My thanks go to Juan Schoch who by his work brought me into contact with the Vitvan material (School of the natural order - Website), Gerald Massey's research on Egypt, the pagan origin of Christanity, and Alvin Boyd Kuhn, the pupil of Massey who has written extensively on the meaning of symbols in myth. Also, Godfrey Higgins work Anacalypsis can be found at members.tripod.com/~pc93 Martin Euser Webmaster --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Message from Juan: Electronically typed and edited by Juan Schoch for educational research purposes. Join gnosis284 - Send e-mail to: gnosis284-subscribe@yahoogroups.com. Refs: enlightenment-engine, members.tripod.com/~pc93 I am looking for contributions: texts, comments, etc. I (Juan) can be contacted at: pc93@enlightenment-engine.net Do not remove this notice. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A good intro into the essence of Kuhn's writings re Christianity can be found
in the books of Tom Harpur,
especially the one about the Pagan Christ.
New Lectures on the Ancient Wisdom--No I
The Christian Bible presents to the reflective mind one of the most
astounding phenomena of modern life. Though neglected and even repudiated by a
large segment of modern thinking, and evidencing few signs of a controlling
influence on current modes of life, it yet occupies a place of dominance that
can only be realized when its position and authority are challenged. More than
that, it exercises through the subtle power of tradition and
child-indoctrination a totally unbelievable thraldom over the common mind which
can only be compared to a type of hypnotic obsession. The force and sweep of the
subtle acceptance is not dreamed of by the person who has not become consciously
emancipated from it and can view it objectively, or from the outside. Few people
have been able to dissociate themselves sufficiently from their indoctrined
prepossession in this regard to objectify this phenomenon of the psychological
life of the day. Only a trained and freed mind can stand out from under its own
inherited habitudes of thought and feeling and subject them to rational and
dispassionate criticism. Few can rationally appraise mass sentiments. This is
the function of the philosopher and thinker. For the most part, people accept as
authoritative the mass conceptions amidst which they grow up, and regard their
general vogue as the seal and surety of their rightness.
In such fashion the Bible has been accepted as the great unique work of
divine authority, and, with the force of sanctified allegiance back of it for
generations, it now wields a perfectly unrealized power over the common mind.
Even those who have outwardly rejected it are unwittingly influenced by it in
ways they little dream of; for society has been insidiously impregnated with the
germs of a thousand ideas, springing from the vast number of phrases, texts and
incidents which have taken unshakable rootage in the mass consciousness. In the
area of Christendom the book is still regarded as the supreme moral and
spiritual guide of the race. And from time to time one reads the oft-broadcast
declaration from eminent divines that what the world needs most of all as a
salve for its ills, is more consecrated study of the Bible.
We have pondered this assertion deeply and sought what truth there may be in
it. It is one of those equivocal statements that are true without meaning much
after all. The answer might be "yes" and "no." We would say "yes," but with
tremendous qualifications and reservations. We can agree that more study of
spiritual things is decidedly a need of our time. But we face a strange
situation here, which does not seem to have been discerned by the advocates of
Bible study. To
begin with, there never has been a book that has been studied so
assiduously and zealously as this. No book has received such devotion and
reverence. No other has been preached on so often and so fervently. It has been
organically dissected and analyzed without end. Thousands of volumes of exegesis
have been written upon it. Yet we are told we need to study it more. And a
prominent writer has, with general approbation, dubbed it The Book Nobody
Knows, and its central hero, The Man Nobody Knows. If this is the
outcome of past study on an enormous scale, what profit to study it further? The
outcome of centuries of consecrated effort to glean its message is held up as a
nullity!
On our part, we stand ready to make the bold assertion that it is yet a
sealed book. Few, if any, know that it does contain a message that would save
the race from disaster. Few, if any, know that it is one of the books of a grand
past wisdom. And perhaps no one now living knows thoroughly what is hidden in
its pages. Our verdict, then, is that it is futile to give it more study of
the kind that it has received heretofore. If it lacks study it is because
thousands have labored to get its meaning and have failed. The effort has bred
disappointment and resentment against its incomprehensibility. What the modern
age needs with regard to the Bible is not more study but some comprehension; not
more waste of futile wrestling with riddles, but a few grains of understanding.
In brief, what is needed is a knowledge of the background out of which it grew,
and in reference to which alone it can be grasped.
Failure of modern effort to read the deep message of the Book is due to the
fact that modern scholars stupidly and stubbornly refuse to see that ancient
scriptural writing was esoteric or hidden as to its meaning, and allegorical and
symbolical as to its method. The ancients did not use newspaper directness. On
the contrary they put up their secret wisdom, vouchsafed to them by the great
Sages, in the form of allegories and myths, which were to be taken as fiction in
their outward dress, but as the cinematograph of profoundest truth and knowledge
in inward sense. By a combination of symbols, nature signs and allegories, often
woven into a background of real history, they sought to portray the deepest
types of spiritual experience and an intellectual grip on reality. The Bible has
been crassly taken for literal truth about living personages on the stage of
mortal history. It has been rendered literally and historically. This is the
most egregious blunder, the most grandiose error, in all human history,--this
mistaking of spiritual allegorism for literal human narrative. We are in
position to make the unqualified declaration for the first time in the modern
age that there is not one iota of history, in the ordinary acceptation of that
term, in the Bible from beginning to end. Some portions of Jewish history are
utilized as the base and frame of spiritual myths. The several Judges,
Patriarchs and Kings are made to stand for the central figure of the Christos.
Geographical names and
historical persons are mentioned but only as characters in the mystic or
religious drama. According to Eusebius, one of the three chief formulators of
Roman Christian theology, the Gospels of the New Testament are themselves
nothing but old dramatic books of the Essenes in pre-Christian days. The
earliest and greatest of the framers of Christian theology, Philo, Clement and
Origen, expressly declared it was impossible and an impiety to assert that the
logos of God could take the flesh of a human personality. New research makes it
positively clear that the Old Testament narratives are in their entirety
rewritings of old Egyptian material, distorted and obscured as it passed through
later Hebrew hands. And Egyptian scripture was never historical. It was
spiritual symbology, pure and unalloyed. The weirdest phenomenon of history
transpired when later ignorance took the Egyptian constructions and converted
them into absurd literal narrative. And the thinking of the whole world of the
civilized West has thus been based on history that never occurred, and the
Christian Church has been founded on a set of miracles that were never
performed. The only miracle envisaged in ancient theology was the transformation
of human character by the indwelling god, and this spiritual miracle was
poetized, dramatized and allegorized in a hundred forms of outward
representation, all of which was absurdly taken for personal history later.
This conversion of spiritual into biographical history has made Christianity
the instrument of the grossest degradation of sublime ancient truth to which it
has ever been subject. That is to say, that all Christian doctrines present the
ancient wisdom in a more literal and hence cruder form of meaning than had ever
been done before in national religions. In the nailing of a personal Jesus on a
wooden cross Christianity reduced the glorious drama of the spiritual life to
its grossest and most repellant form.
It is the business of enlightened Theosophy to lift this weight of crass
literal dogmatism from off the modern imagination and conscience at whatever
cost. The human soul is itself bound on the cross of gross superstition so long
as these crude notions dominate the conscious and subconscious thought of modern
man. The light of the true spiritual Gnosis of olden times must be cast into the
dark nooks and corners of modern thinking, and disperse the mists of such errant
and arrant doctrinism.
It is our declaration, based on years of the most assiduous research, that it
is impossible to understand the allegories of the Bible without a knowledge of
ancient methods of sacred writing, and of the ancient philosophies. Our work in
this field has been rewarded by a number of the most signal discoveries which
are basic for further grasp of the material.
(1) The composers of ancient scriptures were poets, allegorists,
dramatists and mythicists. They never wrote literally. They were in the line
of generations of sages and seers who had developed the art of spiritual
representation to a point of the utmost ingenuity and complexity, completely
shrouding the intended real meaning under veils of symbolism, which have utterly
misled modern scholars who could not pierce the outer veil to read the truth
hidden underneath. Hence the works can not be read without the keys to the myths
and reference to the symbols used. The ancients themselves testify plentifully
that the scriptures are allegories. Origen regards the whole Bible as a set of
allegories. But the most astonishing declaration to this effect is St. Paul's
own statement in Galatians that the whole story of Abraham and Sarah and
Hagar is "an allegory."
(2) The ancients were also esotericists, writing only of the inner life and
for intiated pupils. They wrote of inner things under an outer veil. They wrote
of the Greater Mysteries which were never given out to the multitude, but taught
in secret to disciplined students. Spiritual truth was not published in modern
fashion. Whatever was written, was veiled under glyph and symbol. Mostly it was
taught by oral tradition.
(3) Then the ancients were "uranographers." The "uranograph" was a chart of
heaven. By this is meant a map outlined by the early sages charting the
spiritual constitution and physiology of man, the psychic centers, areas of
spiritual force, and all "after the pattern of things in the heavens." Man, the
microcosm, is a replica of the heavenly man and the universe. From the history
of man written thus in the constellation of the skies, the early religious
formulators transferred the record to earth and distributed the various
phenomena and localities over the national maps in accordance with the heavenly
chart! All nations tried to frame their own history and geography after the
pattern of things in the heavenly mount. Mainly the Egyptians and after them the
Jews made this transfer almost completely. According to this chart each nation
was given an upper and lower section, had a river flowing from the upper down to
the lower, had a lake or sea, a central city representing the Holy City, and a
score of parallel features found in every case. There was first a division into
seven nomes or districts, later into twelve. Each nation thus strove to have its
history interpreted as a fulfilment of the sacred allegory; and its national
history, thus diverted into the form of the celestial myth, was made into the
national epic. And finally came the claim on the part of several, notably the
Jews, that since their history fulfilled the outlines of the sacred story, they
were proven to be the "chosen people" of God. There is not a scrap of evidence
anywhere to identify the Israelites as the historical Hebrews or Jews. The
latter simply appropriated the distinction to themselves and fitted their
history into the sacred scheme. As proof
of this it is offered that a monument in Egypt contained hundreds of
Palestinian place names, afterward localized in the Holy Land of Judea,
before the "historical" Exodus from Egypt. Hence the modern discovery of
a town in Palestine bearing the name of a place mentioned in the Bible does not
offer a single whit of proof that the Bible is history. It only proves that the
religious formulators of the national epic had given to a certain place a name
already found on the uranograph or spiritual chart, much as European explorers
gave sacred names such as Salem, Providence, New Haven, Canaan, Newark, Corpus
Christi and Santa Fe to new towns when they came to America. Jerusalem, Egypt,
Sodom and others are therefore only spiritual names transferred to the map from
the celestial chart.
(4) Lastly it was our discovery that all religious writings deal with but one
central fact, the incarnation of man, or the descent and resurrection of the
soul. It is graphically outlined in the Prodigal Son allegory. It is the whole
story of religion. The old books deal with nothing beyond this story and its
involvements. It is itself the key to all philosophy and religion. All meanings
proceed from this one fact and return thither. In the light of this one fact all
complicated meanings can be reduced to clear significance. It unravels the
infinite complexities of the symbology that have confounded the learned scholars
and theologians. That man is a god dwelling in an animal form is the central and
cardinal fact of all religion.
It is well to note a few situations in the Bible which preclude any sane mind
taking it for literal truth. How the literalist "swallows" them we know not.
First, the story of the flood. Forty (or four hundred) days' rain would not
raise the ocean an inch, as all rain is first drawn off the ocean and only runs
back into it at the constant level. And how could millions of species of every
living thing be collected, cared for and housed in the "ark" by a single man and
his family. It would take an army many years to gather a minute portion of all
creatures. Then how could they be kept in living conditions, fed, and tended on
board for months?
And how did the children of the first pair, Adam and Eve, go off and marry
the women of another nation, as recorded in Genesis? And in the genealogy of
Jesus as of David's line, the link with David is broken at his father Joseph,
who was not his father after all. Jesus is of David's line, yet is denied
parentage from David's descendant. Then we have the anomaly of Joshua's
commanding the sun and moon to stand still at Ascalon. The sun is not moving
(relative to the earth) to begin with. It is already and always still. And the
matter of the star of Bethlehem coming and standing "over the place where the
young child lay." A star small enough to point out a small stable in Beth-
lehem is a thing impossible in astronomy. And stars never stand. They rush on
with unbelievable speed. And finally how was it humanly possible for the events
of Maundy Thursday of Passion Week to have occurred in the space of a single
night? The last supper at sundown, the long siege in the garden of Gethsemane,
the arrest, the mockery, then three separate judicial trials before three
distinct courts in the dead of night (!), then the carrying of the cross
up the hill, the long agony of the crucifixion, the earthquake, the rent veil,
the opened graves, and the burial,--all in the hours of a single night! It is
incredible as human history. Like the Abraham story, it is an allegory. Paul
himself never mentions it as real history, albeit he lived at the time.
These and a hundred other irrationalities make it sheer folly to uphold the
literal historicity of the Bible. Yet the major theses of Christianity stand on
this weak ground. There is therefore nothing surprising in the fact that the
history of the Church has been a tale of warfare, controversy, schism, blind
faith and frightful cruelty, and that it is repudiated by about sixty per cent
of the populations among which it is strongest, and is rather loosely held by
its own adherents.
We are prepared to support the statement, then, that the Bible, sadly
misinterpreted by its most loyal devotees, is in reality a collection of ancient
works that embody in veiled figures the fundamentals of the genuine old wisdom
of the hierophants. One might say indeed, that it is a repository of the great
Mystery teaching of early times. In fact it is an assemblage of material
comprising the substance of Hermeticism, Gnosticism, Kabalism, Chaldean
astrology, Greek Orphism and Hindu Wisdom, drawn mostly from ancient Egypt. It
would not inaptly be described as a book of Platonic Theosophy. For Plato summed
up most of the elements of these systems. To an orthodox churchman it would
doubtless seem to belittle the Book to say that it contains nothing but the
Platonic philosophy. But this is only because the churchman knows nothing of the
grandeur and rank of the Platonic wisdom. It is enough to say that it could not
be a great book if it did not embody Plato's philosophy. For this was
truly "of the gods," and perhaps the most luminous presentation of spiritual
knowledge ever to be vouchsafed to the human intellect. Fortunate is
Christianity that its Bible is heavily charged with the elements of the great
Divine Wisdom of past ages.
It is a practical impossibility, however, to expound even the crudest outline
of Plato's teaching in such a lecture. We must be content with a few statements
dealing with the emanation of living streams of being and intelligence from the
first fount of all things. Plato represents life as unfolding from within itself
at the beginning of a new period of manifestation, and proceeding outward or
downward from a summit of pure spirit into ever-denser forms of creation. The
One Life pours forth its power and essence in streams, called "rivers of
vivification", "from on high as far as to the last of things," bringing all
forms of life into existence and ensouling all forms with more or less of its
own mighty being. At each step of the way out, or down, this life takes
embodiment in coarser forms of cosmic matter, thus giving birth to the greater
and lesser gods of various ranks. For the gods are embodiments of the several
grades and forms of nature's life, power and intelligence. The whole creation
forms a chain of beings reaching from the lowest mineral crystals to the highest
God. Somewhere in this chain stands man, and Plato tells us where it is.
Humanity occupies a place of great strategic importance in the hierarchy,
standing precisely at the point of junction between the highest animal and the
truly human kingdom. Man is the creature that is fashioned to bridge the gap
between the animal and the divine order. Hence his nature is compounded of the
two elements, the animal and the godlike, in one organism, making it possible
for the higher to "lift up" or humanize the lower. In his Timaeus Plato
gives us the remarkable speech of the Demiurgus (Creative Logos) to the "junior
gods," who were the divine beings commissioned by the Lords of Karma to come to
earth and be the gods embodied in an animal race that had no chance of reaching
the next level of evolution without such tutelage. In it the Demiurgus enjoins
the deities to come to earth and "unite mortal with immortal natures," promising
them that they would "never be dissolved," if they held fast to their oath of
purity and the covenant which they made with their Overlord. This is the
covenant in the Old Testament which the Lord tells the Children of Israel (who
were these junior gods, never the earthly Hebrews!) that they have broken times
without number. For the gods, once incarnated, fell under the cloud of oblivion
(drank the waters of Lethe), lost their divine memory and went "the way of all
flesh" into carnality and beastliness. (See scores of passages in the Old
Testament books).
But after rebellion they finally came to earth, incarnated in mortal bodies
of flesh and thus linked a divine principle of intelligence with a body and a
sensual animal nature. And this fact is the basis of all religion. Man is a god
and a beast in one organism. Rather he is a god tabernacling in the flesh of an
animal. Daniel (Chaps. 3 and 5) tells the King, who represents the divine soul,
that he shall come to live with the animals and be given the mind of an animal.
Ezekiel (32:4) says that the Lord "will fill the beasts of the whole earth with
thee." A hundred texts from the old books confirm this statement of the linking
of the two diverse natures in one organism. And this great basic fact is the
heart of Theosophy. Reincarnation and Karma are ancillary to it.
We have, then, in Greek philosophy the "descent of the soul" or the advent of
the gods. This is equated in the old Christian tradition by the legend of "the
fall of the angels," the fall of Lucifer. It is
outlined in full by the Prodigal Son allegory, and hinted at in many other
places. The story of Abraham is a glyph of it, for he, like the Prodigal Son,
left his home and kindred, left his native land, and journeyed to a far country
that the Eternal promised to show him, where he would dwell among savage beasts
and eat of the grass of the earth. (See Genesis 12.) Paul says "we are a
colony of heaven." We, these junior gods, are collectively that second Adam,
who, Paul says, "is the Lord from Heaven," following the animal man who, he
says, "is of the earth, earthy."
There were twelve legions of these angel hosts, and this, indicated clearly
by Plato, is evidenced in the New Testament, where at the feeding of the five
thousand there were gathered up "twelve baskets of fragments"; and again in the
scene in the Garden of Gethsemane, where, when Jesus is seized by the deputation
of soldiers sent out to arrest him, he says to them, in effect: "Don't you know
that I could call upon my father and he would sent to my aid instantly twelve
legions of angels?" These are the mysterious "ten lost tribes of Israel"
(two having failed in their effort), who in two divisions of five legions each,
called the Suras or "willing (obedient) ones" and the Asuras or "unwilling
ones," undertook the commission of the higher Lords and projected their powers
in the direction of earth. These two groups are unquestionably the five wise and
the five foolish virgins (one of their Sanskrit names, Kumaras, means
"virgin youths") of the Biblical allegory; also they are the elder and the
younger brother of the Prodigal Son myth. The Suras made the attempt, but, we
are told, did not descend far enough, and their effort proved abortive. The
Asuras, seeing this miscarriage, became recalcitrant, rebelled and refused,
until at last they were forced to incarnate. The Suras obeyed but failed; the
Asuras refused but finally complied, and took lodgment in our bodies, uniting
the two natures.
The Greeks have all this depicted in their great fable of Prometheus stealing
the heavenly fire--which, be it known, is divine intelligence, not the physical
flame we cook our suppers with!--from the gods and bringing it to man for his
behoof. It was what the Theosophists call Manas, the spark of thinking
intelligence which made "man" a manasic being, or capable of abstract thought.
We, then, are angels from heaven, and higher than the angels we shall be. For
Paul, in two passages, avers that "we are to manage angels, let alone mundane
things," and adds that "God hath made man for a little while (see Moffatt
translation) lower than the angels and hath crowned him with glory and honor."
Another ancient scripture says that "angels from their seats envy him" (man).
For his experience in incarnation will advance his station beyond that of those
spirits who have not been tried in the fires of earth and refined to purest
gold.
The Nicene creed of the Church itself, describing the Second Logos
of the Trinity, avers that it "came down from heaven, was incarnate . . . and
was made man," for us and for our salvation. John declares that no man shall
ascend into heaven save he that first came down from heaven. Jesus said he
"beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven." Satan is Lucifer, and we came down
in the character of the bright and morning star, Lucifer, bright effluence of
deity. The Chinese have a great saying that the "stars ceased shining in heaven
and fell on earth where they became men."
The Neo-Platonic philosopher, Plotinus, has a remarkable passage in which he
makes it clear why the soul or god in man was under the necessity of taking
incarnation in an animal body. As I regard this passage as the clearest
statement of the philosophy of incarnation ever given, I take the liberty of
quoting it:
"Thus although the soul have a divine nature, though she originate in the
intelligible world, she enters into a body. Being of the lower divine, she
descends here below by a voluntary inclination, for the purpose of developing
her power and to adorn what is below her. If she flee promptly from here below,
she does not need to regret having become acquainted with evil and knowing the
nature of vice, nor having had the opportunity of manifesting her faculties. . .
. Indeed the faculties of the soul would be useless if they slumbered
continuously in incorporeal being without ever becoming actualized. The soul
herself would be ignorant of what she possesses if her faculties did not
manifest by procession, for everywhere it is the actualization that manifests
the potentiality. Otherwise the latter would be completely hidden and obscured;
or rather it would not really exist, and would not possess any reality. It is
the variety of sense-effects which illustrates the greatness of the intelligible
principle, whose nature publishes itself by the beauty of its works."
We are on earth, then, to come to self-consciousness as divinities, but to do
it by working through and with an animal. We are here to educate, refine,
humanize and finally divinize, an animal! We are in bodies, which properly are
not ours, but those of the animal soul, who is our appetitive or instinctual
lower self. We are assigned the duty of "taming" this creature and conforming it
to ways of intelligence and brotherhood. We must teach it the better way of
curbing its savage instincts, its lusts and greed inherited from its wild
experience in the animal orders, and must lead it upward to a final assimilation
into the nature of the angel, its tutor. Little wonder the task can not be done
in a single incarnation!
But how was the god to link his higher nature with the body of the animal so
far below his stature? The very fundamentals of religion are interwoven with the
answer to this question. For religions grew out of this relation between the god
and his animal protege. Religions were not
originally forms of mere cult sentimentalism and piety. They were regimes of
ritual and ethical practice designed to keep man in memory of his divine estate,
and to hold him to the obligations of the "broad oaths fast sealed" (Empedocles)
of his covenant to raise up the lower self, while keeping himself "unspotted
from the world."
The technique of his incarnation is philosophically described under the terms
of the great Law of Incubation. This is announced in the Bible in John's
verse: "Unless a grain of corn (wheat) fall into the ground and die, it abideth
alone; but if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit." Also it is seen in Paul's
description of the resurrection in I. Corinthians, 15: "What you sow cannot come
to life unless it die." These texts proclaim the great truth of evolution,
missed by scientific eyes, that each kingdom of nature is linked to the kingdom
below it for the nourishment of its life. The vegetable kingdom is rooted in
mineral soil, the animal is sustained on vegetable matter, the human is built up
physically of animal and vegetable elements, and in their turn the lower divine
beings must take rootage in the human bodies. As the acorn can not develop its
oak potentialities unless it descend and be buried in the dark damp soil of the
mineral kingdom, so the angels of God can not evolve to higher perfection of
their divinity unless they undergo experience in human bodies. This is the
simple law which is the philosophical basis of the incarnation, at once its
explanation and its justification. The son of man must descend into the bowels
of the earth for three "days" (aeons), one in the mineral kingdom, one in the
vegetable and one in the animal, before he rises out of matter again as a god in
the perfection of his spiritual nature in the human kingdom. In the old
scripture the advent of the god always occurs about "the fourth watch of the
night," which symbols the human kingdom, as it is fourth in order. "As Jonas was
three days in the belly of the whale, so must the son of man be three days in
the bowels of the earth,"--in the lower kingdoms of evolution, not in a literal
rocky tomb! We shall have light on the ancient scriptures when we follow the
forms of the old symbolism.
The coming of the god to inhabit the body of an animal is in all respects
equivalent to his death and burial, analogous to the death of the old seed in
the ground, and is necessary if he is to rebeget himself anew as the risen son
of the slain father. For when he steps into the lower body, he loses all the
freedom of his glorious life as a spirit, and comes "under the law" that rules
on the plane of physical matter. He is subject to all the vicissitudes of
climate, bodily needs and the hardships of imprisonment in a body of flesh. In
brief, he is in hell, and the grave or tomb they speak of is nothing more than
his physical body. This is the first great mystery of ancient theology, lost
since the third century, and now restored through occult discovery. The words
tomb and womb are of the same origin and have the same significance. To
be born from the womb of a mortal mother is to enter the tomb of mortal life.
Many passages from Greek philosophy will confirm this interpretation.
Spirit, then, must be buried and die in matter, to reproduce its new
generation. The divine son must come to birth in the womb of Maria (the sea of
matter). "Matter is the mother of the gods," said an ancient sage; as spirit is
their father. The seminal seed of divinity must be sown in the body of flesh. It
is sown to die, or as Paul says, "in corruption; it must rise in incorruption."
It must be sown a mortal body, and be raised a spiritual body. Paul, who was an
Orphic Mystery initiate, was simply giving one of the old symbols of the descent
and resurrection of the god in mortal life.
But the god did not come as an adult. What life cycle starts at maturity? He
came as a god in potentiality only, a god in embryo, a seedling god, in fact a
baby god. The Christmas or advent festival celebrates the birth of an infant
Christ. He is the Christ-child, the Krist Kingle (Kindel, Kindlein, little
child--German), the Jesu Bambino of Italy, and the child Horus of ancient Egypt.
The greatest truth that we humans can be told is that the Christ principle is
born in us as a foetus in the womb of our physical bodies, struggling to be
delivered! The physical body of each person is the womb of the Christ. "I groan
and travail with you in pain," says Paul, "till Christ be formed within you."
Nature, says John, groaneth and travaileth in pain until now, when it is to give
birth to the god or Christ. And Paul says again, "For in this we groan,
earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house which is from heaven," the
spiritual body of our resurrection, the house not built with hands, but in
consciousness and character for when the foetal god is delivered at its final
Easter morn from its imprisonment in the physical body, it must have fashioned
for itself a temple or sanctuary, of imperishable elements, "eternal in the
heavens," as its future abode. This is the temple we are masonically building
out of the materials of incarnational experience,--thought, word and deed, day
by day and life by life. This is the mystic temple in whose building, as says I
Kings, "there was heard neither sound of hammer, axe nor any tool of iron." This
is the temple that Jesus says he could build up, if destroyed, in three "days"
or aeons of natural evolution. It is the glorious house we fashion for the soul
out of the spiritual essence of human life. Every moral lesson learned, every
item of character developed, has contributed to its heightened power to build
this body of indestructible light.
In comparison with it the physical body is named "the garment of shame" and
"the body of this death." It must be dissolved in the fervent heat of the inner
spirit, to free the radiant body of solar glory within. For the god, it is a
matter of shame and degradation to be
housed in the carnal body and subject to its animal impulses. In the body he
is nailed to the cross of matter, and the worst of his painful sacrifice and of
his humbling himself to be born of a virgin is his subjection to the carnal
appetites of the animal. He must wage a valiant warfare to avoid falling under
the complete domination of these massive impulses, until he finally brings the
god to adulthood, and has prepared the new subtle garment of light to be the
eternal home of the soul after its resurrection. He must finally dissolve the
physical elements of the veil of the temple, and the "ekstasis" (ecstasy)
described as the consummation of the drama of initiation in the Mysteries. The
word ecstasy literally means "standing out," and it referred to the actual
freeing of the soul from the physical body. It is the resurrection, when the
tomb of flesh is broken asunder, the gates of death are opened, and the dead are
raised incorruptible. One reason for the egg as a symbol of Easter is the
likeness of the spiritual experience to a chick's pecking its way out of its
shell to effect its birth. Christmas is the quickening of the foetus in the
womb; Easter is the actual birth of the human ego into the new kingdom of
spiritual light. It is a delivery; whence the ancient philosophy was at times
designated as midwifery. Socrates said he was a midwife, presiding at the birth
of the soul into truth.
This glorious body, the Augoeides of the Greeks and the Sahu of the
Egyptians, can be built up only from the union of spirit and body in the human
kingdom. For it is formed on its material side from the particles of radiant
essence generated from the cells of the body, at the center of which even modern
science now declares there are "radiogens" on intensely hot nuclei of solar
fire. (See statement of Dr. Geo. W. Crile, of the Cleveland Laboratories.) No
new birth of higher life can be generated save by the interaction or conjunction
of spirit and matter in some organic form. Man is the kingdom where these two
meet to be joined in one higher union. Paul states this clearly when he says
"the wall of partition between the two natures must be broken down, and the two
made one in one body."
Having seen that the first great law of human life is the Law of
Incubation, we are prepared now to see the operation of the other great law
of nature and principle of Platonic philosophy, the application of which to the
doctrines of religion will immediately throw them all in clear light. Especially
will it illuminate that great doctrine of the Christian Church, its most
significant rite, the Eucharist. Had this principle of ancient philosophy been
kept in the knowledge of the early Church, Christianity would not now be the
outcast from modern intelligent appreciation that it is. With this single
principle restored, theology may again lift up its bowed head and take its
ancient position of kingship among human interests.
We refer to the Law of Dismemberment. It is the method of the Law
of Incubation as Reincarnation is the method of Karma. When one sees how
extensively it was featured in the Book of the Dead and other books of
wisdom, it becomes next to incomprehensible how it fell into total desuetude in
the Christian system. For it is the key to the divinity of man and the humanity
of the god. It is the basic principle beneath our understanding of all
Christology. It gives us the entire rationale of the incarnation.
Briefly the Law of Dismemberment is thus set forth: as a principle of
Plato's philosophy it is the division or partition of unit divine nature or
essence into multiple fragments, the breaking up of the Oneness of God into many
portions or gods. As the principle back of the incarnation, it is the breaking
of the unified life of the god on his own high plane into fragments for the sake
of taking lodgment in multiple bodies. Plato informs us that as the one life
flows forth or descends into manifestation, the farther it proceeds from its
source in homogeneity, the weaker is its power and the more numerous is its
fragmentation. At each step of the descent it must suffer a reduction of its
total force, which can only be effected by "partition" into fragments. The Great
Light breaks up into lesser lights, the Great Fire into lesser sparks. A perfect
analogy is seen in the letting fall of any large compact body of water or other
liquid from a high place; it is thrown into infinite small particles by the
opposition of the air and other causes. Deity breaks up into fragments as it
descends, and according to the New Testament miracle there were twelve groups of
these "fragments."
How could the total power and enormous energy of the god be embodied in the
brain and nervous system of a single human body? It would "blow out the fuse" of
any man to be suddenly subjected to the full dynamic power of such an energy as
that represented by a god. One does not feed a child a whole loaf of bread, but
gives it only fragments. So we are fed on the broken bread of life. How again
could the deific nature and power be made universally accessible to all men, or
distributed amongst them, without dividing itself into fragments, so that a
portion might be given to each individual? It is supremely simple; yet this
simple principle underlying all theology has been lost out of Christian
doctrinism. And the world has been rent with bitter warfare, and much of the
foulest inhumanity to man ever known has been perpetrated, because this basic
understanding was lost out of theology. The full power of divinity is too high
for us to sustain; it would wreck our organism. So we receive each one a reduced
portion--all we can contain.
Again the oak tree is our mentor in spiritual truth. To propagate itself the
great tree divides its unific life into a thousand little nuclei, each of which
when dropped into the soil of the kingdom below it, has the potentiality of
reproducing the whole of its parent. So with the
god. He breaks his Oneness into fragments, and drops a seed, or infant
Christ, into each human breast. This is Paul's "fulness of the stature of
Christ." The child Jesus must grow to the stature of the Christ, or the adult
god.
Tennyson knew of the Law of Dismemberment in its spiritual sense when
he wrote in In Memoriam:
We are but broken lights of thee,
And thou, O Lord, art all in all.
The myths of the ancient gods in many cases convey this deep meaning in the
form of the (symbolic) cutting of the body of the god in pieces, which are
scattered over the earth, later to be reassembled by the Son, who restores the
deity whole. Even with these fables of Osiris, Dionysus, Tammuz, Mithra and many
others hinting at the plain truth, Christian blindness has gone on perverting
the basic meaning of the Eucharist.
The principle explains for the first time also the significance of the
phrase, the Lord of Hosts. As each Lord divides into a host of fragments, it is
a simple matter to see him in his divided totality as a Lord of a Host. Plato
indeed says, "Each superior god becomes the leader of a multitude, engendered
from himself," his split fragments.
But the most astonishing corroboration of this Platonic Theosophy is found in
the Bible itself at the very heart of the Lord's own ordination of the
Eucharist. Is it possible to comprehend the crassness that has made generations
of Christian theologians miss the clearly expressed doctrine of dismemberment in
their own Book of Wisdom? Hardly.
In I Corinthians (11:23, ff) Paul distinctly states the proclamation to him
by the Lord himself (in spiritual vision) of the festival of the Eucharist, "I
pass on to you what I received from the Lord himself, namely, that on the night
he was betrayed the Lord Jesus took a loaf, and after thanking God he broke it,
saying, "This means my body broken for you; do this in memory of me."
Here is the bread of divine life offered to man, and the Lord first broke
it!" If the Christian Church had all along known what "the broken body of
our Lord" meant in terms of Platonic philosophy, the whole course of western
history would have been altered mightily. Instead it quarreled over the Greek
word rendered "broken" in futile negation of its true meaning, and missed the
true gleam of the light of the world.
The Eucharistic symbolism of eating the Lord's body has likewise been missed.
What can it mean beyond partaking spiritually of his spiritual nature? "God is a
spirit" and he can be assimilated only spiritually. To convey this idea to dull
mortal comprehension the ancient sages devised the outward rite, actually eating
symbolic bread and drinking symbolic wine, and Christian literalists have argued
(and fought) for centuries over the question whether the actual life of
deity
was or was not in the elements themselves! In the light of such situations as
this--and it can be duplicated in scores of other doctrines--how can any one
fail to see the world's need of the Ancient Wisdom, and the restoration of the
luminous Platonic Theosophy?
John has told us in ringing passages about "that bread which came down from
heaven, whereof if a man eat he shall hunger no more." "For he who eateth my
flesh and drinketh my blood hath eternal life." It is impossible to realize save
by long study and reflection to what extent the literalization of the Bible and
the Gospel narrative has deprived the human mind of the intellectual nourishment
on which it was expected to feed. None but one who has examined these ancient
allegories and seen point by point how they have been turned into fruitless and
meaningless miracles and earthly incidents, can appreciate the enormity of the
miscarriage of ancient truth in its symbolic transmission to modern
"intelligence." It is, when fully seen, the most monstrous prodigy of ignorance
and superstition perhaps in human history. The ancients used outward nature and
human actions to type spiritual truth. We have converted their spiritual
allegories into the merest outward husk of truth, because Christianity became
predominantly a movement among the ignorant.
A phrase in the Lord's ordination of the Eucharist gives us the text for the
final principle of Plato's system that has to do with Christian theology. "Do
this in remembrance of me," he said. Here again ignorance has beclouded a great
truth and a great light. For here was an announcement by the Lord himself of
Plato's other great doctrine--so mystifying to the modern savants--the doctrine
of Reminiscence. If Washington or Lincoln had left an institution expressly
designated by them as a means of perpetuating their memory, we would regard them
as being actuated by a huge vanity. Was Jesus a vainglorious person, as the
words of Paul make him, if an historical character, to appear? No; Paul was
expressing a grand truth of Platonic wisdom, when he wrote of the light which
came to him in this spiritual vision. Religion was designed primarily on no
other motivation than as a means of putting into practice this phase of Platonic
philosophy. Religion was not originally merely a "system of worship." It had far
deeper bases. It was instituted to save the hosts of fragmented gods in mortal
bodies from the dire fate of losing their divinity. For they were threatened
with total forgetfulness of their real nature. Religion was designed to be a set
of psychological exercises which would subtly revive and stimulate the memory of
their former celestial state. One of the Nine Muses was Mnemosyne, the goddess
of Memory, and Mercury had the function of awakening dead memories. Horus in
Egypt came to awaken the memory of his father Osiris in the grave. From these
connotations we are enabled to discern a totally new force of meaning in our
word "remember." If
the gods on coming to save humanity were "dismembered" or fragmented
into individuals, then the resurrection or return to their primal unity in their
glorification at the end of the aeon would naturally be a "re-membering"
of divided parts. We express the same idea in our other word for the same thing,
"re-collecting." The brotherhood of humanity consists simply in this
reassembling in a common spirit of unity the individualized fragments of the
twelve Lords of Hosts, the twelve tribes of Israel. Horus is said to have come
to reconstitute his dismembered father. Translated from allegory to spiritual
meaning this can signify only that the Christ spark in us is to grow and expand
until it fuses by its fiery power into the great universal spirit of wisdom and
love that is to animate the race. Paul told us we are all members of one body,
of which Christ is the head; but habits of literal thought have prevented us
from sensing this in an intellectual or spiritual way. Our minds and hearts are
to be fused in one great spirit of love and harmony, as we enhance the glory of
the god shining within us ever more brightly unto the day of perfection. As we
separated in our descent into body, so we merge again into a mighty unity as we
ascend back to the father of lights. This is the reconstitution of the
dismembered suffering god, broken upon the cross of matter, in order that we
lower men might ascend into the kingdom of intellect and spirit. The
reconstitution is indeed the re-membering our broken divinity, the re-collection
of the scattered fragments of the broken body of the Divine Lord. Only by the
study of ancient origins in philosophy can we see the grand spiritual sense back
of these figures and terms. All symbols had their origin in simple ideas, which,
however, were the expressions of the loftiest truths of early wisdom.
This reassembling of the scattered fragments is the basis and genius of human
brotherhood. The individuals of the race, being of one identical essence, are
kindred in nature. But being attached to animal bodies, the god is subject to
the separative selfish tendencies of the lower man, until he educates this pupil
to the higher motivations of altruism and community of interest with others. As
an animal he wars with his fellows, is jealous and self-seeking, under the
evolutionary impulse of self-preservation brought up from former experience in
the animal grades. But as a god he revives the memory of his kinship with his
celestial mates, and in the glow of that warm recognition that his brother is
himself, he learns to look upon his fellow-man with that love which is described
as the cement of the universe.