of certain people who, when they have learned with what ease soul-
|
|
flights are accomplished, go about bemoaning the fact that they are now im-
|
|
prisoned. They are constantly thinking of, and longing for, the day when
|
|
they shall be able to leave this mortal coil behind and fly away in their
|
|
spiritual body. Such an attitude of mind is decidedly mistaken; the great
|
|
and wise Beings who are invisible leaders of our evolution have not placed
|
|
us here to no purpose. Valuable lessons are to be learned in this visible
|
|
world wherein we dwell, lessons that cannot be learned in any other realm of
|
|
nature, and the very conditions of density and inertia whereof such people
|
|
complain, are factors which make it possible to acquire the knowledge this
|
|
world is designed to give. This fact was so amply illustrated in a recent
|
|
experience of the writer:
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|
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|
A friend had been studying occultism for a number of years but had not
|
|
studied astrology. Last year she became aroused to the importance of this
|
|
branch of study as a key to self-knowledge and a means of understanding the
|
|
natures of others, also of developing the compassion for their errors, so
|
|
necessary in the cultivation of love for one's neighbor. Love for our neigh-
|
|
bor the Saviour enjoined upon us as the Supreme Commandment, which is the
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[PAGE 64] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
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fulfillment of all laws, and as astrology teaches us to BEAR and FORBEAR, it
|
|
helps as nothing else can in the development of this supreme virtue. She
|
|
therefore joined one of the classes started in Los Angeles by the writer,
|
|
but a sudden illness quickly ended in death and thus terminated her study of
|
|
the subject in the physical body, here it was well begun.
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|
|
|
Upon one of many occasions when she visited the writer subsequent to her
|
|
release from the body, she deplored the fact that it seemed so difficult to
|
|
make headway in her study of astrology. The writer advised continued atten-
|
|
dance at the classes, and suggested that she could surely get someone "on
|
|
the other side" to help her study.
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|
|
|
At this she exclaimed impatiently: "Oh, yes! Of course I attend the
|
|
classes. I have done so right along; I have also found a friend who helps me
|
|
here. But you cannot imagine how difficult it is to concentrate here upon
|
|
mathematical calculations and the judgment of a horoscope or in fact upon
|
|
any subject here, where every little thought-current takes you miles away
|
|
from your study. I used to think it difficult to concentrate when I had a
|
|
physical body, but it is not a circumstance to the obstacles which face the
|
|
student here."
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|
|
|
The physical body was an anchor to her, and it is that to all of us. Be-
|
|
ing dense, it is also to a great extent impervious to disturbing influences
|
|
from which the more subtle spiritual bodies do not shield us. It enables us
|
|
to bring our ideas to a logical conclusion with far less effort at concen-
|
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[PAGE 65] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
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|
tration than is necessary in that realm where all is in such incessant and
|
|
turbulent motion. Thus we are gradually developing the faculty of holding
|
|
our thoughts to a center by existence in this world, and we should value our
|
|
opportunities here, rather than deplore the limitations which help in one
|
|
direction more than they fetter in another. In fact, we should never deplore
|
|
any condition, each has its lesson. If we try to learn what that lesson is
|
|
and to assimilate the experience which may be extracted therefrom, we are
|
|
wiser than those who waste time in vain regrets.
|
|
|
|
We said there is no time in the Desire World, and the reader will
|
|
readily understand that such must be the case from the fact, already men-
|
|
tioned, that nothing there is opaque.
|
|
|
|
In this world the rotation of the opaque earth upon its axis is respon-
|
|
sible for the alternating conditions of day and night. We call it DAY when
|
|
the spot where we live is turned towards the Sun and its rays illumine our
|
|
environment, but when our home is turned away from the Sun and its rays ob-
|
|
structed by the opaque earth we term the resulting darkness NIGHT. The pas-
|
|
sage of the earth in its orbit around the Sun produces the seasons and the
|
|
year, which are our divisions of time. But in the Desire World where all is
|
|
light there is but one long day. The Spirit is not there fettered by a heavy
|
|
physical body, so it does not need sleep and existence is unbroken.
|
|
Spiritual substances are not subject to contraction and expansion such as
|
|
arise here from heat and cold, hence summer and winter are also
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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[PAGE 66] THE ROSICRUCIAN MYSTERIES
|
|
|
|
|
|
non-existent. Thus there is nothing to differentiate one moment from another
|
|
in respect of the conditions of light and darkness, summer and winter, which
|
|
mark time for us. Therefore, while the so-called "dead" may have a very
|
|
accurate memory of time as regards the life they lived here in the body,
|
|
they are usually unable to tell anything about the chronological relation of
|
|
events which have happened to them in the Desire World, and it is a very
|
|
common thing to find that they do not even know how many years have elapsed
|
|
since they passed out from this plane of existence. Only students of the
|
|
stellar science are able to calculate the passage of time after their de-
|
|
mise.
|
|
|
|
When the occult investigator wishes to study an event in the past his-
|
|
tory of man, he may most readily call up the picture from THE MEMORY OF NA-
|
|
TURE, but if he desires to fix the time of the incident, he will be obliged
|
|
to count backwards by the motion of the heavenly bodies. For that purpose he
|
|
generally uses the measure provided by the Sun's precession: each year the
|
|
Sun crosses the Earth's equator about the twenty-first of March. Then day
|
|
and night are of even length, therefore this is called the vernal equinox.
|
|
But on account of a certain wobbling motion (nutation) of the Earth's axis,
|
|
the Sun does not cross over at the same place in the zodiac. It reaches the
|
|
equator a little too early, it PRECEDES, year by year it moves BACKWARDS a
|
|
little. At the time of the birth of Christ, for instance, the vernal equinox
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[PAGE 67] THE VISIBLE AND THE INVISIBLE WORLDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
was in about seven degrees of the zodiacal sign Aries. During the two thou-
|
|
sand years which have intervened between that event and the present time,
|
|
the Sun has moved BACKWARDS about twenty-seven degrees, so that it is now in
|
|
about ten degrees of the sign Pisces. It moves around the circle of the zo-
|
|
diac in about 25,868 years. The occult investigator may therefore count back
|
|
the number of signs, or whole circles, which the Sun has PRECEDED between
|
|
the present day and the time of the event he is investigating. Thus he has
|
|
by the use of the heavenly time keepers an approximately correct measure of
|
|
time even though he is in the Desire World, and that is another reason for
|
|
studying the stellar science.
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE WORLD OF THOUGHT
|
|
|
|
|
|
When we have attained the spiritual development necessary consciously to
|
|
enter the World of Thought and leave the Desire World, which is the realm of
|
|
light and color, we pass through a condition which the occult investigator
|
|
calls The Great Silence.
|
|
|
|
As previously stated, the higher regions of the Desire World exhibit the
|
|
marked peculiarity of blending form and sound, but when one passes through
|
|
the Great Silence, all the world seems to disappear and the Spirit has the
|
|
feeling of floating in an ocean of intense light, utterly alone, yet
|
|
absolutely fearless, because imbued with a sense of its impregnable securi-
|
|
ty, no longer subject to form or sound, past or future; all is one eternal
|
|
NOW.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--- END OF FILE ---
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