º E. E; E. E; Eº Eº E-G E; Eº E; F-º E. C-I) E. E: E: Eº Eº Ea |||||||||||||ſ| º-º-º-º-º- !; i º: º/ 23 sº tº gº | . B.F. fiqí .K J 5. 13% o THE PERFECT WAY; OR, TAZAZ Aſ/AV/D/AVG OA' CAſ A*/S 7. THE PERFECT WAY : OR, THE FINDING OF CHRIST. BY AND EDWARD MAITLAND (B.A. CANTAB.), *W*ANNA (BONUs). KINGSFORD (M.D. of THE FA.culty of PARIS) (THIRD EDITION, REVISED.) .* tº §ombon : FIELD & TUER, THE LEADENHALL PRESS, E.C. GEORGE REDWAY, 15, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN. SIMPKIN, MARSHALL & CO., PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C. HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO., PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C. NEw York: SCRIBNER & WELFORD, 743 & 745, BROADWAY *sº ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, 1890. %. º #.Af * 0.hn. vºcaY º §§ s (, ... 113- $ ADVERTISEMENT. THE Lectures constituting the first edition of this book were delivered in London, before a private audience, in the months of May, June, and July, 1881. The principal changes in this edition consist in the sub- stitution of new matter for the greater part of paragraphs 27–41 in Lecture VIII., and the omission of the plates. The alterations involve no change or withdrawal of doctrine, but only extension of scope, amplification of statement, or modification of expression. Those above specified are made in accordance with Mrs. Kingsford's last wishes and suggestions. LONDON, 1890. PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION. As the writers—rather than the authors—of this book, we propose—on behalf of a more ready apprehension of it, and the satisfaction of much questioning concerning it—to take occasion of the issue of this Edition to give a succinct ac- count of its nature and import. That which The Perfect Way represents is neither an invention nor a compilation, but first, a discovery, and next, a recovery. It represents a discovery because it is the result of an attempt—proved successful by the issue— to ascertain at first hand the nature and method of existence. And it represents a recovery because the system propounded in it has proved to be that which constituted the basic and secret doctrine of all the great religions of antiquity, including Christianity,+the doctrine commonly called the Gnosis, and variously entitled Hermetic and Kabbalistic. In yet another sense does The Perfect Way represent a recovery, and also—for ourselves—a discovery, seeing that it was independent of any prior knowledge on our part. This is as regards Faculty. For the knowledges concerned, although verified by subsequent research in the ordinary z: J2/8A2AA CAE 7TO 7A/E A*A2 WASA, D AEA)/7/OAV. manner, were obtained solely by means of the faculty which consists in perception and recollection of the kind called in- tuitional and psychic, and therefore by the method which in all ages has been recognised as the means of access to know- ledges transcendental and divine. Being fully described in the book (e.g., Lect. i. pars. 4–18; App. iii. part I, etc.), this faculty needs no further definition here. It is necessary, however, to state this in relation to it : That the value of the recovery of the knowledges concerned, great as it is for the intrinsic interest and importance of the subject, is in- definitely enhanced by the manner of its accomplishment. For, much as it is to know the conclusions of ancient wisdom concerning the most momentous of topics, and to recognise their logical excellence, it is far more to know their truth, seeing that they involve the nature and destiny of man in all time. It is this supreme question which finds satisfactory solution in the present case. Had the recovery been made in the ordinary manner, namely, through the examination of neglected writings, or the dis- covery of lost ones, methods which, however successful, would have been altogether inadequate for the results actually attained,—no step would have been gained towards the verification of the doctrines involved. Whereas, as it is, for ourselves, and for all those who with us are cognisant of the genesis of this book, and who are at the same time sufficiently matured in respect of the spiritual consciousness to be able to accept the facts, that is, for all who know enough to be able to believe, the book constitutes of itself an absolute confirmation of its own teaching, and, therein, ARAEAEA CE 7'O 7THE RE WISED EDITION. 17; of the recovered Gnosis. For, being due to intuitional re- collection and perception,-faculties exercised in complete independence of the physical organism,-it demonstrates the essentially spiritual nature of existence; the reality of the soul as the true ego; the multiple rebirths of this ego into material conditions; its persistence through all changes of form and state ; and its ability, while yet in the body, to recover and communicate of the knowledges which, in the long ages of its past as an individualised entity, it has acquired concerning God, the universe, and itself. In respect of all these, the experiences of which this book is the result—although themselves rarely referred to in it— have been such, both in kind and quantity, that to regard them and the world to which they relate as delusory, would be to leave ourselves without ground for belief in the genuineness of any experiences, or of any world what- soever. It is not, however, upon testimony merely personal or extrinsic that the appeal on behalf of this book is rested, but upon that which is intrinsic, and capable of apprecia- tion by all who have intelligent cognition of the subjects concerned. Especially is this book designed to meet the peculiar circumstances of the times, so aptly described by Mr. Matthew Arnold when he says that “at the present moment there are two things about the Christian religion which must be obvious to every percipient person; one, that men cannot do without it ; the other, that they cannot do with it as it is.” In an age distinguished, as is the present, by zzy ARAEAEA CAE TO THAZ A&AE VISAE D Aº DZTION. all-embracing research, exhaustive analysis, and unsparing Criticism, no religious system can endure unless it appeals to the intellectual as well as to the devotional side of man's nature. At present the faith of Christendom is languishing on account of a radical defect in the method of its pre- sentation, through which it is brought into perpetual conflict with science; and the harassing and undignified task is im- posed on its supporters of an incessant endeavour to keep pace with the advances of scientific discovery or the fluctuations of scientific speculation. The method where- by it is herein endeavoured to obviate the suspense and insecurity thus engendered, consists in the establishment of these three positions :— (1) That the dogmas and symbols of Christianity are substantially identical with those of other and earlier re- ligious systems. (2) That the true plane of religious belief lies, not where hitherto the Church has placed it, in the sepulchre of historical tradition, but in man's own mind and heart; it is not, that is to say, the objective and physical, but the sub- jective and spiritual ; and its appeal is not to the senses but to the soul. And, (3) That thus regarded and duly interpreted, Christian doctrine represents with scientific exactitude the facts of man's spiritual history. It is true that many men renowned for piety and learning —pillars, accounted, of the faith—have denounced as in the highest degree impious the practice of what they call “wresting Scripture from its obvious meaning.” But their ARAEAEA CAE 7TO 7 P.A. RAE V/SAE/O AE/D/ ZYOM. Z/ denunciation of impiety includes not only the chief of those “lesser lights,” the Christian Fathers and Jewish Commentators, but also those “two great lights,” Jesus and Paul, seeing that each of these affirmed the mystic sense of Scripture, and the duty of subordinating the Letter to the Spirit and seeking within the veil for the meaning. The fact is, that in their use of the term “obvious,” the literalists beg the questions involved. Those questions are, —To what faculty is the sense of Scripture obvious, to the outer or the inner perception? and,-To which of these two orders of perception does the apprehension of spiritual things rightly belong P Nothing, assuredly, can be more obvious than the “impiety” of setting aside the account which Holy Writ gives of itself, and ascribing to it falsehood, folly, or immorality, on the strength of outward appearance, such as is the letter. To those whom this volume represents, it is absolutely obvious that the literal sense is not the sense intended; and that they who insist upon that sense incur the reproach cast by Paul when, referring to the veil which Moses put over his face, he says: “For their minds were blinded; for until this very day at the reading of the old covenant the same veil remaineth unlifted. Even unto this day the veil is upon their hearts.” We will endeavour briefly to exhibit the principles of this conclusion. The first lesson to be learnt in the school of philosophy is the truth that the mind can apprehend and assimilate that only which presents itself mentally. In other words, the objective must be translated into the sub- jective before it can become pabulum for the spiritual part zyń AREFA CAE 7"O 7THE A*A. PASAPA) A. DAZZOAV. of man. Truth is never phenomenal, but always meta- physical. The senses apprehend and are concerned with phenomena. But the senses represent the physical part only of man, and not that selfhood which the philosopher in- tends when he speaks of Man. This, the true ego, cannot come into relation with, or take account of, events and persons which present themselves phenomenally and ob- jectively only. Thus, they are but vehicles and symbols by which truths, principles, and processes are conveyed to the subjective apprehension,-the hieroglyphs, so to speak, in which these are portrayed. Belonging to time and to matter, persons and events are—in their phenomenal aspect —related only to the exterior and perishable man; while principles and truths, being noumenal and eternal, are cognisable only by that in man which, being also noumenal and eternal, is of like nature with them, namely his sub- jective and spiritual part. For the apprehender and that which is apprehended must belong to the same category. And as the former is, necessarily, the purely rational prin- ciple in man, the latter also must be purely rational. For this reason, therefore, in order to maintain its proper spirituality, religion must always—as Schelling points out— present itself esoterically, in universals and in mysteries. Otherwise, being dependent for its existence upon the con- tinuance of an environment merely physical and sensible, it becomes as evanescent as is this. From which it follows that so long as we regard religious truth as essentially con- stituted of and dependent upon causes and effects apper- taining to the physical plane, we have not yet grasped its ARAEAEA CAE 7"O 7A/E RE VISED EDITIO/W. zyż real nature, and are spiritually unconscious and unilluminate. That which is true in religion is for spirit alone. The necessary subjectivity of truth was affirmed also by Kant, who regarded the historical element in Scripture as indifferent, and declared that the transition of the Creed into a purely spiritual faith, would be the coming of the kingdom of God. Similarly the mystic Weigelius (A.D. 1650) says that in order to be efficacious for salvation, that which is divinely written concerning the Christ on the ob- jective plane, must be transferred to the subjective plane and substantialised in the individual, being interiorly en- acted by him. And the pious and learned translator of the Hermetic books, Doctor Everard, writes:–“I say there is not one word (of Scripture) true according to the letter. Yet I say that every word, every syllable, every letter, is true. But they are true as He intended them that spake them ; they are true as God meant them, not as men will have them ’’ (Gospel Treasury Opened, A.D. 1659). The reason is that matter and its attributes constitute but the middle term in a series the Alpha and Omega of which are spirit. The world of ultimate effects, like that of ulti- mate causes, is spiritual ; and no finality can belong to the plane of their middle term, this being a plane only of tran- sition. The absolute is, first, pure abstract thought. It is, next, a heterisation of that thought by disruption into the atomism of time and space, or projection into nature, a pro- cess whereby, from being non-molecular, it becomes mole- cular. Thirdly, it returns from this condition of self-exter- nalisation and self-alienation back into itself, resolving the zyłłł PREAEA CE 7"O 7"HE REVISED AEZ)/77ON. heterisation of nature, and becoming again subjective and —as only thus it can become—self-cognisant. Such—as formulated by Hegel—is, under manifestation, the process of universals; and such is, necessarily, the process also of particulars, which are the product of universals. Wherefore man, as the microcosm, must imitate, and identify himself with, the macrocosm, and subjectivise, or spiritualise, his experience before he can relate it to that ultimate principle of himself which constitutes the ego, or selfhood. Such a view of religion as this, however, is obviously incomprehensible save by the edpicated and developed : its terms and its ideas alike being beyond the capacity of the generality. This book, therefore, and the work which it inaugurates, are addressed to the former class; — to persons of culture and thought, who, recognising the defects of the popular belief, have abandoned, as hopeless, the attempt to systematise it and to relate it to their mental needs. There never can be one presentation of religion suited equally to all classes and castes of men; and the attempt of the Church to compass this impossibility has, of necessity, resulted in the alienation of those who are unable to accept the crude, coarse fare dealt out to the multitude. Enacting the part of a Procrustes in respect of things spiritual, she has tried to fit to one measure minds of all kinds and dimensions, in total disregard of the apos. tolic dictum —“We speak wisdom among the full-grown. But not unto you as unto the spiritual, but as unto the carnal, unto babes in Christ, feeding you with milk, not with meat, being not yet able to receive it.” ARAE FA CAE TO THE RAE VISA, D ED/TIOAW. ix For these, then, the uninstructed and undeveloped,— the Church must continue to speak with veiled face, in parable and symbol. Our appeal is to those who, having attained their intellectual and spiritual majority, have put away childish things, and who, accordingly,–instead of being content with the husk of the letter, and ignoring the spirit for the form, or limiting it by the form, -are impelled by the very necessity of their nature to seek behind the veil and to read the spirit through the form, that “with unveiled face they may behold the glory of the Lord, and be transformed into the same image.” They who are thus ripe will in these pages learn what is the Reality which only Mind can apprehend ; and will understand that it belongs not to the objective and phenomenal plane of mundane history, but to the subjective and noumenal plane of their own souls, where seeking they will find enacted the process of Fall, Exile, Incarnation, Redemption, Resurrec- tion, Ascension, the coming of the Holy Spirit, and—as the sequel—the attainment of Nirvāna, the “peace that passeth understanding.” For those thus initiated the mind is no longer concerned with history; the phenomenal be- comes recognised as the illusory, a shadow projected by the Real, having no substance in itself, and an accident only of the Real. One thing is and abides, –the Soul in man,—Mother of God, immaculate; descending—as Eve —into matter and generation; assumed—as Mary—beyond matter into life eternal. One state, supreme and perfect, epitomises and resolves all others;–the state of Christ, promised in the dawn of evolution; displayed in its pro- & Jº AREFA CE 7"O 7"HE RE VISA, D AE/D/77OAV. cess; glorified at its consummation. To realise the as- sumption of Mary, to attain to the stature of her Son, these ends and aspirations constitute the desire of the illuminate. And it is in order to indicate them anew and the method of seeking them intelligently, that this book is written. This preface may—it seems to us—fittingly conclude with a token of the estimation The Perfect Way has won Irom persons specially qualified to judge it. The fol- lowing is selected from numerous communications to the like effect, coming, not only from various parts of the world, but from members of various nationalities, races and faiths, and showing that our book is already accomplishing far and wide its mission as an Eirenicon. The veteran student of the “divine science,” a reference to whom, as the friend, disciple, and literary heir of the renowned magian, the late Abbé Constant (“Eliphas Levi’’), will be for all initiates a sufficient indication of his personality, thus writes to us:— “As with the corresponding Scriptures of the past, the appeal on behalf of your book is, really, to miracles: but with the difference that in your case the miracles are in- tellectual ones and incapable of simulation, being miracles of interpretation. And they have the further distinction of doing no violence to common sense by infringing the possibilities of Nature; while they are in complete accord with all mystical traditions, and especially with the great Mother of these, -the Kabbala. That miracles, such as I am describing, are to be found in The Perfect Way, in kind AREAEA CE 7"O THE REVISED ED/7ZON. Acz and number unexampled, they who are the best qualified to judge will be the most ready to affirm. “And here, apropos of these renowned Scriptures, permit me to offer you some remarks on the Kabbala as we have it. It is my opinion,-- “(1) That this tradition is far from being genuine, and such as it was on its original emergence from the sanctuaries. “(2) That when Guillaume Postel—of excellent memory —and his brother Hermetists of the later middle age—the Abbot Trithemius and others—predicted that these sacred books of the Hebrews should become known and under- stood at the end of the era, and specified the present time for that event, they did not mean that such knowledge should be limited to the mere divulgement of these par- ticular Scriptures, but that it would have for its base a new illumination, which should eliminate from them all that has been ignorantly or wilfully introduced, and should re-unite that great tradition with its source by restoring it in all its purity. “(3) That this illumination has just been accomplished, and has been manifested in The Perfect Way. For in this book we find all that there is of truth in the Kabbala, sup- plemented by new intuitions, such as present a body of doctrine at once complete, homogeneous, logical, and inex- pugnable. “Since the whole tradition thus finds itself recovered or restored to its original purity, the prophecies of Postel, etc., are accomplished ; and I consider that from henceforth aciz AREFA CE TO THE REVISED EDITION. *m' ºme- the study of the Kabbala will be but an object of curiosity and erudition like that of Hebrew antiquities. “Humanity has always and everywhere asked itself these three supreme questions:—Whence come we? what are we ? whither go we ? Now, these questions at length find an answer, complete, satisfactory, and consolatory, in The Perfect Way.” I As the secrecy originally observed is, even were it still desirable, no longer practicable, we have added our names to the title-page. CHRISTMAS, 1886. * This judgment is irrespective of the mode of presentation, for any defects in which the responsibility rests with ourselves. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. According to classical legend, the Goddess Athena had once for votary a fair virgin named Medusa, who, becoming vain of her beauty and weary of the pure service of the maiden Goddess, introduced folly and defilement into the very sanctuary of the Temple in which she was wont to worship. Thereupon a terrible fate overtook her. The beautiful face, which had been the cause of her fall, assumed an aspect so terrible as to blight and petrify all who looked upon it; her tresses, once the chief object of her pride, were changed into vipers; and the hands which had ministered to heaven became as the talons of a bird of prey. Thus transformed into a Gorgon, she brought forth monsters, and for a time devastated the earth. At length the hero Perseus, “Son of God,” commissioned by Athena and Hermes, and armed by them with wings and sword and shield, slew the terrible creature, and smote off her venomous head. This exploit—itself fraught with great perils—was followed by the achievement of another not less difficult. Andromeda, daughter of the AEthiopian king, being doomed to become the prey of a dragon which long had ravaged her father's ii ARAEA'A CAE TO 7//E FYRS 7" ED/77OAV. coasts, was already chained to a rock on the seashore and on the point of being devoured, when Perseus—divinely guided to the scene of the intended sacrifice—vanquished the Dragon and delivered the princess. And, having won her love and espoused her, the son of Zeus bore her away from her father's kingdom into heaven, to shine for ever beside him, redeemed, immortal, and glorious. Now, the names Medusa and Andromeda have a common root, and signify respectively “guardian * or “house” of Wisdom, and “the ruler” or “helpmeet” of Man. They are thus typical names, the first, of the Church, the second, of the Soul. And the two myths of which their bearers are the heroines, together constitute a prophecy—or perpetual verity—having special application to the present epoch. Medusa is that system which—originally pure and beautiful, the Church of God and the guardian of the Mysteries—has, through corruption and idolatry, become “the hold of every unclean thing,” and the mother of a monstrous brood. And, moreover, like the once lovely face of Medusa, the Doctrine which bore originally the divine impress and reflected the Celestial Wisdom Herself, has—through the fall of the Church—become converted into Dogma so pernicious and so deadly as to blight and destroy the reason of all who come under its control. And the Perseus of the myth is the true Humanity—earth-born indeed, but heaven-begotten—which, endowed by Wisdom and Understanding with the wings of Courage, the shield of Intuition, and the sword of Science, is gone forth to smite and destroy the corrupt Church and AA-A2A74 CAE 7"O 7"HA2 FIRST EDITION. iii to deliver the world from its blighting influence. But it is not enough that the Gorgon be slain. A task, yet greater and more glorious awaits achievement. Andromeda, the Soul, the better part of Man, is on the point of being de- voured outright by the baleful dragon of N egation, the agent of the lower nature, and the ravager of all the hopes of man- kind. Her name—identical with the terms in which is described the first Woman of Hebrew story—indicates her as the helpmeet and ruler of man ; her parentage denotes the origin of the Soul from the astral Fire or AEther, signi- fied by the land of Æthopis ; the brazen fetters with which she is bound to the rock, typify the present bondage of the Divine in man to his material part; and her redemption, espousal, and exaltation by the hero Perseus, prefigure the final and crowning achievement of the Son of God, who is no other than the Spiritual Manhood, fortified and sustained by Wisdom and Thought. Of no avail against the monster which threatens to annihilate the Soul, are the old devices of terrorism, persecution, and thraldom by which the corrupt Church sought to subjugate mankind to her creed. The Deliverer of the Soul must be free as air, borne on the wings of a Thought that knows no fear and no restraint, and armed with the blade, two-edged and facing every way, of a will omnipotent alike for attack and defence, and with the rod of a perfect Science. He must be bent, not on destruction merely, but on salvation likewise; and his sword must be as apt to smite the fetters from the limbs of Andromeda, as to deal the stroke of death to the Gorgon. It is not enough that he carry to Olympus the dead Medusa's head; he must Iv AAAAA CAE 7"O 7A/A2 A*/A’S 7" ED/7”/OAV. bear thither also a living Bride. His mission is not only to satisfy the Mind but to content the Heart. The Intellect —the “Man’—it is, who handles the sword of the liberator; and the Intuition—the “Woman *-it is, who weaves and constructs. But for her labour his prowess would be vain, and his deeds without goal or reward. The hero brings home his spoils to the tent, and hangs up his shield and spear by the hearth-fire. All honour to the warrior, alike as iconoclast, as scientist, as purifier of the earth. His work, however, is but initiatory, preparing the way and making the path straight for Her who carries neither torch nor weapon of war. By her is the intellect crowned ; by her is humanity completed ; in her the Son of Zeus finds his eternal and supreme reward ; for she is the shrine at once of divinest Wisdom and of perfect Love. It is thus evident that classical story, identical in sub- stance with the allegorical prophecies of Hebrew and Christian scripture, exhibits the work of the Saviour or Liberator, as having a twofold character. Like Zeus the Father of Spirits, whose son he is, the Reason is at once Purifier and Redeemer. The task of Destruction accom- plished, that of Reconstruction must begin. Already the first is well-nigh complete, but as yet no one seems to have dreamed of the last as possible. The present age has witnessed the decline and fall of a system which, after having successfully maintained itself for some eighteen cen- turies against innumerable perils of assault from without and of faction from within, has at length succumbed to the PREAACE 70 THE FIRST EDITION. v combined arms of scientific and moral criticism. But this very overthrow, this very demolition, creates a new void, to the existence of which the present condition of the world and the apprehensions and cravings everywhere expressed, bear ample testimony. On all sides men are asking them- selves, “Who will show us any good?” To whom or to what, if the old system be fallen, shall we turn for counsel and salvation from Doom P Under what roof shall we shelter ourselves if the whole Temple be demolished, and “not one stone be left upon another that shall not be thrown down " ? What way shall we take to Sion, if the old road be buried beneath the avalanche P. Agnosticism and Pessimism have seized upon the best intellects of the age. Conscience has become eclipsed by self-interest, mind obscured by matter, and man's percipience of his higher nature and needs suppressed in favour of his lower. The rule of conduct among men is fast becoming that of the beast of prey:-self before all, and that the earthly, brutish, and ignoble self. Everywhere are the meaning and uses even of life seriously called in question; everywhere is it sought to sustain humanity by means which are in them- selves subversive of humanity; everywhere are the fountains of the great deep of human society breaking up, and a deluge is seen to be impending, the height, extent, and duration of which no one can forecast. And nowhere yet is discernible the Ark, by taking refuge in which mankind may surmount and survive the flood, Nevertheless this Ark so anxiously looked for, this Way so painfully sought, this work of Reconstruction so sorely vi ARAE FA CAE 7"O 7A/A2 A*/A&S 7" EZO/77OAV. needed, are all attainable by man. The certainty of their attainment is involved in the nature itself of existence, and ratified in every expression given to the mysteries of that nature from the beginning of the world. The prime object of the present work is, then, not to demolish but to reconstruct. Already the needful service of destruction has been widely and amply rendered. The old temple has been thrown down and despoiled, and the “children of Israel” have been carried away captive to “Babylon,”—the mystic name of the stronghold of Ma- terialism. As it is written ; “The vessels of the House of the Lord"—that is, the doctrines of the Church—“great and small, and the treasures of the Temple and of the King and of the princes, were carried away to Babylon. And the enemies set fire to the House of God, and broke down the wall of Jerusalem,”—that is, the Soul,-‘‘and burnt all her towers, and whatsoever was precious they destroyed.” g Time it is now for the fulfilment of the second and last act of the prophetical drama ;- - “Thus saith Cyrus,”—that is, Kūptos, the Lord, the Christ;-“All the Kingdoms of the earth hath the God of heaven given me, and He hath chârged me to build Him again a House in Jerusalem.” “Who is there of you, who will go up and build again the Temple of the Lord God of Israel P.” In these words is expressed the intention of the writers of this book. And if they have preferred to withold their names, it is neither because they distrust the genuineness AAEAEAZA CAE 7"O TAZAZ F/RST EA)/7/OAV. vii of their commission or the soundness of their work, nor because they shrink from the responsibility incurred ; but in order that their work may rest upon its own merits and not upon theirs, real or supposed ;-in order, that is, that it may be judged, and not pre-judged one way or the other. Such reservation is in accordance with its whole tenour. For the criterion alone to which appeal is made on its behalf is the Understanding, and this on the ground that it is contrary to the nature of Truth to prevail by force of authority, or of aught other than the understanding; since Truth—how transcendent soever it be—has its witness in the Mind, and no other testimony can avail it. If truth be not demonstrable to mind, it is obvious that man, who is essentially mind, and the product of mind, cannot recognise or appropriate it. What is indispensable is, that appeal be made to the whole mind, and not to one department of it only. . In this book no new thing is told ; but that which is ancient—so ancient that either it or its meaning has been lost—is restored and explained. But, while accepting neither the presentations of a conservative orthodoxy, nor the conclusions of a destructive criticism, its writers ac- knowledge the services rendered by both to the cause of Truth. For, like the Puritans who coated with plaster and otherwise covered and hid from view the sacred images and decorations which were obnoxious to them, orthodoxy has at least preserved through the ages the symbols which contain the Truth, beneath the errors with which it has overlaid them. And criticism, however fiercely infidel, viii AREAEA CE 7TO THE FIRST AC/D/7”/OAV. has, by the very act of destruction, cleared the way for rebuilding. It has fulfilled the man's function,--that of analysis, and made possible the woman's, that of synthesis. And this is according to the Divine order. In both nature and method, therefore, this book is mainly interprefative, and, consequently, reconciliatory. And it is this, not only in respect of the Hebrew, Christian, Oriental, and Classic systems in particular, but in respect also of modern thought and human experience in general. It aims at making at-one-ment between Mind and Heart by bringing together Mercy—that is, Religion—and Truth— that is, Science. It seeks to assure man that his best and most powerful friends on every plane are Liberty and Reason, as his worst enemies are Ignorance and Fear ; and that until his thought is free enough and strong enough to bear him aloft to “heaven,” as well as to “the lowermost parts of the earth,” he is no true Son of Hermes, whose typical name is Thought, and who yet is, in his supremest vocation, the Messenger and Minister of God “ the Father.” ADVENT, 1881. ABSTRACT OF ARGUMENT AND CONTENTS. PREFACE TO THE REVISED EDITION pp. i-xii PREFACE . . FIRST . . . pp. i-viii LECTURE THE FIRST. INTRODUCTORY. PART I. Purpose of this book, to supply the existing need of a perfect system of thought and life by one founded in the nature of existence. This not a new invention, but a recovery of the original system which was the basis of all religions. Its recovery due to the same means by which it was originally received, namely, the Intuition, which repre- sents the knowledges acquired by the Soul in its past existences, and complements the intellect, being itself quickened and enhanced by illumination of the Spirit. Revelation a proper prerogative of man, belonging to him sº IX X ABS ZTAEACT OF AA’ CUMEAVT AAVAD CONTEAWTS. in virtue of his nature and constitution, and crowning the reason. God the Supreme Reason. The Understanding, the “Rock” of the true Church. Illustrations of Method, classic and rabbinical. Sketch of Doctrine. Spirit and Matter : their nature, relations, and essential identity. Existence and Being. The Kalpa, Sabbath, and Nirvāna. Divinity of Substance: its unity and trinity, and mode of individuation and development. The true doctrine of creation by evolution ; found in all religions, as also that of the progression and migration of Souls; personal and his- torical testimony to its truth; recognised in Old and New Testaments. Rudimentary man. The Sphinx . • º º . pp. I-24 PART II. Relation of the system recovered to that in possession. The true heir. Religion, being founded in the nature of existence, is necessarily non-historical, independent of times, places, and persons, and appeals per- petually to the mind and conscience. Ob- jections anticipated. Persistency of religious ideas due to their reality. The apparently new not necessarily really new. Christianity not exempt from the influences which caused the deterioration of Judaism. Its future de- velopment by means of new revelation fore- A BSTRA C 7" OA' A RG UMEAVT AAWD CONTEN 7S. xi told by its Founder. Need of such new revelation to preserve, not only religion, but humanity from extinction. The “man of sin’ and “abomination that maketh deso- late.” Substitution of Gospel of Force for Gospel of Love. One name whereby is sal- vation, but many bearers. The Christs . pp. 25–36 LECTURE THE SECONI). THE SOUL ; A WD THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTEAVCAE. PART I. The Soul, universal or individual, the Supreme subject and object of culture : the essential self, to know which is the only wisdom, involving the knowledge of God. Mysticism or Spiritualism, and Materialism, the doctrines respectively of Substance or Spirit, and of phenomenon. Matter a mode or condition of Spirit, and indispensable to its manifestation. The object of all religion and subject of all revelation the redemption of Spirit from Matter. Necessity to creation of the idea of a no-God. The ascent from Nature's Seeming to God's Being. The re- covered system and Materialism respectively as Phoibos and Python . ſº * . Pp. 37-43 xii ABSTRACT OF ARGUMAEAVT AAWD CONTEM.T.S. PART II. The Soul as individual, its genesis and nature: as the divine idea, eternal in its nature, yet perishable if uninformed of the Spirit. The “Fire of the hearth : ” the Divine breath. Convergence and divergence : the celestial Nirvāna, and that of annihilation. The end of the persistently evil. The planet and its offspring. The fourfold nature of existence, alike in macrocosm and microcosm, due to differentialities of polarisation of original substance e º º e o . pp. 43–48 PART III. The Soul as individual, its history and progress: commencing in the simplest organisms, it works upwards, moulding itself according to the tendencies encouraged by it; its final object to escape the need of a body and return to the condition of pure Spirit. Souls various in quality. The parable of the Talents e e º º . pp. 49-5 I PART IV. Of the nature of God; as Living Sub- stance, One; as Life and Substance, Twain; the Potentiality of all things; the absolute Good, through the limitation of whom by Matter comes evil. Subsists prior to creation as Invisible Light. As Life, God is He, as Substance, She , respectively the Spirit and Soul universal and individual ; the Soul the ABSTRACT OF AA’GUM/EAV7' AAVZ) COAV7 EAW 7 S. xiii feminine element in man, having its represen- tative in woman. God the original, abstract Humanity. The Seven Spirits of God. “Nature.” The heavenly Maria, her charac- teristics and symbols. As Soul or Intuition, she is the “woman’ by whom man attains his true manhood. The defect of the age in this respect. No intuition, no organon of knowledge. The Soul alone such an orga- IłOIl º º º g * * . pp. 5 I-57 PART V. Divine Names, denotive of charac- teristics. Function of religion to enable man to manifest the divine Spirit within him. Man as an expression of God. The Christs, why called Sungods. The Zodiacal plani- sphere a Bible or hieroglyph of the Soul's history. Bibles, by whom written. The “Gift of God’” g e sº e . pp. 57–62 LECTURE THE THIRD. THE VARIOUS ORDERS OF SA/R/ZS ; AAWD AO W TO AZSCAERAV Złż FM. PART I. The sphere of the astral, its four circuli and their respective occupants. The Shades; purgatory; “hell”; “devils”; “the Devil”; possession by devils; “souls in prison"; xiv A BSTRACT OF AA’GOMEAW 7" AAVD COA/TAEAVTS. “under the elements”; spirits of the elements, Subject to the human will ; souls of the dead; the anima bruta and anima divina. Metem- psychosis and reincarnation; conditions of the latter; descent to lower grades ; cause of the Soul's loss. * tº g º . pp. 63–74 PART II. The astral or magnetic spirits by which, ordinarily, “mediums ” are “controlled ”; reflects rather than spirits; difficulty of dis- tinguishing them from Souls; elements of error and deception ; delusive character of astral influences; their characteristics; danger of a negative attitude of mind; necessity of a positive attitude for Divine communication; Spirits elemental and elementary; genii loci, cherubim ſº te § ſº tº ... pp. 75–84 PART III. The sphere of the celestial ; the pro- cession of Spirit ; the triangle of life; the Genius or guardian angel, his genesis, nature, and functions; the Gods, or Archangels . pp. 84-92 LECTURE THE FOURTH. THE A TOMAE/MAEAV 7. PART I. This the central doctrine of religion, and, like the Kosmos, fourfold in its nature. ABSTRACT OF A RGUMENT AAWD CONTENTS. xv. What the doctrine is not ; its corruption by materialism ; priestly degradation of the char- acter of Deity. The Bible represents the conflict between prophet and priest, the former as the minister of the intuition, and the latter as the minister of sense . . pp. 93-98 PART II. The occult side of the sacrificial system. Effusion of blood efficacious in the evocation of sub-human spirits, as shown by various examples. These spirits visible in the fumes of the sacrifices. Astral spirits personate the celestials. Abhorrence of the true prophet for bloodshed, illustrated in Buddha's rebuke to the priests. The orthodox doctrine of vicarious atonement, a travesty, due to astral spirits, of the true doctrine. Pernicious effects of the use of blood (or flesh) for food; impossibility, on such diet, of attaining full perception of divine truth . . sº . pp. 98–IO4 PART III. Antiquity and universality of the Cross as the symbol of Life physical and spiritual. Its application to the doctrine of the Atonement fourfold, having a separate meaning for each sphere of man's nature. Of these meanings the first is of the physical and outer, denoting the crucifixion or rejec- tion of the Man of God by the world. The xvi ABSTRACT OF ARGUMENT Awp cow TEN7.S. Second is intellectual, and denotes the cruci- fixion or conquest in man of his lower nature. The third, which refers to the Soul, implies the passion and oblation of himself, whereby the man regenerate obtains the power—by the demonstration of the supremacy of Spirit over matter—to become a Redeemer to others. The Fourth appertains to the Celestial and innermost, and denotes the perpetual sacrifice of God's Life and Substance for the creation and salvation of His creatures. The pan- theistic nature of the true doctrine . pp. Ioa-II6 LECTURE THE FIFTH. THE WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. PART I. Psyche as the Soul and true Ego the result of Evolution, being individualised through Matter . Grº , e. g . pp. II 7–12 I PART II. Man's two personalities. Karma, or the results of past conduct and consequent destiny. The soul essentially immaculate . . pp. 122–123 PART III. The Ego more than the sum total of the consciousnesses composing the system, as representing these combined and polarised to a higher plane. The Psyche alone subjective and capable of knowledge . º ... pp. I 23-I 34 ABSTRACT OF ARGUMENT AND CONTENTS. xvi PART IV. The Shade, the Ghost, and the Soul, their respective natures and destinies . pp. PART V. The Anima Mundi, or Picture-World. The soul of the planet, like that of the in- dividual, transmigrates and passes on . pp. PART VI. The Evolution of the Ego, and therein of the Church of Christ, implied in the dog- mas of the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption of the B.V.M. . * - PD. LECTURE THE SIXTH. THE FALL (Wo Z.) PART I. The first Church; its type the Kaabeh, or cube, denoting sixfoldness; dates from “Paradise.” The Merkaba, or vehicle of God, drawn by the four elements. The four rivers of Eden. Allegorical character of the Mystic Scriptures; how recovered by Esdras; their origin and corruption . * • PD. PART II. The Parable of the Fall: its significa- tion fourfold, being one for each sphere of existence; the first, physical and social. pp. PART III. The second signification rational and philosophical ; the third, psychic and per- sonal . . . . . ſº º º • PP. I34–I37 137-140 I4O-I43 I44–I 52 I52–159 I60-164 xviii AAESTRACT OF ARGUMENT AND CONTENZS. PART IV. The fourth signification spiritual and kosmical. The Restoration implied in the Sabbath, and prophesied in the Zodiac, and in the arms of Pope Leo XIII. . . pp. 164–169 PART V. A new Annunciation . g . pp. I 70–I 73 LECTURE THE SEVENTH. THE FAZZ (No. II.). PART I. Interpretation of Scripture dual, intel- lectual and intuitional, or exterior and in- terior; the Soul as the Woman, through whose aspiration to God man becomes Man in the mystic sense, and made in the image of God ; and through whose inclination to Matter he falls from that image. As the Fall is through loss of purity, so the Redemption . is through restoration of purity . . pp. I 74–184 PART II. The Soul’s history as allegorised in the - books of Genesis and Revelation . . pp. 185–191 PART III. Source of errors of Biblical interpre- tation. The historical basis of the Fall. The Church as the Woman. Rise and Fall of original Church. A primitive mystic com- munity. The source of doctrine, interior and superior to priesthoods. © . . tº . pp. I92–202 ABSTRA C 7" OA' A RGUMAEAV7' AAWD CONTAEAVTS. xix PART IV. Nature and method of historical Fall. The three steps by retracing which the Res- toration will come. Tokens of its ap- proach º tº gº * . . . pp. 202–2O7 LECTURE THE EIGHTH. 7A/E A&AEDA, MP7/OAV. PART I. The “great work” the Redemption of Spirit from Matter: first in the individual, next in the universal. Definition of mystic terms used to denote the process: “Passion,” “Crucifixion,” “Death,” “Burial,” “Resurrec- tion,” “Ascension” . tº e . pp. 208–2 I5 PART II. The Man perfected and having power: the “philosopher's stone,” and kindred terms; the Adept and the Christ; sense in which the latter may be called a medium for the Highest; not as ordinarily understood : the Hierarch or Magian, his qualifications and Conditions . • * tº ſº . pp. 2 I5-222 PART III. Design of the Gospels to present per- fect character of Man Regenerate ; selection of Jesus as subject; Church's failure of com- prehension through loss of spiritual vision, due to Materialism. Answer to objection. XX A BS 7/84 CZ" OF A RG UMAEAVT AAWD COAV7 FAW 7.S. Jesus as Liberator necessarily spiritual; Paul's view. Method of Gospel symbolism; the miracles; kosmic order of Gospels • P9. PART IV. Parentage of the Man Regenerate. Joseph and V. Mary as representatives of Mind and Soul. The two Josephs. Catholic tradition and hagiology. Mary Magdalen as type of Soul; also the Seven Apocalyptic Churches. Identification of the Magi; the Stable and Cave of the Nativity. The John Baptist within. The Acts of the B. V. M. Ascension and Assumption. Final State of Soul . º º e º º • PD. PART V. The Twelve Gates of the Heavenly Salem; the Tabernacle; the Round Table and its “bright Lord; ” the Number of Per- fection ; the genealogy of the Man Re- generate ; “Christ” no incarnate God or angel, but the highest human. The world's present condition due to Sacerdotal degra- dation of truth. Christian gospels represent later stages only of regeneration, the earlier ones having been exemplified in the systems of Pythagoras and Buddha. Christianity framed with direct reference to these, not to supersede but to complete them; Buddha 222–23o 230–242 A BSTRA C 7" OA' A RGUMAAV7' AAWD COAVTEAVT.S. xxi and Jesus being necessary to each other, as head and heart of same system. Of these combined will be produced the Religion and Humanity of the future; hence the import of the connection between England and the East. The Transfiguration, a prophecy. “Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,” their relation to the mysteries of Brahma, Isis and Iacchos. The “Kings of the East.” The “Eastern Question”; its interior significance; the des- tiny of Islamism. e * ſº . pp. 242-254 LECTURE THE NINTH. GOD AS THE ZORD, OR, THE DIVINE IMAGE. PART I. The two modes of Deity; God as the Lord, in the Bible, the Kabbala, and the Bha- gavat Gita. Swedenborg and his doctrine : his limitations and their cause. The Her- metic doctrine. The “ Mount of the Lord.” True meanings of “Mystery’; Sacerdotal degradation of the term, and its evil re- sults . t te * * te . pp. 255–26 I PART II. Function of the Understanding in regard to things spiritual. Its place in the systems human and divine. The “Spirit of & xxii A BS ZTRA C 7" OA' A RG UMAEAV7' AAV/D CONTAEAVTS. Understanding,” his various names and symbols, and relation to the Christ. Cog- nate myths in illustration. Hermes as re- garded by the Neoplatonists and by modern Materialists. Mystic and Materialist, the feud between them. The School of Torturers. The “Mystery of Godliness,” according to the Kabbala and Paul. The Pauline doctrine concerning Woman ; its contrast with the doctrine of Jesus. Woman according to Plato, Aristotle, Philo, the Fathers, the Church, the Reformation, Milton, Islamism, and Mormonism º º º • DD. PART III. Charges whereby it is sought to dis- credit the system of the Mystics; Plagiarism and Enthusiasm: the signification and value of the latter. Ecstasy: its nature and func- tion. Mystics and Materialists, their respec- tive standpoints. Conspiracy of modern Science against the Soul. Materialists, ancient and modern, contrasted & tº • DD. PART IV. Man's perception of God sensible as well as mental. The divine Unity, Duality, Trinity, and Plurality. The Logos, or Mani- festor. The mystery of the human Face pp. 261–278 278–288 288–292 ABS 7"RACT OF A RGUMEAV7' AAVZ) COAVTEAVT.S. xxiii PART V. The Vision of Adonai tº . pp. 293–296 PART VI. “Christ” as the culmination of Humanity and point of junction with Deity. The Credo of the Elect. * e . pp. 296–298 APPENDICES. PAGE I. CONCERNING THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIP- TURE . e © * e & © . 3OI II. CONCERNING THE HEREAFTER . & & . 306 III. ON PROPHESYING ; AND A PROPHECY . . 3 II IV. CONCERNING THE NATURE OF SIN . ſº . 3 I 5 V. ConCERNING THE “GREAT WORK,” AND THE SHARE OF CHRIST JESUS THEREIN . . 318 VI. THE TIME OF THE END . tº e g . 323 VII. THE HIGHER ALCHEMY . * g tº . 328 VIII. CONCERNING REVELATION . g ſº º . 33O IX. CONCERNING THE POET . º te & • 333 X. CONCERNING THE ONE LIFE . * & . 335 XI. CONCERNING THE MYSTERIES . tº * . 339 XII. HYMN TO THE PLANET-GOD * º g . 34 I XIII. FRAGMENTS FROM THE “GOLDEN BOOK OF VENUS.” PART I. HYMN OF APHRODITE. * e 35O PART II. A DISCOURSE OF THE COMMUNION OF SOULS, AND OF THE USES OF LOVE BETWEEN "CREATURE AND CREATURE . 353 XIV. HYMN TO HERMES . e * (e. e . 357 XV. THE SECRET OF SATAN . tº & * . 359 INDEX e © . 367 “And the Lord God said unto the serpent . . . I will put enmities between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed : she shall crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for her heel.”—Gen. iii. I4, I5. “And a great sign appeared in heaven : a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars.”—Affoc. xii. I. THE PERFECT WAY : OR, 7TAZAZ AºAV/O / W G O AP CAIA’ ZS 7. LECTURE THE FIRST. AVTRODUCTORY. PART I. THE purpose of the Lectures, of which this is the first, is the exposition of a system of Doctrine and Life, at once scientific, philosophic, and religious, and adapted to all the needs and aspirations of mankind. This system is offered in substitution, on the one hand, for that traditional and dogmatic Conventionalism which, by its failure to meet the tests of science and to respond to the moral instincts, is now by thoughtful persons nearly or wholly discarded ; and on the other hand, for that agnostic Materialism which is rapidly overspreading the world to the destruction of all that is excellent in the nature of man. 2. But although offered in substitution both for that which experience has shown to be defective, and that which is so recent as to be only now in course of reception, the system to be proposed is not itself new ; and its present exposition represents, not an Invention as ordinarily under- stood, but a Restoration. For, as will be shown indubit- I B 2 7THE AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.4 V. ably, there has been in the world from the earliest ages a system which fulfils all the conditions requisite for endur- ance ; a system which, being founded in the nature of Existence itself, is eternal in its truth and application, and needs but due understanding and observance to enable man by means of it to attain to the highest perfection and satis- faction he can by any possibility imagine or desire. And, as also will be shown, this system is no other than, that which all the great religions of the world have, under various guises and with varying degrees of success, striven to express. 3. Our object, therefore, is to restore and rehabilitate the Truth, by divesting it of all the many limitations, de- generations, perversions, and distortions to which through- out the ages it has been subjected ; and by explaining the real meaning of the formulas and symbols which thus far have served rather to conceal than to reveal it. That which we shall propound, therefore, will be no new doctrine or practice; but that only which is either so old as to have become forgotten, or so profound as to have escaped the superficial gaze of modern eyes. 4. Now, in order to be entitled to a hearing in respect of a subject thus momentous and recondite, it is obviously necessary that the claimant should be able to plead some special qualification in the shape of the possession either of an exclusive source of information, or of an unusual faculty. Hence it becomes necessary to include in these introduc- tory remarks an account of the qualification relied on in the present instance. 5. That which is thus claimed is at once a faculty and a source of information, and is, in these days, of rare though not novel occurrence. It is that mode of the mind whereby, after exercising itself in an outward direction as AVTRODUCTORY LECTURE. 3. Intellect, in order to obtain cognition of phenomena, it returns towards its centre as Intuition, and by ascertaining the essential idea of the fact apprehended through the senses, completes the process of its thought. And just as only by the combined and equal operation of the modes termed centrifugal and centripetal, of force, the solar system is sustained ; so only by the equilibrium of the modes, intellectual and intuitional, of the mind, can man complete the system of his thought and attain to certitude of truth. And as well might we attempt to construct the solar system by means of an exercise of force in one direction, the human system by means of one sex, or the nervous system by means of one kind of roots only, as to attain to knowledge by means of one mode only of mind. It is, however, pre- cisely in this manner that the materialistic hypothesis errs; and by its error it has forfeited all claim to be accounted a system. 6. The Intuition, then, is that operation of the mind whereby we are enabled to gain access to the interior and permanent region of our nature, and there to possess our- selves of the knowledge which in the long ages of her past existences the Soul has made her own. For that in us which perceives and permanently remembers is the Soul. And inasmuch as, in order to obtain her full development, she remains for thousands of years in connection, more or less close, with Matter, until, perfected by experience of all the lessons afforded by the body, she passes on to higher conditions of being ; it follows that no knowledge which the race has once acquired in the past can be regarded as hope- lessly lost to the present. 7. But the memory of the soul is not the only factor in spiritual evolution. The faculty which we have named the Intuition, is completed and crowned by the operation of 4. THAE AEAA’AºA2C 7' W.4 V. Divine Illumination. Theologically, this illumination is spoken of as the Descent of the Holy Spirit, or outpouring of the heavenly efflux, which kindles into a flame in the soul, as the sun's rays in a lens. Thus, to the fruits of the soul's experience in the past, is added the “grace” or luminance of the Spirit;-the baptism of Fire which, falling from on high, Sanctifies and consummates the results of the baptism of Water springing from the earth. To be illu- mined by this inward Light, to be united with this abiding divinity, was ever the ardent aspiration of the seeker after God in all times and of all lands, whether Egyptian Epopt, Hindú Yogee, Greek Neoplatonist, Arab Sufi, or Christian Gnostic. By the last named it was styled the Paraclete and Revealer, by whom man is led into all truth. With the Hindú it was Atman, the All-seeing, not subject to rebirths like the soul, afta redeeming from the vicissitudes of des- tiny. By the combined operation of this Light, and the enhancement it effects in the intuitions of the soul,- enabling her to convert her knowledge into wisdom, the human race has been from age to age perpetually carried up to higher levels of its evolution, and will in due course be enabled to substantialise in itself and to be all that in the past it has known and desired of perfection. 8. These Lectures, then, represent the result of intui- tional memory, quickened and enhanced, we believe, by some measure of the divine influx, and developed by the only mode of life ever found compatible with sound philo- sophic aspirations. And of the doctrine we seek to restore, the basis is the Pre-existence and Perfectibility of the Soul. The former, because, but for her persistence, progressive genesis, or gradual becoming, would be impossible. For development depends upon memory, and is the result of the intelligent application of knowledge gained by expe- AV7'RO/DOCTORY ZAZ C7'URAE. 5 rience, in satisfaction of the needs of the individual ; the sense of need being complemented by a sense of power. And the Perfectibility; because, as a portion of the Divine Being—which is God—constituted of the Divine Substance and illumined by the Divine Spirit, she, the Soul, is necessarily capable of all that her nature implies ; and competent to realise for the individuality animated by her, the injunction of the great Master of mystical science; “Be ye perfect, as your Father in heaven is perfect.” 9. It is necessary for the elucidation of our system to speak yet further of the constitution of man. Concerning this, our doctrine is that which has prevailed from the ear- liest times, and in all philosophical religions. According to this doctrine, man is possessed of a fourfold nature, a speci- ality which differentiates him from all other creatures. The four elements which constitute him are, counting from without inwards, the material body, the fluidic perisoul or astral body, the soul or individual, and the spirit, or divine Father and life of his system. This last it is whose kingdom is described as the leaven taken by the woman—the divine Sophia or Wisdom—and hidden in three measures of meal, namely, the soul, the perisoul, and the body, until the whole is leavened ; until, that is, the whole man is so permeated and lightened by it that he is finally transmuted into Spirit, and becomes “one with God.” Io. This doctrine of the fourfold nature of man, finds expression also in the Hebrew Scriptures, being symbolised by the four rivers of Eden—or human nature—flowing from one source, which is God; and by the four elemental living beings of Ezekiel, and their four wheels or circles, each of which denotes a region and a principality or power. It has its correspondence also in the four interpretations of all mystical Scriptures, which are the natural, the intellectual, ‘6 ZTAE/E AEA'A'ECT WA V. the ethical, and the spiritual ; and also in the unit of all organic existence, the physiologic cell. For this, as the student of Histology knows, is composed, from without in- wards, first of cell-membrane or capsule, which is not a separable envelope, but a mere coagulative sheathing of its fluidic part ; secondly, of the protoplasmic medium ; thirdly, of the nucleus, itself a mode of protoplasmic substance; and, lastly, of an element not present in all cells, and often when present difficult to perceive, namely, the nucleolus, or inmost and perfectly transparent element. Thus does man, as the Microcosm of the Macrocosm, exemplify in every detail of his system the fundamental doctrine of the famous Hermetic philosophy by which the expression of every true Bible is controlled, the doctrine, namely, of Corres- pondence. “As is the outer, so is the inner ; as is the small, so is #he great : there is but one law; and He that workeſh is One. Mothing is small, nothing is great in the Divine Economy.” II. In these words are contained at once the principle of the universe and the secret of the Intuition. She it is, the Divine woman of man's mental system, that opens to him the “perfect way,” the “way of the Lord,” that “path of the just which, as a shining light, shineth more and more unto the perfect day.” And her complete restoration, crowning, and exaltation, is the one condition essential to that realisation of the ideal perfection of man's nature, which, mystically, is called the “Finding of Christ.” 12. Now, the modes whereby the Intuition operates are two, namely, Perception and Memory. By the former, man understands and interprets ; by the latter he retains and utilises. Perceiving, recollecting, and applying, the mind enacts for itself a process analogous to that which occurs AV7'RODUCTORY LEC 7'URE. 7 in the physical organism. For its operations correspond to the three physiological processes of Nutrition,-prehension, digestion, and absorption. 13. When the uninitiate person, or materialist, denies positively, as, with Curious inconsistency, such persons do deny, the possibility of positive knowledge, and declares that “all we know is, nothing can be known,” he speaks truly so far as concerns himself and his fellows. “The natural man,” as the apostle declares, “perceiveth not the things that are of the Spirit, for they are foolishness unto him ; and he cannot know them because they are spiritually discerned. But the spiritual man judgeth all things, and he himself is judged of no man.” While the two orders here indicated refer to the inner and outer, or soul and body, of each individual, they refer also to the two great divisions of mankind,-they who as yet recognise the body only, and they who are so far unfolded in their interior nature as to recognise the soul also. Of these last is the initiate of sacred mysteries. Following his intuition, such a one directs the force of his mind inwards, and—provided his will is subordinated to and made one with the Divine will—passes within the veil, and knows even as he is known. For, as the apostle says again, “What man knoweth the things of a man, save the man himself? So likewise, the things of God no man knoweth, save the Spirit of God within the man. And the Spirit knoweth all things and revealeth them unto the man.” As thus by means of our Divine part we apprehend the Divine, no such apprehension is possible to him who does not, in some degree, reflect the Divine image. “For if thine eye be evil, thy whole body is full of darkness. If then the very means of light in thee be dark- ness, how great is that darkness l’” I4. Matter is the antithetical ultimate of Spirit. Where- 8 THAE PERFECT WA V. fore the enemy of spiritual vision is always Materiality. It is therefore by the dematerialisation of himself that man obtains the seeing eye and hearing ear in respect of Divine things. Dematerialisation consists, not in the separation of the soul from the body, but in the purification of both soul and body from engrossment by the things of sense. It is but another example of the doctrine of correspondence. As with the vision of things physical, so with that of things spiritual. Purity alike of instrument and medium is indis- pensable to perception. I5. This then is the nature and function of the Intuition. By living so purely in thought and deed as to prevent the interposition of any barrier between his exterior and his interior, his phenomenal and his substantial self; and by steadfastly cultivating harmonious relations between these two, -by subordinating the whole of his system to the Divine central Will whose seat is in the soul, -the man gains full access to the stores of knowledge laid up in his soul, and attains to the cognition alike of God and of the universe. And for him, as is said, “there is nothing hid which shall not be revealed.” I6. And it is not his own memory alone that, thus endowed, he reads. The very planet of which he is the offspring, is like himself, a Person, and is possessed of a medium of memory. And he to whom the soul lends her ears and eyes, may have knowledge not only of his own past history, but of the past history of the planet, as beheld in the pictures imprinted in the magnetic light whereof the planet's memory consists. For there are actually ghosts of events, manes of past circumstances, shadows on the proto- plasmic mirror, which can be evoked. 17. But beyond and above the power to read the memory of himself or of the planet, is the power to penetrate to AV7'ROZ)&VC 7"OA" V ZA2C 7"UAE Z. 9 that innermost sphere wherein the soul obtains and treasures up her knowledge of God. This is the faculty whereby true revelation occurs. And revelation, even in this its highest sense, is, no less than reason, a proper prerogative of man, and belongs of right to him in his highest and completest measure of development. 18. For, placed as is the soul between the outer and the inner, mediator between the material and the spiritual, she looks inwards as well as outwards, and by experience learns the nature and method of God; and according to the degree of her elevation, purity, and desire, sees, reflects, and transmits God. It is in virtue of the soul’s position between the worlds of substance and of phenomenon, and her consequent ability to refer things to their essential ideas, that in her, and her alone, resides an instrument of know- ledge competent for the comprehension of Truth even the highest, which she only is able to behold face to face. It is no hyperbole that is involved in the saying, “The pure in heart see God.” True, the man cannot see God. But the Divine in man sees God. And this occurs when, by means of his soul's union with God, the man becomes “one with the Father,” and beholds God with the eyes of God. I9. That is not really knowledge which is without under- standing. And the knowledge acquired by man through the soul, involves the understanding of all the things apprehended. Now, to understand a thing, is to get intellectually into, beyond, and around it ; to know the reason of and for it; and to perceive clearly that it, and it only under the circumstances, is and could by any possi- bility be true. Apart from such knowledge and under- standing, belief is impossible. For that is not belief, in any sense worthy of the term, which is not of knowledge. And only that belief saves which is conjoined with under- IO TAZAZ AAEA' FA2CT WA Y. standing. For the Rock on which the true Church is built is the Understanding. 20. Such is the meaning of the words of Jesus on the memorable occasion of Peter's confession of him. It was not to the man Simon that was applied the apostrophe, “Thou art Peter, the rock, and upon this rock will I build my Church ; ” but to the eternal and immutable Spirit of Understanding, by means of which the disciple had “found Christ.” Thus the utterance of Jesus had reference, not to the man, but to the Spirit who informed the man, and whom with his spiritual eyes the Master discerned. 21. We have said that the soul, with the eyes of under- standing, looks two ways, inwards as well as outwards. It is interesting to remember that this characteristic of the soul was typified under the image of the two-faced divinity, Janus Bifrons, or, as called by Plutarch, Iannos. Now Janus is the same as Jonas. Wherefore it is said that Simon, the expositor of the true doctrine, is the son of Jonas, meaning the Understanding. Janus is also the door-keeper, as is Peter in Catholic tradition. And for this reason a door is called janua, and the first month or entrance of the year, January. Janus thus came to be regarded, like Peter, as the elder, the renewer of time, and the guardian of the outermost circle of the system, and one therefore with Saturn. And as the former was called Pater Janus, so the latter was called Peter Jonas, the Rock of Understanding. And he is represented, as also is Peter, standing in a ship, and holding in one hand a staff, and in the other a key. By this is signified, that to the Under- standing, born of the experiences of Time, belong the Rod of the Diviner—or the power of the Will—and the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven. Wherefore the real chief of the apostles in the true Church—that which, by its know- AVTRODUCTORY ZAZCTURE. II ledge of the mysteries of existence, alone can open the gates of eternal life—is the Understanding. 22. The priesthoods, materialising, as is their wont, divine things, have applied the utterance of Jesus to the man Simon and his successors in office ; but with the most disastrous consequences. For, ignoring the under- standing, and putting asunder that which God has joined together, Faith and Reason, they have made something other than Mind the criterion of truth. To this divorce between the elements masculine and feminine of man’s intellectual system, is due the prevailing unbelief. For, converted thereby into superstition, religion has been rendered ridiculous ; and instead of being ex- hibited as the Supreme Reason, God has been depicted as the Supreme Unreason. Against religion, as thus pre- sented, mankind has done well to revolt. To have re- mained subject, had been intellectual suicide. Wherefore the last person entitled to reproach the world for its want of faith, is the Priest; since it is his degradation of the character of God, that has ministered to unbelief. Sup- pressing the “woman,” who is the intuition, by putting themselves in her place, the priests have suppressed also the man, who is the intellect. And so the whole of humanity is extinguished. Of the influences under which Sacerdotalism has acquired its evil repute, a full account will appear as we proceed. 23. In these lectures, then, the practice denounced will be exchanged for the original method of all true Churches; and appeal will be made to that consensus of all the facul- ties, sensible, intellectual, moral, and spiritual, comprised in the constitution of man, wherein consists Common Sense. It is not upon any authority of book, person, tradition, or order, that we ourselves rely, or that we invite I2 7A/A2 AAERAEA2C 7' W.A. Y. the attention of others. Reference will indeed be made, as already, to various sacred and other sources, but only for illustration, interpretation, or confirmation. For, con- fident in the knowledge that all things have their procession from Mind, and that consequently Mind is competent for the comprehension of all things; and also that Mind is eternally one and the same 5–we have no fear of antagon- ism between the perceptions of the present and those of the past, however remote that past be. Only, let it be remembered, the appeal is, in all cases, to perception, and in no case to prejudice or convention. In proceeding from God, all things proceed from pure Reason ; and only by Reason which, in being unwarped by prejudice and unobscured by Matter, is pure, can anything be rightly apprehended. 24. Hence it is that the disposition which refers every- thing, for instance, to a book, and this perhaps one arbi- trarily selected from among many similar books; or that refuses to accept truth save on the authority of miracle, is a superstitious disposition, and one that opposes as in- superable a barrier to knowledge as does the materialism— no less superstitious—which, constructing an hypothesis independently of facts, rejects all evidence which conflicts with its hypothesis. It is precisely a materialism such as this which, in the recoil from superstition of one kind, has plunged the age headlong into superstition of another kind. For the cultus of the present day—that of Matter—is the most stupendous example of Fetish-worship the world has ever seen. But of this we shall have more to say further on. It is necessary here but to remind those who worship a book, that things are not true because they are in a Bible; but that they are in a Bible because previously recognised as true. And miracles—which are natural effects of ex- AVTRODUCTORY ZAZCTURE. I3 ceptional causes—may indeed be proofs of occult power and skill, but are no evidences of the truth of any doctrine. 25. The following story from the Talmud will serve both to lighten our lecture and to illustrate our position in this respect. - “On a certain day, Rabbi Eliezer ben Orcanaz replied to the questions proposed to him concerning his teaching; but his arguments being found to be inferior to his preten- sions, the doctors present refused to admit his conclusions. Then Rabbi Eliezer said: ‘My doctrine is true, and this karoub-tree which is near us shall demonstrate the infalli- bility of my teaching.’ Immediately the karoub-tree, obey- ing the voice of Eliezer, arose out of the ground and planted itself a hundred cubits farther off. But the Rabbis shook their heads and answered, ‘The karoub-tree proves nothing. ‘What,’ cried Eliezer, ‘you resist so great a miracle? Then let this rivulet flow backwards, and attest the truth of my doctrine.’ Immediately the rivulet, obeying the command of Eliezer, flowed backwards towards its source. But again the Rabbis shook their heads and said, ‘The rivulet proves nothing. We must understand before we can believe.” ‘Will you believe me,’ said Rabbi Eliezer, “if the walls of this house wherein we sit should fall down P’ And the walls, obeying him, began to fall, until Rabbi Joshua ex- claimed, “By what right do the walls interfere in our de- bates?” Then the walls stopped in their fall out of respect to Rabbi Joshua, but remained leaning out of respect for Rabbi Eliezer, and remain leaning until this day. But Eliezer, mad with rage, cried out : “Then in order to con- found you, and since you compel me to it, let a voice from heaven be heard ' ' And immediately the Bath-Kol, or Voice from heaven, was heard at a great height in the air, and it said, ‘What are all the opinions of the Rabbis com- I4. THE PERFEC7' W.A. V. pared to the opinion of Rabbi Eliezer? When he has spoken, his opinion ought to prevail.” Hereupon Rabbi Joshua rose and said, ‘It is written, “The law is not in heaven ; it is in your mouth and in your heart.” It is in your reason ; for again it is written, “I have left you free to choose between life and death and good and evil.” And it is in your conscience; for “if ye love the Lord and obey His voice within you, you will find happiness and truth.” Wherefore then does Rabbi Eliezer bring in a karoub-tree, a rivulet, a wall, and a voice to settle questions of doctrine P And what is the only conclusion that can be drawn from such miracles, but that they who have expounded the laws of nature have not wholly understood them, and that we must now admit that in certain cases a tree can unroot itself, a rivulet flow backwards, walls obey instructions, and voices Sound in the air P But what connection is there between these observations and the teaching of Rabbi Eliezer P No doubt these miracles were very extraordinary, and they have filled us with astonishment; but to amaze is not to argue, and it is argument, not phenomena, that we require. When, therefore, Rabbi Eliezer shall have proved to us that karoub- trees, rivulets, walls, and unknown voices afford us, by un- usual manifestations, reasonings equal in value and weight to that reason which God has placed within us to guide our judgment, then alone will we make use of such testimonies and estimate them as Eliezer requires.’” To the same purport the famous commentator Maimon- ides, says, “When thy senses affirm that which thy reason denies, reject the testimony of thy senses, and listen only to thy reason.” 26. Having spoken of the Soul's functions, and of her relation to man, we come now to speak of her nature and AAV7'RODUCTORY ZAZCTURE. 15 history. Whether of the individual or of the universal, Soul is Substance, that which sub-stands all phenomena. This substance is original protoplasm; at once that which makes and that which becomes. The first manifestation of sub- stance is in the interplanetary ether, called by Homer the “Middle Air,” and known in the terminology of Occultism as the Astral Fluid. This, be it observed, is not soul, but that whereby soul is manifest, and in which it potentially subsists. Matter is the ultimate expression of substance, and represents that condition in which it is furthest removed from its original state, as the membranous capsule which forms the circumference of the physiologic cell represents the ultimate expression of the fluidic contents. 27. The Soul may be likened to the nucleus of the cell. The protoplasmic medium which is found within the capsu- lar envelope and in which the nucleus floats, may be likened to the astral fluid, whether inter-planetary or inter-cellular. But the nucleus, the fluidic body surrounding it, and the exterior membrane, are all equally protoplasmic in nature, and the potentiality of one is in all; the difference actually observable among them being due only to difference of con- dition. * 28. All the elements of the cell, however, the nucleus included,—are material; whereas Matter itself is, whatever its kind, a mode of Substance, of which the nature is spiritual. But though Substance is, by its nature, Spirit, there is a sense in which Spirit is not Substance. This is the sense in which Spirit denotes will or energy, as distin- guished from the Substance in which this inheres. Under impulsion of the Spirit as thus defined, Substance exchanges its static for a dynamic condition, repose for activity, be- coming molecularised, and therefore materialised, in the process. It does not, however, cease to be Substance by I6 7A/AE ARAEX’AºEC 7' W.A. P. becoming Matter; but Matter ceases to be Matter by cessa- tion of motion. Matter may thus be defined as Substance in a state of incessant, intense activity, which is the condi- tion of every particle in the universe. From the microscopic molecule to the planet everything revolves, impelled by one force, and obeying one law. 29. The truth that Matter is Substance in its dynamic condition was well-known to the hierophants of ancient India and Egypt, and finds expression in the Hebrew sacred books—which are Egyptian in origin—in the phrase, “And on the seventh day, God rested from all His works, which God created and made.” This “resting ”—which is not annihilation but repose— involves the return of Matter to its static condition of Sub- stance. The idea presented is that of the cessation of active creative force, and the consequent return of phenomenal existence into essential being. This stage it is which con- stitutes the termination of the creative period, and the per- fection of every creative work. It is at once the “rest which remains for the people of God; ” the attainment of perfection by the individual, system, or race; and the return of the universe into the bosom of God, by re-absorption into the original substance. The Buddhist terms it Mirvâna ; and the period of which it is the termination is called by the Hindús Aalpa, a word signifying Form. And they hold that the universe undergoes a succession of Kalpas, being at the end of each re-absorbed into Deity, Who then rests awhile prior to the next manifestation, reposing upon Sesha, the celestial “serpent,” or living circle of Eternity, the symbol of essential Being, as opposed to ex-istence in its strict sense of manifested Being. 30. For, as will by-and-by be more fully shown, the substance of the soul, and therein of all things, and the JAV7'RO/DUCTORY ZASC 7"OA"/2. 17 substance of Deity, are one and the same ; since there is but one Substance. And of this substance, the life is also called God, Who, as Living Substance, is at once Life and Substance, one and yet twain, or two in one. And that which is begotten of these two, and is, theologically, called the Son, and the Word, is necessarily the expression of both, and is, potentially, the Universe, for He creates it after His own Divine image by means of the Spirit He has received. Now the Divine Substance is, in its original condition, homogeneous. Every monad of it, therefore, possesses the potentialities of the whole. Of such a monad, in its original condition, every individual squl consists. And of the same substance, projected into lower conditions, the material universe consists. It undergoes, however, no radical change of nature through such projection ; but its manifestation—on whatever plane occurring—is always as a Trinity in Unity, since that whereby substance becomes manifest, is the evolution of its Trinity. Thus—to reckon from without inwards, and below upwards—on the plane physical it is Force, universal Ether, and their offspring the material World. On the plane intellectual it is Life, Substance, and Formulation. On the plane spiritual—its original point of radiation—it is Will, Wisdom, and the Word. And on all planes whatsoever, it is, in some mode, Father, Mother, and Child. For “there are Zhree which bear record in ‘Aeaven,” or the invisible, and these Three are One. And there are three which bear record on ‘earth,’ or the visible, and these three agree in one, being Spirit, Soul and Body.” - 31. The soul's entrance into Matter, and primal mani- festation as an individual, occurs in the lowest modes of organic life, and is due to the convergence of the magnetic poles of the constituent molecules of some protoplasmic C 18 7A7A2 AAEA'AºEC 7' W.A. V. entity, an action due to the working of the Spirit in the Matter concerned. For all Matter, it must be remembered, has, and is, Spirit. The focusing of these poles gives rise to a circular magnetic current, of which the result is as an electric combustion, which is the vital spark, organic life, Soul. It is, however, no new creation in the ordinary sense of the term. For nothing can be either added to or with- drawn from the universe. It is but a new condition of the one substance already existing, a condition which constitutes a fresh act of individuation on the part of that substance. It has become by self-generation, a soul or nucleus to the cell in which it has manifested itself. Such is the mode of operation of Substance, whether as manifested in the human Soul or in the physiologic cell. 32. The doctrine of creation by development or evolu- tion is a true doctrine, and is in no way inconsistent with the idea of divine operation ; but the development is not of the original substance. Being infinite and eternal, that is perfect always. Development is of the manifestation of the qualities of that substance in the individual. Development is intelligible only by the recognition of the inherent consciousness of the substance of existence. Of the qualities of that substance as manifested in the indi- vidual, Form is the expression. And it is because develop- ment is directed by conscious, experienced, and continually experiencing intelligence, which is ever seeking to eliminate the rudimentary and imperfect, that progression occurs in respect of Form. The highest product, man, is the result of the Spirit working intelligently within. But man attains his highest, and becomes perfect only through his own volun- tary co-operation with the Spirit. There is no mode of Matter in which the potentiality of personality, and therein of man, does not subsist. For every IAWTA’O/DUCTORY L.A. CTURE. I9 molecule is a mode of the universal consciousness. With- out consciousness is no being. For consciousness is being. 33. The earliest manifestation of consciousness appears in the obedience paid to the laws of gravitation and chemi- cal affinity, which constitute the basis of the later evolved organic laws of nutritive assimilation. And the percep- tion, memory, and experience represented in man, are the accumulations of long ages of toil and thought, gradually advancing, through the development of the consciousness, from inorganic combinations upward to God. Such is the Secret meaning of the old mystery-story which relates how Deucalion and Pyrrha, under the direction of Themis (Law), produced men and women from stones, and so peopled the renewed earth. These words of John the Bap- tist bear a similar signification :-‘‘Verily I say unto you, that even of these stones God is able to raise up children unto Abraham.” And by children of Abraham, are denoted that “spiritual Israel,” the pure seekers after God, who finally attain and become one with the object of their Quest. - 34. As between Spirit and Matter, so between the organic and the inorganic there is no real barrier. Nature works in spirals, and works intelligently. In all that modern science has of truth, in respect of the doctrine of Evolution, it was anticipated thousands of years ago. But the scientists of old, using a faculty of the very existence of which those of the present day hear but to jeer at it, discerned in Soul the agent, and in Mind the efficient cause, of all progress. They perceived, as all now perceive who only allow them- selves to think, that were Matter, as ordinarily regarded, all that is, and blind force its impelling agent, no explanation would be possible of the obviously intelligent adaptation, everywhere apparent, of means to ends; the strong set of 20 7A/Z PZEA’AºA2C 7' W.4 V. the current of life in the direction of beauty and goodness; and the differentiation of uses, functions, and kinds, not only in cellular tissues, but even in crystalline inorganic elements. Why should Matter, if only what ordinarily it is supposed, —unconscious, aimless, purposeless, differentiate, diversify, develope P This is the question the ancients asked them- selves ; and they were keen enough to see that in their very ability to ask it, lay the solution of the problem. For the question was prompted by Mind, and the presence of Mind in the product man, involves its presence in the sub- stance whereof man consists, seeing that an extract cannot contain that which is not in its original source. 35. The reasonableness of this proposition is, however, at length beginning once again to be recognised even in the prevailing school, by some of the more intelligent of its members; one of these having recently declared it neces- sary, in order to account for the facts of existence, to credit Matter with a “little feeling.” I This is an admission, which, carried to its legitimate issue, involves the recog- nition of the system now under exposition. For it involves the recognition of God and the Soul. Thus is modern Science, painfully and against its will, working back towards the great doctrine taught long ages ago in the lodges of the Indian and Egyptian Mysteries, and verified by the spiritual experience of every epopf who lived the life prescribed as the condition of illumination. 36. This is the doctrine known as that of the Transmi- gration of Souls. Of this doctrine the following concise description is taken from a translation dated 1650 of one of the so-called Hermetic books, which, emanating from Alex- andria, and dating from pre-Christian or early Christian times, represent—at least in a measure—the esoteric doc- * The late Professor Clifford. AAV7'RO DUCTORY L.A. CTURAE. 2 I trine of the Egyptian and other ancient religious systems. Of this body of writings only a few fragments survive. The passage cited is from book iv. of the work called The APivine Pymander, or Shepherd, of Hermes Trismegistus. “Arom one Soul of the Oniverse are all those Souls which in al/ ?/he World are tossed up and dozen as if zeeze, and severally divided. Of these Souls there are many Changes, some into a more fortunate Estate, and some quite contrary. And they which are of Creeping Zhings are changed into those of Watery Things, and those of Zhings Ziving in the Water to those of Zhings living on the Zand; and Airy ones info Mezz, and Æuman Souls that lay hold of Zmmor- tality are changed into (/o/y) Demons. And so they go on into the Sphere of the Gods. . . . And this is the most perfect Glory of the Soul. But the Soul entering into the Aody of a Man, if it continue evil, shall neither taste of Ammorta/ity nor &e AEartažer of the Good, but being drazºn back the same Way, it returneth into Creeping Things. And £his is the Condemnation of an evil Soul.” 37. The doctrine of the Progression and Migration of Souls, and of the power of man, while still in the body, to recover the recollections of his soul, constituted the founda- tion of all those ancient religions out of which Christianity had its birth ; and was therefore universally communicated to all initiates of the sacred mysteries. And, indeed, one of the special objects of the curriculum of these institutions, was to enable the candidate to recover the memory of his previous incarnations, with a view to his total emancipation from the body. For the attainment of this power was regarded as a token that the final regeneration of the indi- vidual—when he would no longer have need of the body and its lessons—was well-nigh accomplished. Thus the prime object of the ancient lodges which constituted the 22 7A7A. AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.4 V. --mº pre-Christian Churches, was the culture of the soul as the divine and permanent element of the individual. 38. Various eminent sages are said to have remembered some at least of their previous incarnations; and notably Krishna, Pythagoras, Plato, Apollonius, and the Buddha Gautama. This last—the “Messenger’ who fulfilled for the mystics of the East the part which six hundred years later was, for the mystics of the West, fulfilled by Jesus—is stated to have recovered the recollection of five hundred and fifty of his own incarnations. And the chief end of his doctrine is to induce men so to live as to shorten the num- ber and duration of their earth-lives. “He,” say the Hindú Scriptures, “who in his lifetime recovers the memory of all that his soul has learnt, is already a god.” Socrates also is represented as distinctly asserting the doctrine of re-incarnation ; and it was implied, if not ex- pressed, in the system formulated by the superb modern thinker and scientist, Leibnitz. 39. Following the Rabbins, and especially the Pharisees, Josephus asserted the return of Souls into new bodies. Nor are recognitions of the doctrine wanting in the Old and New Testaments. Thus the writer of the Book of Wisdom says of himself: “Being good, I came into a body unde- filed.” The prophets Daniel and John are told by their inspiring angels that they shall stand again on the earth in the last days of the Dispensation. And of John it was also intimated by Jesus that he should tarry within reach of the earth-life, either for re-incarnation or metempsychosis when the appointed time should come. And of that great school which, apparently because it approached too near the truth to be safely tolerated by a materialising Sacerdotalism, was denounced as the most dangerously heretical,—the school of the Gnostics, the leader, Carpocrates, taught that the AAV7'RO/OO/C7'OA' V CAEC7'UAEA2. 23 Founder of Christianity also was simply a person who, having a soul of great age and high degree of purity, had been enabled, through his mode of life, to recover the memory of its past. And Paul’s description of him as a “Captain of Salvation made perfect through suffering,” obviously implies a course of experience far in excess of any that is predicable of a single brief career. To these instances must be added that of the question put to Jesus by his disciples respecting the blind man whom he had cured : “Did this man sin, or his parents, that he was born blind P” For it shows either that the belief in transmigration was a popular one among the Jews, or that Jesus had inculcated it in his disciples. His refusal to satisfy their curiosity is readily intelligible on the suppo- sition that he was unwilling to disclose the affairs of other souls. - 4o. The opening chapters of the Book of Genesis imply the like doctrine. For they present creation as occurring through a gradual evolution from the lowest types upwards, —from gaseous elemental combinations to the crowning manifestation of humanity in woman,—and thus indicate the animal as ministering to the human in a sense widely differ- ing from that ordinarily supposed ; for they represent the animal as the younger self of the man, namely, as man rudimentary. All this is involved in the fact that the term applied to the genesis of living things below man, signifies soul," and is so translated when applied to man ; whereas when applied to beasts it is rendered “living creature.” Thus, had the Bible been accurately translated, the doctrine that all Creatures whatsoever represent incarnations, though in different conditions, of one and the same universal soul, would not now need to be re-declared, or when re-declared, * Heb., AWephesh ; i.e., the lowest mode of soul. 24. THAE AEAEA'AºA, CZ" WA V. would not be received with repugnance. That it does produce such a feeling, is a sign how far man has receded from a level once attained, at least in respect of his affec- tional nature. For the doctrine of a universal soul is the doctrine of love, in that it implies the recognition of the larger self. It represents, moreover, Humanity as the one universal creation of which all living things are but different steps either of development or of degradation, progression or retrogression, ascent or descent; that which determines the present condition and ultimate destiny of each individual entity, being its own will and affections. Animals appeared first on earth, not, as is vainly supposed, to minister to man's physical wants, but as an essential preliminary to humanity itself. On no other hypothesis is their existence intelligible for the long ages which elapsed before the appearance of man. $ 4I. Thus, not only is the doctrine respectable for its antiquity, universality, and the quality and character of those who, on the strength of their own experience, have borne testimony to it; it is indispensable to any system of thought which postulates Justice as an essential element of Being. For it, and it alone of all methods ever sug- gested, solves the problem of the universe by resolving the otherwise insuperable difficulties which confront us in regard to the inequalities of earthly circumstance and relation. The importance attached to it by the Egyptians is shown by the fact that they chose for their chief religious symbol an embodiment of it. For in representing the lowest as linked to the highest,-the loins of the creature of prey to the head and breast of the Woman,—the Sphinx denoted at once the unity, and the method of development, under individuation, of the soul of the universal humanity. AVTROD UC 7'ORY ZAZCTURE. 25 PART II. 42. We will now define more precisely the nature of the system we seek to restore, and its relation towards that SO long in possession in the West. Although neither Christian nor Catholic in the accepted sense of these terms, it claims to be both Christian and Catholic in their original and true sense, and to be itself the lawful heir, whose inheritance has been usurped by a presentment altogether corrupt, false, superstitious, idolatrous. According to the system recovered, the Christ Jesus, Redeemer, and Saviour, while equally its beginning, middle, and end, is not a mere historical personage, but, above and beyond this, a Spiritual Ideal and an Eternal Verity. Recognising fully that which Jesus was and did, it sets forth salvation as depending, not on what any man has said or done, but on what God perpetually reveals. For, according to it, Religion is not a thing of the past, or of any one, age, but is an ever-present, ever-occurring actuality; for every man one and the same ; a process complete in itself for each man; and for him subsisting irrespective of any other man whatsoever. It thus re- cognises as the actors in the momentous drama of the soul two persons only, the individual himself and God. And whereas in it alone is to be found a complete and reasonable exposition of the parts assigned to both in the work of salvation, all competing systems must be regarded as but an aspiration towards or a degeneration from it, and as true only in so far as they accord with it. 43. And here it may be remarked, that the doctrine of religion as a present reality, needing no historic basis, is one which in this age ought to find special welcome. For, what now is the condition of men's minds in respect to 26 7THE PAEA' FECT WA V. the historical element of the existing religion ? None but those who through lack of education stand necessarily upon the old ways, have any reliance upon it. Critical analysis — that function of the mind which, in its nature destructive, is, nevertheless, really harmful only to that which, in being untrue, has not in itself the element of perpetuity—has laid an unsparing axe to the forest of ancient tradition. The Science of Biblical exegesis has made it obvious to every percipient mind that sacred books, so far from being infallible records of actual events, abound with inaccuracies, contradictions, and interpolations; that sacred persons, if they existed at all, had histories differing widely from those narrated of them ; that sacred events could not have occurred in the manner stated ; and that sacred doctrines are, for the most part, either intrinsically absurd, or com- mon to systems yet more ancient, whose claims to sanctity are denied. 44. Thus, to take the leading items of Christian belief, —the whole story of the Incarnation, the expectation of the Messiah, the announcement by the angel, the conception by the Virgin, the birth at midnight in a cave, the name of the immaculate mother, the appearance to shepherds of the celestial host, the visit of the Magi, the flight from the persecuting Herod, the slaughter of the innocents, the finding of the divine boy in the temple, the baptism, the fasting and trial in the wilderness, the conversion of the water into wine, and other like marvels, the triumphal entry into the holy City, the passion, the crucifixion, the resur- rection, and the ascension, and much of the teaching ascribed to the Saviour, all these are variously attributed also to Osiris, Mithras, Iacchos, Zoroaster, Krishna, Buddha, and others, at dates long antecedent to the Christian era. And monuments and sculptures still exist, showing that the AV7'RODUCTORY ZZCTURE. 27 —º entire story of the Divine Man of the gospels was, long before Moses, taught to communicants and celebrated in sacraments in numberless colleges of sacred mysteries. 45. The Fathers of the Church—who were well aware of these facts—dealt with them variously according to the tone and resources of their individual minds. Many of the most notable, including St. Augustine, saw the truth in its proper light; but the explanation accepted was, that the Devil, foreknowing the counsel and intention of God, had maliciously forestalled the career of the true Messiah by false semblances, causing it to be enacted in anticipation by a number of spurious messiahs, so that when the world's true redeemer should appear, he might be lost, as it were, in the crowd of his predecessors, and shorn of all particular glory. 46. And what, it may be asked, of the personage just mentioned, who plays so enormous a part in the Orthodox presentment? He, too, is a perversion of a truth, the real meaning of which will by-and-by be exhibited. It is suffi- cient to remark here, that, in being founded—as by the current corrupt orthodoxy—on the conception of a personal and, virtually, a divine principle of evil, Christianity is made to rest upon an hypothesis altogether monstrous and impossible. 47. There is neither space nor need to particularise the strictures to which the Bible, throughout, is fairly open alike on grounds historical, moral, and scientific ; or to speak of the many ecclesiastical Councils which, from century to century, have dealt with its component books, variously affirming or denying their canonicity; or to point out the innumerable contradictions and inconsistencies, of doctrine and of narrative, with which it abounds. These things, already familiar to many, are readily verifiable by all. 28 THE AERAWAZC 7' W.4 V. This only must be insisted on ;-to be a student of religion, to be a theologian in the true sense, it is necessary to have knowledge, not of one religion only, but of all religions, not of one sacred book only, but of all sacred books; and to deal with all as with the one, and with the one as with all ; to handle the Vedas, the Bhagavat-Gita, the Lalita-Vistara, the Zend-Avesta, and the Kabbala with the same reverence as the Old and New Testaments; and to apply to these the same critical touch-stone as to those. It is truth alone which is valuable, and this fears nothing. The crucible does not hurt the gold. The dross alone falls away under the test; and of the dross we are surely well rid. 48. And when all this has been done ; when the mind, purified from prejudice and disciplined by experience, has become an instrument of knowledge competent for the dis- cernment of truth, what, it will be asked, remains to man of his faith and hope, his God and his soul? We know the reply of the Materialist. He, as has been wittily Said, throws away the child with the water in which it has been washed. Because he finds impurity obstructing the truth, he rejects the truth together with the impurity. That which remains is the real, ever-living religion; a Divine and operating Word, and not a testament of the dead; a God and a Soul who, as Parent and Offspring, are able to come into direct and palpable relations with each other. And the Creation, the Fall, the Redemption, and the Ascen- sion—rescued from the tomb of the past—become living and eternal verities, enacted by every child of God in his own soul ; and Inspiration once more lifts its voice and is heard among us as truly as of old. 49. For those, then, who, being indeed of Christ, as well as called by his name, know by personal experience A77 A’OZ) UC7'OR V ZAZCTURE. 29 that “the kingdom of heaven is within,” there is no cause for anxiety as to the issue of any investigation, critical, scientific, or historical, how keen and unsparing soever. For they know that Religion—which is the Science of Life Eternal—appeals, not to the bodily senses, but to the soul, since no mere physical phenomena can have any relation to spiritual needs. They know, too, that in representing absolute, eternal verities, religious ideas are beyond the reach of any power of earth to erase or destroy them. But they who, on the contrary, have staked their all of faith in God and hope in heaven upon the special events of a particular period and place, have indeed ground for dismay and despair when they behold in the sculptured remains of other places and remoter times, the effigies of the like events, the crucifixion of Mithras, the infant Horus or Krishna in the arms of an immaculate mother, the resurrection of Osiris, and the ascension of Heracles. For they see in these, the invalidation, or at least the perplex- ing multiplication, of events which, on their hypothesis, ought to have happened but once in the world’s—nay in the universe's—whole history, and on the correct reporting of which their eternal welfare depends. The actual value of these facts will appear as we proceed. They are cited here in demonstration of the fallacy involved in the con- ception of religion as a thing dependent on history. Rightly interpreted, they will show that the Soul has no relation to phenomena, and that “the kingdom of Christ is not of this world.” 5.o. The Gospels bear evidence of being compiled or adapted in great measure from older Oriental Scriptures. But whether or not the events related happened only in part or not at all; whether they were put into their present form by Alexandrian Epopts some hundred years after the date 3O THE PERATECT WA V. assigned in them to the events they record; or whether their central figure, being himself an Initiate and Adept in the religious science of Egypt and India, actually rehearsed in his own person the greater part of the sacred mysteries, —is, happily, but of secondary importance. And even were it otherwise, it is obvious that the further we get away from the period of the events relied on, and the more years multiply upon us, thrusting that past into still remoter times and ever deepening shades of antiquity, the more difficult must the task of verification become, and the weaker the influences thence exerted upon man’s moral and intellectual nature. Alas for the hopes of the generations yet to be born, if an historical Christianity be indeed essen- tial to salvation l Nor can we be blind to the injustice and Cruelty of making salvation dependent upon belief in occur- rences concerning which only a learned few can at any time be in a position to judge whether or not they ever took place ; and these, moreover, occurrences of a nature to be a priori incredible save to an elect few. Assuredly, if any demonstration be needed of the necessary unsound- ness of a system which rests upon history, it is to be found in the present condition of Christianity. Declining to entrust its doctrine to Reason, the Church has taken its stand upon historical evidence, only to find this give way under it ; and it is now without any basis save that of Custom. The time has come in which Christians are Christians, only because they are accustomed to be Christians. Habit has superseded conviction. 51. Very different is the relation between the human mind and the system under exposition. Appealing to the understanding, and condemning as superstition the faith which is not also knowledge, this system meets unshaken the tests alike of time and of reason ; and, so far from JAV7'RO/DUCTORY L.A.C.TURA2. 3 I looking coldly on science, hails it as an indispensable ally, stipulating only that it be science, and not that which is “falsely so called.” Hoping everything and fearing nothing from the light of reason, it welcomes the searching ray into every recess, and greets with eager hands the phi- losopher, the historian, the critic, the philologist, the mathematician, the classic, the physicist, and the occultist. For its appeal is to intelligence as developed by know- ledge, in the absolute assurance that where these exist in the greatest plenitude, there it will gain the fullest recog- nition. 52. And the intelligence appealed to is not of the head only, but is also of the heart; of the moral conscience as well as of the intellect. Insisting upon the essential unity of all being, it admits of no antagonism between the human and the Divine. But holding that the human is the Divine, and that that which is not Divine is sub-human, it seeks, by the demonstration of the perfection of God, to enable man to perfect himself after the image of God. And it claims, moreover, to be the one philosophy wherein that image finds intelligent exposition, and whereby it obtains practical recognition. To the question why, being in all respects so admirable, it has become lost or perverted, the answer involves the history of man's original Fall, and will in due course appear. 53. There are two or three classes of objectors, to whom reply will now be made in anticipation. Of these classes one is that which, under the influence of the prevailing Materialism, holds, that so far from the phrase just em- ployed, “Image of God,” having any basis in reality, modern science has practically demonstrated the non- existence of God. If the following reply to this class involves a reference to regions of being as yet unrecog- 32 7TP/A2 AFA'A'A.C.7° W.A. V. nised in their own science, it is not upon us that the responsibility for the limitation rests. We speak of that which we know, having learned it by experience. 54. A true Idea is the reflect of a true Substance. It is because religious ideas are true ideas that they are common to all ages and peoples; the differences being of expression merely, and due to the variation of density and character of the magnetic atmosphere through which the image passes. The fact that every nation in every age has conceived, in some shape, of the Gods, constitutes of itself a proof that the Gods really are. For Nothing projects no image upon the magnetic light; and where an image is universally perceived, there is certainly an object which projects it. An Idea, inborn, ineradicable, constant, which sophism, ridicule, or false science has power to break only, but not to dispel:—an image which, however disturbed, invariably returns on itself and re- forms as does the image of the sky or the stars in a lake, however the reflecting water may be momentarily shaken by a stone or a passing vessel :-such an image as this is necessarily the reflection of a real and true thing, and no illusion begotten of the water itself. … In the same manner the constant Idea of the Gods, persistent in all minds in all ages, is a true image ; for it is verily, and in no metaphoric sense, the projection upon the human perception of the Eidola of the Divine persons. The Eidolon is the reflection of a true object in the magnetic atmosphere; and the magnetic atmosphere is a transparent medium, through which the soul receives sensations. For sensation is the only means of knowledge, whether for the body or for the reason. The body per- ceives by means of the five avenues of touch. The soul perceives in like manner by the same sense, but of a finer AV7'RO/DUCTORY L.A.C.7’URAE. 33 sort and put into action by subtler agents. The soul can know nothing not perceptible; and nothing not perceptible is real. For that which is not can give no image. Only that which is can be reflected. 55. To the other classes of objectors, who are chiefly of the religious and orthodox order, the following considera- tions are addressed. a. The apparently new is not necessarily the really new ; but may be a recovery—providential, timely, and precious—of the old and original which has been forgotten, perverted, or suppressed. ô. So far from it being incumbent on Christians to accept the established in religion as necessarily the true and the right, the condemnation by the later Hebrew prophets of the established form of Judaism, as no longer in their time representing the religion divinely given through Moses, imposes on Christians the duty of exercising, at the least, hesitation before accepting the established form of Christi- anity as faithfully representing the religion divinely given through Jesus. Christendom has been exposed for a far longer period than was Israel, to influences identical with those which caused the deterioration denounced by the prophets, namely, the abandonment of religion, without prophetic guidance or correction, to a control exclusively sacerdotal, and therein to Tradition uninterpreted by Intu- ition. And not only so, but on the first formal definition and establishment of Christianity under Constantine,— himself an ardent votary of a sun-worship become grossly materialistic,+the dominant conception was far more in accordance with the principles of sacerdotalism than with those of its Founder. There remains, also, the strong a priori improbability that a system identical with that which, in consequence of the efforts of Jesus to purify it, became D 34 TAZAZ AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.4 V. his destroyer, a system exclusively sacerdotal and tra- ditional,—should, even though calling itself Christian, prove a trusty guardian and faithful expositor of his doctrine. c. The belief that Christianity was indeed divinely in- tended and adapted to effect the redemption of the world from engrossment by the elements merely material of existence, to the recognition and appreciation of its spirit- ual and true substance ; and the fact that thus far Christi- anity has signally failed to accomplish that object, make it in the highest degree obligatory on Christians, both to seek diligently the cause of such failure, and to seek it elsewhere than in an original defect of the religion itself. d. According to numerous indications—including the express declarations of Jesus himself— much that is essential to the proper comprehension and practical appli- cation of Christian doctrine, was reserved for future dis- closure. History has yet to record the full manifestation of that “Spirit of Truth,” who was to testify of Jesus, and lead his followers into all truth. And the world has still to see the Christ-ideal so “lifted 'up' and exhibited as, by force of its perfection as a system of life and thought, irresistibly to “draw all men’’ to it. e. In point alike of character and of time, the present period coincides with that indicated in numerous pro- phecies, as appointed for the close of the old and the com- mencement of a new era. This is necessarily an event which can come about only through some radical change in the course of the world's thought. For, in being, however unconsciously to itself, a product of Mind, the world always follows its thought. The world has now followed its thought in the direction of Matter and blind force, until, for the first time in man's history, its re- cognised intellect has, almost with one consent, pro- INTRODUCTORY ZECTURE. 35 nounced decidedly against the idea of God. This, there- fore, is no other than that “time of the end * whereof the token should be the exaltation of Matter instead of Spirit, and the obtrusion into the “holy place” of God and the soul, of the “abomination that maketh desolate,” to the utter extinction of the world's spiritual life and of the idea of a divine Humanity. Now is “that wicked one" and “man of sin”—that is, humanity deliberately self-made in the image of the Not-God—definitively revealed ; and the gospel of Love is confessedly replaced by the gospel of Force. Of the prophecies, moreover, which referred to the period in question, it was declared that the words should be “closed up and sealed till the time of the end.” The very discovery of the true interpretation of the mystical Scriptures, would therefore constitute an indication that the “end is at hand.” f If it be, indeed, that man is not to “go down quick into the pit” that he has dug for himself, the emergency is one with which religion alone can grapple. But, so far from the religion already in the world being competent for the task, it has, by reason of its own degeneracy, ministered to the evil. Wherefore only by a religion which is not that now in vogue, can man be saved. Time alone, of course, can determine if, or by what means, the needed redemption will be wrought. Enough has been said to show that, from the religious point of view, there is ample reason in favour of according a serious hearing even to doctrines and claims so strange and unfamiliar to most persons as those herein advanced. 56. Finally, to close this Introductory Lecture, and to * It is not a little remarkable, that the foremost symbol of this new gospel should have for name the Greek term fol force; dynamite being simply 6%uapus. 36 THE AAEAEATECT WA V. reassure those who, desirous to know more, are yet appre- hensive of finding themselves in the issue, like the patriarch of old, robbed of their gods, we add this final reflection :- The end in view is not denial, but interpretation ; not de- struction, but reconstruction, and this with the very materials hitherto in use. No names, personages, or doctrines now regarded as divine will be rejected or defamed. And even though the indubitable fact be recognised, that the “one name given under heaven whereby men can be saved ” has been shared by many, that name will still be the name of salvation, and the symbol of its triumph will still be the cross of Jesus, even though borne before him by, or in the name of, an Osiris, a Mithras, a Krishna, a Dionysos, or a Buddha, or any others who, overcoming by love the limita- tions of Matter, have been faithful to the death mystically called the death of the cross, and, attaining thereby the crown of eternal life for themselves, have shown to men the way of salvation. Instead, then, of indulging apprehension on the score in- dicated, let heed rather be given to the true moral of the story of all the Christs, how many soever they be, by whom is enacted in its fulness, while yet in the body, the divine drama of the soul. For, with Christ, all may, in their de- gree, be redeemers alike of themselves and of others; and with him, to redeem, they must themselves first love and suffer and die. For, as said the German mystic, Scheffler, two centuries ago,- “Though Christ a thousand times in Bethlehem be born, But not within thyself, thy soul will be forlorn : The cross of Golgotha thou lookest to in vain, Unless within thyself it be set up again.” LECTURE THE SECOND. Z"HE SOUZ ; AAWD THE SUBSTAAVCAE OF EXISTEAVCAE. PART I. I. OUR theme is that which is at once the supreme subject and object of culture, and the necessary basis of all real religion and science. For it is the substance of existence, the Soul, universal and individual, of humanity. Only when we know the nature of this, can we know what we ourselves are, and what we have it in us to become. For our poten- tialities necessarily depend upon the substance whereof we are made. 2. This is not Matter. Wherefore a science which, in being restricted to the cognition of phenomena, is a ma- terialistic science, cannot help us to an understanding of ourselves. But, on the contrary, to such understanding such science is, in its issues, the greatest enemy. Matter is not God; and in order to understand ourselves, it is necessary to understand God. God is the Substance of existence. Be that substance what it may, it still is God; and of God no other definition is possible or desirable, but all conditions are satisfied by it. To know God, then, is to know this substance ; and to know this, is to know our- selves, and only by knowing this can we know ourselves. 3. Such, and no other or less, was the meaning of the famous mystic utterance inscribed on the temple porch at Delphi,-Know thyself—a sentence which, notwithstanding 37 38 7A7A2 AAEA'AºEC 7' W.A. W. its brevity, comprehends all wisdom. An attempt, it is true, has been made to improve upon it in the saying, Ignore thyself, and learn to know thy God. But that which is intended in the latter, is, albeit unsuspected by its framer, comprised in the former. For, as is known to the Mystic —or student of Substance—such is the constitution of the universe, that man cannot know himself without knowing God, and cannot know God without knowing himself. And as, moreover, only through the knowledge of the one can the knowledge of the other be attained, so the knowledge of the one implies and involves that of the other. For, as the Mystic knows, there is but one substance alike of man and of God. 4. This substance, we repeat, is not Matter; and a science which recognises Matter only, so far from ministering to- wards the desired comprehension of ourselves, is the deadly foe of such comprehension. For, as Matter is, in the sense already described, the antithesis of Spirit, so is Ma- terialism the antithesis of the system under exposition, namely, of Mysticism, or, as we propose to call it, Spiritual- ism. And here it must be understood that we use this latter term, not in its modern debased and limited sense, but in its ancient proper purity and plenitude, that wherein it signifies the science, not of spirits merely, but of Spirit, that is, of God, and therein of all Being. Thus adopting and rehabilitating the term Spiritualism, we define as follows:—first, the system we have recovered and seek to establish ; and, next the system we condemn and seek to destroy. 5. Dealing with both substance and phenomenon, Spirit and Matter, the eternal and the temporal, the universal and the individual; constituting respecting existence a complete system of positive doctrine beyond which neither mind nor LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 39 heart can aspire; providing a rule of knowledge, of under- standing, of faith, and of conduct ; derived from God’s own Self; transmitted and declared by the loftiest intelligences in the worlds human and celestial ; and in every respect confirmed by the reason, the intuition, and the experience of the earth's representative men, its sages, Saints, seers, prophets, redeemers, and Christs, and by none in any re- spect confuted ;-the system comprised under the term Spiritualism is not only at once a science, a philosophy, a morality, and a religion, but is the science, the philosophy, the morality, and the religion of which all others are, either by aspiration or by degeneration, limitations merely. And according to the degree of its acceptance by man, it minis- ters to his perfection and satisfaction here and hereafter. 6. But its antithesis:–Springing from the bottomless pit of man's lower nature; having for its criterion, not the conclusions of the mind or the experiences of the Soul, but only the sensations of the body; and being, therefore, not a science, nor a philosophy, nor a morality, nor a religion, but the opposite of each and all of these, the system com- prised under the term Materialism is not a limitation of Spiritualism but is the negation of it, and is to it what darkness is to light, nonentity to existence, the “devil” to God. And in proportion to the degree of its acceptance by man, it ministers to his deterioration and destruction here and hereafter. 7. Between the two extremes thus presented, having liberty to choose, and power to determine his own destina- tion, man, according to mystical doctrine, is placed, in pursuance of the Divine Idea, of which creation is the mani- festation. And whereas, in implying the culture of the substantial, Spiritualism, as we use the term, represents Reality; and in implying the culture of the phenomenal 40 TAZAZ AAEA'AºEC 7” WA Y. only, Materialism represents Illusion, the choice between them is the choice between the Perfection and the Negation of Being. 8. But whatever the quarrel of the Spiritualist with Materialism for its exclusive recognition of Matter, and consequent idolatry of form and appearance, with Matter itself he has no quarrel. For, although, by reason of its limitations, the cause of evil, Matter is not in itself evil. On the contrary, it comes forth from God, and consists of that whereof God's Self consists, namely, Spirit. It is Spirit, by the force of the Divine will subjected to con- ditions and limitations, and made exteriorly cognisable. 9. Matter is thus a manifestation of that which in its original condition is unmanifest, namely, Spirit. And Spirit does not become evil by becoming manifest. Evil is the result of the limitation of Spirit by Matter. For Spirit is God, and God is good. Wherefore, in being the limitation of God, Matter is the limitation of good. Such limitation is essential to creation. For without a projection of Divine Substance, that is, of God's Self, into conditions and limita- tions,—of Being, which is absolute, into Existence, which is relative, God would remain inoperative, solitary, unmani- fest, and consequently unknown, unhonoured, and unloved, with all God’s power and goodness potential merely and unexercised. For aught else to exist than God, there must be that which is, by limitation, inferior to God. And for this to exist in plenitude corresponding to God’s infinitude, it must involve the idea of the opposite and negation of God. This is to say:-Creation, to be worthy of God, must in- volve the idea of a No-God. God’s absolute plenitude in respect of all the qualities and properties which constitute Being, must be contrasted by that utter deprivation of all such properties and qualities, which constitutes Not-being. LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 4 I Between no narrower extremes can a Divine creation be contained. By no lesser contrast can God be fully mani- fested. The darkness of God's shadow must correspond in intensity with the brightness of God's light. And only through the full knowledge of the one, can the other be duly apprehended and appreciated. He only can thoroughly appreciate good who has ample knowledge of evil. It is a profound truth, that “the greater the sinner, the greater the saint.” That exquisite epitome of the Soul's history, the parable of the Prodigal Son, is based upon the same text. Only they who have gone out from God, returning, know God. At once consequence and cause of the going out from God, Matter is an indispensable minister to Creation, without which and its limitations Creation were not. Io. But mere Creation does not represent the totality of the Divine purpose. And a creation restricted to the actual- ities of Matter would be the reverse of a boon to itself or a credit to God. For by a creation thus limited, Deity would have shown Itself to be that only which the Materialist imagines It, namely, Force. Whereas “God is Love.” And Love is that, not which merely creates and after brief caress repudiates and discards; but which sustains, redeems, per- fects, and perpetuates. And to these ends Matter ministers indispensably, and therein contributes towards that second creation which is the supplement and complement of the first. This second creation is called Redemption, and in it the Creator finds His recognition and glorification, and man his perfection and perpetuation. For Redemption is the full compensation, both to God and to the universe, for all that is undergone and suffered by and through Creation. And it is brought about by the return from Matter of Spirit, to its original condition of purity, but individuated Ae 42 THE AEAEA’AºA2C 7' W.A V. and enriched by the results of all that has been gained through the processes to which it has been subjected;— results which, but for Matter, could not have been. Matter is thus indispensable to the processes both of creation and of perfection. For that through which we are made per- fect is experience, or suffering; and we are only really alive and exist in so far as we have felt. Now, of this divine and indispensable ministry of experience, Matter is the agent. II. Such being for the Spiritualist, who also is Mystic and not Phenomenalist merely, the origin, nature, and final cause of Matter, he has with it no ground of quarrel. But recognising it as intended not to conceal but to reveal God, and to minister to man's creation in the image of God, he regards the material universe as a divine revela- tion, and seeks, by humble, reverent, and loving analysis of it, to learn both it and God, and thus to make it minister to his own perfection. “Imitation,” it has been said, and truly, “is the sincerest flattery.” And man best honours God when he seeks to be like God. In this pursuit it is that, following his intuition of Spirit, he ascends from the exterior sphere of Matter and appearance—that sphere which, as the outermost of man's system, constitutes the border-land between him and negation, and is therefore next neighbour to that which, mystically is called the devil —to the interior sphere of Spirit and Reality, where God subsists in His plenitude. And so, from Nature's Seeming he attains to the cognition at once of God's and his own Being. 12. The system by the knowledge and observance of which these supreme ends are attained, and which is now for the first time in the world's history openly disclosed, has constituted the hidden basis of all the world's divine LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 43 revelations and religions. For from the beginning there has been one divine Revelation, constantly re-revealed in whole or in part, and representing the actual eternal nature of existence; and this in such measure as to enable those who receive it to make of their own existence the highest and best that can possibly be imagined or desired. Known by various names, delivered at various places and periods, and finding expression under various symbols, this revela- tion has constituted a Gospel of Salvation for all who have accepted it, enabling them to escape the limitations of Matter and return to the condition of pure Spirit, and therein to attain immunity, not merely, as is ordinarily de- sired, from the consequences of sin, but from the liability to sin. And, as history shows, wherever it has succeeded in obtaining full manifestation, Materialism, with all its foul brood, has fled discomfited, like Python, the mighty Serpent of Darkness, before the darts of Phoibos, to make its dwell- ing in the caverns and secret places of earth. PART II. 13. Coming, then, to the proper subject of this Lecture, we will now treat of the Soul, universal and individual, commencing with the latter. The soul, or permanent element in man, is first en- gendered in the lowest forms of organic life, from which it works upwards, through plants and animals, to man. Its earliest manifestation is in the ethereal or fluidic material called the astral body; and it is not something added to that body, but is generated in it by the polarisation of the elements. Once generated, it enters into and passes through many bodies, and continues to do so until finally perfected or finally dissipated and lost. The process of its 44 7 HAE A2A2A&AEECT WA V. –4– generation is gradual. The magnetic forces of innumerable elements are directed and focused to one centre ; and streams of electric power pass along all their convergent poles to that centre, until they create there a fire, a kind of crystallisation of magnetic force. This is the Soul, the sacred fire of the hearth, called by the Greeks Hestia, or Vesta, which must be kept burning continually. The astral and fluidic body, its immediate matrix, —called also the perisoul,-and the material or fixed body put forth by this, may fall away and disappear; but the soul, once be- gotten and made an individual, is immortal, until its own perverse will extinguishes it. For the fire of the soul must be kept alive by the Divine Breath, if it is to endure for ever. It must converge, not diverge. If it diverge, it will be dissipated. The end of progress is unity; the end of degradation is division. The soul, therefore, which ascends, tends more and more to union with and absorption into the Divine. 14. The clearest understanding may be obtained of the soul by defining it as the Divine Idea. Before anything can exist outwardly and materially, the idea of it must subsist in the Divine Mind. The soul, therefore, may be understood to be divine and everlasting in its nature. But it does not act directly upon Matter. It is put forth by the Divine Mind; but the body is put forth by the astral, or “fiery,” body. As Spirit, on the celestial plane, is the parent of the soul, so Fire, on the material plane, begets the body. The plane on which the celestials and creatures touch each other, is the astral plane. 15. The soul, being in its nature eternal, passes from one form to another until, in its highest stage, it polarises suf- ficiently to receive the spirit. It is in all organised things. Nothing of an organic nature exists without a soul. It is IECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 45 the individual, and perishes finally if uninformed of the spirit. & 16. This becomes readily intelligible if we conceive of God as of a vast spiritual body constituted of many indi- vidual elements, all having but one will and therefore being one. This condition of oneness with the Divine Will and Being, constitutes what, in Hindú mysticism, is called the celestial Nirvāna. But though becoming pure Spirit, or God, the individual retains his individuality. So that, instead of all being finally merged in the One, the One becomes Many. Thus does God become millions. “God is multitudes, and nations, and kingdoms, and tongues; and the sound of God is as the sound of many waters.” 17. The Celestial Substance is continually individual- ising Itself, that It may build Itself up into One perfect Individual Thus is the Circle of Life accomplished, and thus its ends meet the one with the other. But the de- graded soul, on the other hand, must be conceived of as dividing more and more, until, at length, it is scattered into many, and ceases to be as an individual, becoming, as it were, split, and broken up, and dispersed into many pieces. This is the Nirvâna of annihilation." 18. The Planet must not be looked upon as something apart from its offspring. It, also, is a Person, fourfold in nature, and having four orders of offspring, of which orders man alone comprises the whole. Of its offspring some lie in the astral region only, and are but twofold; some in the watery region, and are threefold; and some in the human region, who are fourfold. The metallic and magnetic en- velopes of the planet are its body and perisoul. The organic region comprises its soul ; and the human region its spirit, or divine part. When it was but metallic it had * See Appendices, No. IV. 46 7A7A2 AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. Y. no individualised soul. When it was but organic it had no divine spirit. But when man was made in the image of God, then was its spirit breathed into its soul. In the metallic region soul is diffused and unpolarised ; and the metals, therefore, are not individual; and not being indi- vidual, their transmutation does not involve transmigra- tion. But the plants and animals are individual, and their essential element transmigrates and progresses. And man has also a divine spirit; and so long as he is man—that is truly human—he cannot redescend into the body of an animal or any creature in the sphere beneath him, since that would be an indignity to the spirit. But if he lose his spirit, and become again animal, he may descend, and —disintegrating—become altogether gross and horrible. This is the end of persistently evil men. For God is not the God of creeping things; but Impurity—personified by the Hebrews as Baalzebub—is their god. And there were none of these in the Age of Gold, neither shall there be any when the earth is fully purged. Man's own wickedness is the creator of his evil beasts." 19. The soul is not astral fluid, but is manifest by astral fluid. For the soul itself is, like the idea, invisible and intangible. This may be best seen by following out the genesis of any particular action. For instance, the stroke of the pen on paper is the phenomenon, that is, the outer body. The action which produces the stroke, is the astral body; and, though physical, it is not a thing, but a tran- sition or medium between the result and its cause,_between, that is, the stroke and the idea. The idea, manifested in the act, is not physical, but mental, and is the soul of the act. But even this is not the first cause. For the idea is put forth by the will, and this is the spirit. Thus, we will * Comp. Bhagavat-Gita, l. xvi. LECT. II.] 7AE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 47 an idea, as God wills the Macrocosm. The potential body, its immediate result, is the astral body; and the phenomenal body, or ultimate form, is the effect of motion and heat. If we could arrest motion, we should have as the result, fire. But fire itself also is material, since, like the earth or body, it is visible to the outer sense. It has, however, many degrees of subtlety. The astral, or odic, substance, there- fore, is not the soul itself, but is the medium or manifestor of the soul, as the act is of the idea. º 20. To pursue this explanation a little further. The act is a condition of the idea, in the same way as fire, or incan- descence, is the condition of any given object. Fire is, then, the representative of that transitional medium termed the Astral body; as Water—the result of the combined inter- action of Wisdom the Mother, or Oxygen, and Justice the Father, or Hydrogen—is of the Soul. Air, which is pro- duced by the mixture—not combination—of Wisdom and Force (Azoth), represents the Spirit—One in operation, but ever Twain in constitution. Earth is not, properly speaking, an element at all. She is the result of the Water and the Air, fused and crystallised by the action of the Fire ; and her rocks and strata are either aqueous or igneous. Fire, the real maker of the body, is, as we have seen, a mode and condition, and not a true element. The only real, true, and permanent elements, therefore, are Air and Water, which are, respectively, as Spirit and Soul, Will and Idea, Father and Mother. And out of these are made all the elements of earth by the aid of the condition of Matter, which is, interchangeably, Heat and Motion. Wisdom, Justice, and Force, or Oxygen, Hydrogen, and Azote, are the three out of which the two true elements are produced. 21. Material body, astral fluid or sideral body, soul, and spirit, all these are one in their essence. And the first 48 THAE AREA’AºECT WA Y. three are differentialities of polarisation. The fourth is God's Self. When the Gods—the Elohim or Powers of the Hebrews—put forth the world, they put forth substance with its three potentialities, but all in the condition of “odic" light. This substantial light is called sometimes the sideral or astral body, sometimes the perisoul, and this because it is both. It is that which makes, and that which becomes. It is fire, or the anima bruta (as distinguished from the Divine), out of and by means of which body and soul are generated. It is the fiery manifestation of the soul, the magnetic factor of the body. It is space, it is substance, it is foundation; so that from it proceed the gases and the minerals, which are unindividuated, and from it also the organic world which is individuated. But man it could not make ; for man is fourfold, and of the divine ether, the province assigned by the Greeks to Zeus, the father of Gods and men. s 22. The outer envelope of the macrocosm and the micro- cosm alike, the Earth or body, is thus in reality not elemen- tal at all, but is a compound of the other three elements. Its fertility is due to the water, and its transmutory or chemical power to the fire. The water corresponds to the soul,-the “best principle” of Pindar, while fire is to the body what spirit is to the soul. As the soul is without divinity and life until vivified by the spirit, so the body— earth or Matter—is without physical life in the absence of fire. No Matter is really dead Matter, for the fire element is in all Matter. But Matter would be dead, would cease, that is, to exist as Matter, if motion were suspended, which is, if there were no fire. For, as wherever there is motion there is heat, and consequently fire, and motion is the condition of Matter ; SO without fire would be no Matter. In other words, Matter is a mode of life. LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 49 PART III. 23. We come now to the history and progress of the soul, Souls, we have said, work upwards from plants and animals to man. In man they attain their perfection and the power to dispense altogether with material bodies. . Their ability to do this is the cause and consequence of their perfection. And it is the attainment of this that is the object of the culture of the soul—the object, that is, of religion. Spirit alone is good, is God. Matter is that whereby spirit is limited, and is, therein, the cause of evil; for evil is the limitation of good. Wherefore to escape from Matter and its limitations, and return to the condition of spirit, is to be superior to the liability to evil. 24. Formerly the way of escape for human souls was more open than now, and the path clearer. Because, although ignorance of intellectual things abounded, especi- ally among the poorer folk, yet the knowledge of divine things, and the light of faith, were stronger and purer. The anima bruta, or earthly mind, was less strongly defined and fixed, so that the anima divina, or heavenly mind, sub- sisted in more open conditions. Wherefore the souls of those ages of the world, not being enchained to earth as they now are, were enabled to pass more quickly through their avatārs ; and but few incarnations sufficed where now many are necessary. For in these days the mind's ignor- ance is weighted by materialism, instead of being lightened by faith; and the soul is sunk to earth by love of the body, by atheism, and by excessive care for the things of sense. And being crushed thereby, it lingers long in the atmosphere of earth, seeking many fresh lodgments, and so multiplies bodies, the circumstances of each of which are influenced by the use made of the previous one. - E 50. TAZAZ AEA'AºA2C 7' W.4 V. 25. For every man makes his own fate, and nothing is truer than that Character is Destiny. It is by their own hands that the lines of some are cast in pleasant places, of some in vicious, and of some in virtuous ones, so that there is nothing arbitrary or unjust. But in what manner soever a soul conduct itself in one incarnation, by that conduct, by that order of thought and habit, it builds for itself its destiny in a future incarnation. For the soul is enchained by these pre-natal influences, which irresistibly force it into a new nativity at the time of such conjunction of planets and signs as oblige it into certain courses and incline it strongly thereto. But if the soul oppose itself to these influences and adopt some other course,_as it well may to its own real advantage, —it brings itself under a “curse” for such period as the planets and ruling signs of that incarnation have power. But though this means misfortune in a worldly sense, it is true fortune for the soul in a spiritual sense. For the soul is therein striving to atone and make restitution for the evil done in its own past; and thus striving, it advances towards higher and happier conditions. Wherefore man is, strictly, his own creator, in that he makes himself and his conditions, according to the tendencies he encourages. The process of such reformation, however, may be a long one. For, tendencies encouraged for ages cannot be cured in a single life-time, but may require ages for their cure. And herein is a reflection to make us as patient towards the faults of others, as it ought to make us impatient of our own. 26. The doctrine of the soul is embodied in the parable of the Talents. Into the soul of the individual is breathed the Spirit of God, divine, pure, and without blemish. It is God. And the individual has, in his earth-life, to nourish that Spirit and feed it as a flame with oil. When we put oil into a lamp, the essence passes into and becomes flame. LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 5 I So is it with the soul of him who nourishes the Spirit. It grows gradually pure and becomes Spirit. By this spirit the body is enlightened as a lamp by the flame within it. Now, the flame is not the oil, for the oil may be there without the light; yet the flame cannot be there without the oil. The body, then, is the lamp-case, into which the oil is poured; and this, the oil, is the soul, a fine and combustible fluid ; and the flame is the Divine Spirit, which is not born of the oil, but is communicated by the hand of God. We may quench this Spirit utterly, and thenceforward we shall have no immortality; but when the lamp-case breaks, the oil will be spilt on the earth, and a few fumes will for a time arise from it, and then it will expend itself, leaving at last no trace. Thus, as in the parable of the Talents, where God has given five talents, man pays back ten; or he pays back nothing, and perishes, 27. Some oils are finer and more combustible than others. The finest is that of the soul of the poet; and in such a medium the flame of God's Spirit burns more clearly and powerfully and brightly, so that sometimes mortal eyes can hardly endure its lustre. Of such a one the soul is filled with holy rapture. He sees as no other man sees; and the atmosphere about him is enkindled. His soul becomes transmuted into flame; and when the lamp of his body is shattered, his flame mounts and soars, and is united to the Divine Fire.1 PART IV. 28. We come to treat of that from which the soul of the individual proceeds, and of which it consists. For, as al- ready observed, it is upon the nature of this that our poten- * See Appendices, No. IX. 52 7THE AASA’AºA2C 7' W.4 V. tialities depend. Let us, then, for a while, ignoring the universe of things, cast our minds backward to the point wherein, prior to Existence, substance necessarily subsists alone and undifferentiate, and pure Being is all. 29. That which subsists before the beginning of things, is necessarily the potentiality of things. This necessarily is homogeneous. As the Substance of things, and pervaded by Life, it is Living Substance; and being homogeneous, it is One. But, consisting of Life and Substance, it is Twain. Constituting the life and substance of Persons, it is neces- sarily personal; and being self-subsistent, infinite, eternal, and personal, it is God; and God is Twain in One. By virtue of the potency of this duality, God subsists and operates. And every monad of God’s substance possesses the potency of Twain. Wherever are Life and Substance, there is God. Wherever God is, there is Being ; and wher- ever Being is, there is God; for God is Being. The uni- verse is Existence, that is, God manifested. Prior to the universe, God subsisted unmanifest. Subsistence and Existence, these are the two terms which denote respec- tively God in God's Self, and God in Creation. 3o. Before the beginning of things, the great and in- visible God alone subsisted. There was no motion, nor darkness, nor space, nor matter. There was no other than God, the One, the Uncreate, the Self-subsistent, Who sub- sisted as invisible Light. 31. God is Spirit, God is Life, God is Mind, God is the Subject and Object of mind: at once the thought, the thinker, and that which is thought of God is positive and personal Being ; the potential Essence of all that is or can be ; the one and only Self; that alone in the universe which has the right to say “I.” Wherever a Presence is, there is God; and where God is not, is no Being. LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 53 32. In God subsist, in absolute plenitude and perfect equilibrium, all qualities and properties which, opposed to and yet corresponding with each other, constitute the ele- ments masculine and feminine of existence. God is perfect will and perfect love, perfect knowledge and perfect wisdom, perfect intelligence and perfect sympathy, perfect justice and perfect mercy, perfect power and perfect goodness. And from God, as original and abstract humanity, proceeds the derived and concrete humanity which, when perfected, manifests God. God is light, truth, order, harmony, reason; and God's works are illumination, knowledge, understanding, love, and sanity. And inasmuch as anything is absolute, strong, perfect, true, insomuch it resembles God and is God. Perfect and complete from eternity, God is beyond possi- bility of change or development. Development pertains only to the manifestation of God in creation. As God is one, so is God's method one, and without variation or shadow of turning. God works from within outwards; for God’s kingdom is within, being interior, invisible, mystic, spiritual. And God's Spirits, the Spirits of the Invisible Light, are Seven :—the spirit of wisdom, the spirit of under- standing, the spirit of counsel, the spirit of power, the spirit of knowledge, the spirit of righteousness, and the spirit of divine awfulness. These are the Powers, or Elohim, of God. They are co-equal and co-eternal. Each has in it- self the nature of the whole. Each is a perfect entity. Of them all is the whole of God's substance pervaded. And in their individual manifestations they are the Gods. 33. In God, before the beginning, all things visible and invisible were potential; and of God's fulness have we all received. Before the beginning negation was not. There was no other than God. - 34. As Living Substance, God is One. As Life and 54 7THE AEA2A’AºA, C7' W.A. V. Substance, God is Twain. HE is the Life, and SHE is the Substance. And to speak of Her, is to speak of Woman in her supremest mode. She is not “Nature ; ” Nature is the manifestation of the qualities and properties with which, under suffusion of the Life and Spirits of God, Substance is endowed. She is not Matter ; but is the potential essence of Matter. She is not Space; but is the within of space, its fourth and original dimension, that from which all pro- ceed, the containing element of Deity, and of which space is the manifestation. As original Substance, the substance of all other substances, She underlies that whereof all things are made ; and, like life and mind, is interior, mystical, spiritual, and discernible only when manifested in operation. In the Unmanifest, She is the Great Deep, or Ocean, of Infinitude, the Principium or Arché, the heavenly Sophia, or Wisdom, Who encircles and embraces all things; of Whom are dimension and form and appearance; Whose veil is the astral fluid, and Who is, Herself, the substance of all Souls. 35. On the plane of manifestation, as the Soul macro- cosmic and microcosmic, She appears as the Daughter, Mother, and Spouse of God. Exhibiting in a perfect Humanity the fulness of the life she has received of God, she is mystically styled the Blessed Virgin Mary, and in token of her Divine Motherhood and heavenly derivation and attributes, is represented as clad in celestial azure, and bearing in Her arms the infant Man, in whom, regenerate and reborn of Her own immaculate substance, the universe is redeemed. In Her subsist inherently all the feminine qualities of the Godhead. As Venus, the brightest of the mystic Seven who represent the Elohim of God, She corres- ponds to the third, the spirit of counsel, in that counsel is wisdom, and love and wisdom are one. Thus, in mystical LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 55 art She is portrayed as Aphrodite the Sea-Queen, and Mary the Star of the Sea, and as the soul from whose pure intui- tion of God proceeds the perfected man. Correspondingly, in mystical science She appears as Sodium, or salt, whose ray in the spectrum, as the place of Venus among the planets, is the third, whose light is the brightest, and whose Colour is the yellow. Among the metals, copper is dedi- cated to Venus. For of copper the crystals are the deep sea-blue. And, inasmuch as She, as love, is the enlightener, and as salt the purifier, and the pure in heart see God, so is its sulphate a balm for ailing eyes. As Pallas or Minerva, She is “Our Lady of Victories,” adversary of demons and dragons, wearing the panoply of heaven, and the insignia of wisdom and righteous war. As Isis or Artemis, She is pre- eminently the Initiator, and the Virgin clothed in white, standing on the Moon, and ruling the waters. 36. Also is She “Mother of Sorrows,” whose bitterness pervades all things below ; and only by her salting with affliction, purification by trial, and purchase of wisdom by dear-bought experience, is the perfection that is of Her attained. Nevertheless She is also “Mother of Joys,” since Her light is gilded by the solar rays; and of Her pain and travail as the soul in the individual, comes the regeneration of Her children. And She is for them no more a Sea of bitterness when once their warfare with evil has been accomplished; for then is She “our Lady, Glory of the Church triumphant.” Thus in the Microcosm. 37. In the Macrocosm She is that Beginning or Wisdom wherein God makes the heavens and the earth; the sub- stantial waters upon whose face He, the Energising Will, moves at every fresh act of creation, and the ark or womb from which all creatures proceed. And it is through the “gathering together,” or coagulation, of Her “waters,” that 56 7A7A2 AAEA’AºA2C 7 WA. V. the “dry land’’ of the earth or body, which is Matter, ap- pears. For She is that spiritual substance which, polaris- ing interiorly, is—in the innermost—God ; and coagulating exteriorly, becomes—in the outermost—Matter. And She, again, it is, who as the soul of humanity, regaining full in- tuition of God, overwhelms the earth with a flood of Her waters, destroying the evil and renewing the good, and bearing unharmed on Her bosom the elect few who have suffered Her to build them up in the true image of God. Thus to these is She “Mother of the Living.” 38. And as, on the plane physical, man is not Man— but only Boy, rude, froward, and solicitous only to exert and exhibit his strength—until the time comes for him to recognise, appreciate, and appropriate Her as the woman ; so on the plane spiritual, man is not Man—but only Ma- terialist, having all the deficiencies, intellectual and moral, the term implies—until the time comes for him to re- cognise, appreciate, and appropriate Her as the Soul, and, counting Her as his better half, to renounce his own ex- clusively centrifugal impulsions, and yield to Her centripetal attractions. Doing this with all his heart, he finds that She makes him, in the highest sense, Man. For, adding to his intellect Her intuition, She endows him with that true manhood, the manhood of Mind. Thus, by Her aid obtaining cognition of substance, and from the phenomenal fact ascending to the essential idea, he weds understanding to knowledge, and attains to certitude of truth, completing thereby the system of his thought. 39. Rejecting, as this age has done, the soul and her in- tuition, man excludes from the system of his humanity the very idea of the woman, and renounces his proper manhood. An Esau, he sells, and for a mess of pottage, his birthright, the faculty of intellectual comprehension. Cut off by his LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 57 own act from the intuition of spirit, he takes Matter for Substance; and sharing the limitations of Matter, loses the capacity for knowledge. Calling the creature thus self-mutilated, Man, the age declares by the unanimous voice of its exponents, that Man has no instrument of knowledge, and can know nothing with certainty, excepting —for it is not consistent even in this—that he can know nothing. Of this the age is quite sure, and accordingly— Complacent in its discovery—styles itself Agnostic. And, as if expressly to demonstrate the completeness of its deprivation in respect of all that goes to the making of Man, it has recourse to devices the most nefarious and inhuman on the pretext of thereby obtaining knowledge. 40. Whereas, had but the soul received the recognition and honour her due, no pretext had remained for the abo- minations of a science become wholly materialistic. For, as the substance and framer of all things, she necessarily is competent for the interpretation of all things. All that she requires of man, is that she be duly tended and heeded. No summit then will be too lofty of goodness or truth, for man to reach by her aid. For, recognised in her plenitude, she reveals herself in her plenitude; and her fulness is the fulness of God. PART V. 41. The wise of old, who, exalting the Woman in them- selves, attained to full intuition of God, failed not to make recognition of Her in the symbols whereby they denoted Deity. Hence the significance of the combination, uni- versal from the first, of the symbols I, O, the unit and the cipher, in the names designative of Diety. For, as the Line of force, and the Circle of comprehension and multipli- 58 THE PAEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. V. cation, these two represent at once Energy and Space, Will and Love, Life and Substance, Father and Mother. And though two, they are one, inasmuch as the circle is but the line turning round and following upon itself, instead of Con- tinuing into the abyss to expend its force in vain. Thus Love is self-completion by the union of corresponding oppo- sites in the same substance, and Sex has its origin in the very nature of Deity. The principle of duality is for the Kabbalists—the heirs and interpreters of Hebrew trans- cendentalism—the true God of Hosts. Hence the univer- sal use of its emblems in religious worship, wherein nations gave the preference to the one or to the other, according to their own characteristics. 42. While these symbols conjoined find expression in the terms Jehovah or Yahveh, Jove, Jao, and numerous similar appellations of Deity, the names Zeus, Dyaus, Theos, and Deus represent but the forceful and masculine element in the feminine azure sphere of the sky, the elec- tric flash from the bosom of the heavens. That name of Deity which, occurring in the Old Testament, is translated the Almighty, namely, El Shaddai, signifies the Breasted God, and is used when the mode of the Divine nature implied, is of a feminine character. The arbitrary and harsh aspect under which Jehovah is chiefly presented in the Hebrew Scriptures, is due, not to any lack of the feminine element either in His name or in His nature, or to any failure on the part of the inspired leaders of Israel to recognise this quality; but to the rudimentary condi- tion of the people at large, and their consequent amenability to a delineation of the sterner side only of the Divine character. It is according to the Divine order that this, the masculine element of existence, should be the first to find exercise. In the initiation of any system, the centri- LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 59 fugal, or repellant, mode of force must precede the centri- petal, or attractive, mode ; since only when the former has accomplished its part, is there opportunity for the exer- cise of the latter. True, the Love Who prompts to crea- tion, is present from the beginning; but She reserves the manifestation of Herself until the subject of Her creative impulsion is able to bear its part in the recognition of Her. First Will, therefore, then Love; first Projection, then Recall ; first Expansion, then Contraction ; first Centrifugal, then Centripetal; first Motor, then Sensory; first Intel- lectual, then Intuitional ; first Sensible then Spiritual ; in short, first Man and then Woman,—such invariably is the order by which the Universal Heart of existence manifests its essential dualism of nature and operation. And in the sequence set forth in the Bible—the sequence, of Law and Gospel, of Old Testament and New—the same rule prevails. To the masculine function is accorded precedence in point of time ; to the feminine, in point of dignity. And it is thus that the manifestation of the Divine will and power in Creation is followed by the manifestation of the Divine love and wisdom in Redemption, and that the agent of this last is always the “woman.” She it is who, by Her Intuition of God, bruises the head of the Serpent of Matter, and Her Sons they are who get the victory over him. 43. Even where not yet recognised by men in general, there were always some by whom the true character of Deity in this respect could be discerned. And to these are due all those utterances in which the mystical Scrip- tures express the justice, mercy, long-suffering, and other qualities of the Divine nature, which, in being moral and of the soul, are feminine, and when manifested of the Spirit as persons, take form, not as “Gods,” but as “Goddesses.” They to whom this truth was known were prophets; and 6o TAZA, PAERATECT WA V. they spoke, not of that which appertains to any one period, but of that which is eternal, though finding ex- pression more or less palpable at various periods. And that whereby they knew so much, was not the outer sense and reason, but the inner perception and recollection—the knowledge, that is, which the soul of the individual has of her own larger self, the Soul of the Universal. For only Soul can read Soul. And only he is a prophet who has ac- quired the knowledge of his own soul. And that which above all else the Soul tells him, is that God is, first and foremost, Love; and that, inasmuch as God is the Substance of humanity, whatever subsists in the Divine nature must, in due course, first in the individual and next in the race, find full expression and recognition. - 44. If it be asked whether God can indeed find such expression in man, and, if so, how so great a marvel comes about, we reply that it is precisely the purpose of these lectures to afford demonstration on both points. For the object of the system under exposition in this, and no more, no less. For that object is—as was the object of all sacred mysteries, whether of our Bible or other—to enable man anew so to develop the Soul, or Essential Woman, within him, as to become, through Her, a perfect reflection of the universal Soul, and made, therefore, in what, mystically, is called the image of God. º 45. An illustration will conduce to the comprehension of this. We are, let us suppose, in a meadow covered with grass and flowers. It is early morning, and everything is bespangled with dew. And in each dew-drop is every- thing reflected, from the sun itself down to the minutest object. All reflect God. All is in every dew-drop. And God is in each individual according to his capacity for reflecting God. Each in his degree reflects God's image. LECT. II.] THE SUBSTANCE OF EXISTENCE. 6 I And the capacity of each, and the degree of each, depend upon the development and purity of his soul. The soul that fully reflects the sun, becomes itself a sun, the brightness of the Divine glory and the express image of the Divine person. 46. Such, in all mystical Scriptures, has ever been the mode in which perfected souls have been regarded. For, in being the redeeming element in man, that whereby he escapes from the dominion of spiritual darkness and death, from the limitations, that is, of an existence merely material,—the soul is as a spiritual sun, corresponding in all things with the solar orb. Wherefore all they who, by virtue of their constituting for men a full manifestation of the powers of the soul, have been to them as a redeeming Sun, -have been designated sungods, and invested with careers corresponding to the apparent annual course of the sun. Between the phenomena of this course and the actual history of the perfected soul is an exact corre- spondence, requiring for its recognition but due knowledge of both. And it is because the soul's history is one, and this a history corresponding with the sun's, that all those who have earned of their fellows the supreme title of Saviour of men, have been invested with it, and represented as having exhibited the same phenomena in their own lives. Thus the history ascribed alike to Osiris, Zoroaster, Krishna, Mithras, Pythagoras, Buddha, and Jesus, has not, as sciolists vainly imagine, been plagiarised in one case from another, or borrowed from some common source in itself unreal; but it has been lived, spiritually, by the men themselves indicated by those names. And, being the history of the soul of the Man Regenerate, it corresponds to that of the sun, the vitalising centre of the physical system,- and has accordingly been described in terms 62 - 7A7A. AEPEA’ FAEC 7' W.A. V. derived from the solar phenomena as indicated in the zodiacal planisphere. Thus the soul's history is written in the stars; and the heavens are her chroniclers, and tell the glory at once of her and of God. A Bible is always a hieroglyph of the soul. And the Zodiac is simply the first and most stupendous of Bibles, a Bible which, like all other Bibles, was written by men who, attaining to the knowledge of their own souls, attained to that of all souls, and of God, Who is the Life and Substance of souls. 47. And these were men who followed steadfastly that Perfect Way, which is in the power of each, according to his degree, to follow, until, by the development of their own natural potentialities, they attained to that which, mystically is called the Finding of Christ. And this is the perfection which, in that it is God, is its own exceeding great reward. For the “gift of God is eternal life.” As God is One, so is the soul one ; and these are One also both in nature and method. All that is in God as universal subsists also in God as individual. Wherefore God is nothing that man is not. And what man is, that God is likewise. God with- holds nothing of God from man. For “God is Love,” and “Love hath nothing of her own.” 48. This is the doctrine of the Soul, mystically called the Woman. It is a doctrine which, by showing men that of which they are made, and therefore that which they have it in them to be, makes them, when they receive it, heartily ashamed of being what, for the most part, they are." * See Appendices, No. I., Part I. LECTURE THE THIRD. THE WARIOUS ORDERS OF SPIRITS; A/VD AO W TO ANZSCAERAV ZAZE/M. PART I. I. WE have spoken of the Soul and of Spirit. We come now to speak of Spirits; for the understanding of these also is necessary to a true doctrine concerning Existence. But though speaking especially of Spirits, it will be neces- sary to refer also to Souls; for though Spirits, properly so called, have not souls, Souls have spirits. In either case, however, we shall treat mainly of the Unembodied, or the Disembodied. And as the region or sphere which is immediately contiguous to the Material, and which we ourselves enter upon quitting the Material, is the Astral, it is this, and its occupants, which will first engage our attention. 2. To understand fully the place and value of this sphere, it is necessary to have in the mind a clear conception of the places and values of all the spheres which are com- prised in and which constitute that manifestation of Being which is termed Existence. To this end we will commence with the following succinct recapitulation. The Spirit and Soul, which are original life and substance, are Divine and uncreated. The astral and material bodies are the “created”—that is, the manifested—part. The astral— which is called also the sideral, the odic, the magnetic, the 63 64 7A7A. AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. Y. fiery—is fluidic, and constitutes the bond between the soul and the material body. It is the original body, being that which makes and that which becomes. The original, per- manent individual consists of soul and spirit; and when manifested it is by means of the astral or fluidic body, of which the material or fixed body is the outer manifestation —the manifestation, as it is called, in ultimates. 3. Every creation, or complete manifested entity, whe- ther it be macrocosmic or microcosmic, is a compound of two dualisms, which are respectively celestial and terres- trial, or spiritual and material. The celestial, or kingdom of heaven, which consists of Soul and spirit, is within. And the terrestrial, or kingdom of this world, which con- sists of astral body—the seat of the anima bruta—and of phenomenal body, is without. Of these two dualisms, each is to the other the Beyond. And between them, saving only where one and the same Divine Will—the will which has its seat in, and which is, the Spirit—pervades the whole being, is antagonism. They are respectively the spiritual man and the natural man. But in the suffusion of the entire personality thus constituted, by one and the same Divine Will, consists what mystically is termed the At-one-ment, or reconciliation between man and God, but which is commonly called the Atonement. 4. As the whole is, thus, fourfold, so, with the excep- tion of the spirit, are the parts. The external, material body, whether of planet or of man, is fourfold in that it is gaseous, mineral, vegetable, animal. The astral body, or perisoul, is fourfold, being magnetic, purgatorial, limbic, cherubic,+terms presently to be explained. The soul is fourfold, namely, elemental, instinctive, vital, rational. And the spirit is threefold, or triune, because there is no external to spirit. Being threefold, it is the Essence, LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 65 the Father, the Word; and is desirous, willing, obedient. And being God, it is one, because God is one. And thus the magical number, mystically called the number of Per- fection and of the Woman, the number Thirteen, derives its sanctity from the constitution of the perfected individual. 5. The astral sphere, zone, or circulus, variously called the perisoul, the magnetic, sideral, and odic fluid or body, is the same with the “wheel” of Ezekiel, of which the four living creatures are the four elemental spirits. It contains four orders of entities, which are represented by four magnetic circuli or wheels encircling the earth, and full of lives. The highest and uppermost of these circuli is that of the elemental spirits or “winged creatures”; the second is that of the souls ; the third is that of the shades; and the fourth and lowest is that of the magnetic spirits commonly called astrals. 6. These circuli correspond to Air, Water, Earth, and Fire, beginning at the outer and uppermost and going inwards and downwards. The magnetic emanations, or astrals, are under the dominion of the Fire. They are not souls, or divine personalities ; they are simply emana- tions or phantasms, and have no real being. 7. Every event or circumstance which has taken place upon the planet, has an astral counterpart or picture in the magnetic light; so that, as already said, there are actually ghosts of events as well as of persons. The magnetic existences of this circle are the shades, or manes, of past times, circumstances, thoughts, and acts of which the planet has been the scene; and they can be evoked and conjured. The appearances on such occasions are but shadows left on the protoplasmic mirror. This order, then, corresponds to that of Fire, and is the fourth and lowest. 8. The next circulus, the third, with its spirits, corre- F 66 7A7A. AERAEEC7' W.A. V. sponds to Earth, and contains the shades, Lares and Penates, of the dead. These are of many different kinds. Some are mere shades, spiritual corpses, which will soon be absorbed by the fourth circulus just described and be- come mere magnetic phantoms. Some are “ghosts,” or astral souls not containing the divine particle, but repre- senting merely the “earthly minds" of the departed. These are in Limbo or the “Lower Eden.” Others are really Souls, and of the celestial order, or anima divina, who are in Purgatory; being bound to the astral envelope, and unable to quit it. They are sometimes called “earth-bound spirits,” and they often suffer horrible torments in their prison; not because this circulus is itself a place of torment, but because to the anima divina the unredeemed body, whether material or astral, is a “house of bondage" and chamber of ordeal. The strong wills, love, and charity of those on earth may relieve these souls and lessen the time of their purgatorial penance. Of some of them the reten- tion is due to wilful ignorance, of others to sensuality, and of others to crimes of violence, injustice, and cruelty. 9. This sphere is also inhabited by a terrible class, that of the “devils,” some of whom are of great power and malice. Of these the souls are never set free ; they are in what is called “Hell.” But they are not immortal. For, after a period corresponding to their personal vitality and the strength of their rebellious wills, they are consumed, and perish for ever. For a soul may be utterly gross at last, and deprived of all spirit of the Divine order, and yet may have so strong a vitality or mortal spirit of its own, that it may last hundreds of years in low atmospheres. But this occurs only with souls of very strong will, and generally of indomitable wickedness. The strength of their evil will, and the determination to be wicked, keep LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 67 them alive. But, though devils, they are mortal, and must go out at last. Their end is utter darkness. They cease to exist. Meanwhile they can be evoked by incantation. But the practice is of the most dangerous and wicked kind; for the endeavour of these lost spirits is to ruin every soul to which they have access. Io. In the sense ordinarily understood, there is no per- sonal Devil. That which, mystically, is called the Devil, is the negation and opposite of God. And whereas God is I AM, or positive Being, the Devil is NOT. He is not positive, not self-subsistent, not formulate. God is all these ; and the Devil, in being the opposite of these, is none of them. God, as has been said, is Light, Truth, Order, Harmony, Reason; and God’s works are illumination, knowledge, understanding, love, and sanity. The Devil, therefore, is darkness, falsehood, discord, and ignorance ; and his works are confusion, folly, division, hatred, and delirium. He has no individuality and no being. For he represents the Not-being. Whatever God is, that the Devil is NOT. Wherever God's kingdom is not, the Devil reigns. II. It is the principle of Not-being which, taking per- sonality in man, becomes to him the Devil. For by divest- ing him of his divine qualities, actual or potential, it makes him in the image of God's opposite, that is, a devil. And of such a one the end is destruction, or, as the Scriptures call it, eternal death. And this of necessity from the nature of the case. For evil has not in itself the element of self- perpetuation. God alone is Life or the principle of eternal generation. And, as Life, God comprises all things neces- sary to life, to its production, that is, to its perfection, and to its perpetuation. And God is Spirit, whereof the anti- thetical ultimate is Matter. The Devil is that which gives 68 7A/AE AAEA’AºEC 7" PVA V. to Matter the pre-eminence over Spirit. That is, since there is nothing but God’s creation to be set in opposition to God, the Devil exalts the mere material of creation in the place of God. Of such preference for Matter over Spirit, for appearance over reality, for Seeming over Being, the end is the forfeiture of reality, and therein, of Being. In representing, therefore, the contest between good and evil,--a contest corresponding to that between light and darkness, creation represents the contest between Being and Not-being. To “give place to the Devil,” is thus, in its ultimate result, to renounce Being. And, as a free agent, man is able to do this. God, while giving to all the opportunity and choice, compels no one to remain in Being. God accepts only willing service ; and there is no such thing as compulsory salvation. God—that is Good, —must be loved and followed for the sake of God and Good, not through fear of possible penalties, or hope of possible rewards. 12. Now the sign, above all others, whereby to dis- tinguish the Devil, is this —God is, first and foremost, Love. The Devil, therefore, is, before all else, Hate. He is to be known, then, first by the limitation, and next by the negation of Love. 13. The Devil is not to be confounded with “Satan,” though they are sometimes spoken of in Scripture as if they were identical. The truth concerning “Satan’ belongs to those greater mysteries which have always been reserved from general cognition." 14. Notwithstanding that the Devil is the Non-entity above described, he is the most potent, and, indeed, sole power of evil. And no one is in so great danger from him, as he who does not behieve in him. The whole function * See Appendices, No. XV. LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 69 of the Christ is to oppose, and rescue men from him. And therefore it is written, “For this cause is Christ manifest, that he might destroy the works of the devil.” 15. But, be it remembered, though there is no self-sub- sistent, positive evil being, such as the Devil is ordinarily presented,—but only the negation of God, which is to God what darkness is to light, and the outermost void to the solar system,-there are evil spirits, the souls of bad men on their downward way to final extinction. And these are wont to associate themselves with persons in the flesh for whom they have affinity. And they do this partly in order to gratify their own evil propensities by inciting to wickedness and mischief, and partly to obtain from them the vitality necessary to prolong their own existence. For, as their career approaches its end, they become so low in vitality that a sentence of expulsion from the person in whom they have taken refuge may involve their immediate extinction, unless they can find other location,--a con- tingency obviously contemplated in the case of the Gadarene demoniacs. The ailments, physical or mental, of men are sometimes caused or aggravated by extraneous malignant entities of this order. And occultists hold that they even share with the elementals the power of inducing the con- ditions under which sudden storms and other elemental disturbances occur. Evil spirits have no chief, no organi- sation or solidarity; nothing that corresponds to God. The worse they are, the lower and the nearer to extinction. The conditions which attract them are due to men themselves, and may be the result of prenatal misconduct. I6. The next and second circulus of the planet—that which corresponds to the Water—is the kingdom of the souls which are mystically described as being in “Brahma's bosom.” These are the purified who are at rest before 70 THAE AERAPEC 7 WA V. seeking re-incarnation. This circulus is not confined to human souls. Therein are all creatures, both great and small, but without “fiery" envelope. Between these and the kingdom of the earth-bound souls in prison to their own astral bodies, a great gulf is fixed ; and they cannot pass from one to the other save on accomplishing their purgation. “Thou comest not out thence until thou hasł paid the last mife.” The souls in the second circulus, however, though purified, are still “under the elements.” For purification is not regeneration, though a necessary step towards it. And not being ready for transmutation into spirit, they must, sooner or later, seek fresh incarnations. They are, therefore, still in the sphere of the planet. Whereas the regenerated or transmuted souls have passed beyond the astral zone altogether, and it contains no trace of them. This second circulus was placed under the dominion of the sea-god Poseidon, because, first, being protoplasmic and devoid of any limiting principle, water corresponds to the substance of the Soul. Next, it is the baptismal symbol of purification from materiality. And, thirdly, it is the source of life and the contrary of fire. “Zet Zazarus dip the tip of his ſinger in water, and cool my ſongwe,” cries the soul in the prison of the “fiery" body to the soul in the zone of the water. 17. To the first and highest circulus belong the spirits of the elements, which pervade all things, not only of the Macrocosmic planet, but of the Microcosm man. Of these elementals, the air-spirits preside over the function of re- spiration, and the organs which accomplish it. The water- spirits preside over the humours and secretions of the body, and in particular the blood. The earth-spirits have for their domain the various tissues of the body. And animal heat, assimilation, and nutrition are dependent on the fire-spirits. LEct. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SP/R77S. 71 18. An initiate of the highest grade, one who has power to hush the storm and still the waves, can, through the same agency, heal the disorders and regenerate the func- tions of the body. And he does this by an impulsion of will acting on the magnetic atmosphere, every particle of which has a spirit capable of responding to the human will. 19. The common phrase, “Spirits of the dead,” is in- correct. There are only shades of the dead and souls of the dead. But these last are of two kinds, the earthly, or anima bruta, and the heavenly, or anima divina. The shade, larva, or spectre—which is the outer element of the ghost—is always dumb. The true “ghost” consists of the exterior and earthly portion of the soul, that portion which, being weighted with cares, attachments and memories merely mundane, is detached by the soul and remains in the astral sphere, an existence more or less definite and personal, and capable of holding, through a Sensitive, con- verse with the living. It is, however, but as a cast-off vestment of the soul, and is incapable of endurance as ghost. The true soul and real person, the anima divina, parts at death with all those lower affections which would have retained it near its earthly haunts, and either passes on at once to higher conditions, attaining its perfection by post mortem evolution, or continues its peregrinations in a new body. This, the true soul, may, by Divine permission, and on special occasions, communicate with the living, re- turning for that purpose from the purgatorial world ; but such an event is of the rarest and most solemn kind. Re- incarnation pertains only to the true soul. The astral soul or fluidic envelope, does not again become incarnate; so that they are not in error who assert that a person is never twice incarnate. That which transmigrates is the essential germ of the individual, the seat of all his divine potencies. 72 THE A2ERAEEC7' W.A. V. In some this exists as a mere dim spark, and in others as a luminous sun. 2O. Metempsychosis, in its strict sense, consists in the overshadowing of a soul already incarnate, by one which has completed its transmigrations, and become freed from Matter and all planetary bonds. This divine overshadow- ing differs both in kind and in degree from those astral visitations which are familiar to so many under the names of “guides,” and “controls,” and which, as will presently be shown, are often not even “ghosts,” but mere astral mirages of the seer or the invoker. When not of this kind, the Control is either of the spirits known as Elementals, or of the shades or larvae of the recently dead, the Manes, Lares, and Penates of the Latins. The river Lethe, of which the dead are said to drink in order to obtain oblivion of their past before returning to new earth-bodies, repre- sents the process of separation between the anima divina and anima bruta, whereby the former doffs for a time the garment of its memory. Souls may, according to circum- stances, either become re-incarnate immediately after such divestment of their astral part, or proceed to accomplish their purification in the purgatorial world." 21. It is as penance or expiation that souls re-descend from the human into the animal form. This return occurs through the forfeiture of the divine-human spirit, so that the spirit itself does not incur dishonour. True, the penance involves disgrace ; but the disgrace is not in the penance, but in the sin through which the need for the penance is incurred. The man who sullies his humanity by cruelty or impurity, is already below the grade of humanity; and the form which his soul assumes is the mere natural Consequence of that degradation. Form is * See Appendices, No. II. LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 73 the expression of qualities. These are dependent upon the condition of substance, so that the soul takes neces- sarily its form according to its condition. And this is dependent upon the will or affections of the individual. Wherefore it is an error to hold “Nature” responsible for fierce and horrible creatures. All that “Nature” does, is to enable creatures to take form according to the image in which they have made themselves by the tendencies they have voluntarily encouraged. She allows that which is in- terior to the individual to manifest itself exteriorly. Were this not so, no character of any creature could be known by its appearance. The “mark set upon Cain * has its counterpart in the stripe of the tiger; and the crustacea denote selfish spirits, who are hard exteriorly to all the world, and soft only interiorly to themselves. The adept in Psychology can tell whether the soul of an animal is on its upward or its downward path. He can discern also the animal beneath the human form, when the progressing soul has not yet wholly shed the animal nature; for the ex- terior form of humanity is reached in full while its interior reality is reached in part only. Thus, for the adept there are more animals than men to be seen in the streets of a city, despite the humanity of their forms. The individual is already partly human before it has ceased to wear the form of a rudimentary man, that is, of an animal. The matrix can bring forth only its own kind, in the semblance of the generators; and as soon as the human is attained, even in the least degree, the soul has power to put on the body of humanity. Thus, too, the adept can see the human shape in creatures under torture in the physiological laboratory. He can discern the potential form of a man, with limbs and lineaments resembling those of his tormentors, hidden within the outward form as a child in its mother's womb, 74 7A/E PAEA' FECT WA Y. –4 and writhing and moaning under the lacerations of the knife. And he sees also the tiger and the devil rapidly developing within the still human forms of the torturers, and knows certainly that to such grades they will descend on quitting the human. For he knows, having learned it by the long experiences of his own soul, that God, who is before all else Love, is also before all else Justice, and this because God is Love ; for Justice is Sympathy. Wherefore, by the inexorable law of Justice, he who makes existence a hell for others, prepares, inevitably, a hell for himself, wherein he will be his own devil, the inflictor of his own torments. His victims will, indeed, find compen- sation at the Divine hands; but for him will be no escape, no alleviation, until “he has paid the last mite.” For the pitiless, and for the pitiless alone, there is no pity. Such, the adept of spiritual science knows absolutely, is the doom that awaits both the tormentor himself, and, in their degree, those who, by accepting the results of his practice, consent to his method. 22. That which leads to the loss of the soul, is not isolated crime, however heinous, or even a repetition of this ; but a continued condition of the heart, in which the will of the individual is in persistent opposition to the Divine Will ; for this is a state in which repentance is impossible. The condition most favourable to salvation, and speedy emanci- pation from successive incarnations, is the attitude of willing obedience,—freedom and submission. The great object to be attained is emancipation from the body, the redemption, that is, of Spirit from Matter. LECT. III.] THE DISCAERNZNG OF SPIRITS. 75 PART II. 23. We will now speak particularly of that order of spirits by which, ordinarily, “mediums” are “controlled ”; or, more correctly, sensitives are influenced, since these spirits, which are called astrals, have no force, and cannot exercise the least control. Born of the emanations of the body, they occupy the perisoul, or fluidic astral and magnetic bond which unites the soul to the body. 24. In this fluid, which is the magnetism of the earth, —the lowest circulus of the Fire, and which may be more clearly denoted by the term latent ſight, analogous to latent heat, take place those changes, currents, and modi- fications which result and are expressed in the phenomena —of late days familiar to numbers—produced by astral spirits. Through this fluidic element are passed two cur- rents, one refracted from above, and the other reflected from below, one being celestial, as coming direct from the spirit, and the other terrestrial, as coming from the earth or body; and the adept must know how to distinguish the ray from the reflection. When a medium, or sensitive, passes into the negative, and thence into the Somnambulic state, the mind of such sensitive is controlled by the will of the magnetiser. The will of this second person directs and controls the procession and expression of the image per- ceived. But the magnetiser, unless an adept, will not be able to discern the true origin of the images evoked. 25. Now, in this magnetic sphere are two orders of existences. Of these orders, one is that—already men- tioned—of the shades of the dead ; the other consists of reflects of the living; and the difficulty of distinguishing between these two orders is, to the uninitiated, a source of error. Error of a more serious kind arises through the 76 THE AAEA’AºA2C 7' W.A. W. complex character of the astral region itself, and the variety of the grades of spirits by which every division is tenanted. Spirits of the sub-human order, moreover, are wont, under control of the wish of their invokers, to personate spirits of a higher grade. 26. It will thus be seen that the elements of deception are, broadly, twofold. In the first place, to enter the astral region, is not to enter the celestial ; and the ray reflected from below, and which bears the imprint of the body, may easily be mistaken for the ray refracted from above, and which alone is pure and divine. In the second place, the astral region itself contains various orders of spirits, of which some only bear relation to actual souls, and the others consist of phantasmal and illusory reflects. These latter—the astral spirits properly so called—are in no cases entities, or intelligent personalities; but are reflections, traces, echoes, or footprints of a soul which is passing, or which has passed, through the astral medium ; or else they are reflections of the individual himself who beholds or who evokes them, and may thus represent an equal compound of both sensitive and magnetiser. 27. Now, the atmosphere with which a man surrounds himself—his soul's respiration—affects the astral fluid. Reverberations of his own ideas come back to him. His soul's breath colours and savours what a sensitive conveys to him. But he may also meet with contradictions, with a systematic presentation of doctrine or of counsels at variance with his own personal views, through his mind not being sufficiently positive to control all the manifestations of the electric agent. The influence of the medium, more- over, through which the words come, interposes. Or, as is often the case, a magnetic battery of thought has over- charged the element and imparted to it a certain current. LECT. III.] THE DISCERAVING OF SPIRITS. 77 Thus, new doctrines are “in the air,” and spread like wild- fire. One or two strongly positive minds give the initiative, and the inpulse flies through the whole mass of latent light, correspondingly influencing all who are in relation with it. 28. The merely magnetic spirits are like mists which rise from the damp earth of low-lying lands, or vapours in high altitudes upon which if a man's shadow falls he beholds himself as a giant. For these spirits invariably flatter and magnify a man to himself, telling one that he is, or shall be, a king, a Christ, or the wisest and most famous of mortals; and that if he will be wholly negative, and give himself up entirely to them, suppressing his own intelligence and moral sense, they will enable him to realise his utmost ambition. Being born of the fluids of the body, they are unspiritual and live of the body. And not only have they no aspirations beyond the body, but they ignore, and even deny, the existence of any sphere above their own. They speak, indeed, of God, especially under the name of Jehovah, but with complete ignorance of its meaning; and they insist on material renderings and applications of any doctrine of which they may catch the terms. They are profuse alike of promises and of menaces, and indulge freely in prophecies. But when informed of their failures they declare that even God cannot surely foresee the future, but can judge only according to apparent probabilities. Of contradictions in their own statements they are altogether unconscious; and be these gross and palpable as they may, they remain wholly unabashed by the disclosure of them. Especially are they bitter against the “Woman.” For, in her intuition of Spirit, they recognise their chief enemy. And whenever they attach themselves either to a man or to a woman, they make it their endeavour to exalt the masculine 78 THE, AERAEEC7' W.A. Y. or force element, of mind or body, at the expense of the feminine element. And these, generally, are their signs. Is there anything strong P they make it weak. Is there anything wise? they make it foolish. Is there anything sublime P they distort and travesty it. And where suffered to expatiate unchecked, they descend to blasphemy and obscenity without measure, and incite to courses in turn sensuous, vicious, malicious, or cruel, encouraging to gross and luxurious living, the flesh of animals, and stimulants being especially favourable to their production and nurture. They are the forms beheld in delirium, and are frequent agents in producing the phenomena of hysteria. They are the authors, too, of those hasty impulses by yielding to which people do in a moment mischief which a life-time cannot efface or repair. And, as they live upon the vital spirits of the blood, they deplete the vital energy, and are as vampires to those upon whom they fasten. They are able, moreover, to carry elsewhere the knowledge they get from any one ;- being the “powers of the air” spoken of in Scripture, and the “bird that carries the voice and tells the matter.” For the term rendered “bird” signifies a winged creature, and implies an astral. Hence one of the reasons for observing secrecy concerning Sacred Mysteries. For, by seeming to have knowledge of these, the astrals are able to persuade and mislead people, mixing up a little truth with dangerous error, and getting the error accepted on the strength of the truth, or of some Divine name or phrase with which they associate it, themselves being ignorant of its import. Being impersonal, they have no organon of knowledge, for this is of Soul, and the astrals have no positive existence, but subsist subjectively in human beings. Having no souls, they are not individuals, and have no idea of right and wrong, true and false, but, like a mirror, reflect what comes Lect. III.] THE D1scERMING OF SPIRITS. 79 before them, and, in reflecting, reverse it. Catching any prominent quality in a person's mind, they make the most of it by reflecting and magnifying it. Hence they are not to be heeded. We must heed only the God within. Of the enormous ladder within us, at the apex of which is the Absolute, these magnetic phantasmagoria are at the base. 29. Unable to grasp or conceive of anything beyond the atmosphere of their own circle, the astral phantoms— unless under the influence of a strongly positive mind— deny altogether the existence of the upper dualism, which, with the lower, constitutes man a fourfold being. They assert, indeed, that man consists of body and soul; but they mean thereby the material body and earthly mind, and represent these as constituting the man. The soul and spirit, which are really the man, have for them no existence; and they usually refuse, in consequence, to admit the doctrine of Transmigration or Re-incarnation. For, as they are aware, the body and perisoul perish, and the anima bruta cannot transmigrate or become re-incarnate. Their inability to recognise the soul and spirit, leads them to deny the existence of any source of knowledge superior to themselves, and to assert that they themselves are man’s true and only inspiring spirits and guardian angels. And one of their favourite devices consists in building up, out of the magnetic emanations of the individual, a form which they present as his own “counterpartal angel” and divine spirit, from whom, say they, he was separated in what —affecting Scripture phraseology—they call the Adamic period of his being, and by reunion with which he attains his final perfection. In this they travesty at once the doctrine of that divine marriage between soul and spirit, which, occurring in the individual, constitutes his final perfection, or Nirvāna; and the relations of the genius, or 80 THE PERFECT WA V. true guardian angel, with his client. For, being unintel- ligent, they fail to perceive that perfection is to be attained, not by accretion or addition from without, but only by development or unfoldment from within. Thus the process itself of regeneration, becomes altogether an absurdity in their hands. And in this, as in all other matters, the object of the astrals is to obtain all credit and support for their own order, by substituting for the Spirit a spirit, and this one of themselves. 3o. It is to astral instigation, generally, that are due the various communities and sects which have for their basis some peculiar relation between the sexes. That modern form of the cultus of what is called “Free Love,” which sets forth, not the human, but the female, body as the temple of God, and with this couples the doctrine of “counterpartal angels,” is entirely of astral contrivance. And so also is the notion, far from uncommon, that by abjuring the ordinary marriage relation, and devoting her- self wholly to her astral associate, a woman may, in the most literal sense, become an immaculate mother of Christs. It is to their materialisation of this and other doctrines, which properly are spiritual only,–and, notably, as will by-and-by be shown, of the doctrine of Vicarious Atonement, that is due the degradation of Christianity from a spiritual to a materialistic, and therein to an idolatrous religion, and its consequent failure, thus far, to accomplish its intended end. But of this more on a future occasion. It is sufficient to add here in this connection, that, not in doctrine only, but also in practice,—as in the formation of habits of life, astral influence is always exerted in the direction of the gross, the selfish, and the cruel. It is always the influence under which men, whether they be conscious of it or not, lower the standard of their conduct, and seek their own LEct. III.] THE DISCERNZNG OF SP7R/7:S. 8I gratification at the cost of others. Of those hideous blots upon modern life, the frequent sins of violence, greed, and intemperance, the astrals are active promoters. And to them is due in no small degree that extension of the doctrine of vicarious sacrifice—originally their own in- vention—from the sacerdotal to the social and scientific planes, which has made of Christendom little else than a vast slaughter-house and chamber of torture. No less than the priest of a sacrificial religion, are the butcher, the sportsman, and the vivisector, ministers to the astral in man. Nevertheless, though thus indictable, these spirits are not in themselves evil. They do but reflect and magnify the evil which men harbour and encourage in themselves. 31. It is characteristic of the astrals, that they always strenuously insist on the most absolute passivity on the part of those whom they influence or address. This con- dition of unintelligent passivity must be carefully distin- guished from the reasonable reflective state favourable to divine communion, and called the “Night-time of the Soul.” Such is the unsubstantiality of the astrals, that the smallest exercise of an adverse will throws them into confusion and deprives them of the power of utterance. They shun a person in whom the flame of the spirit burns up straightly and ardently; but where it spreads out and is diffused, they flock round him like moths. The more negative the mind and weak the will of the person, the more apt and ready he is to receive them. And the more positive his mind and pronounced his will,—in the right direction,-the more open he is to Divine communication. The kingdom of the Within yields, not to indifference and inaction, but to enthusiasm and concentration. Wherefore it is said, “To labour is to pray; to ask is to receive ; to G 82 THE AREA’AºA2C 7' W.A. V. knock is to have the door opened.” When we think inwardly, pray intensely, and imagine centrally, then we Converse with God. When we allow ourselves to be inert and mechanically reflective, then we are at the mercy of the astrals, and ready to accept any absurdity as divine truth. 32. The astrals, it will be useful to many to be assured, not only cannot confer the Divine life, they cannot rise to be partakers of it themselves. In describing them, the exigencies of language compel the use of terms implying personality. But it must be clearly understood that these “spirits” are mere vehicles, and are no more possessed of independent volition or motive than is the electric current by which telegraphic messages are conveyed, and which, like them, is a medium of thought ; or than the air, which, according to circumstances, transmits the germs of health or of disease. Thus, although they are not intelligent personalities, they are often the media of intelligent ideas, and operate as means of communication between intelli- gent personalities. Ideas, words, sentences, whole systems of philosophy, may be borne in on the consciousness by means of the currents of magnetic force, as solid bodies are conveyed on a stream, though water is no intelligent agent. The minutest cell is an entity, for it has the power of self-propagation, which the astral has not. 33. Few are they, even of the highest orders of mind, who have not at times fallen under astral influence, and with disastrous results. And herein we have the key, not only to the anomalies of various systems, otherwise admirable, of philosophy and religion, but also to those discordant utterances of the most pious mystics, which have so sorely perplexed and distressed their followers. When we have named a Plato, a Philo, a Paul, a Milton, and a Boehme, as conspicuous instances in point, enough will have been LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 83 said to indicate the vastness of the field to which the suggestion applies. Few, indeed, are they who can always find the force to penetrate through the astral and dwell solely in the celestial. Hence, for the true ray refracted from above, men mistake and substitute the false ray reflected from below, foul with the taint of earth, and savouring of the limitations of the lower nature, and, like the image in the glass, exactly reversing the truth. Wherever we find a systematic depreciation of woman, advocacy of bloodshed, and materialisation of things spiritual, there, we may be confident, does astral influence prevail. The profound Boehme frankly admits his own liability in this respect. 34. Though inhabiting the astral region, the spirits called elemental or nature-spirits, and presiding spirits or genii loci, are of very different orders from those just de- scribed. Of this last class are the spirits known to all early nations as haunting forests, mountains, cataracts, rivers, and all unfrequented places. They are the dryads, naiads, kelpis, elves, fairies, and so forth. The elementals are often mysterious, terrifying, and dangerous. They are the spirits invoked by the Rosicrucians and mediaeval magicians, and also by some in the present day. They respond to pentagrams and other symbols, and it is dan- gerous even to name them at certain times and places. The most powerful of them are the salamanders, or fire- spirits. The ability of the elementals to produce physical phenomena, and their lack of any moral sense, render them dangerous. In this they differ from the celestial spirits, for to these no physical demonstration is possible, as they do not come into contact with Matter. 35. The marvels of the adept are performed chiefly through the agency of the elementals. And it was the knowledge of and belief in them, on the part of the cen- 84 7 HE PERATEC 7' W.A. Y. turion in the gospels, that elicited from Jesus his expression of surprise, “I have not found such faith even in Israel.” For the centurion's reply had indicated his recognition of the fact that, just as he himself had soldiers under him to do his bidding, so Jesus had spirits under him. Others than adepts may be, and are, thus associated with the elementals; but only for one who, like an adept, has first purified and perfected himself in mind and spirit, is the association free from danger to himself or to others. Where not mastered, they become masters, and exact absolute subservience, showing themselves pitiless in the infliction of vengeance for disobedience to their behests. 36. To this order and sphere belong the class called by the Hebrews cherubim. They inhabit the “upper astral” immediately outside and below the celestial ; and are the “covering angels,” who encompass and guard the sanctuary of the innermost of man's system, the “holy of holies” of his own soul and spirit. Passing, by their permission, within the sacred precincts, we enter the presence of the celestials, of whom now we will speak. PART III. 37. But first, in order the better to comprehend the procession of Spirit, it should be explained that Life may be represented by a triangle, at the apex of which is God. Of this triangle the two sides are formed by two streams, the one flowing outwards, the other upwards. The base. may be taken to represent the material plane. Thus, from God proceed the Gods, the Elohim, or divine powers, who are the active agents of creation. From the Gods proceed all the hierarchy of heaven, with the various orders from the highest to the lowest. And the lowest are the orders of LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 85 the genii, or guardian angels. These rest on the astral plane, but do not enter it. The other side of the triangle is a continuation of the base. And herein is the significance alike of the pyramid and of the obelisk. The pyramid represents the triangle of Life, fourfold, and resting on the earth. The obelisk, the summit only of which is pyramidal, represents a continuation of the base, and is covered with Sculptured forms of animal life. For, of this base of the triangle of life, the continuation contains the lowest ex- pressions of life, the first expressions of incarnation, and of the stream which, unlike the first, flows inwards and up- wards. The side of the triangle represented by this stream, culminates in the Christ, and empties itself into pure Spirit, which is God. There are, consequently, spirits which by their natures never have been and never can be incarnate; and there are others which reach their perfection through incarnation. And the genii, daemons, or guardian angels, have nothing in common with the astrals, but are altogether different and superior in kind. Standing, as they do, within the celestial sphere, their function is to lift man from below to their own high region, which, properly, is also his. 38. The day and night of the Microcosm, man, are its projective and reflective states. In the projective state we seek actively outwards ; we aspire and will forcibly; we hold active communion with the God without. 39. In the reflective state we look inwards, we commune with our own heart; we indraw and concentrate ourselves secretly and interiorly. During this condition the “Moon” enlightens our hidden chamber with her torch, and shows us ourselves in our interior recess. 40. Who or what, then, is this Moon P. It is part of our- selves, and revolves with us. It is our celestial affinity,+of 86 7A/E PAEA’AºEC 7' W.A. P. whose order it is said, “Their angels do always behold the face of My Father.” 41. Every human soul has a celestial affinity, which is part of his system and a type of his spiritual nature. This angelic counterpart is the bond of union between the man and God ; and it is in virtue of his spiritual nature that this angel is attached to him. Rudimentary creatures have no celestial affinity; but from the moment that the soul quickens, the cord of union is established. 42. The Genius of a man is this satellite. Man is a planet. God—the God of the man—is its sun. And the moon of this planet is Isis, its initiator, angel, or genius. The genius ministers to the man, and gives him light. But the light he gives is from God, and not of himself. He is not a planet, but a moon; and his function is to light up the dark places of his planet. 43. It is in virtue of man's being a planet that he has a moon. If he were not fourfold, as is the planet, he could not have one. Rudimentary men are not fourfold. They have not the Spirit. 44. Every human spirit-soul has attached to him a genius, variously called, by Socrates, a daemon; by Jesus, an angel ; by the apostles, a ministering spirit. All these are but different names for the same thing. 45. The genius is linked to his client by a bond of soul- substance. Persistent ill-living weakens this bond; and after several incarnations—even to the mystical seventy times seven—thus ill-spent, the genius is freed, and the soul definitively lost. 46. The genius knows well only the things relating to the person to whom he ministers. About other things he has opinions only. The relation of the ministering spirit to his client, is very well represented by that of the Catholic LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 87 confessor to his penitent. He is bound to keep towards every penitent profound secrecy as regards the affairs of other souls. If this were not the case, there would be no order, and no secret would be safe. The genius of each one knows about another person only so much as that other's genius chooses to reveal. 47. The genius is the moon to the planet man, reflecting to him the sun, or God, within him. For the divine Spirit which animates and eternises the man, is the God of the man, the Sun that enlightens him. And this sun it is, and not the outer and planetary man, that his genius, as satellite, reflects to him. Thus attached to the planet, the genius is the complement of the man; and his “sex’ is always the converse of the planet's. And because he reflects, not the planet, but the sun, not the man (as do the astrals), but the God, his light is always to be trusted. 48. The genius never “controls” his client, never suffers the soul to step aside from the body to allow the entrance of another spirit. The person “controlled ” by an astral or elementary, on the contrary, speaks not in his own person, but in that of the spirit operating. And the gestures, expression, intonation, and pitch of voice, change with the obsessing spirit. A person prophesying speaks always in the first person, and says, either, “Thus saith the Lord,” or, “So says some one else,” never losing his own person- ality. 49. The genii are not fighting spirits, and cannot prevent evils. They were allowed to minister to Jesus only after his exhaustion in combat with the lower spirits. Only they are attacked by these, who are worth attacking. No man ever got to the promised land without going through the desert. The best weapon against them is prayer. Prayer means the intense direction of the will and desire towards 88 THE AERRECT WAY. the Highest, an unchanging intent to know nothing but the Highest. So long as Moses held his hands up towards heaven, the Israelites prevailed; when he dropped them, then the Amalekites. 50. Now, there are two kinds of memory, the memory of the organism and the memory of the soul. The first is possessed by all creatures. The second, which is obtained by Recovery, belongs to the fully regenerate mar. For the Divine Spirit of a man is not one with his soul until regeneration, which is the intimate union constituting what, mystically, is called the “marriage” of the hierophant, an event in the life of the initiate, one of the stages of which is set forth in the parable of the Marriage in Cana of Galilee. 51. When this union takes place, there is no longer need of an initiator; for then the office of the genius is ended. For, as the moon, or Isis, of the planet man, the genius reflects to the Soul the Divine Spirit, with which she is not yet fully united. In all things is order. Wherefore, as with the planets, so with the Microcosm. They who are nearest Divinity, need no moon. But so long as they have night, so long, that is, as any part of the soul remains unilluminated, and her memory or perception obscure, so long the mirror of the angel continues to reflect the Sun to the soul. 52. For the memory of the soul is recovered by a three- fold operation—that of the soul herself, of the moon, and of the sun. The genius is not an informing spirit. He can tell nothing to the soul. All that she receives is already hers. But in the darkness of the night, it would remain undiscovered, but for the torch of the angel who enlightens. “Yea,” says the angel genius to his client, “I illuminate thee, but I instruct thee not. I warn thee, but I fight not. LECT. III.] THE DISCERNING OF SPIRITS. 89 I attend, but I lead not. Thy treasure is within thyself. My light showeth where it lieth.” 1 53. When regeneration is fully attained, the divine Spirit alone instructs the hierophant. “For the gates of his city shall never be shut ; there shall be no night there ; the night shall be no more. And they shall not need the light of the lamp, because the Lord God shall enlighten them.” The prophet is a man illumined by his angel. The Christ is a man married to the Spirit. And he returns out of pure love to redeem, needing no more to return to the flesh for his own sake. Wherefore he is said to come down from heaven. For he has attained, and is a Medium for the Highest. He baptises with the holy Ghost, and with the Divine Fire itself. He is always “in Heaven.” And in that he ascends, it is because the Spirit uplifts him, even the Spirit who descends upon him. “And in that he descends, it is because he has first ascended beyond all spheres into the highest Presence. For he that ascends, ascends because he also descended first into the lower parts of the earth. He that descended is the same also who ascended above all the heavens, to fill all things.” Such a one returns, therefore, from a higher world ; he belongs no more to the domain of Earth. But he comes from the Sun itself, or from some nearer sphere to the sun than ours, having passed from the lowest upwards. 54. And what, it will be asked, of the genius himself? Is he sorry when his client attains Perfection, and needs him no more ? “He that hath the bride is the bridegroom. And he that standeth by rejoiceth greatly because of the bridegroom's voice.” The genius, therefore, returns to his source, for * Respecting the complete, final recovery of memory, see Appen- dices, No. II. 90 7A7A2 AAEA’AºA2C 7' W.A. Y. his mission is ended, and his Sabbath is come. He is one with the Twain. 55. The genius, then, remains with his client so long as the man is fourfold. A beast has no genius. A Christ has none. For first, all is latent light. That is one. And this one becomes two ; that is, body and astral body. And these two become three; that is, a rational soul is born in the midst of the astral body. This rational soul is the person ; itself dual, in virtue of its earthly and its divine parts. And from that moment this personality is an individual existence, as a plant or as an animal. These three become four ; that is, human. And the fourth is the Mous, not yet one with the soul, but overshadowing it, and transmitting light as it were through a glass, that is, through the initiator. But when the four become three,_that is, when the “marriage” takes place, and the soul and the spirit are indissolubly united,—there is no longer need either of migration or of genius. For the Nous has become one with the soul, and the cord of union is dissolved. And yet again, the three become twain at the dissolution of the body; and again, the twain become one, that is, the Christ-spirit-soul. The Divine Spirit and the genius, therefore, are not to be re- garded as diverse, nor yet as identical. The genius is flame, and is celestial ; that is, he is Spirit, and one in nature with the Divine; for his light is the Divine Light. He is as a glass, as a cord, as a bond between the soul and her divine part. He is the clear atmosphere through which the divine ray passes, making a path for it in the astral medium. 56. In the celestial plane, all things are personal. And therefore the bond between the soul and spirit is a person. But when a man is what is mystically called “born again,” he no longer needs the bond which unites him to his Divine Source. The genius, or flame, therefore, returns to that LECT. III.] THE DISCEAEAVING OF SAEIR/7.S. 9I Source; and this being itself united to the soul, the genius also becomes one with the Twain. For the genius is the Divine Light in the sense that he is but a divided tongue of it, having no isolating vehicle. But the tincture of this flame differs according to the celestial atmosphere of the particular soul. The Divine Light, indeed, is white, being Seven in One. But the genius is a flame of a single colour only. And this colour he takes from the soul, and by that ray transmits to her the light of the Nous, her Divine Spouse. The angel-genii are of all the tinctures of all the colours. 57. While in the celestial plane all things are persons, in the astral plane they are reflects, or at most impersonal. The genius is a person because he is a celestial, and of soul- spirit, or substantial nature. But the astrals are of fluidic nature, having no personal part. In the celestial plane, spirit and substance are one, dual in unity; and thus are all celestials constituted. But in the astral plane they have no individual, and no divine part. They are protoplasmic only, without either nucleus or nucleolus. 58. The voice of the angel-genius is the voice of God; for God speaks through him as a man through the horn of a trumpet. He may not be adored ; for he is the instru- ment of God, and man's minister. But he must be obeyed; for he has no voice of his own, but shows the will of the Spirit. 59. They, therefore, who desire the Highest, will not seek to “controls;” but will keep their temple—which is their body—for the Lord God of Hosts; and will turn out of it the money-changers and the dove-sellers and the dealers in curious arts, yea, with a scourge of cords, if need be. 60. Of the superior orders in the celestial hierarchy—of 92 7"HA. AAEAEAZAZCT WA 9. those, that is, who, being Gods and Archangels, are to the Supreme Spirit as the seven rays of the prism are to light, and the seven notes of the scale are to sound—the know- ledge appertains to the Greater Mysteries, and is reserved for those who have fulfilled the conditions requisite for initiation therein. Of those conditions the first is the com- plete renunciation of a diet of flesh, the reason being four- fold,—spiritual, moral, intellectual, and physical,—according to the fourfold constitution of man. This is imperative. Man cannot receive, the Gods will not impart, the mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven on other terms. The conditions are God's ; the will is with man." * See Appendices, No. III., Part I. LECTURE THE FOURTH. THA. A 7'OAVEMEAWT. PART I. 1. WE have chosen to speak thus early in our series of the doctrine of the Atonement, because it is that around which all religious teaching, ancient and modern, pure and corrupt, is alike grouped, and in which it all centres. Constituting thus the pivot and point of radiation of Religion itself, this doctrine, expounded in its pure and ancient sense, is at once the glory of the saint and the hope of the fallen ; expounded in its modern and corrupt sense, it is to the latter a licence, and to the former a shame and perplexity. 2. As will by-and-by be fully shown, sacred Mysteries are, like all things kosmic, fourfold, in that they contain, like the whorls of a flower, or the elements of an organic cell, four mutually related and yet distinct Modes and Ideas. And these four are—from without inwards—the Physical, the Intellectual, the Ethical, and the Spiritual. We propose in this lecture to explain the doctrine of the Atonement from each of these points of view, in order to do which with clearness and without fear of misapprehension, we shall first expose the common errors in regard to it. 3. The popular and corrupt view of the doctrine of the Atonement presents us with one of the most salient exam- ples extant of that materialism in things religious, which 93 94 THE AERATECT WA V. constitutes Idolatry. To commit the sin of Idolatry is to materialise spiritual Truth, by concealing under gross images the real substantial Ideas implied, and setting up the images for worship in place of the celestial verities. Now, the cur- rent doctrine of Christ's Atonement starts with the irrational, and therefore false, hypothesis, that between physical blood and moral guilt there is a direct and congruous relation, in virtue of which the opening of veins and laceration of mus- cular tissue constitute a medium of exchange by which may be ransomed an indefinite number of otherwise forfeited Souls. 4. In opposition to this and other kindred conceptions, it is necessary to insist on the principle which, being, so to speak, the corner-stone and centre of gravitation of Religion, was in our Introductory Lecture prominently placed before the reader,-the principle that sacred Mysteries relate only to the Soul, and have no concern with phenomena or any physical appearances or transactions. The key-note of Religion is sounded in the words, “My kingdom is not of this world.” All her mysteries, all her oracles, are conceived in this spirit, and similarly are all sacred scriptures to be interpreted. For anything in Religion to be true and strong, it must be true and strong for the Soul. The Soul is the true and only person concerned ; and any relation which Religion may have to the body or phenomenal man, is in- direct, and by correspondence only. It is for the Soul that the Divine Word is written; and it is her nature, her history, her functions, her conflicts, her redemption, which are ever the theme of sacred narrative, prophecy, and doctrine. 5. But a priesthood fallen from the apprehension of spiritual things, and only competent, therefore, to discern the things of sense,_a priesthood become, in a word, idola- trous, -is necessarily incapable of attaining to the level of LECT. IV.] THE A 7'OAVEMEAVT. 95 the original framers of the Mysteries appertaining to the Soul; and therefore it is that invariably in the hands of such priesthood, the Soul has been ignored in favour of the body, and a signification grossly materialistic substituted for that which had been addressed only to the spiritual man. 6. To the thoughtful mind there is nothing more per- plexing than the doctrine and practice of bloody sacrifice, commonly believed to be inculcated in that portion of the Hebrew scriptures which is known as the Pentateuch. And the perplexity is increased by a comparison of this with the prophetical books in which occur such utterances as the fol- lowing:— “Sacrifice and oblation Thou dost not desire : but Thou hast opened ears for me. “Burnt-offering and sin-offering Thou wouldest not; but that I should come to do Thy Will. “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit, a lowly and contrite heart, O God.” And, yet more emphatically and indignantly, the prophet Isaias — “Hear the word of the Lord, ye rulers of Sodom, give ear to the law of our God, ye people of Gomorrha. “To what purpose do you offer me the multitude of your victims? saith the Lord. I desire not holocausts of rams and fatlings, the blood of calves, and sheep, and goats. “When you come to appear before Me, who hath required these things at your hands P “Offer sacrifice no more, your new moons and festivals I cannot abide ; your assemblies are wicked. “My soul hateth your solemnities, when you stretch forth your hands I turn away Mine eyes, for your hands are full of blood.” And again, in Jeremias:– 96 7A7A. AAEA’AºA2C 7' W.A. Y. “I, the Lord, spake not to your fathers, and I com- manded them not in the day that I brought them out of the land of Egypt, concerning the matter of burnt-offerings and sacrifices. “But this one thing I commanded them, saying, Hearken to My voice, and walk in My way. “But they have set their abominations in the house that is called by My Name, to pollute it.” 7. In the presence of these truly Divine words, what must be our verdict upon certain contrary declarations and prescriptions in the Pentateuch P We must say, as indeed all sound criticism and inference based on careful examina- tion of internal evidence justify us in saying, that the greater part of the Five Books, and especially the chapters prescrip- tive of ritual and oblations, are of far later date than that usually assigned to them, and are not in any sense the work of the inspired Moses, or of his initiates and immediate successors, but of a corrupted priesthood, in the age of the kings—a priesthood greedy of gifts, tithes, and perquisites; ever replacing the spirit by the letter, and the idea by the symbol; ignorant of the nature of Man, and therefore ever trampling under foot his true and better self, the Soul, whose type is Woman; “taking away the key of knowledge, entering not themselves into the Kingdom, and hindering those who would have entered.” But for these bloody and idolatrous sacrifices, there would have been neither occupa- tion nor maintenance for the numerous ecclesiastics who subsisted by means of them ; and but for the false and cor- rupt conception of a God whose just anger was capable of being appeased by slaughter, and this of the innocent,- and whose favour could be bought by material gifts, the whole colossal scheme of ceremonial rites and incantations which gave the priesthood power and dominion over the LECT. IV.] THE A 7'OAVAEMAEAV7. 97 people, would never have found place in a system originally addressed wholly to the needs of the soul.1 Thus, even with the Old Testament alone as evidence, our verdict must be given to the Prophet as against the Priest, seeing that while the former, as the true Man of God, directed his appeal to the soul, the latter, as the minister of sense, Cared only to exalt his own Order, no matter at what cost to the principles of religion. 8. Turning to the New Testament, a significant fact con- fronts us. It is, that Jesus appears never to have sanctioned by his presence any of the Temple services; an abstention which cannot but be regarded as a tacit protest against the sacrificial rites then in vogue. Nor in all the utterances ascribed to him is there any reference to these rites even in connection with the common belief that they were designed as types of the death supposed to be ordained for the Messiah in his character of Redeemer and Victim. 9. And truly, it is inconceivable that if the special object and end of his incarnation had been, as is currently held, to be immolated on the Cross, a spotless sin-offering for men, in propitiation of the wrath of God against the guilty, no word implying a doctrine so essential and tremendous should have been uttered by the Divine Victim himself, or that it should have been left to later statements of uncertain authorship and interpretation, and chiefly to men who never were disciples of Jesus—Paul and Apollos—to formulate and expound it. Nor can we regard as other than fatuous the conduct of a priesthood, which, while throwing upon the Cross of Calvary the burden of the salvation of the whole world in all ages, and teaching mankind that to the innocent sacrifice thereon offered is alone due their rescue from eternal damnation, yet sees fit to execrate and brand * See Appendices, No. I., Part II. H 98 THA. AAERAAFC 7' W.A. V. with infamy the very men who procured the consummation of that sacrifice,—and to whom, therefore, next to Jesus himself, the world is indebted for ransom from hell, and for the opening of the gates of heaven, Caiaphas, Pontius Pilate, and—most important of all—Judas the traitor | Io. The truth is, that so far from depicting Priest and Prophet as co-operating for the welfare of man, the sacred scriptures exhibit them in constant conflict;-the Priest, as the minister of Sense, perpetually undoing the work per- formed by the Prophet as the minister of the Intuition. And so it is seen that when, at length, the greatest of all the prophetical race appears, the priesthood does not fail to compass his death also, and subsequently to exalt the crime into a sacrifice, and that of such a nature as to render it the apotheosis of the whole sacerdotal system, and to advance the sacerdotal order to the position which, throughout Christendom, it has ever since maintained PART II. 11. At this point another aspect of our subject claims attention. It relates, not to any particular sacrifice, but to the whole question of the origin and nature of bloody sacrifices generally. And it involves reference to influences and motives yet darker and more potent than any mere human desire of gain or power, in exposing which it will be necessary to speak of occult subjects, unfamiliar save to those who, being acquainted with the science of magic, understand at least something of the nature and conditions of “spiritual” apparitions. 12. The effusion of physical blood has, in all ages, been a means whereby magicians have evoked astral phantoms or phantasmagoric reflects in the magnetic light. These LECT. IV.] 7A/E A 7'OAVAEMEAV7. 99 efflorescences of the lower atmosphere immediately related to the body, have a direct affinity for the essential element, called by the old physiologists the “vital spirits,” of the blood, and are enabled by means of its effusion to manifest themselves materially. Thus, as one recent writer says, “Blood begets phantoms, and its emanations furnish certain spirits with the materials requisite to fashion their temporary appearances.” Another speaks of blood as “the first incarnation of the universal fluid, materialised vital light, the arcanum of physical life.”? The famous Paracelsus also asserts that by the fumes of blood one is able to call forth any spirit desired, for by its emanations the spirit can build for itself a visible body. This, he says, is Sorcery, a term always of ill-repute. The hierophants of Baal made incisions all over their bodies, in order to produce visible objective phantoms. There are sects in the East, especially in Persia, whose devotees celebrate religious orgies in which, whirling frantically round in a ring, they wound themselves and each other with knives, until their garments and the ground are soaked with blood. Before the end of the orgy, every man has evoked a spectral companion which whirls round with him, and which may sometimes be dis- tinguished from the devotee by having hair on its head, the devotees being closely shorn. The Yakuts of Eastern Siberia still maintain the practice of the once famed witches of Thessaly, offering nocturnal sacrifices and evoking evil spectres to work mischief for them. Without the fumes of blood these beings could not become visible; and were they deprived of it, they would, the Yakuts believe, suck it from the veins of the living. It is further held by these people that good spirits do not thus manifest themselves * Blavatsky, Isis Ünveiled. * “Eliphas Levi,” La Aſaute Magie. IOO THE PERFECT WAY. to view, but merely make their presence felt, and require no preparatory ceremonial. The Yezidis, inhabiting Ar- menia and Syria, hold intercourse with certain aérial spirits which they call Jakshas, probably mere astral phantoms, and evoke them by means of whirling dances, accompanied, as in the case of the sect already mentioned, by selfin- flicted wounds. Among the manifestations thus obtained is the apparition of enormous globes of fire, which gradually assume grotesque and uncouth animal forms." 13. Reverting to earlier times, we find in the writings of Epiphanius, a passage concerning the death of Zacharias, which bears directly on the Levitical practice in regard to this subject. He says that Zacharias, having seen a vision in the Temple, and being, through surprise, about to dis- close it, was suddenly and mysteriously deprived of the power of speech. He had seen at the time of offering incense after the evening sacrifice, a figure in the form of an ass, standing by the altar. Going out to the people, he exclaimed,—“Woe unto you / whom do ye worship 2" and immediately “he who had appeared to him in the Temple struck him with dumbness.” Afterwards, however, he re- covered his speech and related the vision, in consequence of which indiscretion the priests slew him. It was asserted by the Gnostics that the use of the little bells attached to the garments of the high-priest was enjoined by the Jewish ordinance-makers with special reference to these apparitions, in order that on his entry into the sanctuary at the time of sacrifice, the goblins might have warning of his approach in time to avoid being caught in their natural hideous shapes. 14. An experience of the writer's received while pre- paring this lecture well illustrates the foregoing citations. * Lady Hester Stanhope. LECT. IV.] 7THAE A 7TOAVEMEAV7. IOf Conducted in magnetic sleep by her guardian Genius into a large hall of temple-like structure, she beheld a number of persons grouped in adoration around four altars upon which were laid as many slaughtered bullocks. And above the altars, in the fume of the spirits of the blood arising from the slain beasts, were misty colossal figures, half-formed only, from the waist upwards, and resembling the Gods. One of them in particular attracted the writer's attention. It was the head and bust of a woman of enormous pro- portions and wearing the insignia of Diana. And the Genius said: “These are the Astral Spirits, and thus will they do until the end of the zworld.” Such were the spurious phantom-images, which, with emaciated forms and pallid countenances, presented them- selves to the Emperor Julian, and, claiming to be the veritable Immortals, commanded him to renew the sacri- fices, for the fumes of which, since the establishment of Christianity, they had been pining. And he, able only to see, but not to discern, spirits, took these spectres—as so many still do—for what they pretended to be, and, seek- ing to fulfil their behests, earned for himself the title of “Apostate.” To the impulsion of spirits of this order are to be ascribed those horrible human sacrifices of which in ancient times Canaan was the chief scene and Molech the chief recipient. In these sacrifices the Jews themselves largely indulged, the crowning example being that of which the high priest Caiaphas was the prompter. 15. But idolatry and bloody sacrifice have ever been held in abhorrence by the true prophet and the true redeemer. The aspect under which these things present themselves to the eyes of such men is epitomised in the divine and beautiful rebuke addressed by Gautama Buddha to the priests of his day, for an exquisite rendering of which the IO2 THE PERFECT WA Y. reader is referred to Sir Edwin Arnold's recent poem, “The Light of Asia.” 1 Buddha, it will be observed, classed with the practice of bloody sacrifice the habit of flesh- eating, and included both in his unsparing denunciation. The reason is not far to seek. Man, as the Microcosm, resembles in all things the Macrocosm, and like the latter, therefore, he comprises within his own system an astral plane or circulus. In eating flesh, and thereby ingesting the blood principle,_flesh and blood being inseparable, he sacrifices to the astral emanations of his own magnetic atmosphere, and so doing, ministers to the terrene and corruptible. This it is to “eat of things offered to idols,” for blood is the food of the astral eidola, and the eater of blood is infested by them. 16. It should be observed that this astral medium and its emanations are incapable of originating ideas, for these are positive entities and come from the celestial or spiritual “heaven.” The astral, being reflective merely and unsub- stantial, receives divine ideas but to reverse and travesty them. Thus, the doctrine of sacrifice and of atonement are true doctrines, and of celestial origin ; but the sacrifice must be of the lower human self to the higher divine self, and of personal extraneous affections to the love of God and of principles. But the astral mind, reversing the truth, converts these aspirations into the sacrifice of the higher to the lower nature, of the soul to the body, and of others to oneself. Again, the truth that man is saved by the perpetual sacrifice of God's own Life and Spirit to be his life and spirit, finds a like distortion in the notion that man is saved by taking the life of a God and appropriating his merits. The true meaning of the word “atonement” is * P. 129 ss. The appearance of this remarkable book constitutes a sign of the times of no small importance. &r Lect. IV.] 7"HE A 7TOMAE MEAV7. IO3 reconciliation, rather than “propitiation.” For “Heaven” cannot be “propitiated ” save by at-one-ment. 17. As, moreover, the astral and the physical planes are intimately united, and both are ephemeral and evanescent, of Time and of Matter, that which feeds and ministers to the astral stimulates the physical, to its own detriment and that of the inner and permanent Twain,_Soul and spirit, L- the true man and his Divine Particle,_since these, being celestial, have neither part nor communion with the merely phenomenal and phantasmal. For the astral emanations resemble clouds which occupy the earthy atmosphere be- tween us and heaven, and which, filmy and incorporeal though they be, are nevertheless material, and are born of the exhalations of earth. To perpetuate and do sacrifice to these phantoms, is to thicken the atmosphere, to obscure the sky, to gather fog and darkness and tempest about us, as did the old storm-witches of the North. Such is that worship which is spoken of as the worship of the Serpent of the Dust ; and thus does he who ingests blood; for he makes thereby oblation to the infernal gods of his own system, as does the sacrificing priest to the powers of the same sphere of the Macrocosm. 18. And this occult reason for abstaining from the inges- tion of flesh, is that which in all ages and under all creeds has ever powerfully and universally influenced the Recluse, the Saint, and the Adept in Religion. As is well known, the use of flesh was in former times invariably abjured by the hermit-fathers, by the ascetics of both East and West, and in short by all religious persons, male and female, who, aspiring after complete detachment from the things of sense, sought interior vision and intimate union with the Divine ; and it is now similarly abjured by the higher devotional orders of the Catholic Church and of Oriental adepts. IO4 THE AAEA'AºA2CT WA Y. Let us say boldly, and without fear of contradiction from those who really know, that the Interior Life and the clear Heaven are not attainable by men who are partakers of blood;—men whose mental atmosphere is thick with the fumes of daily sacrifices to idols. For so long as these shadows infest the Man, obscuring the expanse of the higher and divine Ether beyond, he remains unable to detach himself from the love for Matter and from the attractions of Sense, and can at best but dimly discern the Light of the Spiritual Sun. 19. Abstinence from bloody oblations on all planes, is therefore the gate of the Perfect Way, the test of illumina- tion, the touchstone and criterion of sincere desire for the fulness of Beatific Vision. The Holy Grail, the New Wine of God's Kingdom, of which all souls must drink if they would live for ever, and in whose cleansing tide their garments must be made white, is, most assuredly, not that plasmic humour of the physical body, common to all grades of material life, which is known to us under the name of blood. But, as this physical humour is the life of the phenomenal body, so is the blood of Christ the Life of the Soul, and it is in this interior sense, which is alone related to the Soul, that the word is used by those who framed the expression of the Mysteries. PART III. 20. This brings us to speak of what the Atonement is, and of the sense in which we are to understand it, in its fourfold interpretation. First, let us remind the reader, the Cross and the Cruci- fied are symbols which come down to us from pre-historic ages, and are to be found depicted on the ruined monuments, LECT. IV.] TH/A2 A 7'OAVEMEAV7. IO5 temples, and sarcophagi of all nations,—Coptic, Ethiopian, Hindú, Mexican, Tartar. In the rites of all these peoples, and especially in the ceremonials of initiation held in the Lodges of their Mysteries, the Cross had a prominent place. It was traced on the forehead of the neophyte with water or oil, as now in Catholic Baptism and Confirmation ; it was broidered on the sacred vestments, and carried in the hand of the officiating hierophant, as may be seen in all the Egyptian religious tablets, And this symbolism has been adopted by and incorporated into the Christian theosophy, not, however, through a tradition merely imitative, but because the Crucifixion is an essential element in the Career of the Christ. For, as says the Master, expounding the secret of Messiahship, “Ought not the Christ to suffer these things, and so to enter into his glory P” Yes, for this Cross of Christ—the spiritual Phoibos—is made by the Sun's equinoctial passage across the line of the Eclip- tic,+a passage which points on the one hand to the des- cent into Hades, and on the other to the ascent into the kingdom of Zeus the Father. It is the Tree of Life ; the Mystery of the Dual Nature, male and female; the Symbol of Humanity perfected, and of the Apotheosis of Suffering. It is traced by “Our Lord the Sun” on the plane of the heavens; it is represented by the magnetic and diamagnetic forces of the earth ; it is seen in the ice- crystal and in the snow-flake; the human form itself is modelled upon its pattern ; and all nature bears throughout her manifold spheres the impress of this sign, at once the prophecy and the instrument of her redemption. 21. Fourfold in meaning, having four points, and making four angles, dividing the circle into four equal parts, the Cross pourtrays the perfect union, balance, equality, and at-one-ment on all four planes and in all four worlds—phe- Ioë 7A/E PERFECT WA Y. nomenal, intellectual, psychic, and celestial—of the Man and the Woman, the Spirit and the Bride. It is supremely, transcendently, and excellently, the symbol of the Divine Marriage; that is, the Sign of the Son of Man IN HEAVEN. For the Divine Marriage is consummated only when the Regenerate Man enters the Kingdom of the celestial, which is within. Then the Without is as the Within, and the Twain are as One in Christ Jesus. 22. Being thus the key of all the worlds, from the Outer to the inner, the Cross presents, as it were, four wards or significations; and according to these, the mystery of the Crucifixion bears relation :- First, to the natural and actual sense, and typifies the Crucifixion of the Man of God by the world. Secondly, to the intellectual and philosophical sense, and typifies the Crucifixion in man of the lower nature. Thirdly, to the personal and sacrificial sense, and symbol- ises the Passion and Oblation of the Redeemer. Fourthly, to the celestial and creative sense, and repre- sents the Oblation of God for the Universe. 23. First in order, from without inwards, the Crucifixion of the Man of God implies that persistent attitude of scorn, distrust, and menace with which the Ideal and Substantial is always met by the worldly and superficial, and to the malignant expression of which ill-will the Idealist is always exposed. We have noted that Isaias, rebuking the ma- terialists for their impure and cruel rites, addresses them as “rulers of Sodom and people of Gomorrah.” So likewise, the Seer of the Apocalypse speaks of the two divine Witnesses as slain “in the streets of the great city, which is called spiritually Sodom and Egypt, where also the Lord was crucified.” This city, then, is the world, the material- ising, the idolatrous, the blind, the sensual, the unreal; the LECT. IV.] THE A 7TOAVEMEAV7. Io'7 house of bondage, out of which the sons of God are called. And the world being all these, is cruel as hell, and will always crucify the Christ and the Christ-Idea. For the world, which walks in a vain shadow, can have no part in the kingdom of heaven ; the man who seeks the Within and the Beyond is to it a dotard, a fool, an impostor, a blasphemer, or a madman; and according to the sense of its verdict, it ridicules, maligns, despoils, punishes, or Se- questers him. And thus every great and merciful deed, every noble life, every grand and holy name, is stamped with the hall-mark of the Cross. Scorn and contumely and the cries of an angry crowd surround that altar on which the Son of God makes obla- tion of himself; and cross after cross strews the long Via Dolorosa of the narrow path that leadeth unto Life. For indeed the world is blind, and every redemption must be purchased by blood. 24. Yes, by blood and tears and suffering, and these not of the body only ; for the Son of God, to attain that Sonship, must have first crucified in himself the old Adam of the earth. This is the second meaning of the Cross; it sets forth that interior process of pain which precedes regenera- tion ; that combat with and victory over the tempter, through which all the Christs alike have passed ; the throes of travail which usher in the New-Born. And the crucified, regenerate Man, having made At-one-ment throughout his own fourfold nature, and with the Father through Christ, bears about in himself the “marks” of the Lord, the five wounds of the five senses overcome, the “stigmata” of the saints. This crucifixion is the death of the body; the , rending of the veil of the flesh ; the uniting of the human will with the Divine will ; or, as it is sometimes called, the Reconciliation—which is but another word for the At-one- IO8 THAE PERFECT WA Y. \ ment. It is the consummation of the prayer, “Let Thy Will be done on earth as it is in Heaven;” let Thy Will, O Father, be accomplished throughout the terrene and astral, even as it is in the inmost adytum, that in all the micro- cosmic system no Will be found other than the Divine. 25. This also is the secret of transmutation,-the chang- ing of the water into wine, of Matter into Spirit, of man into God. For this blood of Christ and of the Covenant—this wine within the holy Chalice, of which all must drink who nevermore would thirst—is the Divine Life, the vital im- mortal principle, having neither beginning nor end, the perfect, pure, and incorruptible Spirit, cleansing and making white the vesture of the soul as no earthly purge can whiten; the gift of God through Christ, and the heritage of the elect. To live the Divine Life is to be partaker in the blood of Christ and to drink of Christ's cup. It is to know the love of Christ which “passeth understanding,” the love which is Life, or God, and whose characteristic symbol is the blood-red ray of the solar prism. By this mystical blood we are saved, this blood, which is no other than the secret of the Christs, whereby man is transmuted from the material to the spiritual plane, the secret of inward purifi- cation by means of Love. For this “blood,” which, through- out the sacred writings is spoken of as the essential principle of the “Life,” is the spiritual Blood of the spiritual Life, Life in its highest, intensest, and most excellent sense, not the mere physical life understood by materialists, but the very substantial Being, the inward Deity in man. And it is by means of this Blood of Christ only—that is by means of Divine Zove only—that we can “come to the Father,” and inherit the kingdom of heaven. For, when it is said that “the blood of Christ cleanseth from all sin,” it is signified that sin is impossible to him who is perfect in Love. Lect. IV.] THE ATO/VEMEAV7. IO9 26. But the Christ is not only the type of the sinless Man, the hierarch of the mysteries; he is also the Redeemer. Now, therefore, we come to speak of the Vicarious and Re- demptive office of the Divine Man, of his Passion, Sacrifice, and Oblation for others. . There is a true and there is a false rendering of this Mystery of Redemption, which is the central mystery of the Divine Life, the Gold of the target, the heart of Jesus, the bond of all grace, the very core and focus and Crown of Love. This third aspect of the Cross is in itself two-fold, because Wisdom and Love, though one in essence, are twain in appli- cation, since Love cannot give without receiving, nor receive without giving. We have therefore in this double mystery both the oblation and liſting up of the Christ in Man, and the Passion and Sacrifice for others of the Man in whom Christ is manifest. For even as Christ is one in us, so are we one with Christ, because, as Christ loves and gives himself for us, we also who are in Christ give ourselves for others. - 27. But the notion that man requires, and can be re- deemed only by, a personal Saviour in the flesh, extraneous to himself, is an idolatrous travesty of the truth. For that whereby a man is “saved" is his own re-birth and At-one- ment in a sense transcending the phenomenal. And this process is altogether interior to the man, and incapable of being performed from without or by another ; a process requiring to be enacted anew in each individual, and impos- sible of fulfilment by proxy in the person of another. True, the new spiritual Man thus born of Water and the Spirit, or of the Pure Heart and the Divine Life ; the Man making oblation on the cross, overcoming Death and ascend- ing to Heaven, is named Christ-Jesus, the Only Begotten, I IO THE AAERA.A.C.T PVA V. the Virgin-born, coming forth from God to seek and to save the lost; but this is no other than the description of the man himself after transmutation into the Divine Image. It is the picture of the regenerate man, made “alive in Christ,” and “like unto him.” For the Christos or Anointed, the Chrestos or Best, are but titles signifying Man Perfect; and the name of Jesus, at which every knee must bow, is the ancient and ever Divine Name of all the Sons of God— Iesous or Yesha, he who shall save, and Issa the Illumin- ated, or Initiate of Isis. For this name Isis, originally Ish- Ish, was Egyptian for Light-Light; that is, light doubled, the known and the knowing made one, and reflecting each other. It is the expression of the apostolic utterance, “Aace to face, knowing as we are known, transformed into the image of His glory.” Similarly our affirmatives is and yes ; for in both Issa and Iesous “all the promises of God are Yes,” because God is the supreme Affirmative and Posi- tive of the universe, enlightening every soul with truth and life and power. God is the Sun of the soul, whereof the physical sun is the hieroglyph, as the physical man is of the true eternal spiritual Man. 28. The light is positive, absolute, the sign of Being and of the everlasting “Yes;” and “the children of the Light" are they who have the gnosis and eternal Life thereby. But the negation of God is “Nay,” the Night, the Destroyer and the devil. The name therefore of Antichrist is Denial, or Unbelief, the spirit of Materialism and of Death. And the children of darkness are they who have quenched in themselves the divine Love, and “know not whither they go, because darkness hath blinded their eyes.” Hence the Serpent of the Dust is spoken of as “the Father of Lies,” that is, of negations; for the word “lie " means no- thing else than “denial.” “No denial is of the truth,” says LECT. IV.] 7A/A2. A 7'OAVAEMAEAV7. I I I S. John, for this is Antichrist, even he that denieth. Every spirit which annulleth Jesus (or the divine Yes) is not of God. By this we know the spirit of Truth, and the spirit of Error.” 29. Christ Jesus, then, is no other than the hidden and true man of the Spirit, the Perfect Humanity, the Express Image of the Divine Glory. And it is possible to man, by the renunciation—which mystically is the crucifixion—of his outer and lower self, to rise wholly into his inner and higher self, and, becoming suffused or anointed of the Spirit, to “put on Christ,” propitiate God, and redeem the earthly and material. 30. And that which they who, in the outer manifestation, are emphatically called Christs, whether of Palestine, of India, of Egypt, or of Persia, have done for man, is but to teach him what man is able to be in himself by bearing, each for himself, that Cross of renunciation which they have borne. And inasmuch as these have ministered to the salvation of the world thereby, they are truly said to be saviours of souls, whose doctrine and love and example have redeemed men from death and made them heirs of eternal life. The Wisdom they attained, they kept not secret, but freely gave as they had freely received. And that which thus they gave was their own life, and they gave it knowing that the children of darkness would turn on them and rend them because of the gift. But, with the Christs, Wisdom and Love are one, and the testannent of Life is written in the blood of the testator. Herein is the differ- ence between the Christ and the mere adept in knowledge. The Christ gives and dies in giving, because Love constrains him and no fear withholds ; the adept is prudent, and keeps his treasure for himself alone. And as the At-one-ment accomplished in and by the Christs, is the result of the un- II 2 7"HE PERATEC 7' W.A. Y. reserved adoption of the Divine Life, and of the unreserved giving of the Love mystically called the Blood of Christ, those who adopt that Life according to their teaching, and who aspire to be one with God, are truly said to be saved by the Precious Blood of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. For the Ilamb of God is the spiritual Sun in Aries, the spring-tide glory of ascending Light, the symbol of the Pure Heart and the Righteous Life, by which hu- manity is redeemed. And this Lamb is without spot, white as snow, because white is the sign of Affirmation and of the “Yes; ” as black is of Negation and of the devil. It is Jesous Chrestos, the Perfect Yes of God who is symbolised by this white Lamb, and who, like his sign in heaven, was lifted up on the Cross of Manifestation from the founda- tion of the world. 31. In the holy Mysteries, dealing with the process of that second and new creation, which—constituting a return from Matter to Spirit—is mystically called Redemption,-every term employed refers to some process or thing subsisting or occurring within the individual himself. For, as man is a Microcosm, and comprises within all that is without, the processes of Creation by Evolution, and of Redemption by Involution, occur in the Man as in the Universe, and thereby in the Personal as in the General, in the One as in the Many. With the current orthodox symbolism of man's spiritual his- tory, the Initiate, or true Spiritualist, has no quarrel. That from which he seeks to be saved is truly the Devil, who through the sin of the Adam has power over him ; that whereby he is saved is the precious blood of the Christ, the Only-begotten, whose mother is the immaculate ever-virgin Maria. And that to which, by means of this divine obla- tion, he attains is the Kingdom of Heaven and eternal Life. But, with the current orthodox interpretation of these terms, LECT. IV.] THE A TOWEMENT. II 3 the Initiate is altogether at variance. For he knows that all these processes and names refer to Ideas, which are actual and positive, not to physical transcripts, which are reflective and relative only. He knows that it is within his own microcosmic system he must look for the true Adam, for the real Tempter, and for the whole process of the Fall, the Exile, the Incarnation, the Passion, the Crucifixion, the Resurrection, the Ascension, and the Coming of the Holy Spirit. And any mode of interpretation which implies other than this, is not celestial but terrene, and due to that intrusion of earthy elements into things divine, that con- version of the inner into the outer, that “Fixing of the Vola- tile ” or materialisation of the Spiritual, which constitutes idolatry. 32. For, such of us as know and live the inner life, are saved, not by any Cross on Calvary eighteen hundred years ago, not by any physical blood-shedding, not by any vica- rious passion of tears and scourge and spear ; but by the Christ-Jesus, the God with us, the Immanuel of the heart, born, working mighty works, and offering oblation in our own lives, in our own persons, redeeming us from the world, and making us sons of God and heirs of everlasting life. 33. But, if we are thus saved by the love of Christ, it is by love also that we manifest Christ to others. If we have received freely, we also give freely, shining in the midst of night, that is, in the darkness of the world. For so long as this darkness prevails over the earth, Love hangs on his Cross ; because the darkness is the working of a will at variance with the Divine Will, doing continual violence to the Law of Love. 34. The wrongs of others wound the Son of God, and the stripes of others fall on his flesh. II4 7A/A2 AAERAAFC 7' W.A. Y. Ae is smitten with the pains of all creatures, and his heart is pierced with their wounds. There is no offence done and he suffers not, nor any Zºrong and he is not hurt thereby. Aor his heart is in the breast of every creature, and his ôlood in the veins of all flesh. Aor to know perfectly is to love perfectly, and so to love is to be partaker in the pain of the beloved. And inasmuch as a man loves and succours and saves even the least of God’s creatures, he ministers unto the Zord. Christ is the perfect Zover, bearing the sorrows of all the £oor and oppressed. And the sin and injustice and ignorance of the World are the nails in his hands, and in his feet. O Passion of Zove, that givest thyself freely, even unto death / Aor no man can do Zove's perfect work unless Zove thrust /him through and through. But, if he love perfectly, he shall be able to redeem ; for strong Zove is a Met which shall draw all souls unto him. Because unto Zove is given all power, both in heaven and on earth ; Seeing that the will of him who loves perfectly is one with the Will of God: And unto God and Zove, all things are possible. 35. We come now to the last and innermost of the four- fold Mysteries of the Cross; the Oblation of God in and for the Macrocosmic Universe. The fundamental truth embodied in this aspect of the holy symbol, is the doctrine of Pantheism ; God, and God only, in and through All. The celestial Olympus—Mount of Oracles—is ever creating; God never ceases giving of the Divine Self alike for Creation and for Redemption. LECT. IV.] 7A7A. A 7'OAVAE MEAV7. II 5 God is in all things, whether personal or impersonal, and in God they live and move and have being. And that stage of purification through which the Kosmos is now passing, is God's Crucifixion; the process of Transmuta- tion and Redemption of Spirit from Matter, of Being from Existence, of Substance from Phenomenon, which is to cul- minate in the final At-one-ment of the ultimate Sabbath of Rest awaiting God's redeemed universe at the end of the Kalpa. In the Man Crucified we have, therefore, the type and symbol of the continual Crucifixion of God manifest in the flesh, God suffering in the creature, the Invisible made Visible, the Volatile Fixed, the Divine Incarnate, which manifestation, suffering, and crucifixion are the causes of purification and therefore of Redemption. Thus, in the spiritual sense, the six days of creation are always Passion Week, in that they represent the process of painful experi- ence, travail, and passing-through, whereby the Spirit accom- plishes the redemption of the Body, or the return of Matter into Substance. Hence in the sacred writings, God, in the person of Divine Humanity, is represented as showing the Five Mystical Wounds of the Passion to the Angels, and saying:—“These are the Wounds of My Crucifixion, where- with I am wounded in the House of My Friends.” For, so long as pain and sorrow and sin endure, God is wounded continually in the persons of all creatures, small and great; and the temple of their body is the House wherein the Divine Guest suffers. 36. For the Bread which is broken and divided for the children of the Kingdom is the Divine Substance, which with the Wine of the Spirit, constitutes the holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, the Communion of the Divine and the Terrene, the Oblation of Deity in Creation, 37. May this holy Body and Blood, Substance and Spirit, II6 7A/E AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.4 V. Divine Mother and Father, inseparable Duality in Unity, given for all creatures, broken and shed, and making oblation for the world, be everywhere known, adored, and venerated / May we, by means of that Blood, which is the Zove of God and the Spirit of Zife, Če redeemed, indrawn, and trans- muted into that Body which is Pure Substance, immaculate and ever virgin, express Image of the Person of God / That we hunger no more, neither thirst any more, and that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor £owers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any creature, be able to separate us from the Zove of God, which is in Christ /esus. Zhat being made one through the At-one-ment of Christ, who only hath Immortality, and inhabiteth Light inacces- sible ; We also, beholding the glory of God with open face, may Če transformed into the same Image, from glory to glory by the power of the Spirit.l * See Appendices, Nos. V. and VII. LECTURE THE FIFTH. THAE AWA 7TURAE AAWD COAVS 777 OTYOAW OF 7"HAE A.G.O. PART I. I. Evolution as revealed by the facts of physical science is inexplicable on the materialistic hypothesis, as also are the facts of occult experience and science. This is because, by its failure to recognise consciousness as subsisting prior to organism, and inherent in substance, that hypothesis ignores the condition essential to evolution. e 2. But for evolution something more even than conscious- ness is requisite,_namely, memory. For memory is the condition of segregation ; the cause and consequence of individuation. Hence every molecule, both in its indi- vidual and its collective capacity is capable of memory; for every experience leaves, in its degree, its impression or scar on the substance of the molecule, to be transmitted to its descendants. This memory of the most striking effects of past experience, is the differentiating cause which, accumulated over countless generations, leads up from the amoeba to man. Were there no such memory, instead of progress, or evolution, there would be a circle returning into and repeating itself; whereas, the modifying effects of accumulated experience convert what would otherwise be a circle into a spiral, whose eccentricity—though imper- ceptible at the outset—becomes greater and more complex at every step.” * See Unconscious Memory, ch. xiii., by S. Butler, 1880. 117 II.8 7A7A. AEAEA'AºEC 7' W.A. V. 3. Consciousness being inherent in substance, every molecule in the universe is able to feel and to obey after its kind,-the inorganic as well as the organic, be- tween which there is no absolute distinction as ordinarily supposed. For even the stone has a moral platform, em- bracing a respect for and obedience to the laws of gravita- tion and chemical affinity. Wherever there are vibration and motion, there are life and memory; and there are vibration and motion at all times and in all things. Here- in may be seen the cause of the failure of the attempt to divide the ego from the non-ego. Strictly speaking, there is only one thing and one action ; for unconsciousness is no more a positive thing than darkness. It is the priva- tion, more or less complete, of consciousness, as obscurity is of light. 4. We come to speak of the substantial ego, the soul or Psyche, the superior human reason, the nucleus of the human system.” In every living entity there are four inherent powers. We are speaking now not of component parts, but of forces. The first and lowest mode of power is the mechanical ; the second is the chemical ; the third is the electrical,—an order which includes the mental ; and the fourth is the psychical. The first three belong to the domain of physiological science; the last to that of spiritual science. It is this last mode of power which be- longs to the “Immaculate ’’ and Essential. It is inherent in the Substantial, and is, therefore, a permanent and inde- feasible quantity. It is in the Arché, and is wherever there is organic life. Thus is Psyche at once the “living mother” and “mother of the living.” And she is from the Beginning latent and diffused in all matter. She is the unmanifest, Using the term Psyche in the higher sense usually attached to it by the post-Homeric Greeks, and not that of the animal life as by Paul. Lect. V.] WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE ECO. 119 by the divine Will made manifest ; the invisible, by energy made visible. Wherefore every manifested entity is a Trinity, whose three “persons” are, (1) that which makes visible ; (2) that which is made visible; and (3) that which is visible. Such are Force, Substance, and the expression or “Word” of these, their Phenomenon. 5. Of this Energy, or Primordial Force, there are two modes, for everything is dual,—the centrifugal, or ac- celerating force, and the centripetal, or moderating force; of which the latter, in being derivative, reflex, and comple- mentary, is as feminine to the other's masculine. By means of the first mode substance becomes matter. By means of the second mode substance resumes her first condition. In all matter there is a tendency to revert to substance, and hence to polarise Soul by means of evolution. For the instant the centrifugal mode of force comes into action, that instant its derivative, the centripetal force, begins also to exercise its influence. And the primordial substance has no sooner assumed the condition of matter, than matter itself begins to differentiate, being actuated by its inherent force,—and by differentiation to beget individualities. 6. Then Psyche, once abstract and universal, becomes concrete and individual, and through the gate of matter issues forth into new life. A minute spark in the globule, she becomes—by continual accretion and centralisation —a refulgent blaze in the globe. As along a chain of nerve-cells the current of magnetic energy flows to its central point, being conveyed, as is a mechanical shock, along a series of units, with ever-culminating impetus, so is the psychic energy throughout nature developed. Hence the necessity of centres, of associations, of organ- isms. And thus, by the systematisation of congeries of I 20 THE AERFEC 7" PVA Y. living entities, that which in each is little, becomes great in the whole. The quality of Psyche is ever the same; her potentiality is invariable. 7. Our Souls, then, are the agglomerate essences of the numberless consciousnesses composing us. They have grown, evolving gradually from rudimentary entities which were themselves evolved, by polarisation, from gaseous and mineral matter. And these entities combine and coalesce to form higher—because more complex—entities, the soul of the individual representing the combined forces of their manifold consciousnesses, polarised and centra- lised into an indefeasible unity. 8. While the material and the psychical are to each other respectively the world of Causes and the world of Effects, the material is, itself, the effect of the spiritual, being the middle term between the spiritual and the psychical. It is therefore true that organism is the result of Idea, and that Mind is the cause of evolution. The explanation is, that Mind is before matter in its abstract, though not in its concrete condition. This is to say, that Mind, greater than, and yet identical with, that which results from organism, precedes and is the cause of organ- ism. 9. This Mind is God, as subsisting prior to and apart from creation, which is manifestation. God is spirit or essential substance, and is impersonal if the term persona be taken in its etymological sense, but personal in the highest and truest sense if the conception be of essential consciousness. For God has no limitations. God is a pure and naked fire burning in infinitude, whereof a flame subsists in all creatures. The Kosmos is a tree having innumerable branches, each connected with and springing out of various boughs, and these again originating in and LECT. V.] WA 7TURE AND CONST/7-U77ON OF 7:HE EGO. 121 nourished by one stem and root. And God is a fire burn- ing in this tree, and yet consuming it not. God is I AM. Such is the nature of infinite and essential Being. And such is God before the worlds.1 Io. What, then, is the purpose of evolution, and separa- tion into many forms, the meaning, that is, of Life? Life is the elaboration of soul through the varied trans- formations of matter. Spirit is essential and perfect in itself, having neither beginning nor end. Soul is secondary and perfected, be- ing begotten of spirit. Spirit is the first principle, and is abstract. Soul is the derivative, and is therefore con- crete. Spirit is thus the primary Adam ; and Soul is Eve, the “woman’’ taken out of the side of the “man.” 11. The essential principle of personality—that which Constitutes personality in its highest sense—is conscious- ness, is spirit; and this is God. Wherefore the highest and innermost principle of every monad is God. But this primary principle—being naked essence—could not be separated off into individuals unless contained and limited by a secondary principle. This principle—being derived —is necessarily evolved. Spirit, therefore, is projected into the condition of matter in order that soul may be evolved thereby. Soul is begotten in matter by means of polarisation ; and spirit, of which all matter consists, returns to its essential nature in soul—this being the medium in which spirit is individuated—and from ab- stract becomes concrete ; so that by means of creation God the One becomes God the Many. * Terms implying succession, when used in relation to the infinite and eternal, are to be understood logically, not chronologically. I 22 THE AEERAEEC7' W.A. Y. PART II. 12. We have spoken of an outer personality and an inner personality, and of a material consciousness as differ- ing from a spiritual consciousness. We have now to speak of a spiritual energy as differing from a material energy. The energy whereby the soul polarises and accretes, is not dependent upon the undulations of the ether as are material energies. The astral ether is the first state of matter. And to the first state of matter corresponds the primordial force, the rotatory, or centrifugal and centripetal in one. But before and within force is Will; that is, Necessity, which is the will of God. It is inherent in sub- stance, which is the medium in which it operates. Such as the primordial will is in relation to the primordial substance, the individual will is to the derived soul. And when the current of spiritual energy, or will, is strong enough in the complex organism to polarise and kindle centrally, then the individual Psyche conceives Divinity within her and becomes God-conscious. In the rudimentary stages of matter, this current is not strong enough or continuous enough thus to polarise. 13. When Psyche has once gathered force sufficient to burn centrally, her flame is not quenched by the disintegra- tion of the physical elements. These, indeed, fall asunder and desguanate many times during life; yet the con- sciousness and memory remain the same. We have not in our physical bodies a single particle which we had some few years ago, and yet our ego is the same and our thought continuous. The Psyche in us, therefore, has grown up out of many elements; and their interior egos are perpetuated in our interior ego, because their psychic force is central- ised in our individuality. And when our Psyche is dis- LECT. V.] WATURAE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE AEGO. 123 engaged from the disintegrating particles of our systems, she will—after due purgation—go forth to new affinities and the reversion of matter to substance will still continue. I4. Is it asked,—If the soul be immaculate, how comes she to be attracted by material affinities? The reply is, that the link between her and earth is that which the Hindås call Aarma, namely, the results of past conduct, and consequent destiny. Immaculate though she be in her virginal essence, Psyche is not the “espoused Bride” until the bond between her and the earth be severed. And this can be only when every molecule of her essence is pervaded by spirit, and indissolubly married therewith, as God with Arché in the Principle. The soul, like water, can never really be other than “immaculate,” and hence the peculiar propriety of water as the mystical symbol for the soul. Being a chemical combination of two gases–hydrogen and oxygen—them- selves pure, water itself also is pure, and cannot be other- wise. The condition called foulness occurs, not by the admission of foreign substances entering into combination with it, but only by mechanical admixture with these, and the holding of them in suspension in such wise that they may be eliminated by distillation. Such is the relation of the soul to “sin.” When regeneration—the equivalent of distillation—is accomplished, “Karma” is no longer operative. PART III. 15. The law inherent in the primordial substance of matter obliges all things to evolve after the same mode. The worlds in the infinite abyss of the heavens are in all respects similar to the cells in vegetable or animal tissue. Their evolution is similar, their distribution similar, and I 24 7 'AAA' PAEA’AºA2C 7' W.4 V. their mutual relations are similar. For this reason we may, by the study of natural science, learn the truth not only in regard to this, but in regard also to occult science ; for the facts of the first are as a mirror to the facts of the last. I6. We have already said that our souls are the agglom- erate essences of the numberless consciousnesses compos- ing us. Our souls are not, however, limited in capacity to the sum total of those consciousnesses as they are in their separate state; but represent them combined into One Life and polarised to a plane indefinitely higher. For the synthetical resultant thus attained is not a mere aggregate of Constituents; but represents a new condition of these, precisely as in chemistry H2O-the symbol for water— represents a new condition of 2H + O, and differs from it by a reformulation of state. After such a reformulation, the sum of the activities of the molecules of the resulting product is different from that previously possessed by its factors. In such sense is to be understood the synthesis of consciousness by means of which our individuality is constituted ; and—referring this synthetic energy to a yet higher plane—the formulation of the God-consciousness peculiar to our world. This idea was familiar to the ancients. They were wont to regard every heavenly orb as a deity, having for his material body the visible planet; for his astral nature, its vegetable and animal intelligences; and for his Soul, man's substantial part ; his spirit being the Mous of man, and therefore Divine. And as, when speaking of the planet-God they specially meant that Nous, it was said with truth that our Divine part is no other than the planet-God, in our case Dionysos, or Jehovah-Nissi, the “God of the emerald " or green earth, called also Iacchos, the mystic Bacchos." * See Appendices No. XII. The Earth's place in the “Seven LECT. V.] WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 125 17. Such as all creatures composing the planet are to the planet, all the planets are to the universe, and such are the Gods to God (in manifestation). The supreme Ego of the universe is the sum total of all the Gods; His Personality is their agglomerate personality ; to pray to Him is to address all the celestial host, and, by inclusion, the souls of all just men. But as in man the central unity of consciousness constituted of the association of all the consciousnesses of his system, is more than the sum total of these, inasmuch as it is on a higher level;-so in the planet and the universe. The soul of the planet is more than the associated essences of the souls composing it. The con- sciousness of the system is more than that of the associated world-consciousnesses. The consciousness of the mani- fest universe is more than that of the corporate systems; and that of the Unmanifest Deity is greater than that of them all. For the Manifest does not exhaust the Unmani- fest; but “the Father is greater than the Son.” 1 18. And here it is necessary that this distinction between the manifest and unmanifest God be insisted on and defined. “No man,” it is declared, “hath seen the Father at any time,” because the Father is Deity unmanifest. And again, “He that hath seen the Son, hath seen the Father also,” because the Son is Deity in manifestation, and is the “Express Image" or Revelation of the Father, being brought forth in the “fulness of time” as the crown of kosmic evolution. This latter mode of Deity is therefore synthetical and cumulative ; the terminal quantity of the whole series of the universal Life-process (Zebens-progess) as exhibited in successive planes of generative activity, Planets” is that of the green ray in the spectrum. Hence the emerald “Tablet of Trismegistus” and signet of the Popes. * See Appendices, No. X. I. I 26 7.E.A. AAEA’APEC 7" PVA V. the Omega of concretive developments. But the Father is Deity under its abstract mode, logically precedent to and inclusive of the secondary and manifest mode; the Alpha of all things and processes, the supra-kosmic, primordial Being, impersonal (in the etymological sense of the term) and unindividuated ; that wherein consciousness subsists in its original mode, and whereby it is subsequently con- ditioned and compelled. This unmanifest Deity must necessarily represent some mode of Selfhood; but its nature remains inscrutable to us, and can be known only through the Person of the Son 5–that is, in manifestation. The difference between the two modes of Deity finds apt illustration in the physiology of embryonic development. The first condition of the fecundated ovum is one of generalised and informulate vitality. An activity, at once intelligent and unindividuated, permeates the mass of potential differentiations, and directs their manifestation. Under the direction of this inherent activity, the mass divides, segregates, and constitutes itself into discrete elements; and these in their turn sub-divide, and elaborate new individuations; until, by means of successive aggre- gations of cellular entities, various strata and tissues are formed. In this way, is built up, little by little, a new glomerate creature, the consciousness of which, though manifold and diverse, is yet one and synthetic. But this synthetic individuality is not of itself. It was begotten in the bosom of the inherent and primordial intelligence per- vading the essential matter out of which it was constructed, and to which, as Father, it is Son. 19. The Gods are not limited in number. Their num- bers denote orders only. Beyond number are the orbs in infinite space, and each of them is a God. Each globe has its quality corresponding to the conditions of the elements LECT. V.] WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 127 which compose it. And every physical world of causes has its psychic world of effects. All things are begotten by fission, or section, in a universal protoplast ; and the power which causes this generation is centrifugal. 20. God unmanifest and abstract is the Primordial Mind, and the kosmic universe is the ideation of that Mind. Mind in itself is passive ; it is organ, not function. Idea is active ; it is function. As soon, therefore, as Mind becomes operative, it brings forth Ideas, and these constitute exist- ence. Mind is abstract; Ideas are concrete. To think is to create. Every thought is a substantial action. Where- fore Thoth—Thought—is the creator of the Kosmos. Hence the identification of Hermes (Thoth) with the Logos. 21. Nevertheless, there is but one God ; and in God are comprehended all thrones, and dominions, and powers, and principalities, and archangels and angels in the celestial world,—called by Kabbalists the “Exemplary World,” or world of archetypal ideas. And through these are the worlds begotten in time and space, each with its astral sphere. And every world is a conscient individuality. Yet they all subsist in one consciousness, which is one God. For all things are of spirit, and God is spirit, and spirit is consciousness. 22. The science of the Mysteries is the climax and crown of the physical sciences, and can be fully understood only by those who are conversant therewith. Without this knowledge it is impossible to comprehend the basic doc- trine of occult science, the doctrine of Vehicles. The knowledge of heavenly things must be preceded by that of earthly things. “If, when I have spoken to you of earthly things, you understand not,” says the Hierophant to his neophytes, “how shall you understand when I speak to you 128 7THE AEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. V. of heavenly things P” It is vain to seek the inner chamber without first passing through the outer. Theosophy, or the science of the Divine, is the Royal Science. And there is no way to reach the King's chamber save through the outer rooms and galleries of the palace. Hence one of the reasons why occult science cannot be unveiled to the generality of men. To the uninstructed no truth is demon- strable. Nor can any one who has not learned to appre- ciate the elements of a problem, appreciate its solution. 23. All the component consciousnesses of the individual polarise to form a unity, which is as a sun to his system. But this polarisation is fourfold, being distinct for each mode of consciousness. And the central, innermost, or highest point of radiance—and it alone—is subjective. They who stop short at the secondary consciousness and imagine it to be the subjective, have failed to penetrate to the innermost and highest point of the consciousness in themselves, and in so far are defective as to their humanity. Whereas they who have developed in themselves the consciousness of every zone of the human system, are truly human, and do, of themselves, represent humanity as no majority, however great, of undeveloped and rudimentary men can do. Being thus, they represent Divinity also. Theocracy consists in government by them. 24. Let us take for illustration the image of an incan- descent globe, or ball of fire, fluid and igneous throughout its whole mass. Supposing this globe divided into several successive zones, each containing its precedent, we find that the central interior zone only contains the radiant point, or heart of the fiery mass, and that each successive zone con- stitutes a circumferential halo, more or less intense according to its nearness to the radiant point; but secondary and de- rived only, and not in itself a source of luminous radiation. LECT. V.] NATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 129 25. It is thus with the macrocosm, and also with the human kingdom. In the latter the soul is the interior zone, and that which alone contains the radiant point. By this one, indivisible effulgence the successive zones are illumin- ated in unbroken continuity; but the source of it is not in them. And this effulgence is consciousness, and this radiant point is the spiritual ego or Divine spark. God is the Shining One, the radiant point of the universe. God is the Supreme consciousness, and the Divine radiance also is consciousness. And man's interior ego is conscient only because the radiant point in it is Divine. And this con- sciousness emits consciousness; and transmits it, first, to the Psyche ; next, to the anima bruta ; and last, to the physical system. The more concentrated the conscious- ness, the brighter and more effulgent the central spark. 26. Again : if from the midst of this imagined globe of fire the central incandescent spark be removed, the whole globe does not immediately become dark; but the effulgence lingers in each zone according to its degree of proximity to the centre. And it is thus when dissolution occurs in the process of death. The anima bruta and physical body may retain consciousness for a while after the Soul is withdrawn, and each part will be capable of memory, thought, and re- flection according to its kind. 27. Apart from the consciousness which is of the Psyche, man is necessarily agnostic. For, of the region which, being spiritual and primary, interprets the sensible and secondary, he has no perception. He may know things, indeed, but not the meaning of things; appearances, but not realities; resultant forms, but not formative ideas; still less the source of these. The world and himself are fellow-phantoms; aimless apparitions of an inscrutable something, or, may-be, nothing ; a succession of unrelated, unstable states. K I 30 7A/A2 PERFECT WA V. 28. From this condition of non-entity, the spiritual con- sciousness redeems him, by withdrawing him inward from materiality and negation, and disclosing to him a noumenal and, therefore, stable ego, as the cogniser of the unstable states of his phenomenal ego. The recognition of this noumenal ego in himself involves the recognition of a cor- responding ego, of which it is the counterpart, without him- self:-involves, that is, the perception of God. For the problem of the ego in man is the problem also of God in the universe. The revelation of one is the revelation of both, and the knowledge of either involves that of the other. Wherefore for man to know himself, is to know God. Self- consciousness is God-consciousness. He who possesses this consciousness, is, in such degree, a Mystic. 29. That whereby the mystic is differentiated from other men, is degree and quality of sensitiveness. All are alike environed by one and the same manifold being. But whereas the majority are sensitive to certain planes or modes only, and these the outer and lower, of the common envi- ronment, he is sensitive to them all, and especially to the inner and higher; having developed the correspond- ing mode in himself. For man can recognise without him- self that only which he has within himself. The mystic is sensitive to the God-environment, because God is Spirit, and he has developed his spiritual consciousness. That is, he has and knows his noumenal ego. Psyche and her recollections and perceptions are his. 30. Hence the radiant point of the complex ego must be distinguished from its perceptive point. The first is always fixed and immutable. The second is mutable ; and its position and relations vary with different individuals. The consciousness of the Soul, or even—in very rudimentary beings—of the mind, may lie beyond the range of the LECT. V.] WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 131 perceptive consciousness. As this advances and spreads inwards, the environment of the ego concerned expands; until, when, finally, the perceptive point and the radiant point coincide, the ego attains regeneration and emancipa- tion. 31. When the physiologists tell us that memory is a biological processus, and that consciousness is a state depen- dent upon the duration and intensity of molecular nervous vibration, a consensus of vital action in the cerebral cells; a complexity, unstable and automatic, making and unmaking itself at each instant, as does the material flame, and similarly evanescent, they do not touch the Psyche. For what is it that cognises these unstable states ? To what Subject do these successive and ephemeral conditions mani- fest themselves, and how are they recognised? Phenomenon is incapable of cognising itself, and appears not to itself, being objective only. So that unless there be an inner, subjective ego to perceive and remember this succession of phenomenal states, the condition of personality would be impossible; whereas, there is of necessity such an ego; for apparition and production are processes affecting—and therefore implying—a subject. Now this subject is, for man, the Psyche; for the universe, God. In the Divine mind subsist eternally and substantially all those things of which we behold the appearances. And as in nature there are infinite gradations from simple to complex, from coarse to fine, from dark to light, so is Psyche reached by innumer- able degrees; and they who have not penetrated to the inner, stop short at the secondary consciousness, which is ejective only, and imagine that the subjective—which alone explains all—is undemonstrable. 32. A prime mistake of the biologists consists in their practice of seeking unity in the simple, rather than in the 132 THAE AAA-AAZC 7' W.A. V. complex. They thus reverse and invert the method of evolution, and nullify its end. They refuse unity to the man, in order to claim it for the molecule alone. Claiming unity and, thereby, individuality, for the ultimate element, indivisible and indestructible by thought, for the simple monad only,–they divinise the lowest instead of the highest, and so deprive evolution of its motive and end. Whereas Psyche is the most complex of extracts; and the dignity and excellence of the human soul consist, not in her simpli- city, but in her complexity. She is the summit of evolution, and all generation works in order to produce her. The occult law which governs evolution brings together, in in- creasingly complex and manifold entities, innumerable unities, in order that they may, of their substantial essence, polarise one complex essential extract :—complex, because evolved from and by the concurrence of many simpler monads:—essential, because in its nature ultimate and indestructible. The human ego is, therefore, the synthesis, the Divine Impersonal personified; and the more sublimed is this personality, the profounder is the consciousness of the Impersonal. The Divine consciousness is not ejective, but subjective. The secondary personality and conscious- ness are to the primary as the water reflecting the heavens; the nether completing and returning to the upper its own concrete reflex. 33. It is necessary clearly to understand the difference between the objective and ejective on the one hand, and the subjective on the other. The study of the material is the study of the two former; and the study of the sub- stantial is the study of the latter. That, then, which the biologists term the subjective, is not truly so, but is only the last or interior phase of phenomenon. Thus, for example, the unstable states which constitute consciousness, are, in LECT. V.] WATURE AND cows 777 UT/ow of THE Eco. I33 their view, subjective states. But they are objective to the true subject, which is Psyche, because they are perceived by this latter, and whatever is perceived is objective. There are in the microcosm two functions, that of the revealer, and that of the entity to which revelation is made. The unstable states of the biologist, which accompany certain operations of organic force, are so many modes whereby exterior things are revealed to the interior subject. Consti- tuting a middle term between object and subject, these states are strictly ejective, and are not, therefore, the sub- ject to which revelation is made. It is hopeless to seek to attain the subjective by the same method of study which discovers the ejective and objective. We find the latter by observation from without ; the former by intuition from within. The human kosmos is a complexity of many principles, each having its own mode of operation. And it is on the rank and order of the principle affected by any special operation that the nature of the effect produced depends. When, therefore, for example, the biologist speaks of unconscious cerebration, he should ask himself to whom or to what such cerebration is unconscious, knowing that in all vital processes there is infinite gradation. Questions of duration affect the mind; questions of intensity affect the Psyche. All processes which occur in the objective are relative to something ; there is but one thing absolute, and that is the subject. Unconscious cerebration is therefore only relatively unconscious in regard to that mode of per- ception which is conditioned in and by duration. But inas- much as any such process of cerebration is intense, it is perceived by that perceptive centre which is conditioned by intensity; and in relation to that centre it is not uncon- scious. The interior man being spiritual, knows all pro- cesses; but many processes are not apprehended by the I34 7 HE PERATEC7' WAY. man merely mental. We see herein the distinction between the human principles, and their separability even on this plane of life. And if our mundane ego and our celestial ego be so distinct and separable even while vitally con- nected, that a nervous process conscious to the latter is unconscious to the former, much more shall separability be possible when the vital bond is broken. If the polarities of our entire system were single and identical in direction, we should be conscious of all processes and nothing would be unknown to us; because the central point of our perception would be the precise focus of all convergent radii. But no unregenerate man is in such case. In most men the per- ceptive point lies in the relative man,—ejective or objective, —and by no means in the substantial and subjective man. Thus the convergent radii pass unheeded of the individual consciousness, because, as yet, the man knows not his own spirit. Being thus incapable of absolute cognition, such as these may be said to be asleep while they live. PART IV. 34. The higher the entity undergoing death, the easier is the detachment of the Psyche from the lower conscious- nesses by which she is enshrined. The saint does not fear death, because his consciousness is gathered up into his Psyche, and she into her spouse the Spirit. Death, for him, is the result, not of any pathological process, but of the normal withdrawal, first, of the animal life into the astral or magnetic; and, next, of this into the psychic, to the reinforcement of the latter ; precisely as in the cell about to disintegrate, its protoplasmic contents are seen to become better defined and to increase, as their containing capsule becomes more tenuous and transparent. In this wise have passed away Saints and holy men innumerable of LECT. V.] WATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 135 all lands and faiths; and with a dissolution of this kind the relations of the redeemed Psyche with materiality may terminate altogether. Such an end is the consummation of the redemption from the power of the body, and from the “sting of death.” Forasmuch, however, as the righteous has attained this condition by what Paul calls “dying daily.” during a long period to the lower elements, death for him —whatever the guise in which it may finally come—is no sudden event, but the completion of a process long in course of accomplishment. That which to others is a violent shock, comes to him by insensible degrees, and as a release wholly comfortable. Hence the aspiration of the prophet, “Let me die the death of the just, and let my last end be like his.” 35. In dissolution, the consciousness speedily departs from the outermost and lowest sphere, that of the physical body. In the shade, spectre, or astral body (Hebrew, Mephesh)—which is the lowest mode of soul—consciousness lingers a brief while before being finally dissipated. In the astral soul, anima bruta, or ghost (Hebrew, Ruach) con- sciousness persists—it may be for centuries—according to the strength of the lower will of the individual, manifesting the distinctive characteristics of his outer personality. In the soul (Hebrew, AWeshamah)—the immediate receptacle of the Divine Spirit—the consciousness is everlasting as the soul herself. And while the ghost remains below in the astral sphere, the soul, obeying the same universal law of gravitation and affinity, detaches herself and mounts to the higher atmosphere suited to her;-unless, indeed, she be yet too gross to be capable of such aspiration. In which case, she remains “bound” in her astral envelope as in a prison. This separability of principles is recognised in Homer when Odysseus is made to say of his interview with I36 7"HA. AERAEAEC7' W.A. V. the shades —“Then I perceived Herakles, but only in phantom (eiðoxov), for he himself is with the gods.” 36. The ghosts of the dead resemble mirrors having two opposed surfaces. On the one side they reflect the earth-sphere and its pictures of the past. On the other they receive influxes from those higher spheres which have received their higher, because spiritual, egos. The interval between these principles is, however, better described as of state or condition than as of locality. For this belongs to the physical and mundane, and for the freed soul has no existence. There is no far or near in the Divine. 37. The ghost, however, has hopes which are not with- out justification. It does not all die, if there be in it any- thing worthy of recall. The astral sphere is then its place of purgation. For Saturn, who as Time is the Trier of all things, devours all the dross, so that only that escapes which in its nature is celestial and destined to reign. The soul, on attaining Nirvāna, gathers up all that it has left in the astral of holy memories and worthy experiences. To this end the ghost rises in the astral by the gradual decay and loss of its more material affinities, until these have so disin- tegrated and perished that its substance is thereby en- lightened and purified. But continued commerce and inter- course with earth add, as it were, fresh fuel to its earthly affinities, keeping these alive, and so hinder its recall to its spiritual ego. And thus, therefore, the spiritual ego itself is detained from perfect absorption into, and union with, the Divine. * As pointed out by Dr. Hayman, Pindar similarly emphasises the distinction between the hero and his immortal essence. And Chaucer has the line : “Though thou here walke, thy spirit is in helle’’ (Man of Law's Tale). These distinctions are more than poetic imaginings. They represent occult knowledges as verified by the experience of all ages. LECT. V.] WA 7TURE AND CONST77 UTION OF 77/E EGO. 137 38. This dissolution of the ghost is gradual and natural. It is a process of disintegration and elimination extending over periods which are greater or less according to the char- acter of the individual. Those ghosts which have belonged to evil persons possessed of strong wills and earthly tenden- cies, persist longest and manifest most frequently and vividly, because they do not rise, but—being destined to perish— are not withdrawn from immediate contact with the earth. These are all dross, having in them no redeemable element. The ghost of the righteous, on the other hand, complains it his evolution be disturbed. “Why callest thou me?” he may be regarded as saying: “ disturb me not. The me- mories of my earth-life are chains about my neck; the desire of the past detains me. Suffer me to rise towards my rest, and hinder me not with evocations. But let thy love go after me and encompass me ; so shalt thou rise with me through sphere after sphere.” Thus even though, as often happens, the ghost of a righteous person remains near one who, being also righteous, has loved him, it is still after the true soul of the dead that the love of the living friend goes, and not after his lower personality represented in the ghost. And it is the strength and divinity of this love which helps the purgation of the soul, being to it an indication of the way it ought to go, “a light shining upon the upward path * which leads from the earthly to the celestial and everlasting. For the good man upon earth can love nothing other than the Divine. Wherefore, that which he loves in his friend is the Divine,—his true and radiant self." PART V. 39. Of the four constituent spheres of the planet one subsists in two conditions, present and past. This is its * See Appendices, Nos. II. and XIII., Part 2, 138 7A/E PERFEC 7' W.A. V. magnetic atmosphere or astral soul, called the Anima Mundi. In the latter condition it is the Picture-world wherein are stored up all the memories of the planet; its past life, its history, its affections and recollections of physical things. The adept may interrogate this phantom-world, and it shall speak for him. It is the cast-off vestment of the planet ; yet it is living and palpitating, for its very fabric is spun of psychic substance, and its entire parenchyma is magnetic. And forasmuch as the planet is an entity ever being born and ever dying; so this astral counterpart of itself, which is the mirror of the globe, a world encompassing a world, is ever in process of increase. 40. What the disintegrating Ruach is to man, this astral zone is to the planet. In fact, the great magnetic sphere of the planet is itself composed and woven out of the mag- netic egos of its offspring, precisely as these in their turn are woven out of the infinitely lesser atoms which compose the individual man. So that, by a figure, we may represent the whole astral atmosphere of the planet as a system of so many minute spheres, each reflecting and transmitting special rays. But as the Divine Spirit of the planet is not in its magnetic circle, but in the celestial; so the true soul and spirit of the man are not in this astral sphere, but are of the higher altitudes. 41. Each world has its astral soul which remains always with it. But the world's true soul migrates and interchanges, which is the secret of the creation of worlds. Worlds, like men, have their karma; and new kosmic globes arise out of the ruins of former states. As the soul of the individual human unit transmigrates and passes on, so likewise does the Psyche of the planet. From world to world, in cease- less intercourse and impetus, the living Neshamah pursues her variable way. And as she passes, the tincture of her LECT. V.] NATURE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 139 divinity changes. Here, her spirit is derived through Iacchos; there through Aphrodite; and, again, through Hermes, or another god. Here, again, she is weak; and there, strong. Our planet—it must be understood—did not begin this Avatār in Štrength. An evil karma over- whelmed its soul;—a karma which had endured throughout the last £ralaya,—or interval intervening between the former period of vivification of the planet and its rebirth to new activities, and which, from the outset of the fresh manifes- tation—commonly called creation—dominated the recon- struction of things. This planetary karma was, by the Scandinavian theology, presented under the figure of the “golden dice of destiny,” which, after the “twilight of the Gods,” or “night of the Kalpa,” 1 were found again un- changed in the growing grass of a new risen earth. For, as the kabbalistic interpreters of Genesis teach, the moral formations of all created things preceded their objective appearance. So that “every plant of the field before it sprang, and every herb of the ground before it grew,” had its “generation” unalterably determined. And, so long as these moral destinies which constitute the planetary karma remain operative, so long the process of alternate passivity and activity will continue. The revolutions and evolutions of matter, the interchanges of destruction and renovation, mark the rhythmic swing of this resistless force, the expres- sion of essential Justice. But with every cyclic wave that breaks shoreward, the tide rises. “The might of the Gods increases: the might of the powers of evil dwindles.”? 42. As with man so with the planet. For small and great there is One Law; though one star differs from an- other in glory. And so throughout the infinite vistas and * Hindú term for the period of kosmic manifestation. * The Dharmasastra Sutras. I4O TAWE PERA'A2C 7" WA P. Systems of the heavens. Fºom star to star, from sun to sun, from galaxy to galaxy the kosmic souls migrate and inter- change. But every (, d keep his tincture and maintains indefeasibly his perso), lily. * PART V { 43. To apply what ha been said to the elucidation of catholic doctrine and pra Le. The object set before the Saint is so to live as to render the soul luminous and con- solidate with the spirit, that thereby the spirit may be per- petually one with the soul, and thus eternise its individuality. For individuality appertains to the soul, inasmuch as it consists in separateness, which it is the function of soul- substance to accomplish in respect of spirit.” Thus, though eternal and immaculate in her substance, the soul acquires individuality by being born in matter and time; and within her is conceived the divine element which, divided from God, is yet God and man. Wherefore catholic dogma and tradition, while making Mary the “mother of God,” repre- sent her as born of Anna, the year, or time.” | While Christianity teaches the everlasting persistence of the acquired personality of the redeemed, and makes redemption consist in this, Buddhism insists that personality is an illusion belonging to the sphere of existence,—as distinguished from Being, -and makes redemption consist in the escape from it. But the difference between the two doc- trines is one of presentation only, and is not a real difference. The explanation is, that there are to each individual two personalities or selfhoods, the one exterior and phenomenal, which is transient, and the other interior and substantial, which is permanent. And while Budd- hism declares truly the evanescence of the former, Christianity declares truly the continuance of the latter. It is the absorption of the indi- vidual into this inner and divine selſhood, and his consequent with- drawal from Existence, that constitutes Nirvāna, “the peace that passeth understanding.” * The Hebrew forms of these names—Miriam and Hannah—do not bear quite the same meanings. But, as is obvious from the analogies used and accepted in Catholic teaching, the name of the Virgin has LECT. V.] WA 7'UA' E AND CONSTITUTION OF THE ECO. 141 44. The two terms of the history of creation, or evolu- tion, are formulated by the Church in two dogmas. These are (1), the Immaculate Conception, and (2), the Assump- tion, of the Blessed Virgin Mary.” The former concerns the generation of the soul, presenting her as begotten in the womb of matter, and by means of matter brought into the world, and yet not of matter, but from the first moment of her being, pure and incorrupt. Otherwise she could not be “Mother of God.” In her bosom, as Nucleus, is conceived the bright and holy Light, the Nucleolus, which—without participation of matter—germinates in her and manifests itself as the express image of the Eternal and Ineffable Self- ‘hood. To this image she gives individuality; and through and in her it is focused and polarised into a perpetual and self-subsistent Person, at once human and Divine, Son of God and of man. Thus is the soul at once Daughter, Spouse, and Mother of God. By her is crushed the head of the Serpent. And from her triumphant springs the Man Regenerate, who, as the product of a pure soul and divine always been related to its Latin signification, so that it is consistent to accept the name of her mother in accordance with this practice, especi- ally as the latter is not mentioned by any of the Evangelists, but occurs only in Latin tradition. * It is true that the doctrine of the Assumption is not a dogma in the technical sense of the term, inasmuch as it has not yet been formally promulgated as an article of faith. But it has always subsisted in the Church as a “pious belief,” and in promulgating it we are but antici- pating the Church's intention;–excepting that we present it as a con- clusion of reason no less than as an article of faith. How far our action may be agreeable to ecclesiastical authority we have not thought neces- sary to inquire. Neither deriving our information from ecclesiastical Sources, nor being under ecclesiastical direction, we commit no breach of ecclesiastical propriety. In any case it has the notable effect of securing the fulfilment of the prophecy implied in the choice of his official title and insignia by Pope Leo XIII.—the prophecy that his pontificate should witness the promulgation in question. For further explanation see Lect. VI. 39. I42 7A7A2 FA2A’AºEC 7' W.A. Y. spirit, is said to be born of water (Maria) and the Holy Ghost. 45. The declarations of Jesus to Nicodemus are explicit and conclusive as to the purely spiritual nature both of the entity designated “Son of Man,” and of the process of his generation. Whether incarnate or not, the “Son of Man” is of necessity always “in heaven,”—his own “kingdom within.” Accordingly the terms describing his parentage are devoid of any physical reference. “Virgin Maria” and “Holy Ghost” are synonymous, respectively, with “Water” and “the Spirit”; and these, again, denote the two con- stituents of every regenerated selfhood, its purified soul and divine spirit. Wherefore the saying of Jesus, “Ye must be born again of Water and of the Spirit,” was a declara- tion, first, that it is necessary to every one to be born in the manner in which he himself is said to have been born ; and, next, that the gospel narrative of his birth is really a presentation, dramatic and symbolical, of the nature of regeneration. 46. As the Immaculate Conception is the foundation of the Mysteries, so the Assumption is their crown. For the entire object and end of kosmic evolution is precisely this triumph and apotheosis of the soul. In this Mystery is beheld the consummation of the whole scheme of crea- tion,-the perfectionment, perpetuation, and glorification of the individual human ego. The grave—that is the astral and material consciousness—cannot retain the Mother of God. She rises into heaven ; she assumes its Queenship, and is—to cite the “Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary”—“taken up into the chamber where the King of kings sits on His starry throne”; her festival, therefore, being held at the corresponding season in the astronomical year, when the constellation Virgo reaches the zenith and LECT. V.] WATURAE AND CONSTITUTION OF THE EGO. 143 is lost to view in the solar rays. Thus, from end to end, the mystery of the soul's evolution—the argument, that is, of the kosmic drama and the history of Humanity—is con- tained and enacted in the cultus of the Blessed Virgin. The Acts and the Glories of the soul as Mary are the one and supreme theme of the sacred Mysteries." 47. Now this discourse on the nature and constitution of the Ego, is really a discourse on the nature and constitution of the Church of Christ.” * See Appendices, No. XI. * See Appendices, No. X. LECTURE THE SIXTH. THE FAZZ (Wo. I.). PART I. 1. IN the city of Mecca, the birthplace of the iconoclast Mohammed, is a square edifice thirty feet high, called the Kaabeh, or Cube. The Koran says that it was the first house of worship built for mankind. It has been known from time immemorial as Beit-Allah, which name is the exact equivalent of the Hebrew word Beth-El, House of God. According to Moslem legend it was originally built by Adam, after the pattern of a similar structure in Paradise, and was restored by Abraham. It contains a white stone, —now blackened by time and by the kisses of pilgrims, which stone was also, according to tradition, brought from Paradise. But, ages before the birth of Mohammed, the Kaabeh was an object of veneration as a Pantheon of the Gods, and the white stone was adored as a symbol of Venus. 2. This cubic House is a figure of the Human Kingdom framed on the pattern of the Universal Kingdom con- structed in the primal Age, or “Beginning.” And the original builder of the Kaabeh is said to have been Adam, “Adam ” in one aspect representing the first Church of the Elect, the first Community of men “made in the Image of God.” This Church, having forfeited “Paradise” and fallen away from perfection, was restored by Abraham, the Father of the Faithful or Initiates, this great Ancestor of the I44 I.ECT. VI.] 7THE FAZ L. I45 chosen people of God being in one aspect the personified Church of Brahma in India, whence the Mysteries “went down into Egypt,” and ultimately into all the world. The name Beth-El given to the Human House, denotes that man, when “cubic” or six-fold, is the habitation of Deity. For in their interior and primary meaning these six stages or “days” of the creative week of the Microcosm, corre- spond to the processes included in the Lesser and Greater Mysteries, and are, in order, Baptism, Temptation, Passion, Burial, Resurrection, and Ascension; the “Marriage of the Lamb” being the equivalent of the Sabbath, or Within of the Cube, the Seventh, last and supremest of all the Acts of the Soul. The white stone, which, as we have seen, has been always the object of special veneration, is the well- known symbol of the Divine Spirit, the nucleolus of the Cell, the sun of the system, the Head of the Pyramid. It was regarded as sacred to Venus, because she is the Genius of the Fourth Day, the Revealer of the Sun and heavenly system, and to her, therefore, was peculiarly dedicated the emblem of Celestial Light. The Kaabeh is by its very name identified with the Kabbalistic Merkaba, the “car” in which the Lord God was said to descend to earth, –a phrase indicating the work of Manifestation, or Incarnation of Divine Being in “Creation.” This Merkaba, or Vehicle of God, is described by Ezekiel as resembling a throne of sapphire, upon which is seated Adonai; and supporting and drawing it are four living creatures or cherubim, having four faces, the face of an ox, the face of a lion, the face of a man, and the face of an eagle. And there are also four wheels of the chariot, a wheel by each cherub, “in appear- ance like chrysolite.” “And their whole body, and their necks, and their hands, and their wings, and the circles are full of eyes.” L 146 7 HE PERFECT WAY. 3. The perusal of this descriptive vision, which is identi- cal with certain passages in the Apocalypse of St. John, was permitted only by the ancient Hebrews to men who had attained the age of thirty years." This age represents maturity, manhood, and reason, as reckoned in mystical numbers. Thus the Ark of Noë in which the Elect are preserved, is thirty cubits in height; the vision above cited occurs in his thirtieth year to Ezekiel, whose name signifies Strength of God; and Jesus, at the commencement of his mission of salvation, “begins to be about thirty years of age.” Similarly the Kaabeh, or Cubic House of the Microcosm, is a cube of thirty feet. 4. This car, then, within which Adonai rides, typified by the Stone, called sapphire by Ezekiel, and jasper by St. John, is the Human Kingdom; and the living creatures which draw it are the four elements of that Kingdom, Body, Mind, Soul, and Spirit, corresponding respectively to the elemental spirits of Earth, Fire, Water, and Air, which constitute the Macrocosmic system. Of these living creatures the first in order, from without inwards, is the Ox, symbolising the earth or body, ploughed by the sacred Kine of Demeter, laborious and obedient; the next is the Lion, type of the magnetic or “fiery” mind, whose reason is destructive and whose energy is rapacious, the seat of daring and of the masculine will, which, suffered to ex- patiate uncontrolled, would rend and profane the sacred mysteries. Third in order comes the genius of the Soul, having a human face, and symbolising the true Person of the Microcosm, to whom, as to the Keeper of the House, belongs the constructive reason, the restraining and con- servative force of the system. Last, and “over all the rest,” is the Eagle, the bird of the Sun or Adonai, type of * Epistles of Jerome. LECT. VI.] 7 HE FA ZZ. I47 light, strength, and freedom, and of the wind on whose wings the Spirit rides. As it is written, “Behold, he shall come up as an eagle and fly.” All these four cherubim are united in one, and make one fourfold creature, the wings of one being joined to the wings of another. 5. Over and around the seat or car of Adonai, as de- scribed by the seers of both Old and New Testaments, is a Rainbow, or Arch. This, the symbol of the Cup of the Heavens encircling and enclosing the Kosmos, is in the Scriptures termed Mount Sion and the Mount of the Lord; by the Hindås it is called Mount Meru, and by the Greeks Olympus, the home of the Gods. And with all it is the symbol of the Celestial Kingdom, the Uncreate, which “was, and is, and is to come; ” wherein dwell the Seven Spirits of Light, the Elohim of the Godhead. From this holy Mount proceed all the oracles and dispensations of Heaven, and nothing is done in the macrocosmic or micro- cosmic worlds that is not first conceived and perfect etern- ally in the divine counsel. “For ever, O Lord,” says the psalmist, “Thy Word is written in Heaven.” And for this reason the Scriptures declare that everything in the Taber- nacle of the Wilderness was “made after the pattern of it in the holy Mount.” For the Tabernacle in the Wilderness is, like the Kaabeh, a figure of the Human House of God, pitched in the wilderness of the material world, and re- movable from one place to another. 6. The Mystery implied in the vision of Ezekiel, is in Genesis presented under the hieroglyph of the Four Rivers which, flowing from one Source, go out to water Paradise. This source is in the holy place of the Upper Eden. It is the “well of the Water of Life,” or God, Who is the Life and Substance of all things. And the four heads of the river have names corresponding to the zones of the I48 TA/A2 AAACAPECT WA V. fourfold unit of existence, as exemplified in the Cell, and therefore to the faces of the fourfold cherub. Thus, Phison, the first stream, is the Ancient, or the Body and Matter, and represents the agricultural or mineral Earth, wherein lies gold, prosperity, and renown. The second river is Gehon, signifying the Vale of Gehenna or Purgation, the stream which traverses “Ethiopia” or AEth-opis, a compound word meaning literally the Fire- Serpent, or Astral Fluid. This river, therefore, is the igneous body or magnetic belt. The third river, which is Hiddekel, signifies the Double Tongue of Two Meanings, the stream which rises from and flows back to ancient or anterior ages, and which guides to Assyria, the land or place of Perfection. This river is the Soul, the permanent element in man, having neither beginning nor end, taking its origin in God anterior to time, and returning whence it came individuated and perfected. Divine in nature and human in experience, the language of the Soul is double, holding converse alike with heaven and earth. The fourth river is Euphrates, that is, the power of the Pharaoh, or Phi-ourah, Voice of Heaven, the oracle and divine Will of the human system. And the “paradise” watered by these four rivers is the equilibrated human nature, the “garden which the Lord God has planted in Eden,” or the Kosmos; that is, the Particular in the bosom of the Universal. 7. Not without deep meaning and design is the Book of Genesis or of Beginnings made to open with this de- scription of the Four Rivers of Paradise. For their names and attributes supply the four wards of the Key wherewith to unlock all the mysteries of the Scriptures whose Pro- logue and Argument Genesis represents. These mysteries are, like the Rivers of Eden, distributed into four channels, each belonging to a distinct region of the fourfold human Lect. VI.] 7THE AWA L.A. I49 kingdom, whose queen and priestess is the Soul. And of these mystic or secret Scriptures, one of the most precious and profound is the Drama of the Fall, whose acts, de- picted in the first chapters of the Bible, serve, as a series of hieroglyphic tableaux, to delineate at once the history of Man and the object of Religion. 8. Maimonides, the most learned of the Rabbis, speak- ing of the Book of Genesis, says, “We ought not to take literally that which is written in the story of the Creation, nor entertain the same ideas of it as are common with the vulgar. If it were otherwise, our ancient sages would not have taken so much pains to conceal the sense, and to keep before the eyes of the uninstructed the veil of allegory which conceals the truth it contains.” In the same spirit it was observed by Jerome, that “the most difficult and obscure of the holy books contain as many secrets as they do words, concealing many things even under each word.” “All the Fathers of the second century,” says Mosheim, “attributed a hidden and mysterious sense to the words of Scripture.” Papias, Justin Martyr, Irenaeus, Clemens Alexandrinus, Gregory of Nazianzen, Gregory of Nyssa, and Ambrose, held that the Mosaic account of Creation and of the Fall was a series of allegories. The opinion of Origen on the same subject was plainly expressed. “What man,” he asks, “is so simple as to believe that God per- sonifying a gardener, planted a garden in the East P that the tree of Life was a real tree which could be touched, and of which the fruit had the power of conferring immor- tality ?” 9. It is hardly necessary to enlarge on this point, or to bring forward further authorities. Suffice it to say that this interior method of interpreting sacred writings was, and still is, the method of all who possess the Gnosis, or 15o THE PERFECT WA Y. secret knowledge of the mysteries, their mere letter being abandoned to the vulgar and to the “critics,” as the husk or shell, which serves but to conceal, encase, and preserve the life-giving seed, the priceless pearl of the true “Word.” Io. Both the story of the Fall, and all cognate Myths or Parables, are far older and more universal than the ordinary unlearned reader of the Bible supposes. For the Bible itself, in its Hebrew form, is a comparatively recent compilation and adaptation of mysteries, the chief scenes of which were sculptured on temple walls, and written or painted on papyri, ages before the time of Moses. History tells us, moreover, that the Book of Genesis as it now stands, is the work, not even of Moses, but of Ezra or Esdras, who lived at the time of the Cap- tivity, between five and six hundred years before our era, —and that he recovered it and other writings by the process already described as Intuitional Memory. “My heart,” he says, “uttered understanding, and wisdom grew in my breast; for the Spirit strengthened my memory.” If then by such means he recovered what Moses had pre- viously delivered orally to Israel, it is obvious that Esdras must have been initiated into the ancient tradition in a former state of existence; since no memory could have enabled him to recover that which he had never known, and which—when the Divine commission to rewrite it was given him—was so wholly lost that “no man knew any of the things that had been done in the world since the beginning.” As the Talmud says, “Ezra could not have received the word, if Moses had not first declared it.” II. Neither must it be supposed that we have the Books of Moses as recovered and edited by Esdras. The system of interpolation and alteration already referred to as largely applied to the Bible, especially affected the Pentateuch. Lect. VI.] THE FALL. I5 I And foremost among those who thus perverted it were the Pharisees, denounced in the New Testament, who greatly modified the text, introducing their own ritual into the law, incorporating with it their commentaries, and Sup- pressing portions which condemned their doctrine and practice. According to Spinoza, “there was before the time of the Maccabees, no canon of holy writ extant; the books we now have were selected from among many others by and on the authority of the Pharisees of the second Temple, who also instituted the formulae for the prayers used in the synagogue." 12. Sacerdotal or rabbinical as were these interpolations and corruptions, they affected principally the books of cere- monial law and historical narrative, and referred to public customs, temple rites, priestly privileges, and questions of mere national interest. They hardly touched the great parabolic Myths which lie embedded in the Hebrew Scrip- tures like so many gems encased in clay. And gems these are, which, from prehistoric times, have been the property of the initiates of all religions, and especially of the Hindú and Egyptian, from which last indeed Moses originally drew them, as is occultly intimated when it is said: “And the children of Israel borrowed of the Egyptians jewels of silver and jewels of gold; and they spoiled the Egyptians.” 13. With regard to this particular Myth of the Fall, the walls of ancient Thebes, Elephantine, Edfou, and Karnak bear evidence that long before Moses taught, and certainly ages before Esdras wrote, its acts and symbols were em- bodied in the religious ceremonials of the people, of whom, according to Manetho, Moses was himself a priest. And “the whole history of the fall of man is,” as says Sharpe in * Tractatus Theologico-Politicus. 152 THE PERFEC 7' W.A. J. a work on Egypt, “ of Egyptian origin. The temptation of woman by the serpent and of man by the woman, the sacred tree of knowledge, the cherubs guarding with flaming swords the door of the Garden, the warfare declared between the woman and the serpent, may all be seen upon the Egyptian sculptured monuments.” PART II. 14. Let us now examine, in the order indicated by the hieroglyphic symbol of the Four Rivers, the significations of the mystic story to which it is prefixed. e Taking first the meaning corresponding to the river Phison or the Body, we have presented to us the condition of humanity in the perfect state, with special reference to the just and harmonious relations existing in that state between the Body and the Soul. This perfect condition is exemplified by a picture of the first Mystic Community, Lodge, or Church of men formed in the image of God, who, under the name of Sons of God, were distinguished from mere rudimentary men not made in the Divine image, —the still materialistic part of mankind. This perfect condition was, and still is, reached—in the aggregate, as in the individual—by a process of evolution, or gradual unfoldment and growth from the lowest to the highest. They who first attained to this perfect state are celebrated by Ovid and others as the men of the “Golden Age,” the primal Sabbath of the world under Saturn. This Age is reached, whether individually or collectively, whenever the Divine Spirit working within, has completed the generation of Man, making him spiritually “in the image of God, male and female.” Such is the “Son of God” having power, because in him the soul dominates LECT. VI.] THE FAZAZ. I53 the body, and the body has no will of its own apart from that of the Divine Spirit. 15. In this aspect of the parable, then, “Adam ” repre- sents the bodily or sensuous nature in man ; and his wife his psychic and spiritual nature. The epithet translated “help,” “helper,” or “helpmeet,” applied to the woman, signifies an overseeing guide ; and the name Isha, by which at first she is designated, denotes the generative substance, or feminine principle, of humanity. After the fall she is Chavah, or Eve, a term denoting the circle of life, and represented by a serpent. As the soul, she has two aspects, the earthly and the heavenly, and is indicated, therefore, by two kinds of serpent, the serpent of the dust, or tempter, and the serpent which represents the Divine wisdom, or Sophia,-in which aspect she is man's initiator into divine knowledges. This heavenly serpent, the repre- sentative of the solar ray,+-as opposed to the serpent of subterraneous fire, is familiar to us under the name of “Seraph,” the title given to angels of the highest order in the celestial hierarchy, and signifying “the burning,”—Sons of the Sun. In Egyptian symbology the Divine Seraph or Serpent appears constantly, surmounting a Cross and wearing the crown of Maut, the Mother, that is, the Living Mother, who is the original and celestial Reason. This is the Serpent on the Cross by looking to which, another sacred parable tells us, the Israelites were healed of the venomous bites inflicted on them by the Serpent of the Dust, the earthly and destructive reason whose figure is derived, not from the life-giving sun-ray, but from the flame of the devouring and rapacious fire. And thus it is said in the Gospel, that by the exhibition of this Divine Wisdom, by the restoration of the “Woman" or “Mother of the Living” to her rightful throne, will the world finally be I54 7THE PERAEEC 7' W. W. } redeemed from the dominion of the serpent of the Abyss, that is, of the lower and materialistic reason. “For as Moses lifted up the Serpent in the Wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up.” For “Christ” is identical with Amun-Ra, “our Lord the Sun,” offspring of the heavenly Maut. And the means of delivery for mankind from the “ravenous lion ” and the “fiery serpents” of the outer intellect or earthly “wilderness of Sin” will be the ex- altation of the Dual humanity at once “Mother” and “Son.” 16. In the individual or microcosmic system, the celestial Wisdom or Soul of the Universe finds expression as the Soul of the Man. And the condition of humanity “un- fallen’ and sinless, is one of obedience on the part of the sense-nature, or “Adam,” to the rule of the Soul, or “Eve.” But, by the “Fall” this state of things is directly reversed, and the “woman * or the “Living” becomes subject to this sense-nature. This is “the Curse.” And the curse will be removed, Paradise regained, and the second Sab- bath of the Golden Age achieved, only when this “woman" is again invested with her rightful supremacy. 17. Eve is said to be taken from the side of the sleeping Adam, because, although the Soul subsists in all men, she becomes revealed only in such as have transcended the consciousness of the Body. When the “Adam ” is asleep, passive, unassertive, the Soul, or Living man, is made mani- fest. Hers it is to guide, to rule, to command; hers the vocation of the Seer, the Pythoness, the Interpreter and Guardian of the Mysteries. 18. Tokens of the superior respect once accorded to the Soul, and to Woman as the soul's representative, abound in the historical remains of Egypt, where, as we learn from numberless sculptures, writings, and paintings, the goddess Isis held rank above her husband, the chief instructor in LECT. VI.] 7 HE FALL. I55 the Mysteries was represented as a woman, priestly and noble families traced their pedigree through the female line, and public acts and chronicles were dated by the name of the high priestess of the year. I9. Such then in the “Edenic” or unfallen state, are the mutual relations of Adam and Eve, Sense and Soul. And the parable sets forth the end of the Edenic Sabbath, the ruin of the Golden Age, the “Fall” of the Church, as brought about by disobedience to the Divine Voice, or Central Spirit to which the Soul ought to be always dutiful. Sin thus originates with the Soul, as the responsible part of the man ; and she whose office is to be to him overseer and guide, becomes his betrayer. The forbidden fruit communi- cated by the Soul to Adam, is the vital flame or Conscious- ness, described by classical poets as the “Fire of Heaven.” For, as God is supreme and original Consciousness, the first manifestation of human consciousness has its seat in the Soul. In the pure, Edenic state, or, as it is called, the state of innocence, therefore, the shrine of this heavenly Fire, is in the spiritual part of man. But Prometheus, or pseudo-thought, the spurious thought as opposed to the true Hermetic Reason,-steals or “draws down" this Fire from its original place and transfers it to the outer man or body. Thenceforward, the consciousness of man ceases to reside in the soul, and takes up its abode in the body. That is to say, that man in his “fallen” condition is con- scious only of the selfhood of the body, and until regenerate, or redeemed from the “Fall,” he does not again become conscious and vitalised in the soul. To find the Soul is the first step towards finding Christ; that is, as the Catholic Church puts it, “Mary brings us to Jesus.” The material- istic unregenerate man is totally unconscious of his soul. He is aware only of the body, and his percipience of life is 156 THE PERFECT WA V. limited to the bodily sense. By the transference of the vitalising Fire from the “heaven” to the “earth" of the human system, the lower nature is inflamed and set at war with the Divine Spirit or “Zeus” within the man. This act is the Promethean Theft, punished so terribly by the “Father” at the hand of Hermes, the true Thought, or Angel of Understanding. For by this act, man becomes bound and fettered to the things of sense, the victim of a perverse will, which, as an insatiable bird of prey, continu- ally rends and devours him. Thus is formulated that con- dition which Paul so graphically laments:—“I find then a law, that when I would do good, evil is present with me. For I delight in the law of God after the inward man ; but I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man ; who shall deliver me from this body of death P” 20. Although, then, sin originates in the soul, the bodily nature is the ultimate offender. Hence it is to “Adam ” that the interrogation is addressed :—“Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not eat?” And the penalty pronounced upon “Adam ” enu- merates the sorrows of the body in its “fallen' state, and foretells its inevitable return to the “dust” and “earth' of which it is;–a penalty, be it observed, which differs from that incurred by “Eve.” For of her we read that her will, ceasing to polarise itself inwards and upwards upon her Divine Centre, is now, by the effect of the “Fall,” directed outwards and downwards towards her earthly mate. Like “Lot's Wife" in another and cognate parable, “she looks back, and straightway becomes a pillar of Salt.” Salt was, in alchemic terminology, a synonym for Matter. This transformation into Salt is the converse of the “Great LECT. VI.] THE FAZA. 157 Work”; it is the Fixation of the Volatile. The Great Work is, in alchemic science, the Volatilisation of the Fixed. By this act of depolarisation the soul imprisons herself definitively in the body, and becomes its subject until that “Redemption ” for which, says Paul, “all creation groans and travails in the pain of desire.” 21. In this first of the four explanations of our parable, the Tree of Life is the secret of Transmutation or of Eter- nal Life, of which it is impossible for the rebellious Adam to taste. For, so long as the elements of disorder remain in the body, so long as the flesh lusts against the spirit, so long as the Microcosm admits two diverse wills and is swayed by two adverse laws;–so long is the Fruit of this Tree unattainable. If it were possible for this ruined and disobedient Adam to “eat and live for ever,” that eternal life would necessarily be the eternal hell of the Calvinists, that endless condition of torment and defiance of God, that life indestructible in the midst of destruction, which would —were it possible—constitute the division of the universe, and set up in opposition to the Divine rule, an equal and co-eternal throne of devildom. 22. As, in this reading of the myth, Adam represents the person, Eve the soul, and the Divine Voice the Spirit, so the serpent typifies the astral element or lower reason. For this subtle element is the intermediary between soul and body, the “fiery serpent” whose food is the “dust,” that is, the perception of the senses, which are concerned with the things of time and matter only. This “serpent,” if not controlled and dominated by the will of the Initiate, leads the soul into bondage and perdition, by destroying the equilibrium of the system and dividing the Hearth-Fire. But though, when not thus dominated, the astral fire be- comes, through its function of Tempter, the Destroyer and 158 7TP/A2 PERATEC7' W.A. Y. agent of Typhon or Negation, it is also, when under the dominion of the married spirit and soul, an element of power and a glass of vision. 23. The deposition from her rightful place of the Living Mother, Isha, Chavah, or Eve, typified by the celestial ser- pent, is then brought about by the seductions of the earthly and astral serpent. Thence ensues the ruin of the Edenic order. The soul is subject to the body, intuition to sense, the inner to the outer, the higher to the lower. Henceforth the monitions of the soul must be suppressed, her aspirations quenched, her conceptions difficult, her fruit quickened and brought forth with labour and sorrow. Intuition wars with passion, and every victory of the spiritual man is bought with anguish. And between the kabbalistic “woman’ and the astral “serpent’’ there must be perpetual enmity; for henceforward the astral is antagonistic to the psychic, and between the intellectual and the intuitional “a great gulf is fixed.” For this astral serpent is the terrene Fire, and the kabbalistic woman is the Water, the Maria, which is des- tined to quench it. “She shall crush his head, and he shall lie in wait for her heel.” Such is, on the plane historical, whether of the individual or of the Church, the meaning of “Paradise” and its “loss” —the gradual attainment of a certain high grade, and the decline therefrom ;-a loss, the immediate effects of which manifest themselves in a subversion of the divine-natural order, and in the supremacy of the outer over the inner, the lower over the higher. 24. To humanity in Paradise, made in the divine Image, and unfallen, were given as meat the tree-fruits and the herb-grains; then, as Ovid tells us, “men were contented with the food which Nature freely bestowed.” For the bodily appetites knew no law but that of a healthy natural LECT. VI.] TA/AE FAA. I59 intuition, and obeyed the impulse of the God within, de- siring no other nourishment than that for which alone the body was anatomically and physiologically designed. But, so soon as it acquired a perverse, selfish will, a new lust arose; for a new and subhuman nature appeared in it, the nature of the beast of prey, whose image the fallen body has put on. That this is literal truth, all the poets, all the seers, all the regenerate testify, bearing witness also that Paradise can never be regained, Regeneration never com- pleted, man never fully redeemed, until the body is brought under the law of Eden, and has cleansed itself thoroughly from the stain of blood. None will ever know the joys of Paradise who cannot live like Paradise-men ; none will ever help to restore the Golden Age to the world who does not first restore it in himself. No man, being a shedder of blood, or an eater of flesh, ever touched the Central Secret of things, or laid hold of the Tree of Life. Hence it is written of the holy city: “Without are dogs.” For the foot of the carnivorous beast cannot tread the golden floors; the lips polluted with blood may not pronounce the Divine Name. Never was spoken a truer word than this; and if we should speak no other, we should say all that man need know. For if he will but live the life of Eden, he shall find all its joys and its mysteries within his grasp. “He who will do the will of God, shall know of the doctrine.” But until “father and mother” are forsaken, that is, until the disciple is resolved to let no earthly affections or desires withhold him from entering the Perfect Way, Christ will not be found nor Paradise regained. “Many indeed begin the rites,” says Plato, “but few are fully purified.” And a greater than Plato has warned us that “the Way is strait and the Gate narrow that leadeth unto Life, and few they are who find it.” I6o 7 HE PERATECT WA V. PART III. 25. Coming next to the philosophical reading of our Farable, we find that on this plane the Man is the Mind or rational Intellect, out of which is evolved the Woman, the Affection or Heart; that the Tree of Knowledge repre- sents Maya or Illusion; the Serpent, the Will of the Body; the Tree of Life, the Divine Gnosis—or interior knowledge; and the sin which has brought and which brings ruin on mankind, Idolatry. In this aspect of the Fall, we have presented to us the decline of Religion from the celestial to the astral. The affection of the unfallen mind is fixed on things above, spiritual and real, and not on things beneath, material and phantasmal. Idolatry is the adoration of the shadow instead of the substance, the setting up of the eidolon in the place of the God. It is thus no specific act, but the general ten- dency towards Matter and Sense, that constitutes the Fall. And of this tendency the world is full, for it is the “original sin” of every man born of the generation of “Adam ”; and only that man is free of it who is “born again of the Spirit” and made “one with the Father,” the central and divine Spirit of man's system. 26. Into this sin of Idolatry the human Heart declines by listening to the monitions and beguilements of the lower will, the will of the sensual nature. Withdrawing her desire from the Tree of Life, the Gnosis, the Affection fixes on the false and deceitful apples of Illusion, pleasant and de- sirable “to the eyes” or outer senses. “Your eyes shall be opened,” urges the lower will, “and you shall be as gods, knowing both worlds.” The Affection yields to the se- ductions of this promise, she entangles herself in Illusion, she communicates the poison to the Mind, and all is lost. LECT. VI.] 7THE AWA/C/. I6 I Man knows indeed, but the knowledge he has gained is that of his own shame and nakedness. “Their eyes were opened, and they knew—that they were naked.” By this act of idolatry man becomes instantly aware of the body, of sense, of Matter, of appearance; he falls into another and a lower world, precipitated headlong by that fatal step out- wards from the celestial to the astral and terrene. Hence- forth the fruit of the divine Gnosis, the healing Tree, is not for him, he has lost the faculty of discerning Substance and Reality, the eye of the Spirit is closed, and that of Sense is opened; he is immersed in delusion and shadow, and the glamour of Maya. Sudden divorce has taken place in him between the spirit and the soul. He has lost the “Kingdom, the Power and the Glory.” And, so long as he remains in the “wilderness” of the illusory world, the Gnosis is guarded against him by the Elemental Spirits and their fourfold sword, which, to the man having lost both the power and the secret of the Dissolvent, are an impenetrable barrier. 27. We now enter on the Ethical and Pyschic interpre- tation of the myth, which interpretation is itself of a dual character, affecting on the one hand the Church, on the other the Individual. In this third aspect of the parable the Man represents the human Reason ; the Woman, Faith, or the religious Con- science; the Serpent, the lower nature ; the Tree of Know- ledge, the kingdom of this world; and the Tree of Life the kingdom of God. The religious Conscience set over the human Reason as his guide, overseer, and ruler, whether in the general, as the Church, or in the particular, as the Individual, falls when—listening to the suggestions of the lower nature—she desires, seeks, and at length defiles herself with the ambitions, vanities, and falsehoods of the M I62 7 HE AERAWAZC 7' W.A. W. kingdom of this present world. Nor does she fall alone. For, ceasing to be a trustworthy guide, she becomes herself serpent and seducer to the human Reason, leading him into false paths, betraying and deluding him at every turn, until, if she have her way, she will end by plunging him into the lowest depths of abject ignorance, foolishness, and weak- ness, there to be devoured by the brood of Unreason, and annihilated for ever. For she is now no longer the true wife Faith, she is become the wanton, Superstition ; and rather than heed or obey monitions such as hers, he must, if he would save himself, assert dominion over her and keep her in bondage and subjection to his authority. Better far that he should be master in the Man, than superstition, whose method is folly, whose end is madness and death. 28. The Church at her best, unfallen, is the glass to the lamp of Truth, guarding the sacred flame within, and trans- mitting unimpaired to her children the light received upon its inner surface. Such is the function of the priesthood, in idea and intention; but not, now at least, in fact and deed. For through the failure of the priesthood to resist the materialising influences of the world upon the side exposed to the world, the lamp-glass has become so clouded that the light within is either unable to pass through it at all, or passes only to cast around, instead of genial rays, ghastly and misleading shadows. Or, may-be, the light has expired altogether ; and, not the maintenance of the flame, but the concealment of its loss, is become the prime object of solici- tude for its whilom guardians. 29. The world's history shows that hitherto this Fall has been the common fate of all Churches. Nor is its cause far to seek, seeing that all human histories are essentially one and the same, whether the subject be an individual or an aggregation of individuals. A Church is, like every LECT. VI.] 7A/AE AEAAA. 163 other personal organism, a compound organism. Between the circumferential containing body, and the central in- forming spirit, having a side turned to each, and uniting the mental with the spiritual,—stands the soul, to which the Church, Priesthood, or Intuition corresponds, in order by her mediation to reconcile the world to God and main- tain the Man in grace. And so long as, by virtue of the purity of such medium, the stream of life and light from the central spirit of Truth is enabled to find free course and circulation, perfect health continues in the system. But when, inclining towards the outer and lower elements, the Church abandons the inner and higher, and becomes of the earth earthy, the flame within her shrine, choked and quenched, departs, leaving the sanctuary tenantless. Then, no longer of the heavenly, but of the earthly king- dom, the fallen Church becomes the betrayer and the enemy of man. To confess the truth — that she has suffered the sacred flame to expire—would, in respect of all for which she is now solicitous, her material sway and interests, be fatal. Hence the fact that she is naked and empty must be studiously concealed, and all approach for- bidden, that no one not concerned to keep the secret may spy upon her darkened shrine. Thenceforth the Church stands between God and the people, not to bring them together, but to keep them apart. With light and spirit lost to view, and the way to the kingdom of God blocked by superstition, the rational man either ceases to believe that any such kingdom subsists, and, falling in his turn, he plunges into the gulf of atheism or agnosticism ; or, with- held by his traitor spouse from attaining the fruition of the Tree of Life, contents himself with “stones for bread,” and with “serpents” of the astral in place of the true celestial mysteries. I64 THE AAEA’AºEC 7' W.A. V. 30. Thus fallen and degraded, the Church becomes, as mankind too well knows, a Church “of this world,” greedy of worldly dignities, emoluments, and dominion, intent on foisting on the belief of her votaries, in the name of author- ity and orthodoxy, fables and worse than fables, apples of Sodom and Gomorrah, Dead-sea fruit ;-a Church jealous of “the Letter which killeth ; ” ignorant of, or bitterly at enmity with, “the Spirit which giveth life.” PART IV. 31. We now reach the last and innermost interpretation of our fourfold hieroglyph, the spiritual and creative secret embodied in the Edenic allegory. This secret is some- times more obscurely alluded to as the Lapse of heavenly beings from their first happy estate into sub-celestial spheres, and their final redemption by means of penance done through incarnation in the flesh. It need scarcely be said that this imagined Lapse is also a parable designed to veil and preserve a truth. And in its interpretation is found the creative secret, the projection of Spirit into Matter; the Fall or Descent of Substance into Maya or Illusion. Hence results Chavah, the Eve of Genesis, and circle of life conditioned as past, present, and future, and corresponding to Jehovah, the covenant name of Deity. In this reading of the parable, the Tree of Divination or Knowledge becomes Motion, or the Kalpa, the period of Existence as distinguished from Being ; the Tree of Life is Rest, or the Sabbath, the Nirvāna; Adam is Manifestation; the Serpent—no longer of the lower but of the higher sphere—is the celestial Serpent or Seraph of heavenly Counsel. For now the whole signification of the myth is changed, and the act of Arché, the Woman, is LECT. VI.] ZTAE/E FAA. L. 165 the Divine act of Creation. Ase, the root of the Hebrew word for Woman, signifies the generating female Fire, the Living Substance producing or causing production. Its Coptic form, Est, gives Esta or Hestia, the goddess of the Temple-fire, for the continual preservation of which the order of Vestal virgins was established. This word, Est, is identical also with the Latin and Greek equivalents of IS, whence are derived all the modern European forms of the same affirmative, as also the names Esther and Easter. 32. Adam signifies the Red, hence the Blood ; and in Blood, Substance becomes incarnate and takes form as Nature or Isis, which name is, of course, but another ren- dering of the affirmative EST. Hence Nature, the incarnate Arché, is said to be born from the side of Adam, or Mani- festation by Blood. “Blood,” as says “Eliphas Levi,” “is the first incarnation of the Universal Fluid ; it is the materialised vital Light. It lives only by perpetually trans- forming itself, for it is the universal Proteus, the great Arcanum of Life.” 33. Now, as has been said in a former discourse, Motion is the means by which Spirit becomes visible as Matter, for Spirit and Matter represent two conditions of one thing. Therefore by the Tree of Divination of Good and Evil, in this interpretation, must be understood that condition by means of which Spirit, projected into appearance, becomes manifested under the veil of Maya. 34. Among the Sacred symbols and insignia of the Gods depicted in Egyptian sculpture, none is repeated so often as the Sphere. This Sphere is the emblem of Creative Motion, because the Manifesting Force is rotatory; being, in fact, the “Wheel of the Spirit of Life” described by Ezekiel as “a wheel within a wheel,” inasmuch as the whole system of I66 . 7A7A. AAEA’AºA2C 7' W.A. V. the universe, from the planet to its ultimate particle, revolves in the same manner. And for this reason, and as an evi- dence of the knowledge which dictated the ancient sym- bology of the Catholic Church, the Eucharistic Wafer, figure of the Word made Flesh, is circular. The sacramental sphere, poised on the head of a Serpent or Seraph, is a common hieroglyph in Egyptian sacred tableaux; and sculptures bordered with processions of such emblematic figures are frequent in the ancient temples. The Apple, or round Fruit of the Tree of the Kalpa, of which, by the advice of the “Serpent’ of heavenly counsel, the Divine Arché partakes, and thereby brings about the “Fall” or Manifestation of Spirit in Matter, is no other than the Sacramental Host, type of the Bread of Life or Body of God, figured in the Orb of the Sun, reflected in the disc of every star, planet, and molecule, and elevated for adoration on the Monstrance of the universe. 35. Only when the Naros, or cycle of the Six Days, shall again reach their Seventh Day, will “the Lord of the Seventh "→whom the Latins adored with unveiled heads under the name of Septimianus—return, and the veil of Illusion or Maya be taken away. The anticipation of the Seventh Day of the renewed Arcadia, the Seven Days' festival of liberty and peace, was held by the Greeks under the name of the Kronia, and by the Latins under that of the Saturnalia. This redemptive Sabbath is spoken of in the gospel as the “harvest of the end of the world,” when Saturn or Sator (the Sower) as “Lord of the Harvest,” “shall return again with joy, bringing his sheaves with him.” And when that Day comes, the Fruit of the Tree of Life, or Nirvāna, shall be given for the healing of the universe; rest from motion shall put an end to Matter; and Substance, now by the “Fall” brought under the dominion of Adam LECT. VI.] 7THE FA ZZ. 167 or Manifestation, shall return to Her original divine eState. 36. It remains only to speak of the symbolic Bow or Cup encircling the microcosmic car of Adonai, and representing, as already explained, the heavenly Mount, of which the phenomenal heaven is the transcript. The planisphere of the heavens, familiar in all ancient astrological science, is divided into two parts by a line passing from east to west, and representing the horizon. The portion of the plani- sphere below this horizontal line comprises the lower and invisible hemisphere; that which is above, the upper and visible. At the opening of the year the constellation of the Celestial Virgin, Astraea, Isis, or Ceres, is in ascension. She has beneath her feet in the lower horizon the sign Python or Typhon, the Dragon of the Tree of the Hespe- rides, who rises after her, pursuing her, and aiming his fangs at her heel. 37. This heavenly Virgin is the regenerate Eva, Maria the Immaculate, the Mother of the Sun-God. Her first “decan" is that of the Sun, whose birth as Mithras was celebrated on the twenty-fifth day of December, the true birth of the year, at midnight, at which time she appears above the visible horizon. The figure of the sun was conse- quently placed over this “decan’’ on the planispheric chart, and rests therefore on the head of the Virgin, while the first “decan” of Libra, which is that of the Moon, is under her feet. In her we recognise the woman of the Apocalypse, victorious over her adversary the Dragon, and restoring by her manifestation the equilibrium—Libra—of the universe. 38. Thus the Heavens eternally witness to the promise of the final redemption of the Earth, and of the return of the Golden Age, and the Restoration of Eden. And the keynote of that desired harmony is to be found in the exalt- I68 7//E A2AA’AºECT WA. V. ation on all the universal fourfold planes, physical, philo- Sophical, psychic, and celestial, of the WOMAN. Once again, in the end as in the beginning, shall the Soul rehabilitated, the Affection regenerated, the Intuition puri- fied, the Divine Substance redeemed from Matter, be throned, crowned, and glorified. 39. That the time of the rising of this Celestial Virgin and of the rehabilitation of truth by the Woman-Messias of the Interpretation is near at hand, they who watch the “times" and the “heavens” may know by more than one token. To name but one. The sign Leo, which upon the celestial chart precedes the ascension of the Woman, going before her as her herald, is the sign of the present Head of the Catholic Church. When assuming that title, he declared his office to be that of the “Lion of the Tribe of Juda,” the domicile of the Sun, the tribe appointed to pro- duce the Christ. To the ascension of this constellation, preparing, as it were, the Way of the Divine Virgin, the prophecy of Israel in Genesis refers:— “Juda is a strong lion ; my son, thou art gone up. The sceptre shall not be taken away from Juda till the coming of the Messenger — or Shiloh — the expectation of the nations.” And not only does the chief Bishop of the Church bear this significant name of the “Lion,” but he is also the thirteenth of that name, and Thirteen is the number of the Woman and of the lunar cycle, the number of Isis and of the Microcosm. It is the number which indicates the fulness of all things, and the consummation of the “Divine Marriage,” the At-one-ment of Man and God. Moreover the Arms of Leo XIII. represent a Tree on a Mount, between two triune Lilies, and in the dexter chief point a blazing Star; with the motto “ Mumen in Calo.” LEct. VI.] 7THAE AEA LZ. I69 What is this tree but the Tree of Life ; these Lilies but the Lilies of the new Annunciation,--of the Ave which is to reverse the curse of Eza 2 What star is this, if not the Star of the second Advent? History repeats itself only because all history is already written in “heaven.” 40. For the signs of the Zodiac, or of the “Wheel of Life,” as the name signifies, are not arbitrary, they are the Words of God traced on the planisphere by the finger of God, and first expressed in intelligible hieroglyphs by men of the “Age of Saturn,” who knew the truth, and held the Key of the Mysteries. The Wheel of the Zodiac thus constituted the earliest Bible; for on it is traced the universal history of the whole Humanity. It is a mirror at once of Past, Present, and Future; for these three are but modes of the Eternal NOW, which, philosophically, is the only tense. And its twelve signs are the twelve Gates of the heavenly City of religious science, the Kingdom of God the Father. 41. The philosophy of the day, unable, through its igno- rance of the soul, to solve the riddle of the Zodiac, con- cludes that all sacred history is a mere tissue of fables, framed in accordance with the accidental forms of the con- stellations. But, as the Initiate knows, these signs are written on the starry chart because they represent eternal verities in the experience of the soul. They are the pro- Cesses or acts of the soul, under individuation in Man. And so far from being ascribed to Man because written in the Zodiac, they were written in the Zodiac because re- cognised as occurring in humanity. In the Divine order, pictures precede written words as the expressions of ideas. The planisphere of the Zodiac is thus a picture-bible; and the images embodied in it have controlled the expression of all written Revelation. 17o 7A/E PERATECT WA Y. PART V. 42. This discourse was closed for the writer by a vision, an account of which will form an equally fitting conclusion for the reader. This vision was as follows:— A golden chalice, like those used in Catholic rites, but having three linings, was given to me by an Angel. These linings, he told me, signified the three degrees of the heavens,—purity of life, purity of heart, and purity of doctrine. Immediately afterwards, there appeared a great dome-covered temple, Moslem in style, and on the thresh- old of it a tall Angel clad in linen, who with an air of command was directing a party of men engaged in destroy- ing and throwing into the street numerous crucifixes, bibles, prayer-books, altar-utensils, and other sacred emblems. As I stood watching, somewhat scandalised at the apparent sacrilege, a Voice at a great height in the air cried with startling distinctness, “All the idols he shall utterly destroy l’ Then the same Voice, seeming to ascend still higher, cried to me, “Come hither and see l’” Immediately it appeared to me that I was lifted up by my hair and carried above the earth. And suddenly there arose in mid-air the apparition of a man of majestic aspect, in an antique garb, and sur- rounded by a throng of prostrate worshippers. At first the appearance of this figure was strange to me; but while I looked intently at it, a change came over the face and dress, and I thought I recognised Buddha,_ the Messiah of India. But scarcely had I convinced myself of this, when a great Voice, like a thousand voices shouting in unison, cried to the worshippers: “Stand upright on your feet — Worship God only l’ And again the figure changed, as though a cloud had passed before it, and now it seemed to assume the shape of Jesus. Again, I saw the kneeling LECT. VI.] THE AEA CAE. 171 adorers, and again the mighty Voice cried, “Arise ! worship God only 1” The sound of this Voice was like thunder, and I noted that it had seven echoes. Seven times the cry reverberated, ascending with each utterance, as though mounting from sphere to sphere. Then suddenly I fell through the air, as though a hand had been withdrawn from sustaining me: and again touching the earth, I stood within the temple I had seen in the first part of my vision. At its east end was a great altar, from above and behind which came faintly a white and beautiful Light, the radiance of which was arrested and obscured by a dark curtain sus- pended from the dome before the altar. And the body of the temple, which, but for the curtain, would have been fully illumined, was plunged in gloom, broken only by the fitful gleams of a few half-expiring oil-lamps, hanging here and there from the vast cupola. At the right of the altar stood the same tall Angel I had before seen on the temple threshold, holding in his hand a smoking censer. Then, observing that he was looking earnestly at me, I said to him : “Tell me, what curtain is this before the Light, and why is the temple in darkness?” And he answered, “This veil is not One, but Three ; and the Three are Blood, Idolatry, and the Curse of Eve. And to you it is given to withdraw them. Be faithful and courageous; the time has come.” Now the first curtain was red, and very heavy; and with a great effort I drew it aside, and said, “I have put away the veil of blood from before Thy Face. Shine, O Lord God l’ But a Voice from behind the folds of the two remaining coverings answered me, “I cannot shine, because of the idols.” And lo, before me a curtain of many colours, woven about with all manner of images, crucifixes, madonnas, Old and New Testaments, prayer-books, and other religious symbols, some strange and hideous like the 172 7THE PERA'EC 7" LP.A V. idols of China and Japan, some beautiful like those of the Greeks and Christians. And the weight of the curtain was like lead, for it was thick with gold and silver embroideries. But with both hands I tore it away, and cried, “I have put away the idols from before Thy Face. Shine, O Lord God l’ And now the Light was clearer and brighter. But yet before me hung a third veil, all of black; and upon it was traced in outline the figure of four Lilies on a single stem inverted, their cups opening downwards. And from behind this veil, the Voice answered me again, “I cannot shine, because of the curse of Eve.” Then I put forth all my strength, and with a great will rent away the curtain, crying, “I have put away her curse from before Thee. Shine, O Lord God!” And there was no more a veil, but a landscape, more glorious and perfect than words can paint, a Garden of absolute beauty, filled with trees of palm, and olive, and fig, rivers of clear water and lawns of tender green ; and distant groves and forests framed about by mountains crowned with snow; and on the brow of their shining peaks a rising Sun, whose light it was I had seen behind the veils. And about the Sun, in mid-air hung white misty shapes of great Angels, as clouds at morning float above the place of dawn. And beneath, under a mighty tree of cedar, stood a white elephant, bearing in his golden houdah a beautiful woman robed as a queen, and wearing a crown. But while I looked, entranced, and longing to look for ever, the garden, the altar, and the temple were carried up from me into Heaven. Then as I stood gazing upwards, came again the Voice, at first high in the air, but falling earthwards as I listened. And behold, before me appeared the white pinnacle of a minaret, and around and beneath it the sky was all gold and red with the glory of LECT. VI.] 7A/A2 FAZ.Z. 173 the rising Sun. And I perceived that now the voice was that of a solitary Muezzin standing on the minaret with uplifted hands and crying:— “Put away Blood from among you ! Destroy your Idols Restore your Queen 1 ° And straightway a Voice, like that of an infinite multitude, coming as though from above and around and beneath my feet,_a Voice like a wind rising upwards from caverns under the hills to their loftiest far-off heights among the stars, responded,— “Worship God alone !”1 1 See Appendices, No. III., Part 2. LECTURE THE SEVENTH. THE FALL (Wo. II.). PART I. I. OUR subject is again the cataclysmal event mystically called the Fall of Man. Before entering upon it, we will recapitulate briefly what has been said respecting the nature of man. As already explained, this is fourfold. This fourfold nature is itself included in a dual personality, Consisting of male and female, Reason and Intuition, Man is, in this sense, a twofold being. But the masculine moiety comprises the dualism of Sense and Intellect; and the feminine moiety, the dualism of Soul and Perception. 2. Owing to this duality of his constitution, every doc- trine relating to Man has, primarily, a dual significance and application. And owing to his fourfoldness, it has also, secondarily, a fourfold significance and application. The interpretation, therefore, of any doctrine must, to be complete, be at the least twofold. And since there is between the inner and outer spheres of man's being an exact correspondence, by virtue of which, whatever subsists or occurs in the one sphere has its counterpart in the other, the terms which describe the one apply also to the other; and no interpretation or application is complete which may not include both spheres. 3. Thus it comes—to quote a fragment of Hermetic derivation—that:— X74 LECT. VII.] THAE FAIZ. I75 “All Scriptures which are the true Word of God, have a dual interpretation, the Intellectual and the Zntuitional, the Apparent and the Hidden. “A or nothing can come forth from God save that which is fruitful. “As is the nature of God, so is the Word of God's Mouth. “The Zetter alone is barren ; the Spirit and the Zetter give Zife. “Aut that Scripture is the more excellent which is exceed. ing fruitful, and brings forth abundant signification. “Aror God is able to say many things in one ; as the perfect Ovary contains many seeds in its Chalice. “Therefore there are in the Scriptures of God's Word, certain Writings which, as richly yielding Trees, bear more abundantly than others in the self-same holy Garden. “And one of the most exce/lent is the Parable of the Fall, which, as a stream parted into four branches, has a four ſold /head, and is a word exceeding rich.” For a parable it is, and not a history, as ordinarily understood, but having a hidden, that is, a mystic mean- ing;-a parable, moreover, which, while founded indeed upon a particular fact, is true for all time, in that it is perpetually being enacted. Being thus, the Parable of the Fall constitutes an Eternal Verity. 4. The opening chapters of the sacred books exhibit, then, not merely events occurring in, and having relation to, a particular place or time, but the meaning and object of religion at large, the creation of man, the nature of sin, and the method of salvation ; and all these as perpetually subsisting. These chapters constitute thus a kind of argument or abstract prefixed to the divine drama of man's spiritual history. And the key to their intepretation is the word NOW. 176 7A7A. AEA2A’AºA2C 7' W.A. V. 5. For, in the Divine Mind, there is no past, in the Divine economy, no future. God is I AM, and always IS. The term Jehovah combines in one word the tenses past, present, and future of the verb I AM. Scripture is a record of that which is always taking place. Thus, the Spirit of God, which is original Life, is always moving upon the face of the waters, or heavenly deep, which is original Sub- stance. And the One, which consists of these two, is always putting forth alike the Macrocosm of the universe and the Microcosm of the individual, and is always making man in the image of God, and placing him in a garden of innocence and perfection, the garden of his own unso- phisticated nature. And man is always ſalling away from that image and quitting that garden for the wilderness of sin, being tempted by the serpent of sense, his own lower element. And from this condition and its consequences he is always being redeemed by the blood of the sacrifice always being made for him by the Christ Jesus, who is Son at once of God and of man, and is always being born of a pure virgin;–dying, rising, and ascending into heaven. 6. For these are, one and all, mystic terms denoting facts of perpetual recurrence in the history of the Soul, and necessary to salvation. It depends, however, upon the sense in which they are understood, whether they minister to salvation or to condemnation. The letter, it is declared, killeth ; the letter and the spirit together have and confer life. For, while interpreted in one sense—the sense of the spirit—they are divine truths ; interpreted in another sense —the sense of the letter—they are idolatrous falsehoods. And inasmuch as idolatry consists in the materialisation of spiritual mysteries, and the substitution for the true things signified, of their material symbols; those interpre- tations are idolatrous which give to mystical doctrines LECT. VII.] 7"HE FAZAZ. 177 physical applications. Now, all Scripture given by inspira- tion of God is mystical; and, in its esoteric sense, deals not with material things, but with spiritual realities, the mystic intention of the things named being alone implied, and by no means the things themselves. And this rule holds good alike of those two divisions of Scripture which are called respectively the Old and the New Testament. 7. In accordance, then, with the fourfold constitution of existence, the Parable of the Fall has a fourfold significa- tion. But, inasmuch as that which is true of the race is true also of the individual, and that which is true of the individual is true also of the race, each portion of the fourfold signification has a twofold application, namely, to the race and to the individual. For each alike it is true on the planes spiritual, moral, intellectual, and physical. And it is constructed in terms derived from this last, because only thus it can find on any plane universal recognition ; since the physical is the universal mirror of the unmanifest, and is the only medium capable of reflect- ing at once all the three planes above itself. Thus repre- sented in terms derived from the physical, it possesses a meaning for all, if only as an allegory of the Seasons, for— having an astronomical basis—such it also is. 8. So far, however, from being intended to represent the actual natural history, either of the planet or of man, or to be what now-a-days it is the fashion to call scientific, it is so contrived as to make that history appear to be the reverse of what it really is. For, read by the super- ficial sense, it represents man as created perfect from the first, by a power working from without ; whereas, the truth is, that he is created by gradual development from rudimentary being, by a power—the Divine Spirit—work- ing from within. For this is ever the method of the N 178 7 H.A. AERAAEC 7' W.A. Y. Divine procedure, and it is this that the parable really implies. 9. But only when it is understood what the mystic books mean by Man, does the true meaning appear. And as, until this is understood, it is vain to attempt to interpret those books, a definition of the term Man, as therein em- ployed, must be our first concern. A materialistic science, discerning only the outward appearance of things, and taking, therefore, no account of qualities, necessarily makes the Form all. Hence, for it, man is but a primate among the animals, and sufficiently defined under the terms Mammal, Biped, Bimamous, and the like. The notion that the form, to be valid, must be filled up, and that he who is man in form only, and is de- void of all the qualities, intellectual, moral, and spiritual, which are comprised in the term humanity, is not really man, is a notion which does not enter into the conception of the Materialist, Io. According to mystical doctrine, on the other hand, he who is human in form only, is but man rudimentary, and to be classed, in all essential respects, with those lower grades of humanity, the plants and animals. He has, like them, the potentiality only of humanity, and is no realised humanity. For, according to this doctrine, man's supreme function is knowledge ; so that he is not man until he knows, or, at least, has found his organon of knowledge, and is capable of knowing. Besides, the very term know- ledge, has, in this relation, a special meaning. For the mystic applies it only to the cognition which is of Realities. That alone for him is knowledge, which has for its subject the nature of Being, his own nature, that is, and God's; not phenomena merely, but Substance, and its method of oper- ation. And, forasmuch as, in order to have this knowledge, LECT. VII.] THE FA LL. 179 a man must have attained his spiritual consciousness, it follows that, according to mystical definition, man is not man until he has attained the consciousness of his spiritual nature. To attain this consciousness, and this alone, is to attain true manhood. And, prior to the attainment of this, the individual is but as an infant, incompetent to fulfil, or even to comprehend, the functions of manhood. II. The reason of this is, that man is a dual being, not masculine only or feminine only, but both of these ; not man only or woman only, but man and woman. And he is this in respect, not of his exterior and physical, but of his interior and spiritual nature. For, since humanity is dual, that which, being man, represents humanity, must be dual also. And this cannot be on the plane merely physical, whereon but one moiety only of the human dual- ism can be expressed in the same individual. On this plane it takes two persons, a man and a woman, to express the whole humanity. And it is by means of its two sexes that the body constitutes a symbol of the humanity which, in being interior and permanent, is alone the humanity which is real. 12. For, as already stated,—that whereby the man attains to manhood is woman. It is his power to recog nise, appreciate, and appropriate her, that stamps him, physically, man. She it is who, influencing him through the affections kindled by her in him, withdraws him from his outward and aimless course, in which, left to himself, he would sooner or later be dissipated and lost; and who, gathering him round herself as centre, redeems him and makes him into a system capable of self-perpetuation, supplementing and complementing meanwhile his mascu- line qualities, as will, force, and intellect, with her feminine qualities, as endurance, love, and intuition. Thus, by the 18O 7A7A: PERFEC7' W.A. V. -* addition of herself she makes him Man. It is not to the male moiety of the dualism constituted by them, that the term Man is, properly, applicable, any more than to the female moiety. Neither of them separately is Man ; and it is by an unfortunate defect of language that the masculine half of man is called a man." He is man male, as she is man female. And only when wedded, that is welded, into one by a perfect marriage, does Man result, the two together thus blended making one humanity,+as earth and water make one Earth, and by their power of self-perpetu- ation and multiplication demonstrating the completeness and perfection of their system. 13. Only because it is already so with Humanity on the inner plane, is it so on the outer. Whatever the sex of the person physically, each individual is a dualism, consisting of exterior and interior, manifested personality and essential individuality, body and soul, which are to each other mas- culine and feminine, man and woman ; he the without, and she the within. And all that the woman, on the planes physical and social, is to the man, that she is also on the planes intellectual and spiritual. For, as Soul and Intuition of Spirit, she withdraws him, physically and mentally, from dissipation and perdition in the outer and material; and by centralising and substantialising him redeems and crowns him;-from a phantom converting him into an entity, from I Much and serious misconception has arisen from the use of the same term to denote both the whole humanity and the masculine half of humanity. The confusion is identical with that which arises from , the use of the word Earth to denote both the entire globe of earth and water, and the solid portion only of the globe. As in its former sense earth and water are equally Earth, the one being as earth masculine, and the other as earth feminine, so man and woman are equally Man, the one being man masculine, and the other man feminine. For her as well as ſor him, the exterior personality is what mystically is called the “man,” and the interior being is the “woman.” LECT. VII.] THE FA C/. 181 a mortal into an immortal, from a man into a god. With- out her, it were better both for himself and for others that he should not be at all. On no plane of being is it good that the man-element be alone. For without Love, Force can but work evil until it be spent. And such is man and his doom until he finds and is found of her, the soul and woman within him. She is to him very “mother of the living,” and without her is no life. And she is this because she is, by her nature, that wherein the Divine Life resides. For, as the soul is the life of the man, so is the spirit, which is God, the life of the soul. Thus is she mediator between man and God, to draw them together in herself. And only he is truly alive, is truly Man, and made after the Divine Image, in whom she thus operates. Redeeming him from chaos and making him a Kosmos, she is the centripetal to his centrifugal, the attractive to his separative, the con- structive to his destructive, the synthesis to his analysis, the being to his seeming, the reality to his illusory. With her advent he begins to be ; and thenceforth, through her, he can claim kindred with the I AM. 14. Man, then, in our parable, is represented as created perfect in that he is, in the mystical sense, male and female, that is, he has a soul—anima divina—Superadded to his exterior personality,+anima bruta,-each of which is con- scious of the separate existence of each. Their attainment of this consciousness is represented under the allegory of the creation of the woman ; they first then begin to exist for each other. The time chosen for the attainment of this stage in their history, is an important element in the process. For it is the same for all men. It is not while engaged in the active exercise of his masculine qualities that man first becomes conscious of his other and better, because interior and divine, self. His aggressive and 182 7"A/A2 AERATEC 7" VA V. destructive tendencies must have been exhausted, and the animal in him, his own exterior self-in a word, the man part of him, cast into deep slumber, before the woman in him can reveal herself, and make him conscious of some- thing, or rather some one, within him, himself, yet differing from himself, and higher and better than anything he has before had or been. 15. Once recognised, and her reality and superiority ad- mitted, there is no height of goodness and knowledge to which she cannot raise him, if but only he follow her lead, and keep her free from defilement by Matter and Sense, the direct traffic with which appertains to him. In order properly to fulfil her function in regard to the man, and attract his regards upwards to her, she must herself aspire continually to the Divine Spirit within her, the central sun of herself, as she is that of the man. If, withdrawing her gaze from this, she fix it on things without and below, she falls, and in her fall takes him with her. Except through her, he cannot fall ; for only through her does he at all rise, being, by his very nature the lowermost, and of himself incapable of rising. For he rests on the material plane, and is of earth earthy. 16. It is not because Matter is in itself evil that the soul's descent into it constitutes a fall and ensures disaster. It is because to the soul, Matter is a forbidden thing. So that the act constitutes a disobedience. The prohibition, how- ever, is not an arbitrary one, but is founded in the soul's own nature, as also is the penalty attached to her trans- gression. Only by remaining spiritual substance can soul subsist as soul, having all the potentialities of soul. By quitting her own proper condition and descending into Matter, she takes upon herself the limitations of Matter. As between Spirit and Matter there is no boundary line, LECT. VII.] THE FAIL. 183 it is only by the maintenance of a will set exclusively spiritwards, that a soul can be held from subsiding into the lower condition of Matter, finally to disintegrate and perish. 17. Such a fall, it will be well to repeat, does not involve the loss of any portion of the divine Substance. The ani- mating spirit is withdrawn, and the constituent elements are separated. That only which perishes is the individuality constituted of these. And it perishes through its own per- sistent refusal of that “Gift of God” which is Eternal Life, the gift, namely, of a portion of God's Self or Spirit. Re- fusing this, man refuses life, as he is free to do. God rejects and annihilates no one. Man, by his rejection of God, annihilates his own individuality. And God cannot make man on any other terms. And this, for the reason that God is omnipotent. God would not be omnipotent were the individual indestructible. For then there would be something not God, possessing all the power of God. So that, instead of this doctrine being an impugnment of the Divine love and goodness, it is essential to these qualities. God, we have said, rejects and destroys nothing. But there is in things evil an element of self-destruction, in the opera- tion of which lies the safety of the universe. Were the fact otherwise, could individuals subsist for ever in a condition of opposition to the Divine will,—then would evil itself be eternised ; and the universe, divided against itself, would fall. And, on the other hand, were man not free to anni- hilate himself, but were salvation compulsory, existence, in- stead of being a solemn reality, would be a farce wherein man and the soul would be but mechanical puppets alto- gether unworthy a divine creation. By the law of Heredity, God's freedom involves man's freedom; and this involves the freedom to renounce God, and with God, all Being. 184 THE PERFEC 7" ſy,4 V. Thus is the saying true, “For him who will not have God, God is not.” 18. It is through the soul, and the soul only, that man learns the Divine will, and, learning it, saves himself. And the clearness with which the soul, on her part, discerns and transmits that will, depends upon her purity. In this word purity lies the essence of all religion. It is the burden of the whole Bible and of all bibles. Always is purity insisted on as the means to Salvation ; always impurity as the cause of condemnation. To this uniformity of doctrine the Par- able of the Fall is no exception. With the soul pure, man dwells in Eden and “sees God.” With the soul impure, he is driven forth into the Wilderness. Such, on the plane spiritual, is the operation of that great law of gravitation which—as has been said—is the one law of existence. Sal- vation and condemnation are matters of spiritual gravitation. Man tends towards or away from God—the Tree of Life— according to the specific gravity of his soul. Of this the density depends upon the nature of the affections culti- vated by him. And this, again, depends upon his own Will, which is free. Wherefore, in being the regulator of his own specific gravity, he is the arbiter of his own destiny; and according as he himself wills, he tends inwards and upwards to salvation, or outwards and downwards to extinction. Yielding to the Tempter Sense, and making Matter, not his means merely but his end, his soul loses at length her spiritual nature. Nevertheless, while there is life in her there is hope for him. But only through a return to purity. For only when she has regained her “virginity” and become “immaculate,” can the Christ—his saviour—be born of her. LECT. VII.] 7THE AWA/CAE. 185 PART II. 19. The full significance of the Parable under consider- ation, and the unity of the mystic Scriptures, become con- spicuously apparent when we collate their various corre- sponding utterances, as by taking into account those also of the Book of Revelation. For it is there that the doc- trine of the Woman receives its crowning recognition as the foundation of that true Christianity which those persist- ent suppressors of the woman—the world's materialising priesthoods—have so nearly extinguished. Let us, then, —though at the risk of some repetition—collate these two utterances, between the delivery of which so many thou- sands of years elapsed. 20. In creating Man, God creates one whole and perfect being, formed of two distinct parts, Adam the earthly, ex- terior man, and Eve the spiritual and interior man, his soul and “living mother.” These two are joined together by God in perfect union as one creature, and made, for the time, indispensable to each other. Adam, as the manifested personality or man, is not complete, that is, is not a man having Manhood, until Eve, the soul or woman, is added to him as helpmeet and guide. By the addition of her the two natures become one Humanity. 2 I. From this state of perfection Humanity soon falls. For Eve, the soul, withdrawing her steadfast gaze from the proper object of her regard, namely, her spirit, God, fastens them on things below, things earthly and material, which are to her the “forbidden fruit,” since her nature is spiritual. Beholding this fruit, and finding it pleasant to the eyes, she puts forth her hand and plucks of it, and gives of it to her husband, or Adam, to eat with her. 22. This is ever the history of sin. The exterior per- 186 7 H.A. AERFEC 7" ſy. A V. sonality cannot of itself sin, for it is not a responsible being. Sin is of the soul; and it comes of the soul's inclination to the things of sense. Taking of this fruit and enjoying it, she is said to eat it. And at her instigation “Adam ” does likewise. And thenceforth, instead of the soul operating within him to purify and enlighten him, and lead him up- wards towards the Spirit, together they become sensual and debased. And thus the sin, which has its commencement in the thought of the soul, afterwards becomes developed into action through the energy of the body or masculine part. 23. The sin consummated, the result is inevitable. Adam and his wife, the man and his soul, hear the voice of the Lord God speaking through their conscience. And sensible that they are no longer clad in the purity which alone en- ables man to face his Maker, they fly, as one caught naked, to hide from the Divine presence. Having rejected God, and no longer looking up to Him as her Lord and King, the soul, Eve, falls under the sway of Adam and the body. He rules her, and her desire is unto him : and thenceforth Matter has dominion in them over the spirit. The garden of perfection is lost, and the world becomes for them a wil- derness. 24. Meanwhile Adam, being interrogated by the Divine Voice, lays the blame upon Eve. For, but for the soul within him, the man had not known or been capable of committing sin; sin being possible only where there is a sense of right and wrong, which the soul alone possesses. Eve, interrogated in her turn, throws the blame on the serpent of Matter—sense, or the lower nature—through whose allurements she has fallen. It is no particular act that thus constitutes sin. And sin does not consist in fulfilling any of the functions of nature. Sin consists in LECT.VII.] 7THE AEA LA. 187 acting without or against the spirit, and in not seeking the divine sanction for everything that is done. For sin is not of the physical but of the spiritual man. And by the spirit the act is redeemed or condemned. It is sheer materialism and idolatry to regard an act as itself sinful. For to do this, is to invest that which is merely physical with a spiritual attribute. 25. The natural result of the soul's enslavement to Mat- ter is her liability to extinction. In her own nature the soul is immortal. That is, she does not partake the death which befalls the body, but survives to take on other bodies, and continues to do so until she has finally built up a spiritual man worthy and capable of enduring for ever. But the lower she sinks herself into Matter, the lower be- comes her vitality and power of recovery. So that unless she turn and mend, she must ultimately perish ; for she will lose altogether the Divine Spirit which is her necessary life. 26. Notwithstanding the soul's fall, then, there is still hope of recovery for man. She shall yet, she is divinely assured, “crush the serpent's head.” Not her seed only, but herself-the soul,-when fully restored. For this is the true rendering, both in the Hebrew Scriptures and in the far older Bible of the Zodiac-that indefeasible prophecy of the soul's history. So that she who has been the cause of the fall, shall be the means also of redemption. “I will put enmity,” says God to the serpent, “between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed: She shall crush thy head, and thou shalt lie in wait for her heel.” For the fallen soul, retaining in some degree her spirituality, and recoiling from a merely material estimate of things, constitutes in the man a constant protest against his en- grossment by his lower nature. It is, therefore, of the soul, restored to her pure estate, and not of the body and its I88 7THE AAERAAEC 7' W.A V. animal propensities, that the redeemed man must be born. The first Adam is of the earth, earthy, and liable to death. The second is “from heaven,” and triumphant over death. For “sin has no more dominion over him.” He, therefore, is the product of a soul purified from defilement by Matter, and released from subjection to the body. Such a soul is called virgin. And she has for spouse, not Matter—for that she has renounced—but the Divine Spirit, which is God. And the man born of this union is in the image of God, and is God made man ; that is, he is Christ, and it is the Christ thus born in every man who redeems him and endows him with eternal life. For in him the man becomes transmuted from Matter into Spirit. He is the man him- self, by regeneration become a son at once of man and of God. Generation, degeneration, regeneration,-in these three terms is comprised the whole process of the soul's history. 27. This triumphant consummation of the soul's course is thus celebrated in the Apocalypse. “I beheld,” says the seer, “a great wonder in heaven: a woman clothed with the sun, having the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars.” This is the soul invested with the light of Supreme knowledge attained through the experiences undergone in the long series of her past exist- ences; standing on the moon as victor over materiality and firm in the faith of a full intuition,-states denoted re- spectively by the dark and light portions of the moon; and superior evermore to the changes and chances of mortal destiny, the stars which represent this being the jewels of her crown, each of them denoting one of the “twelve la- bours ” necessary to be endured by the soul on her path to her final perfectionment, and the spiritual gifts and graces acquired in the process. LECT. VIII 7THA. A.A LZ. 189 28. Of the woman or soul thus exalted, the offspring is a “man-child,” who is persecuted by the “serpent” of the lower world. It is a man-child for several reasons. First, because it represents the good deeds, and not intentions or thoughts merely, but actual works and positive fruits of a soul overshadowed by the Divine Spirit, and fertilised by the Divine Love. In the origination of such deeds, the outer nature or man can have no part; they proceed wholly from the soul or woman. And they constitute a man-child, because deeds imply an exercise of the masculine element of force. And they are necessary to salvation, not because they themselves can save, but because they indicate the redemption of the individual who performs them. Faith and holy longing are feminine, and of themselves insufficient. They must be supplemented by works—which are mas- culine—in order to win acceptance in God's sight. “For the man is not without the woman, nor the woman without the man, in the Lord.” And “the Lord ” means and is the whole humanity of man and woman, as subsisting in the Divine Idea. Without the child, therefore, and this a man- child, the allegory would have been incomplete. 29. Now the good deeds thus engendered are the special aversion of the devil, or principle of evil, since, more than all else, they endanger his kingdom. Hence he is repre- sented as seeking to annihilate both them and the soul which has given them birth. But though the soul must yet remain in the world to endure trial and persecution until the time comes for God to end her probation and call her to her final joy with Himself, it is not so with her offspring ; but this is forthwith caught up to God and His throne. For, the good deed once wrought cannot be destroyed ; but God accepts and preserves it, and the devil has no power over it. Wherefore the latter, finding it useless to pursue 190 7/VE AEA, RFECT WA V. the man-child, redoubles his efforts against the soul, and pours forth a flood of temptations, in order, if possible, to sweep her from God's sight. She, however, though still in the “wilderness” of the flesh, is divinely sustained and de- livered. The rest of her seed, the good deeds she con- tinues to bring forth, are still the subject of persecution, until the dragon is finally overcome through what mystically is called the Blood of the Lamb, which is the pure doctrine and life whereby the elect are made sons of God and heirs of eternal life. 30. In the final exaltation which awaits her as the reward of her faithfulness, the woman, or soul, is described as ar- rayed by God in the white linen of righteousness, the emblem of perfect purity, and given to be the bride of His “only son,” Christ Jesus. This is the man perfected through experience of suffering, and made regenerate through following his soul's pure intuition of God. And he is called the “only son,” not because he is a single in- dividual, but because only he is so designated who comes up to this description. He always is a son of God, who is the product, not of a soul defiled by contact of Matter, but of a soul pure and vitalised of the Spirit. The character or “man” thus reborn is an “only begotten son of God,” be- cause God begets none of any other kind. Of men such as this are the “saints" who “inherit the earth.” And under their rule, the “New Jerusalem,” or state of perfec- .tion, which “cometh down from heaven,”—the city which has God for its sun, and which has no temple, because every man is himself a house of God, replaces the lost garden of Eden. 31. Side by side with this epitome of the history of the pure and faithful soul, the allegory traces that of the per. verse soul, under the type of an abandoned woman who Lect. VII.] 7 HE FAZZ. 191 sits upon the “seven hills” of the “seven deadly sins,” and allies herself in wickedness with the “kings of the earth.” That is, who yields wholly to the promptings of the lower nature, and accepts in all its grossness and cruelty a civilisa- tion merely materialistic, in which the body is made all, and the spirit and every divine principle are set at nought. 32. The completeness of the parable in Genesis appears yet more distinctly when we compare the curse pronounced on Adam with man's actual condition in material respects. The sentence in its proper integrity, runs thus:—“And unto Adam God said, Because thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife when beguiled of the devil, and hast eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee, saying, Thou shalt not eat of it: cursed is the ground for thy sake; in sorrow shalt thou eat of it all the days of thy life; thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat, instead of the nobler fruit of the tree which grows spontaneously, the grosser herb of the field which requires laborious cultivation. For, in the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground out of which thou wast taken : for dust thou art, and unto dust shalt thou return.” This is, God said to the bodily nature of man : “Because thou hast yielded to the solicitations of thy mate, the soul, when, turning from God, she inclined to Matter, and from being spiritual became sensual, thou must lead a hard and painful life, occupied by ignoble cares, and return by death to the lower elements to perish. Thy mate, meanwhile, though also liable to perish, shall still have long endurance, but henceforth—until finally purified and redeemed—shall bring forth her works, as the slave of the body, in great trouble and compunction for her fallen and degraded condition.” I 92 s. 7THE PERFECT WA Y. PART III. 33. All the mistakes made in Biblical interpretation come of referring statements of which the intention is spi- ritual and mystical, implying principles or states, to times, persons, or places. But though these are never the essen- tial element in any such statement, it is, nevertheless true that the Bible parables are either based upon certain special historical facts, or are stated in terms derived from actual occurrences; just as a hieroglyphical record is expressed in symbols drawn from the animal world, and yet has no refer- ence to that world ; so that the spiritual significations im- plied are not without a correspondence of some sort on the natural plane. 34. Now, the special historical fact upon the lines of which the parable of the Fall is constructed, is one which— already implied in the account just given of the soul in- dividual of man—is to be sought in the history of the soul collective of man,—in the history, that is, of the Church, an account of the Fall in relation to which will occupy the rest of this lecture. Sacerdotalism has always claimed for the Church the distinction of being the mystic woman through whose exaltation redemption occurs. But it has never re- cognised the Church as also the woman through whose fall comes the need of redemption. This reproach the priest has bestowed in a quarter in which originally there was no idea of bestowing it, and where it by no means belongs, namely, the feminine moiety of the human race. Yet, not- withstanding this assumption of sacerdotalism, it is to the fall of the Church from the standard attained in the Edenic period, that, in one of its aspects, the parable refers. 35. Even so, however, the interpretation is not to be re- stricted to any single or special instance. It is only as a LecT. VII.] 7THE FA CI. 193 type of all Churches that the first or best Church is em- ployed, precisely as the soul of the first or best man may be employed as a type of all souls. And any less general application would deprive the parable of its due place as an eternal and universal verity, and reduce it to the level of the merely historical and local. 36. Nor, in likening all Churches one to another in respect of their fall, is it intended to assimilate them in respect of the height from which they have fallen. All that is meant is, that, whatever the level of spiritual perfec- tion attained by any mystic community or Church in the full flush of its enthusiasm and purity, there is always a fall from such level, and the fall is due to one and the self. same cause, namely, that which is implied in the parable of Eden, and of which account has just been given in relation to the soul as individual. For of the soul's fall, whether in one or in many, the cause is always the same, the inclination to Matter. 37. The rise also is the same, both in cause and in method. And it is of this—the rise, that is, of the earliest known—perhaps the original—Church of Christ—that we have first to speak. This, as with man himself, was by evolution from rudimentary being. For the doctrine of creation by evolution is, as already stated, a true doctrine ; and it is true as regards both man's physical and man's spiritual history. And it has been the doctrine of Mysti- cism from the beginning, the knowledge of it being re- served for initiates of a high grade. But between it and the travesty of it propounded by the science—wholly material- istic—of our day, is this essential difference. That science, —“falsely so called,”—in its ignorance of the nature of Substance, credits Matter with a power of evolution while denying to it the properties through which alone evolu- O 194 THE PEA’AºEC 7' W.A. Y. tion can occur, namely, inhering life and consciousness. This science, moreover, contemplates as possible the de- velopment of that which, being infinite and eternal, is necessarily all-perfect in perpetuity, namely, the substance of existence. For mysticism, on the contrary, existence— or, more properly, Being—and consciousness are terms synonymous and interchangeable; and all Substance, under whatever mode manifested, continues still to be, in some mode, consciousness. And inasmuch as Substance itself is incapable of development, in the sense of becoming more or better than it originally is, development is not of the qualities of substance, but of the manifestation of those qualities in individuated portions of it, a process which— consisting in the unfoldment of qualities already subsisting, but latent—may fairly be designated evolution. 38. The man spiritual, like the man physical,—the Church, like the world, then, represents a development from rudimentary being, occurring in virtue of the nature of the substance of which that being represents the pro- jection ; and the only difference between them is of degree or stage of development. And whereas the lowest or ma- terial plane is that wherein the process commences, the highest and last to be attained is the celestial. According to the degree in which he attains this, man attains the divine and is at one with God, having, in virtue of the knowledge thus derived, power “over things in heaven and things on earth,”—power, that is, over both regions, the spiritual and the material, of his own nature, and being altogether superior to the seductions of the illusory astral which lies between. - 39. This celestial sphere was attained by the Edenic Church in a degree never reached by any other. Where- fore, since that alone is such a Church in which it is LECT. VII.] 7THE A*AL/C. 195 attained, no Church which has subsequently existed has been truly Edenic; but all have been Churches of the Fall. In Eden alone was man made in the “image of God,” being called in token thereof, Adam and Eve. Then was the first man, according to the mystical definition of the term. Men and women, indeed, had subsisted on the earth for ages before him; but not man properly so called. They were—as the vast majority of men and women still are— man only in the making, or, it may be, in the marring. Man attains manhood and becomes Man, only when he reaches his spiritual majority. The attainment of the celestial did not, and does not, involve the abandonment of the terrestrial. The not uncommon notion, that man in his primal perfection was a non-material or fluidic being, having no material body, is erroneous. Man, while yet in the body, attained “power over the body”; from fixed, making it volatile, and, though not immortal, capable of an indefinitely prolonged existence, its vitality meanwhile being such as not only to render it superior to disease and injury in itself, but as to enable it to communicate health to others. These results, however, stupendous as they would now be deemed,—did not exhaust the potentialities of our race. There is a superior stage of which account will be given when we come to treat particularly of the redemption, and which belongs to a period of development transcending that of the Adamic man. Nevertheless, though not realising all the possibilities of humanity, the Edenic Church attained, in its representative members, as no other religious community has attained. And it was through that Church's failure to continue at the same high level, that the fall whereof we are treating, occurred. By this fall, man receded from the celestial back towards his original level, the terrestrial, becoming once more subject 196 7 HE PEA FEC 7' W.A. Y. to Matter, and losing the power over his body. There was no fall on the part of the individuals themselves who had risen. These quitted the earth and passed on to higher conditions of being. The Fall came through the failure of the succeeding generations to attain the level reached by their predecessors. Failing to attain, like them, the celestial, man remained — where, with a few individual exceptions, he has ever since been—in the astral and material. 4o. Let us attempt a description of that inmost sphere— the abode of the man celestial—which is at once the source of doctrine and the sphere wherein—as representative of the soul and intuition—the woman especially presides. It is a memory that we are about to recall, a memory re- covered of an age not absolutely but relatively “golden,” to revisit which in thought, is to revert to a period in the world's youth, when, as yet unpoisoned by all-pervading sin and disease, the conditions of life were so exquisite in their purity and harmony, as to make existence itself a positive, intense delight. And while in the act of recover- ing that memory, and enjoying again that remote past, the mind is able to look forward as well as backward, and to behold the whole subsequent period of the world's course— that which is called the historical period—as but a season —brief compared with that which preceded it—of sickness and suffering which the race, by its own fault, has brought upon itself; but from which, it seems, rescue is not impossi- ble, can humanity but furnish the love needful for the task of saving itself. For in those hyper-lucid moments it is made to appear as a self-evident truth, that just as it has been possible for us in the past to live healthily and happily, it will be possible for us to do so in the future. For LECT. VII.] 7THE FAZZ. 197 Utopia is Utopia only for those who insist that it shall for ever be Utopia and unrealised. There is no force in the universe save will-force; and all that life needs for life is possible to will. And, continuing to operate over an in- definite period, even a finite will becomes infinite. Where- fore man has but to will long enough, to make the world as he would have it. But to will is not merely to wish, but to work towards the desired end. It is for the woman in us to wish, and therein to prompt. She is the inspirer. But the man in us must work. He is the executor. Apart, powerless; together, they can move the world. He and She, Will and Love, Spirit and Substance, operating in the celestial, created the world ; and assuredly they can redeem it. 41. That which we propose to describe, so far as the attempt to reconstruct it has been successful, -is the inner- most sphere, not, indeed, of the mystic community of Eden itself, but of one of those ancient successors of and approxi- mations to it, which, as Colleges of the Sacred Mysteries, were the true heirs of Eden, and which, so recently even as by Plato, were described as places wherein were repaired the effects of the Fall, and to quit which for the outer world was to quit once more the garden for the wilderness. Once accessible to all, so completely now has the true character of these institutions fallen from remembrance, that even scholars write them down as instruments of imposture and oppression, and devoid of special knowledge or faculty. Wherefore to recover them is to re-create them ;-no small task, seeing that the way to them, even in thought, is barred and banned by all the priesthoods, so that only by facing and piercing the formidable phalanx of sacerdo- talism itself, can the forbidden ground of those lost para- dises be even approached. 198 THE PAEA'A'EC 7' W.4 V. 42. For—as recorded in classic legend— the golden fruit of a perfect doctrine and life, produced on the union of Zeus and Hera, the man and woman of the substantial humanity,+is guarded not only by the dragon of man's own lower nature, but also by the “daughters of the sun- set,”—the world's materialistic sacerdotalisms. And these, together with dragon and sword of flame, keep watch and ward, lest any, re-entering the closed garden, may find, and pluck, and eat, and know, and, knowing, have life in himself, needing no assistance of priest. And so fierce and vigilant is the watch kept, that only a Heracles—or man already half divine—can succeed in piercing or evading the formidable phalanx. - 43. Let us suppose this done, and the priestly lines safely passed and left behind. Traversing the broad belt which divides these lines from the wished-for centre, the seeker descries at length a Mount, towards the summit of which the sky appears to dip, so that by the meeting of the two a junction is formed between the earth and heaven. Thus does it appear to the interior vision, with which, to be a successful follower of such quest, the seeker must be endowed. That which he finds on reaching the Mount, is a community of beings, of both sexes, to the ordinary eyes human, but to the interior divine also. And the life they lead—though outwardly quiet, grave, uneventful, and, as some would deem it, even ascetic—in reality throbs with intensest vitality, abounds in enterprise the most lofty, and brims with keenest satisfaction. For, of this community the members are, of all mankind, the profoundest of intelli- gence, widest of culture, ripest of experience, tenderest of heart, purest of soul, maturest of spirit. They are persons who—using life without abusing it, and having no perverse will to the outer—have learnt all that the body has to teach, LECT. VII.] 7THE A* AL/C. 199 and who, rising above earth by the steadfast subordination of their lower, and exaltation of their higher nature, have at length—to use their own most ancient and significant phrase—crucified in themselves the flesh, and thereby made of their bodies instruments, instead of masters, for their souls, and means of expression, instead of sources of limitation, for their spirits. Thus rising above the earth, they have drawn down heaven to meet them; and, like the revolving rain-cloud of tropic seas, formed a pillar of communication between the spheres upper and nether. 44. An Order, or School, do these compose, whereof the initiates, while honouring the man as the heir of all things, —if only he be lawfully begotten and be a true child of the Spirit, especially champion the woman, by exalting her within themselves to share supremacy with the man, making themselves at once man and woman. For together with the intellect, they cherish also the intuition, together with the head, the heart, and combining in all things love with will, make it their one object to enable the substance of their humanity to attain in them the full manifestation of its qualities. Practisers as well as preachers of the doctrine of creation by development, and—withheld by no prepos- session or prejudice—fearless followers of thought to its extremest spheres in every direction, they are the earth's sole genuine evolutionists and free-thinkers; and to them alone, and those who, affiliated to them, know and follow their method, it is given, while in the body, to live the life of the spirit; to reach their intellectual manhood; to com- plete the system of their thought, and find certitude of truth even the highest ; to attain the supreme common Sense of all the spheres and modes of being in which substance is wont to be manifested; and, in a word, to be taught of the informing Spirit Itself of the universal 2OO THE AERAEA2C 7' W.A. V. ... --" humanity, all the mysteries of that kingdom which, being within, is the counterpart of and sole key to that which is without. 45. Of all who attain eminence in this School—and these have been, and haply shall yet again be, many—the motive is one and the history one. For the motive is the love of perfection, for the sake, not of self only, but of perfection. And this is a goal which, pursued as these pursue it, con- tinues ever to rise, and draws the pursuer after it. And the history is that of the soul. For, as the soul is one, so also is her history one. 46. From this order, wherever established, have pro- ceeded, as from a central sun, all the light and heat of knowledge and goodness which, distributed through faithful priesthoods, have ministered towards the world's redemp- tion from utter ignorance and barbarism to such degree of humanity as it has reached. From the germs of truth and beauty, in doctrine and conduct, idea and practice, thus originated, and transferred to various soils, has sprung all that the world has of true philosophy, morality, art, science, civilisation, religion. And in so far as the products have been lacking in excellence, the fault has been due, not to the original seed, but to the soil and to the husband- {{\621). - 47. How stubborn that soil, and how inefficient or faith- less those husbandmen, may be inferred from the fact that rarely, since history began, has the Order found in the smallest degree the recognition and gratitude its due. But, on the contrary, whenever, in a period of degradation so extreme that humanity itself seemed in its death-throe, and instead of men the earth bore monsters, one of its mem- bers has quitted his loved seclusion and, descending from his own celestial “Mount” into the world below, has sought LECT. VII.] 7THE FAZA. 2OI by conduct and precept to afford an example of what humanity has in it to be, he has by the world he sought to rescue been subjected to persecution and affront, and in the official guardians of the doctrine he represented and would have regenerated, has found his bitterest foes. 48. Long vanished from human view, the Order has been replaced by semblances, mechanical merely and void of vitality; and for lack both of the knowledge and of the materials, incompetent to build up a single specimen of humanity after its perfected pattern. Nevertheless the true order still survives, though dwindled in numbers and no longer having organisation or appliance due ; but as “a people scattered and peeled,” lost tribes of a spiritual Israel, whose roll call is no more on earth. Once known and supremely honoured by the titles of Magi, Wise Men, Kings of the East, and Sons of God, its initiates are now mis- known and supremely contemned under the designation of Mystics. Yet, notwithstanding the uncongenial climate and evil entreaty of a civilisation become wholly materialistic, these still pursue—unknown for the most part even to each other—their ancient vocation ; and still is this, as of old, the Gnosis, or Divine Science. For its subject is the Sub- stance of the universal Humanity, and its object is the attainment of personal perfection. 49. Of all earthly Orders, this, by reason of its antiquity, its universality, its objects, and its achievements, is incom- parably the most notable, seeing that from it have pro- ceeded all the world’s true sages, saints, seers, prophets, redeemers, and Christs; and through it all divine revela- tion. And its doctrine is that one true doctrine of ex- istence, and therein of religion, which—always in the world—is now for the first time in its history published to the world in language comprehensible by the world 5– 2O2 7A/E PERFECT WA Y. * -º-º: having, it is confidently believed, been recovered in the way in which it was originally received. FART IV. 5.o. It remains to speak of the cause and manner of the fall from a level so lofty, from a rule so beneficent. The truth is, that the world fell only because the Church fell. And the Church, or collective soul of Humanity, fell, as does the individual soul, by looking less and less upward to God, and more and more downward to Matter. Cataclysmal as the result may appear when viewed in the totality of its effects and from a distance of time, the declension was very gradual, and extended over many generations. It may thus be compared to a diminution of agricultural produce, such as occurs through the gradual impoverishment of the soil. The spiritual possibilities of the race had, as it were, exhausted themselves. Or it may be likened to a recession of the tides of the sea, and to the sea- sons of the year. For, until finally united to God by what, mystically, is called the Divine Marriage, man is subject to many fluctuations and alternations in respect of his spiritual condition. And instead of the wave of his spiritual life remaining always at high water, it falls back to rise in another tide,-a tide, it may be, as in this case, to culminate only after another creative “week” of man's spiritual forma- tion, of which every “day” should be a “thousand years.” In the sense and manner ordinarily supposed, mankind never fell. Its fall was gradual as its rise. Under the ripening influence of a vast wave of spiritual light and heat, —to the production of which man himself had contributed his necessary quota, by voluntary co-operation with the Divine Spirit working within him, he attained the first LECT. VII.] 7THE FA LL. 2O3 great summer of his perfection, in the time and manner indicated in the parable of Eden and the legends of the Golden Age. Upon the subsidence of this wave—a sub- sidence due to himself—he fell from this summer back into the spiritual autumn and winter in which he has remained buried more or less deeply ever since. And now he is at the lowest depth compatible with any retention at all of existence. Another step in the same direction means for Humanity—in the mystical and true sense, and that is in every high sense—total extinction. 51. As with the Individual, so with the Race. The path of ascent from rudimentary being is also the path of descent when, through a perverse will to the outer, descent occurs. Man rose into man, and attained the full image of God, through the culture of the woman within him. Repre- senting his soul and intuition of God, she was his initiator into the knowledge of divine things. And led by the clear perceptions which are her special gift when duly tended and honoured, he learnt to shun idolatry—which is the prefer- ence for the Form over the Substance—and bloodshed (whether for soul or body), and with these whatever might serve to obscure or distort his conceptions of the Divine Character. Thus exalting the woman on the spiritual and intellectual planes of her manifestation in humanity, he exalted her also on the planes social and political ; and instead of seeing in her—as do the fallen philosophies and sacerdotalisms of all subsequent ages—a thing maimed and defective, and—however fair—a mistake and a blunder of Nature, to be classed with criminals, idiots, and children, and yet to be held responsible for all the evils of existence, —he regarded her as a later and higher development upon himself, and as, of the two, the nearer to God. And richly did she repay him for the preference, so long as it was 2O4. 7 HE AERATEC7' W.A. V. accorded to her. For through her he attained Paradise. But as, when pure and uncorrupted, the soul is man's initiator into things divine ; so when, turning towards the things of sense, the soul loses her purity, she becomes his initiator into things evil, and gives him of the fruit of forbidden knowledge, making him a “sinner,” which, but for the soul, he could not be. For “by the law is the knowledge of sin,” and the law is given to the soul. The Fall, therefore, when at length it came, came not through any individual person, woman or man, but through the fault of man, and was due to the fall of the woman in himself. Following her intuition of God, he had as- cended from the material, through the astral to the celestial, and became made in the “image of God.” Following her in her fall into Matter, he descended by the same way to where he now is, his path being one continuous track of agony, tears, and blood, due solely to the suppression within himself of the “woman.” 52. At once the cause and consequence of the Fall, the manifestation of this suppression is always threefold. The loss of the intuition means idolatry, and idolatry means murder. Each of these is a condition of the other. Losing his intuition of Spirit, man becomes Materialist, and instead of the spiritual idea, which alone is real, worships the visible symbol. That is, he ignores the soul and exalts the body of things. Exalting the body, he sacrifices all to the body, and sheds, for its gratification, innocent blood. Thus is he murderer as well as idolater. The woman in him falling, he becomes “Cain,” a cultivator of “the fruits of the ground” only, or lower nature, whence proceeds all evil. In other words, for a doctrine of love he substitutes a doctrine of selfishness. For this is the sin of which blood- shed is the symbol and outcome. { • * LECT. VII.] | THE FAIZI. - 205 53. Since these are the three steps of his descent, to reverse his practice in respect of them—in the Spirit as well as in the Letter—will be to reverse the Fall, and to remount once more to the celestial. Already has the move- ment begun in each regard. The position of woman on the lower planes is being rapidly revolutionised, and soon will be so also on the higher. Little, however, do most of those who are working to that end know what it means, and little will the end coincide with their anticipations. For many who in our day are pretending to “exalt the woman" are doing so by means subversive of her. And many even of the women who are seeking to exalt themselves, are doing so by the repression, rather than by the promotion, of their womanhood ; and this, by reason, not of their doing man's work, but of their doing it in man's evil fashion, leaving out the woman. Nevertheless, the woman shall be exalted. God will carry her to His throne, and “will make the wrath of man to praise Him.” The outcry, surely gathering volume and strength, against the slaughter and torture of our animal brethren, whether for use or for pleasure, is an- other token of entrance upon the upward path. It is not at the hands of those who kill or eat them, that the animals will be permitted to accept their salvation from the torturer. They who would redeem others must first make sacrifice in themselves. When this truth is understood, the redemp- tion of the animals will be at hand. And in respect of idolatry the prospect is even yet brighter. For the “Gospel of Interpretation ” has come, and the “letter which killeth’ is henceforth shorn of its strength. 54. Do we speak of signs P What sign more astounding could have been imagined than the modern phenomenon known as “Spiritualism " ? Herein man has already taken one whole step upward towards the celestial. For in 2O6 7THAE AERFA2CZ" WA P. “Spiritualism" he has quitted the exclusively material, and has actually entered the astral. Short of the celestial now he cannot stop. The very profundity of his dissatis- faction with his experiences of the astral, will compel him onwards. To this every “Spiritualist” will testify. Back- ward man dare not turn, to the merely material. For he has beheld in vivisection the abyss which confronts him there, and in healthy horror has recoiled from the bottomless pit therein disclosed, of the possibilities of his own lower nature. In vivisection the human is abandoned for the infernal. 55. The cry, then, is onward, upward, inward to the celestial. And happy will they be who first are uplifted thither, for they will surely draw all men up after them. Reversing the Fall and the Curse of Eve, they will lead Man to a new Golden Age, a new sabbath of Perfection, and the glories of the New Jerusalem, that true City of Hygieia, which cometh down from the heaven of his own pure Ideal. Thus will the divine Virgin Astraea—forced to quit earth when the Golden Age was no more—fulfil the promise of her return, bringing her progeny of divine sons, to redeem the world.” Thus, too, will Intuition and Intellect, as a new Esther and Mordecai, once more gain favour with the world, and, redeeming from oppression the true Israel, give the kingdom to the righteous. Moreover in these faculties, thus restored, will the “two "Apocalyptic “Witnesses” rise, as from the dead, in “the streets of the great City,” and “ascending into heaven,” reign supreme. And thus also will the dream of King Nebuchadnezzar find its fulfilment, and the Golden Image its destruction. For the Image is * Jam redit et Virgo, redeunt Saturnia regna, Jam nova progenies coelo dimittitur alto. Virgil, Eclog. IV. LECT. VII.] 7THE FAA. L. 207 the symbol of a civilisation whose head—or intellect—is golden, but whose body is of silver mixed with brass, and whose legs and feet are iron and clay ;-that is, which rests on Force and Matter. And the Stone, hewn with- out hands, which destroys it, is the Understanding, mani- fested in a new Word or Gospel of Interpretation, which, smiting the monster mis-called Civilisation, shall “scatter in pieces the iron, the clay, the brass, the silver, and the gold, and make them as the chaff of the summer threshing- floor.” But the “Stone” by which the Image is destroyed shall “become a great mountain, and fill the whole earth.” Becoming the “head corner stone,” by it the Great Pyramid of the standard Humanity shall be completed. LECTURE THE EIGHTH. THE REDEMAZYOAV. PART I. 1. THAT, then, which, mystically, is called the Fall of Man, does not mean, as commonly supposed, the lapse, through a specific act, of particular individuals from a state of original perfection; nor, as sometimes supposed, a change from a fluidic to a material condition. It means such an inversion of the due relations between the soul and the body of a personality already both spiritual and material, as involves a transference of the central will of the system concerned, from the soul—which is its proper seat—to the body, and the consequent subjection of the soul to the body, and liability of the individual to sin, disease, and all other evils which result from the limitations of Matter. 2. That, therefore, which, mystically, is called the Re- demption, and which is the converse of the Fall, does not mean, as commonly supposed, the remission, or transference from the guilty to the innocent, of the penalties incurred through the Fall. No penalty incurred by man ever is or can be remitted by God, since the Divine Justice is just. Nor, for the same reason, can it be borne by another, since a substitution of the innocent for the guilty would in it- self be a violation of justice. Wherefore the doctrine of Vicarious Redemption, as ordinarily accepted, represents a total misconception of the truth, and one derogatory to 208 LECT. VIII.] THE REDEMA’77OAV. 209 the Divine Character. The Redemption means such re- moval of the will of the individual system concerned, from the body, and reinstatement of it in the soul, as thence- forth to secure to the soul full control over the body, and to exempt the individual from further liability to trans- gression. He who is redeemed cannot sin, that is, mor- tally. 3. It is according to the Divine order of Nature that the soul should control the body. For, as a manifested entity, man is a dual being, consisting of soul and body; and of these, in point both of duration and function, and therefore in all respects of value, the precedence belongs to the soul. For the soul is the real, permanent Individual, the Self, the everlasting, substantial Idea, of which the body is but the temporary residence and phenomenal expression. The Soul, nevertheless, has, properly speaking, no will of her own, since she is feminine and negative. And she is therefore, by her nature, bound to obey the will of some other than herself. This other can be only the Spirit or the Body;-the Within and the Above, which is Divine, and is God; or the Without and the Below, which, taken by itself and reduced to its last expression, is the “devil.” It is, therefore, to the Spirit and soul as one, that obedi- ence is due. Hence, in making the body the seat of the will, the man revolts, not merely against the soul, but against God; and the soul, by participation, does the same. Of such revolt the consequence is disease and misery of both soul and body, with the liability, ultimately, to extinc- tion of the soul as well as of the body. For the soul which persistently rejects the Divine Will in favour of the bodily will, sins mortally, and, becoming mortal, at length dies. For her life is withdrawn and her constituents are scattered to the elements; so that, without any actual loss either of P 2 IO 7 HE AERAºEC7' W.A. P. the Life or of the Substance of the universal existence, the individuality constituted of them perishes. The “man” is no more. “He that gathereth not with Me, scattereth.” 4. The result, on the other hand, of the soul's steadfast aspiration towards God, the Spirit, that is, within her,- and of her consequent action upon the body, is that this also becomes so permeated and suffused by the Spirit as, at last, to have no will of its own, but to be in all things one with its soul and Spirit, and to constitute with these one perfectly harmonious system, of which every element is under full control of the central Will. It is this unification, occurring within the individual, which constitutes the Atonement. And in him in whom it occurs in its fullest extent, Nature realises the ideal to attain which she first came forth from God. For in the man thus redeemed, purified, and perfected in the image of God, and having in himself the power of life eternal, she herself is vindicated and glorified, and the Divine Wisdom is justified of her children. The process, however, is one which each individual must accomplish in and for himself. For, being an interior process, consisting in self-purification, it cannot be performed from without. That whereby perfection is attained is experience, which implies suffering. For this reason the man who is reborn in us of “Water and the Spirit,”—our own regenerate Self, the Christ Jesus and Son of Man, who in saving us is called the Captain of our salvation,--is said to be made perfect through suffering. This suffering must be borne by each man for himself. To deprive any one of it by putting the consequences of his acts upon another, so far from aiding that one, would be to deprive him of his means of redemp- tion. 5. There are two senses in which the term Fall is used, each of them having relation to an indispensable epoch in LECT. VIII.] THE RED AEMATZOAV. 2 II the process of the universe. The one is the fall of Spirit, the other of the soul. The first occurs in the universal, and concerns the Macrocosm. The second occurs in the individual, and concerns the Microcosm. The first and general descent of Spirit into Matter consists in that original projection of the Divine Substance from pure Being into the condition of Existence, whereby Spirit becomes Matter, and Creation occurs. The doctrine which regards the universe as the Thought of God, is a true doctrine. But the universe is not therefore unsubstantial. God is real Being, and that which God thinks is also God. Wherefore, in consisting of the thought of the Divine Mind, the Universe consists of the Substance of that Mind, the Substance, that is, of God. God's Ideas, like God, are real beings, Divine Per- sonages, that is, Gods. Put forth by, and, in a sense divided from, God, in order to accomplish God's purposes, these be- come messengers of God, that is, Angels. And, of them, those to whom is assigned a condition below that of God—a condition no longer of Spirit—are called “Fallen Angels.” Wherefore the “Fall of the Angels” denotes simply the original and kosmic descent of Spirit into the condition of Matter, the precipitation, that is, of the Divine Substance from a state of pure Being, into the various elements and modes which are comprised in and which constitute Existence or Creation. Creation is thus, not, as ordinarily supposed, a making out of that which is not, but a manifestation or putting forth—by the conversion of essence into things—of that which already is, but which subsists unmanifest. It is true, that prior to such manifestation, there is no thing. But this is not because there is nothing; but because before things can exist, the ideas of them must subsist. For a thing is the result of an idea, and except as such cannot exist. Thus, Matter, as the intensification, or densification, of Idea, is a mode of 212 THE PERFEC7' W.A. V. the Divine consciousness, put forth through an exercise of the Divine Will; and being so, it is capable, through an exercise of the Divine Love, of reverting to its original, unmanifest condition of Spirit. The recall of the universe to this condition constitutes the final Redemption or “Restitution of all things.” And it is brought about by the operation of the Divine Spirit within the whole. 6. The Redemption from the other of the two Falls specified, is due to the operation of the divine element within the individual. And it is of this alone that we pro- pose to treat on this occasion. As already stated, this Fall does not consist in the original investment of the soul with a material body. Such investment—or incarnation—is an integral and indispensable element in the process of the individuation of soul-substance, and of its education into humanity. And until perfected, or nearly so, the body is necessary to the soul in turn as nursery, school, house of correction, and chamber of ordeal. It is true that redemp- tion involves deliverance from the need of the body. But redemption itself is from the power of the body; and it is from its fall under the power of the body that the soul requires redemption. For it is this fall which, by involving the alienation of the individual from God, renders necessary a reconciliation or at-one-ment. And inasmuch as this can be effected only through the total renunciation of the ex- terior or bodily will, and the unreserved acceptance in its place of the interior or divine will, this at-one-ment con- stitutes the essential element of that Redemption which forms the subject of the present discourse. 7. Although Redemption, as a whole, is one, the process is manifold, and consists in a series of acts, spiritual and mental. Of this series, the part wherein the individual finally surrenders his own exterior will, with all its exclu- LECT. VIII.] THE REDEMPTYOAV. 213 sively material desires and affections, is designated the Passion. And the particular act whereby this surrender is consummated and demonstrated, is called the Crucifixion. This crucifixion means a complete, unreserving surrender, L to the death, if need be, without opposition, even in de- sire, on the part of the natural man. Without these steps is no atonement. The man cannot become one with the Spirit within him, until by his “Passion” and “Crucifixion,” he has utterly vanquished the “old Adam ” of his former self. Through the atonement made by means of this self- sacrifice he becomes as one without sin, being no more liable to sin; and is qualified to enter, as his own high- priest, into the holy of holies of his own innermost. For thus he has become of those who, being pure in heart, alone can face God. 8. The “Passion” and “Crucifixion ” have their im- mediate sequel in the Death and Burial of the Self thus renounced. And these are followed by the Resurrection and Ascension of the true immortal Man and new spiritual Adam, who by his Resurrection proves himself to be— like the Christ—“virgin-born,” in that he is the offspring, not of the soul and her traffic with Matter and Sense, but of the soul become “immaculate,” and of her spouse, the Spirit. The Ascension, with which the Drama terminates, is that of the whole Man, now regenerate, to his own celes- tial kingdom within himself, where—made one with the Spirit—he takes his seat for ever “at the right hand of the Father.” 9. Although the Resurrection of the man regenerate has a twofold relation, in that it sometimes affects the body, the resurrection is not of the body in any sense ordinarily supposed, nor is the body in any way the object of the pro- cess. The Man, it is true, has risen from the dead. But 2I4 THE PERFECT WA Y. it is from the condition of deadness in regard to things spiritual, and from among those who, being in that condition, are said to be “dead in trespasses and sins.” In these two respects, namely, as regards his own past self and the world generally, he has “risen from the dead;” and “death,” of this kind, “has no more dominion over him.” And even if he have redeemed also his body and made of it a risen body, this by no means implies the resuscitation of an actual corpse. In this sense there has been for him no death, and in this sense there is for him no resurrection. It was through misapprehension of the true doctrine, and the consequent expectation of the resurrection of the dead body, that the practice—originally symbolical and special —of embalming the corpse as a mummy, became common, and that interment was substituted for the classic and far more wholesome practice of cremation. In both cases, the object was the delusive one of facilitating a resuscitation at once impossible and undesirable, seeing that if reincarnation be needful, a soul can always obtain for itself a new body. Io. That which constitutes the Great Work is not the resuscitation of the dead body, but the redemption of Spirit from Matter. Until man commits what, mystically, is called idolatry, he has no need of such redemption. So long as he prefers the inner to the outer, and consequently polarises towards God, the will of his soul is as the Divine Will, and she has, in virtue thereof, power over his body, as God has over the universe. Committing idolatry, by reason of perverse will to the outer, looking back, and down, that is, and preferring the form to the substance, the appearance to the reality, the phenomenon to the idea, the “city of the Plain” to the “mount of the Lord,”—she loses this power, and becomes a “pillar of salt,” material and patent to sense, and, hence, “naked.” The “resurrec- LECT. VIII.]. TAWE ACE DEMA'77OAV. 2 I 5 tion body” is altogether sublime, being woven for herself by the ascended soul out of elements transcending aught the physical corpse can yield; for it is her own “unfallen" substance. It is not a body raised, but a raised body. PART II. II. In order to obtain an adequate conception of the vastness of the interval between the conditions of man “fallen” and man “redeemed,” it will be necessary to speak yet more particularly of the man perfected and having power. Thus contrasted, the heights and depths of hu- manity will appear in their true extent. It is but a sketch, comparatively slight, which can here be given of what they must endure, who, for love of God, desire God, and who by love of God, finally attain to and become God; and who, becoming God without ceasing to be man, become God-Man,—God manifest in the flesh,_at once God and Man. The course to this end is one and the same for all, whenever, wherever, and by whomsoever followed. For perfection is one, and all seekers after it must follow the same road. The reward, and the means towards it, are also one. For “the Gift of God is eternal Life.” And it is by means of God, the Divine Spirit working within him, to build him up in the Divine Image,_he, meanwhile co- operating with the Spirit, that man achieves Divinity. In the familiar, but rarely understood terms, “Philosopher's Stone,” “Elixir of Life,” “universal Medicine,” “holy Grail,” and the like, is implied this supreme object of all quest. For these are but terms to denote pure Spirit, and its essential correlative, a Will absolutely firm and inaccess- ible alike to weakness from within and assault from without. Without a measure of this Spirit is no understanding—and 2I 6 THE PERFECT WA Y. therefore no interpretation—of the Sacred Mysteries of Ex- istence. Spiritual themselves, they can be comprehended only by those who have, nay, rather, who are Spirit; for God is Spirit, and they who worship God must worship in the Spirit. 12. The attainment in himself of a pure and divine Spirit, is, therefore, the first object and last achievement of him who seeks to realise the loftiest ideal of which humanity is capable. He who does this is not an “Adept” merely. The “Adept” covets power in order to save himself only; and knowledge is for him a thing apart from love. Love saves others as well as oneself. And it is love that dis- tinguishes the Christ;-a truth implied, among other ways, in the name and character assigned in mystic legends to the favourite disciple of the Christs. To Krishna, his Arjun, to Buddha, his Ananda ; to Jesus, his John ;-all terms identical in meaning, and denoting the feminine and tender moiety of the Divine Nature. He therefore, and he alone, who possesses this spirit in quality and quantity with- out measure, has, and is, “Christ.” He is God's Anointed, suffused and brimming with the Spirit, and having in virtue thereof the power of the “Dissolvent" and of “Transmu- tation,” in respect of the whole man. Herein lay the grand secret of that philosophy which made “Hermes" to be accounted the “trainer of the Christs.” Known as the Kabbalistic philosophy, it was a philosophy—or rather a science—based upon the recognition in Nature of a uni- versal Substance, which man can find and “effect,” and in virtue of which he contains within himself the seed of his own regeneration, a seed of which—duly cultured—the fruit is God, because the seed itself also is God. Wherefore, the “Hermetic science” is the science of God. 13. “Christ,” then, is, primarily, not a person, but a LECT. VIII.] THAE A* E/DEMA'77OAV. 217 principle, a process, a system of life and thought, by the observance of which man becomes purified from Matter, and transmuted into Spirit. And he is a Christ who, in virtue of his observance of this process to its utmost extent while yet in the body, constitutes a full manifestation of the qualities of Spirit. Thus manifested, he is said to “destroy the works of the devil,” for he destroys that which gives pre-eminence to Matter, and so re-establishes the kingdom of Spirit, that is, of God. 14. This, the interior part of the process of the Christ, is the essential part. Whether first or last, the spiritual being must be perfected. Without this interior perfection, nothing that is done in the body, or exterior man, is of any avail, save only in so far as it may minister to the essential end. The body is but an instrument, existing for the use and sake of the soul, and not for itself. And it is for the soul, and not for itself, that it must be perfected. Being but an instrument, the body cannot be an end. That which makes the body an end, ends with the body; and the end of the body is corruption. Whatever is given to the body is taken from the Spirit. From this it will be seen what is the true value of Asceticism. Divested of its rational and spiritual motive, self-denial is worthless. Rather is it worse than worthless; it is materialistic and idolatrous; and, being in this aspect a churlish refusal of God's good gifts, it impugns the bounteousness of the Divine nature. The aim of all endeavour should be to bring the body into subjection to, and harmony with, the spirit, by refining and subliming it, and so heightening its powers as to make it sensitive and responsive to all the motions of the Spirit. This it can be only when, deriving its sustenance from substances the purest and most highly solarised, such as the vegetable kingdom alone affords, it suffers all its molecules to be- 218 7"AyA. PERFECT WA Y. come polarised in one and the same direction, and this the direction of the central Will of the system, the “Lord God of Hosts” of the Microcosmic Man,—Whose mystic name is Adonai. 15. The reason of this becomes obvious when it is understood that the Christs are, above all things, Media. But this...not as ordinarily supposed, even by many who are devoted students of spiritual science. For, so far from suffering his own vivifying spirit to step aside in order that another may enter, the Christ is one who so develops, puri- fies, and in every way perfects his spirit, as to assimilate and make it one with the universal Spirit, the God of the Macrocosm, so that the God without and the God within may freely combine and mingle, making the universal the individual, the individual the universal. Thus inspired and filled with God, the soul kindles into flame; and God, identified with the man, speaks through him, making the man utter himself in the name of God. 16. It is in his office and character as Christ, and not in his own human individuality, that the Man Regenerate proclaims himself “the way, the truth, and the life,” “the door,” and the like. For, in being, as has been said, the connecting link between the creature and God, the Christ truly represents the door or gate through which all ascend- ing souls must pass to union with the Divine ; and save through which “no man cometh unto the Father.” It is not, therefore, in virtue of an extraneous, obsessing spirit that the Christ can be termed a “Medium,” but in virtue of the spirit itself of the man, become Divine by means of that inward purification by the life or “blood" of God, which is the secret of the Christs, and “doubled ” by union with the parent Spirit of all,—the “Father” of all spirits. This Spirit it is Whom the typical Regenerate Man of the LECT. VIII ) THE REDEMP77OAW. 219 Gospels is represented as calling the “Father.” It is the Unmanifest God, of Whom the Christ is the full manifes- tation. 17. Hence he disavows for himself the authorship of his utterances, and says, “The words which I speak unto you 1 speak not of myself. The Father which dwelleth in me, He doeth the works.” The Christ is, thus, a clear glass through which the divine glory shines. As it is written of Jesus, “And we beheld his glory, the glory as of the Only Begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.” Now, this “Only Begotten" is not mortal man at all, but He Who from all eternity has been in the bosom of the Father, namely, the Word or Zogos, the Speaker, the Maker, the Manifestor, He Whose mystic name, as already said, is Adonai, and of whom Christ is the counterpart. 18. To attain to the perfection of the Christ,--to polarise, that is, the Divine Spirit without measure, and to become a “Man of Power” and a Medium for the Highest,- though open potentially to all,—is, actually and in the present, open, if to any, but to few. And these are, neces- sarily, they only who, having passed through many trans- migrations and advanced far on their way towards maturity, have sedulously turned their lives to the best account by means of the steadfast development of all the higher faculties and qualities of man ; and who, while not declin- ing the experiences of the body, have made the spirit, and not the body, their object and aim. Aspiring to the re- demption in himself of each plane of man's fourfold nature, the candidate for Christhood submits himself to discipline and training the most severe, at once physical, intellectual, moral, and spiritual, and rejects as valueless or pernicious whatever would fail to minister to his one end, deeming no task too onerous, no sacrifice too painful, so that he be 22O 7THE PERATEC 7' W.A jº. spiritually advanced thereby. And how varied soever the means, there is one rule to which he remains constant throughout, the rule, namely, of love. The Christ he seeks is the pathway to God; and to fail, in the least degree in respect of love, would be to put himself back in his journey. The sacrifices, therefore, in the incense of which his soul ascends, are those of his own lower nature to his own higher, and of himself for others. And life itself, it seems to him, would be too dearly bought, if purchased at the expense of another, however little or mean,—unless, indeed, of a kind irremediably noxious, whose extinction would benefit the world. For—be it remembered—though always Saviour, the Christ is sometimes also Purifier, as were all his types, the Heroes—or Men Regenerate—of classic story. Enacting, thus, when necessary the execu- tioner's part, he slays for no self-gratification, but “in the name of the Lord.” 19. They who have trod this path of old have been many, and their deeds have formed the theme of mystical legends innumerable. Epitomising these we find that the chief qualifications are as follows. In order to gain “Power and the Resurrection,” a man must, first of all, be a Hierarch. This is to say, he must have attained the magical age of thirty-three years, having been, in the mystic sense of the terms, immaculately conceived, and born of a king's daughter; baptised with water and with fire; tempted in the wilderness, crucified and buried, having borne five wounds on the cross. He must, moreover, have answered the riddle of the Sphinx. To attain the requisite age, he must have accomplished the Twelve Labours sym- bolised in those of Heracles and in the signs of the Zodiac; passed within the Twelve Gates of the Holy City of his own regenerate nature; overcome the five Senses; and LECT. VIII.] THE RAE ZXA2MPTION. 22 I obtained dominion over the Four Elements. Achieving all that is implied in these terms, “his warfare is accom- plished,” he is free of Matter, and will never again have a phenomenal body. 20. He who shall attain to this perfection must be one who is without fear and without desire, save towards God; who has courage to be absolutely poor and absolutely chaste; to whom it is all one whether he have money or whether he have none, whether he have house and lands or whether he be homeless, whether he have worldly re- putation or whether he be an outcast. Thus is he volun- tarily poor, and of the spirit of those of whom it is said that they inherit the kingdom of heaven. It is not neces- sary that he have nothing; it is necessary only that he care for nothing. Against attacks and influences of whatever kind, and coming from whatever quarter without his own Soul's kingdom, he must impregnably steel himself. If infortune be his, he must make it his fortune; if poverty, he must make it his riches; if loss, his gain; if sickness, his health; if pain, his pleasure. Evil report must be to him good report; and he must be able to rejoice when all men speak ill of him. Even death itself he must account as life. Only when he has attained this equilibrium is he “Free.” Meanwhile he makes Abstinence, Prayer, Meditation, Watchfulness and Self-restraint to be the decades of his Rosary. And knowing that nothing is gained without toil, or won without suffering, he acts ever on the principle that to labour is to pray, to ask is to receive, to knock is to have the door open, and so strives accordingly. 21. To gain power over Death, there must be self-denial and governance. Such is the “Excellent Way,” though it be the Via Dolorosa. He only can follow it who accounts the Resurrection worth the Passion, the Kingdom worth 222 THE PERATEC7' W.A. V. the Obedience, the Power worth the Suffering. And he, and he only, does not hesitate, whose time has come. 22. The last of the “Twelve Labours of Heracles" is the conquest of the three-headed dog, Cerberus. For by this is denoted the final victory over the body with its three (true) senses. When this is accomplished, the process of ordeal is no longer necessary. The Initiate is under a vow. The Hierarch is free. He has undergone all his ordeals, and has freed his will. For the object of the Trial and the Vow is Polarisation. When the Fixed is Volatilised, the Magian is Free. Before this, he is “subject.” 23. The man who seeks to be a Hierarch must not dwell in cities. He may begin his initiation in a city, but he cannot complete it there. For he must not breathe dead and burnt air, air, that is, the vitality of which is quenched. He must be a wanderer, a dweller in the plain and the garden and the mountains. He must commune with the starry heavens, and maintain direct contact with the great electric currents of living air and with the unpaved grass and earth of the planet, going bare-foot and oft bathing his feet. It is in unfrequented places, in lands such as are mystically called the “East,” where the abominations of “Babylon " are unknown, and where the magnetic chain between earth and heaven is strong, that the man who seeks Power, and who would achieve the “Great Work,” must accomplish his initiation. PART III. 24. In assigning to the Gospels their proper meaning, it is necessary to remember that, as mystical Scriptures, they deal, primarily, not with material things or persons, but with spiritual significations. Like the “books of Moses,” LECT. VIII.] 7 HE REDEMP77OAV. 223 therefore, and others, which, in being mystical, are, in the strictest sense, prophetical, the Gospels are addressed, not to the outer sense and reason, but to the soul. And, being thus, their object is, not to give an historical account of the physical life of any man whatever, but to exhibit the spiritual possibilities of humanity at large, as illustrated in a particular and typical example. The design is, thus, that which is dictated by the nature itself of Religion. For Religion is not in its nature historical and dependent upon actual, sensible events, but consists in processes, such as Faith and Redemption, which, being interior to all men, subsist irrespectively of what any particular man has at any time suffered or done. That alone which is of importance, is what God has revealed. And therefore it is that the narratives concerning Jesus are rather parables founded on a collection of histories, than any one actual history, and have a spiritual import capable of universal application. And it is with this spiritual import, and not with physical facts, that the Gospels are concerned. 25. Such were the principles which, long before the Christian era, and under divine control, had led the Mys- tics of Egypt, Persia, and India, to select Osiris, Mithras, and Buddha as names or persons representative of the Man Regenerate and constituting a full manifestation of the qualities of Spirit. And it was for the same purpose and under the same impulsion that the Mystics of the West, who had their head-quarters at Alexandria, selected Jesus, using him as a type whereby to exhibit the history of all souls which attain to perfection; employing physical occur- rences as symbols, and relating them as parables, to inter- pret which literally would be to falsify their intended import. Their method was, thus, to universalise that which was par- ticular, and to spiritualise that which was material ; and, 224 THE PERATECT WA Y. writing, as they did, with full knowledge of previous mys- tical descriptions of the Man Regenerate, his interior his- tory and his relations-to the world,—notable among which descriptions was the fifty-third chapter of the miscellaneous fragmentary prophetic utterances collected together under the typical name of Isaiah, they would have had no diffi- culty in presenting a character consistent with the general anticipation of those who were cognisant of the meaning of the term “Christ,” even without an actual example. 26. The failure to interpret the mystical Scriptures by the mystical rule, was due to the loss, by the Church, of the mystical faculty, or inner, spiritual vision, through which they were written. Passing under a domination exclu- sively sacerdotal and traditional, and losing thereby the intuition of things spiritual, the Church fell an easy prey to that which is the besetting sin of priesthoods,-Idolatry; and in place of the simple, true, reasonable Gospel, to illus- trate which the history of Jesus had been expressly de- signed, fabricated the stupendous and irrational superstition which has usurped his name. Converted by the exaltation of the Letter and the symbol in place of the Spirit and the signification, into an idolatry every whit as gross as any that preceded it, Christianity has failed to redeem the world. Christianity has failed, that is, not because it was false, but because it has been falsified. And the falsifica- tion, generally, has consisted in removing the character described under the name of Jesus, from its true function as the portrait of that of which every man has in him the potentiality, and referring it exclusively. to an imaginary order of being between whom and man could be no possible relation, even were such a being himself possible. Instead of recognising the Gospels as a written hieroglyph, setting forth, under terms derived from natural objects and persons, LECT. VIII.] THE RAE/O AEMAETYOAV. 225 processes which are purely spiritual and impersonal, the Churches have—one and all—fallen into that lowest mode of fetish-worship, which consists in the adoration of a mere symbol, entirely irrespective of its true import. To the complaint that will inevitably be made against this exposi- tion of the real nature of the Gospel history, that it has “taken away the Lord,”—the reply is no less satisfactory than obvious. For he has been taken away only from the place wherein so long the Church has kept him, that is, the sepulchre. There, indeed, it is, with the dead, bound about with cerements, a figure altogether of the past,--that Christians have laid their Christ. But at length the “stone” of Superstition has been lifted and rolled away by the hand of the Angel of Knowledge, and the grave it concealed is discovered to be empty. No longer need the soul seek her living Master among the dead. Christ is risen, risen into the heaven of a living Ideal, whence he can again descend into the hearts of all who desire him, none the less real and puissant, because a universal principle, and not merely an historical personage; none the less mighty to save because, instead of being a single Man Regenerate, he is every Man Regenerate, ten thousand times ten thousand, —the “Son of Man" himself. 27. The name Jesus, or Liberator, belongs not to the man physical,—of his name and parentage the Gospels take no note, but to the man spiritual, and is an initiation name denoting re-birth into a spiritual life. In this relation the man physical has no title to the name of Liberator, since the limitations from which man requires to be de- livered can be overcome only by that which transcends the physical. Wherefore the name Jesus belongs to that in and by which liberation occurs, namely, the man's own re- generated selfhood; and whereas it is in and by means Q 226 7 HE PERAEEC 7' W.A. V. of this selfhood that he has emerged from a condition of spiritual death to one of spiritual life, it signifies to him a resurrection from the dead. Jesus is thus the name, not of one but of many, not of a person, but of an Order, the Order of regenerated Selfhoods, each of which is “Christ- Jesus” in that it is the Saviour, through “Christ,” of him in whom it is realised, though not all of these are Christs in the sense of being manifestations of Christ to the world. Paul alone of the Apostles clearly taught the doctrine of the subjective nature of the saving agency. His expression, “Christ in you the hope of glory,” is inapplicable to any physical or extraneous personality. As a kabbalist and mystic, Paul was an evolutionist, and knew that the seed of every man's regeneration is within. Hence his exaltation of Christ as an interior principle, and his ability to re- cognise that method of the mystical Scriptures which con- sists in regarding man as a distinct personality in each Successive stage of his unfoldment, and assigning to him a corresponding name. Adam, David, Jesus, are thus respectively the man “natural,” being simply generate; the man “under grace,” or partially regenerate, and there- fore liable to serious lapses; and the man fully regenerate, and incapable of sin. Hence Paul's declaration that in the Adam stage of our development we all die, not having yet realised our saving principle; but in the Christ stage we all have eternal life. It was not, however, so much Paul's mysticism, as the sacerdotal guise in which he pre- sented it, that brought him into conflict with the disciples. 28. Although the Gospels uniformly describe the miracles wrought by the Man Regenerate in terms derived from the physical plane, He, as master of the spirits of all the elements, works miracles on all planes. Only those, how ever, which are referable to the spiritual plane have signifi- LECT. VIII.] TAZE REDAEAMP77OAV. 227 cance and value for the Soul. Hence for it the raising from the dead—as of Lazarus—implies resurrection from the condition of spiritual deadness; the giving of sight implies the opening of the spiritual vision; and the feeding of the hungry multitude implies the satisfaction of man's cravings for spiritual nourishment. The terms descriptive of the miracle last named afford one of the numerous indi- cations of the influence of Greek ideas in the composition of the Gospels. For the “loaves” represent the doctrine of the lesser Mysteries whose “grain” is of the Earth, the kingdom of Demeter and of the outer. And the “fishes" —which are given after the loaves—imply the greater Mysteries, those of Aphrodite, fishes symbolising the element of the “Sea-born” Queen of Love, whose dominion is the inner kingdom of the Soul.” Similarly the conver- sion of water into wine implies the mysteries of Iacchos, the mystic name of the planet-God. The “beginning of miracles” for the Man Regenerate is always the transmuta- tion of the “Water” of his own Soul into the “Wine" of the Divine Spirit. To these mysteries—which also were Egyptian, and there is reason to believe were enacted in the “king's and queen's chambers” of the Great Pyramid— belong also the “Acts” or “Crowns” which constitute for the Man Regenerate the “Week” of his New Creation, each being a “ day” in that week. They are Baptism— called also Betrothal in view of the subsequent “Marriage”: Temptation, or Trial: Passion : Crucifixion, or Death : Burial : Resurrection; and Ascension, the Sabbath, or Nir- vana, of perfection and rest, when—the “veil of the Temple” of the external self-hood having already been “rent from the top to the bottom *—he enters into the “Holy of Holies” of his now divine nature. All these Acts or * See Appendices, No. XIII., Part I. 228 7A7A2 AERFA2C 7' W.A. W. Crowns—irrespective of any correspondence on the physical plane—denote indispensable processes enacted in the in- terior experiences of all who attain to full regeneration. From which it follows that the Gospel narrative, while re- lated—in Scripture fashion—as of an actual particular person, and in terms derived from the physical plane—is a mystical history only of any person, and implies the spiritual possibilities of all persons. And hence, while using terms implying, or derived from, actual times, places, persons and events, it does not really refer to these or make pretence to historical precision, its function and purpose being, not to relate physical facts, which can have no relation to the soul, but to exhibit and illustrate processes and principles which are purely spiritual. Thus regarded, the Gospels—even though having in view a special personality as their model —constitute a parable rather than a history. 29. There is, moreover, a yet further explanation of the indifference to identity of detail by which everywhere this narrative is characterised. Being four in number, and dis- posed in order corresponding to that of the four divisions of man's nature, the Gospels have for standpoint, and bear relation to, different planes of the kosmos. Thus, the Gospel of Matthew, which represents the lower and physical plane, appeals more particularly on behalf of the character ascribed to Jesus of Nazareth as fulfilling the promises of the Messiah of the Old Testament, and is pervaded by one principle, the fulfilment in him at once of the Law and of the prophecies. The Gospel of Mark is adapted to the plane next above this, namely, the rational; its appeal on behalf of the divinity of the mission of Jesus being founded on the nature of his doctrine and works. The Gospel of Luke represents the further ascent to the plane of the soul and the intuition. Hence it occupies itself chiefly with LECT, VIII.] TAZE A*A2DA2MATZOAV. 229 accounts of the spiritual parentage of the Man Regenerate, —setting forth under a parabolic narrative his genesis from the operation of God in a pure soul. To the same end, this Gospel gives prominence to the familiar conversations, rather than to the formal teaching of its Subject, since it is in these that the affectional nature of a man is best manifested. In the fourth Gospel the scene changes to a sphere transcending all the others, being in the highest degree interior, mystic, spiritual. This Gospel, therefore, corresponds to the Nucleolus, or Divine Spirit, of the microcosmic entity, and exhibits the Regenerate Man as having surmounted all the elements exterior and inferior of his system, and won his way to the inmost recess of his own celestial kingdom, where, arrived at his centre and source, he and his Father are One ; and he knows positively that God is Love, since it is by Love that he himself has found and become God. Such being the controlling idea of this Gospel, its composition is appropriately assigned to that “Beroved Disciple" whose very name denotes the feminine and love principle of existence. And to “John,” surnamed “the Divine" in respect of the character thus ascribed to his ministry, is unanimously assigned the em- blem of the Eagle, as representing the highest element in the human kingdom. With regard to the distribution of the other three symbols, it is obvious—when once the intention of each division of the Christian evangel is understood— that Matthew, who corresponds to the earth or body, is rightly represented by the Ox; Mark, the minister of the astral or fire, by the Lion ; and Luke, whose pen is chiefly occupied with the relation of Christ to the Soul, by an Angel with the face of a man to denote the sea-god Posei- don, the “father of Souls.” The Gospels are thus dedicated, each to one of the elemental spirits, Demeter, Hephaistos, 230 7A/A2 AERA’EC7' W.A. P. Poseidon, and Pallas. Owing, however, to the loss by the Church of the doctrine which determines this distribution, much confusion and difference of opinion exist among ecclesiastical authorities with regard to the correct assign- ment of the elemental emblems. All the Fathers are agreed in giving the Eagle to the Fourth Gospeller, and but little doubt exists respecting the claim of Mark to the Lion ; but the Ox and Angel have been generally mis- placed in order. PART IV. 30. Having defined the nature of the Man Regenerate and the relations represented in the Gospels as subsisting between him and the soul personified as the Virgin Mary, it remains still further to “declare his generation” by exhibit- ing the function fulfilled towards these two by the Mind, which is personified as Joseph, the Spouse of the Virgin and foster father of her Son. This is not the first appearance of Joseph in the Biblical presentation of the drama of the Soul. On the previous occasion he was in the vigour of youth, yet sufficiently matured intellectually and morally to be found worthy the highest posts of responsibility, and able to withstand the seductive sophistries of the materialistic philosophy—typified by the wife of Potiphar—of which “Egypt,” the symbol of the lower nature, is always the seat. As also on his later appearance, he was emphatically a “just man,” so that—it is written—the king set him over all the land and bid every one go to him and do all that he should direct. And under his guidance, Israel—who had followed him into Egypt, and to serve whom while there was his divinely appointed function—prospered exceedingly. But losing him, they sank into extreme misery, being en- LECT. VIII.] TAZAZ FA2/0A2AMAZYOAV. 23.I slaved and evil entreated of the Egyptians." On his reap- pearance in the Gospels,” Joseph is still the “son of Jacob’’ and a “just man”; but of advanced maturity, yet possessed of energy and wisdom in measure to qualify him for the most difficult and delicate of tasks, that of guarding and guiding a pure and tender soul to the realisation of its highest aspirations, the production in its offspring of a character Divinely perfect. His task corresponded, indeed, to that assigned to the former Joseph, as the protector of the chosen of God ; but the mode was changed, the level was higher, and the stage more advanced. The legend of the selection of Joseph to be the Spouse of the Virgin and foster father of her predicted Son, shows the quality of mind deemed requisite for such offices. For in representing his rod alone of those belonging to the candidates as blossom- ing, and the Holy Spirit as a dove settling upon it, the legend implies a mind—of which and its knowledges the rod is a symbol—competent for the perception of divine things and the suggestion of divine acts, and controlled, therefore, by the Divine Will. Only under the protection and governance of a mind thus conditioned can the soul become mother of man regenerate, mother, that is, of God in man. And in order to show the supreme importance attached by it to the function of the Mind in this relation, the Catholic Church speaks of St. Joseph as having “re- ceived all power necessary for the salvation of souls”; styles him an “Angel on earth,” “King of Saints and Angels,” and “third person of the earthly Trinity”; and declares that “after the dignity of Mother of God comes that of the foster father of God”; “after Mary comes * See Appendices, No. XII. (6). * As not persons but principles are here intended, there is no sug- gestion of a reincarnation of an individual. 232 7 H.A. AEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. V. * Joseph’;—expressions intelligible and appropriate as ap- plied to the mind as a factor in the higher evolution of man ; his redemption, that is, from his lower elements; but not as applied to a person, be he whom he may. Never- theless, the mind is only the putative, not the actual, father of the man regenerate. His exclusive parents are the Soul and Spirit, variously designated “Water and the Spirit,” “Virgin Mary and the Holy Ghost.” Being an entity purely spiritual, his parentage also is purely spiritual, and the mind has no more part in his generation than the body. Wherefore Joseph, who is not the builder of the house, but its fitter and furnisher, is not mason but carpenter. 31, It is not only in virtue of his function of protector from Herod—who as the genius of the world's materialistic régime always is the destroyer of innocence—that Joseph takes the young child and his mother and flees into Egypt, but in virtue also of his function as educator. For in denoting the world and the body, Egypt denotes the lessons to be derived from both of these, the learning of which is indispensable to the soul's development. “There is Corn in Egypt. Go thou down into her, O my soul, with joy,” says the man seeking regeneration, on every fresh return into earthly conditions; “For in the kingdom of the Body thou shalt eat the bread of thine Initiation.” He returns as an eager scholar to school. The ladder of evolution must be climbed painfully and with labour from the lowest step again and again, for each fresh branch of experience that is necessary for the soul's full development. For “there is no knowledge but by labour; no intuition but by experi- ence.” Heavenly things are unintelligible until earthly things have been mastered. Only when the aspirant is so firmly grounded and so far advanced as to have nothing LECT. VIII.] 7A/E A*A2/D.A.MA 7TWOAV. 233 more to fear from “Herod,” who thus is virtually dead for him, can he return with safety to the land of Israel. And even there the mind must still be his guard and guide until by the attainment of his spiritual majority he passes into higher keeping. The parallel between the two Josephs is maintained to the last. Both are leaders of the chosen family into Egypt and their protectors while there. And of each the withdrawal is followed by danger and disaster. There is a profound significance in the date assigned for the death of the second Joseph. According to Christian tradition he remains with the Virgin and her Son, stead- fastly exercising his functions towards them, until the latter is twenty-nine years of age. The age of full and final per- fection for the man regenerate is—as already explained (par. 19.)—the age of thirty-three, mystically computed, this im- plying his accomplishment of the thirty-three steps of initia- tion of which the last and highest is his “ascension ” by transmutation, to final divine union. But the achievement of thirty steps fits him for his mission, by lifting him from the sphere wherein the mind is still necessary to him—the sphere of acquisition, reflection, and deliberation—to that wherein he is independent of processes of ratiocination,-- the sphere of direct perception and knowledge, inasmuch as he is thenceforth under a control exclusively divine, being “driven of the Spirit.” At this juncture, therefore, just as Jesus “begins to be about thirty years of age,”— Joseph dies, leaving him to enter upon the career which ends in his crucifixion, unimpeded by the prudential con- siderations which it is the province of the mind to suggest. In accounting Joseph the patron of a happy death, the Church implies the blissful satisfaction of a mind conscious of having made the interests of the Soul and her divine life its supreme object. - 234. THE PERFECT WA Y. 32. Besides the state wherein the soul as Eve and immergent into materiality becomes the mother of man degenerate, and that wherein as Virgin Mary and exempt from materiality she becomes the mother of man regenerate, there is a third and intermediate state, an exposition of which is necessary to the full comprehension of the Gospels. This is the state of the soul during the period of her pro- gress from Eve to Virgin Mary, while undergoing the experiences indispensable to such evolution. For the soul, no less than the man re-born of her, must be “perfected through suffering,”—the suffering involved in experiences profoundly felt and wisely applied. Hence her appellation “Sea of Bitterness.” Only when she has exchanged the innocence that comes of ignorance, for the impeccability that comes of full knowledge, is she no longer in danger of relapse. Thenceforth there is for her son “no more sea.” Thus the very “sin” involved in the acquisition of ex- periences may itself be a means of redemption. Of these experiences the agent is always matter, this being at once the cause and the consequence of limitation of spirit. And whereas the soul's only true affinity and legitimate affection is Spirit—her own nature being spiritual—her intercourse with matter is mystically accounted an adultery, and she herself, during its continuance, is styled a “harlot.” She may, nevertheless, in this her “fallen " state, retain and cherish the sense of her true nature and destiny, and eagerly anticipate the time when, freed from her associa- tion with materiality, and purged of her defilement, she will emerge white and spotless to claim her proper rank. That through which she will do this, will always be Love, her love for the ideal she has kept alive, though latent, in her heart, even while descending to so low an actual. And for 33 LECT. VIII.] 7 HE RAE ZOAAMAZYOAV. 235 the sake of this Love, her sins—how many and grievous soever they may have been—will be forgiven her, and she herself in her turn will be dearly loved of Him—the Man Regenerate—since he will recognise in her past the indis- pensable prelude to his own present. And thus will she become ministrant to him of her substance,—he unhesi- tatingly accepting, notwithstanding the mode of its ac- quisition; while the very passionateness of her nature, which has led to her past self-abandonment, serves but to endear her to him the more as betokening her capacity for self- surrender in the opposite direction. And only by him are her acts of devotion towards him not deemed extragavant, because he, and he alone, comprehends their source and significance. The name given in the Gospels to the repre- sentative of the Soul in this state is Mary Magdalen, whom tradition identifies with Mary of Bethany. In the Old Tes- tament, where she aids Israel to enter the promised land, she is termed Rahab, a name which, signifying large or extended, may have been given her to imply that the soul which through weakness or fear shrinks from experiences, remains stunted and dwarfed, and makes but a poor saving after all. 33. Herein lies the secret of the leniency and even tenderness exhibited by the typical Man Regenerate to- wards women of this class. Himself the representative of a perfection won through experience, he knows that the soul, of which Woman is the type, must have experiences. Himself the child of the soul, he heeds only the state of the soul, and views every act from the standpoint of the soul, caring only for the spirit in which it is performed. The conduct of Jesus in the case of the woman brought before him, when he reserved all his reprobation for her accusers, 236 THE PERFECT WA Y. was but the reduction to practice of his denunciations of the chief priests and elders, “Verily, I say unto you, that the publicans and the harlots go into the kingdom of God before you.” To ingrained impurity and hardness of heart, and to these alone, he is obdurate. Let a soul but be on the upward path, no matter at how low a point, and for Him it takes rank with the highest. He has already marked it for his own ; it is one of his Elect. 34. They are, in their primary sense, various states of the soul which the Apocalypse describes under the guise of the Seven Churches of Asia Minor. And it is the soul hope- lessly debased and reprobate which, under terms drawn from the Rome of the period, is denounced as the paramour of the “kings of the earth’—that is man's ruling propensities —and doomed to destruction together with that “Great City” which rests upon the “seven deadly sins” as Rome upon seven hills, the world's materialistic system. 35. Not only is the process of the soul's growth, educa- tion, and purification so slow and gradual as to require for its accomplishment the experiences of numerous earth-lives, it is also liable to be so unequal that, while far advanced in certain respects, in others it may be as far in arrears. And, meanwhile, these inequalities may find expression in anoma- lies and inconsistencies of character in the highest degree perplexing and distressing, combining in one and the same personality the opposite extremes of sage and simpleton, saint and sinner, a high moral character with dull intellec- tual faculties, or keen intellectual faculties, with a total absence of moral perception ; or, again, a high moral and intellectual nature with complete deprivation of spiritual perception. Thus irregularly developed, the same soul LECT. VIII.] THE REDEMPTION. 237 may subsist at once in all the stages enumerated, being simultaneously Eve, Magdalen, and Blessed Virgin, and manifesting in turn the characteristics of each. Only when she is all Virgin Mary can she become mother of a man wholly regenerate. As sings the mystic poet already quoted,— “I must become Queen Mary, and birth to God must give, If I in blessedness for evermore would live.”" 36. We have yet to identify the persons represented in the Gospels as fulfilling at the Nativity the important function of recognition. These are the Magi, or “Wise men from the East,” who hastened to render their homage and their offerings at the cradle of the Divine Infant. Ac- cording to Catholic tradition, they were three in number, and were royal personages, a description which seems to identify them with the “kings of the East” of the Apoca- lyptic visions, whose habitat lies beyond the “great river Euphrates,” and the way for whose coming requires to be specially prepared by the making of a ford across that river. Now the Euphrates is one of the “four rivers” of Genesis, already explained (Lecture VI. 6) as denoting the four constituent principles of the human kosmos. It is the Will; in man unfallen, the Divine Will; in man fallen, the human will. The East is the mystical term for the source of heavenly light. “The glory of God came from the way of the East,” says Ezekiel. Wherefore the “Kings of the East” are they who hold sway in a region lying beyond and above the “river” of the human Will, and only when that river is “dried up" can they approach man as heralds of the Divine Glory. Their function it is to announce the Epiphany of the Divine Life, to be the Sponsors for the * Scheffler. 238 THE PERFECT WA Y. Christ, the Godfathers of the heavenly Babe. To them it is appointed to discern him from afar off, and to hasten to affirm and declare him while yet in his cradle. Their offerings of gold, frankincense, and myrrh denote the recognition of the indwelling divinity by the prophetic, priestly, and regal attributes of man. Representing, re- spectively, the spirit, the soul, and the mind, they are symbolised as an angel, a queen, and a king; and they are, actually, Right Aspiration, Right Perception, and Right Judgment. The first implies enthusiasm for the glory of God and the advancement of souls, unalloyed by any selfish end. The second implies a vision for things spiri- tual, undimmed and undistorted by intrusion of elements material or astral. And the third implies the ability to “compare like with like and preserve the affinity of simi- lars,” so that things spiritual may not be confounded with things physical, but “to God shall be rendered the things of God, and to Caesar the things of Caesar.” - 37. But wherefore is it to a Cave and a Stable that the Star of the Understanding directs the steps of the Wise Men when seeking the birthplace of the Christ? Because, “In the elements of the Body is he imprisoned, lying asleep in the caves of Iacchus, in the crib of the Oxen of Demeter.” Because, that is, in constituting the culmina- tion of the returning and ascending stream of emanation, Christ is attained by evolution from the lowest:—“From the dust of the ground to the throne of the Most High.” 38. An important factor in the education of the Man Regenerate is that described under the figure of John the Baptist. For he, too, is interior and mystic, inasmuch as * See Appendices No. XIII., Part I. LECT. VIII.] 7A/E RED EAMAZYOAV. 239 he represents that all-compelling summons of the conscience to repentance, renunciation, and purification, which is the indispensable precursor of success in the quest after inward perfection. 39. The history of the Virgin Mary and her functions in regard to her Son, as presented alike in the Gospels and in Catholic tradition and ritual, are in every particular those of the soul to whom it is given to be “Mother of God” in man. Her acts and graces, as well as his life and passion, belong to the experience of every redeemed man. As the Christ in him delivers him from the curse of Adam, so the Virgin Mary in him delivers him from the curse of Eve, and secures the fulfilment of the promise of the conquest over the serpent of Matter. And, whereas, as sinner, he has seen enacted in his own interior experience the drama of the Fall; so, as saint, he enacts the mysteries represented in the Rosary of the Virgin, his soul passing in turn through every stage of her joys, her sorrows, and her glories. Wherefore the part assigned to Mary in the Christian Evangel is the part borne by the soul in all mystical experience. That which first beguiles and leads astray the soul is the attraction of the illusory world of mere pheno- mena, which is aptly represented under the figure of the Serpent with glittering coils, insinuating mien, and eyes full of fascination. Yielding to this attraction, through directing her gaze outwards and downwards instead of inwards and upwards, the soul—as Eve—has abandoned celestial realities for mundane shadows, and entangled in her fall the mind, or Adam. Thus mind and soul fall together and lose the power of desiring and apprehending the divine things which alone make for life, and, so, become cast out of divine conditions, and conscious only of ma- 24O THE PERFECT WAY. terial environments and liable to material limitations. This substitution of the illusory for the real, of the material for the spiritual, of the phenomenal for the substantial, constitutes the whole sin and loss of the Fall. Redemption consists in the recovery of the power once more to apprehend, to love, and to grasp the real. “Original sin,” from which Mary is exempt, is precisely the condition of blindness which—owing to the soul's immergence in materiality— hinders the perception of divine things. By no possibility can the Divine Life be generated in any soul afflicted with this blindness. Christ cannot be conceived save of a soul immaculate and virgin as to matter, and meet to become the spouse of the Divine Spirit. Therefore, as the soul as Eve gives consent to the annunciation of the Serpent, so, as Mary, become virgin, she gives consent to the annuncia- tion of the Angel, and understands the mystery of the Motherhood of the man regenerate. She has no acts of her own, all the acts of her Son are hers also. She par- ticipates in his nativity, in his manifestation, in his passion, in his resurrection, in his ascension, in his pentecostal gift. He himself is her gift to the world. But it is always he who operates; she who asks, acquiesces, consents, responds. Through her he outflows into the mind and external man, and, so, into life and conduct. As Augustine says, “All graces pass to us through the hands of Mary.” For the purified soul is the mediatrix, as she is the genetrix, of the Divine presence. 40. The Church speaks of the Ascension of Christ, and of the Assumption of Mary. Christ being deific in nature and of heavenly origin, ascends by his own power and will. But the soul is “assumed,” or drawn up by the power and will of her Son. Of herself she is nothing; he is her all LECT. VIII.] THE REDEMPTIow. 24I in all. Where he abides, thither must she be uplifted, by force of the divine union which makes her one with him. Henceforth she abides in the real, and has the illusions of sense for evermore under foot. It is not of herself that Mary becomes Mother of God in man. The narrative of the Incarnation implies a conjunction of human—though not physical—and Divine potencies. Mary receives her infant by an act of celestial energy overshadowing and vitalising her with the Divine life. This is because the pure soul is as a lens to the Divine rays, polarising them and kindling fire therefrom. Having this attitude towards God, she has kindled in her that holy flame which becomes the light that enlightens the world. 41. The final state of the soul of the Man Regenerate is described in the Apocalypse under the figure of a marriage, wherein the contracting parties are the soul herself and the now Divine Spirit of the man, which is called the Lamb. The description of this Lamb as “slain before the founda- tion of the world,” denotes the original and eternal act of self-immolation—typified in the Eucharist—whereby Deity descends into conditions and distributes of Itself to be the life and substance of the Universe, alike for its creation, its sustentation, and its redemption. In the crowning act of this stupendous drama—the act which mystically is called the “Consummation of the Marriage of the Son of God” —the Spirit and Bride, rvedpa and viſuºm, as King and Queen of the perfected individuality, are indissolubly united; and the human is taken up into the Divine, having received the “Gift of God,” which is life eternal. Not merely a gift from God, although God is the giver; but a gift of God's own substantial Self, the infinite and eternal / AM being individualised in him. As already shown, the initial and R 242 7A/E PERFECT WA V. final stages of man's spiritual evolution are indicated by Paul when, read with the mystic sense, and translated into the eternal now, he says, “He is at first Adam, a living soul”—a soul having derived life; “He is at last Christ, a life-giving Spirit,” or spirit that is itself Divine life. “In the former all die. In the latter all are made to live.” From this it appears that the Bible sets forth the higher evolution—that is, the redemption, called also the new crea- tion—of man, as a dual process occurring simultaneously in his two constituents, himself and his soul; and whereas for the former and masculine moiety the first and last terms are, respectively, Adam and Christ; for the latter and feminine moiety they are Eve and Mary, called also the Bride. PART V. 42. It was no part of the design of the Gospels to repre- sent either the course of a man perfect from the first, or the whole course from the first of the man made perfect. Had they been designed to represent the former, they had contained no account of a Crucifixion. For, of the man perfect, no crucifixion, in the Mystical sense, is possible, since he has no lower self or perverse will, or any weak- ness, to be overcome or renounced, the anima divina in him having become all in all. That, therefore, which the Gospels exhibit, is a process consisting of the several degrees of regeneration, on the attainment of the last of which only does the man become “perfect.” But of these successive degrees not all are indicated. For the Gospels deal, not with one whose nature is, at first, wholly unregener- ate, but with one who is already, in virtue of the use made of his previous earth-lives, so far advanced as to be within reach, in a single further incarnation, of full regeneration. LECT. VIII.] 7"HE RAE DAEAMPTVOAV. 243 43. For, owing to the complex and manifold nature of existence, every sphere or plane of man's being requires for itself a redemptive process; and, for each, this process consists of three degrees. Of these the first three relate to the Body, the second three to the Mind, the third three to: the Heart, and the fourth three to the Spirit. There are thus, in all, twelve Degrees or “Houses” of the Perfect Man or Microcosm, as there are twelve Zodiacal Signs or Mansions of the Sun in his course through the heavens of the Macrocosm. And the Gospels set forth mainly the six of the Heart and Spirit. The crown both of the twelve degrees and of the six acts—that which constitutes alike the “Sabbath" of the Hebrews, the “Nirvāna" of the Buddhists, and the “Transmutation ” of the Alchemists —is the “Divine Marriage.” Of this, accordingly, types and parables recur continually in all Hermetic Scriptures. The last book of the Bible, the Apocalypse of John, fitly closes with a descriptive allegory of it. In this alle- gory the “Bride” herself is described as Salem, the Peace, or Rest, of God, a “city lying four-square,” having Twelve Foundations and Four Aspects, all equal to each other, and upon every Aspect Three Gates. This heavenly Salem is, thus, the perfected Microcosm in whom is seen the At-one-ment of all the four planes, the physical, the in- tellectual, the moral, and the spiritual; the “Gates” of each side, or plane, symbolising the three degrees of Regeneration appertaining to each. And these twelve gates are described as being each of a single pearl, because, like pearls, the excellences denoted by them are attainable only through skill and courage, and devotion even to the death, and require of those who would attain them the divestment of every earthly encumbrance. 44. The idea of this heavenly Salem is expressed also 244 7A7A2 FAERAPEC 7' W.A. Y. in the Tabernacle of Moses. For this, too, was fourfold. The Outer Court, which was open, denoted the Body or Man physical and visible; the covered Tent, or Holy place, denoted the Man intellectual and invisible; and the Holy of Holies within the veil, denoted the Heart or Soul, itself the shrine of the Spirit of the man, and of the divine Glory, which, in their turn, were typified by the Ark and Shekinah. And in each of the four Depositaries were three utensils illustrative of the regenerative degrees belonging to each division. The Marriage Supper, then, can be celebrated in the kingdom of the Father only, when all the “Twelve Apostles,” or elements corresponding to the twelve degrees, have been brought into perfect harmony and at-one-ment, and no defective element any longer exists among them. In the central place at this divine feast is the Thirteenth Personage, the Master or Adonai of the system, the founder and president of the banquet. He it is who in later times found a representative in the pure and heaven-born Arthur, —Ar-Thor—the “Bright Lord” of the Round Table. For, as already stated, the number of the Microcosm is thirteen, the thirteenth being the occupant of the interior and fourth place, which, thus, he personifies, constituting the fourth and completing element, the Nucleolus of the whole cell or “Round Table.” “And of this Fourth the form is as the Son of God.” Thus the number thirteen, which on the earthly plane, and before the “Crucifixion,” is, through the treachery of “Judas,” the symbol of imper- fection and ill-fortune, becomes, in the “Kingdom of the Father,” the symbol of perfection. As the number of the lunar months, it is the symbol also of the Woman, and denotes the Soul and her reflection of God, the solar number twelve being that of the Spirit. The two numbers in combination form the perfect year of that dual humanity LECT. VIII.] 7"HE RED EAM A77OAV. 245 which alone is made in the image of God, the true “Christian Year,” wherein the two—the inner and the outer, Spirit and Matter—are as one. Thirteen then represents that full union of man with God wherein Christ becomes Christ. 45. In representing the Regenerate Man as descended through his parents from the house of David and the tribe of Levi, the Gospels imply that man, when regenerate, is always possessed of the intuition of the true prophet, and the purity of the true priest, for whom “David" and “Levi" are the mystical synonyms. Thus the spiritual blood of prophet, priest, and king mingles in the veins of the Messiah and Christ, whose lineage is the spiritual lineage of every man regenerate, and attainable by all men. 46. For, as cannot be too clearly and forcibly stated, be- tween the man who becomes a Christ, and other men, there is no difference whatever of kind. The difference is alone of condition and degree, and consists in difference of un- foldment of the spiritual nature possessed by all in virtue of their common derivation. “All things,” as has repeat- edly been said, “are made of the divine Substance.” And Humanity represents a stream which, taking its rise in the outermost and lowest mode of differentiation of that Sub- stance, flows inwards and upwards to the highest, which is God. And the point at which it reaches the celestial, and empties itself into Deity, is “Christ.” Any doctrine other than this—any doctrine which makes the Christ of a different and non-human nature—is anti-christian and sub-human. And, of such doctrine the direct effect is to cut off man altogether from access to God, and God from a CCeSS to man. . 47. Such a doctrine is that which, representing the Messiah as an incarnated God or Angel who, by the volun- 246 7A/F AAA' FEC 7' W.4 y. tary sacrifice of himself, saves mankind from the penalty due for their sins, has distorted and obscured the true doctrine of atonement and redemption into something alike derogatory to God and pernicious to man. That from which man requires to be redeemed, is not the penalty of sin, but the liability to sin. It is the sin, and not the suffering, which is his bane. The suffering is but the remedial agent. And from the liability to sin, and conse- quently to suffering, he can be redeemed only by being liſted into a condition in which sin is impossible to him. And no angel or third person, but only the man himself, co-operating with the God within him, can accomplish this. Man is, himself, the laboratory wherein God, as Spirit, works to save him, by re-creating him in God's image. But—as always happens under a control exclusively Sacer- dotal—religion has been presented as a way of escape, not from sin, but from punishment. With redemption degraded to this unworthy and mischievous end, the world, has, as was inevitable, gone on sinning more and more, and, by the ever-increasing grossness of its life and thought, sinking itself deeper and deeper into Matter, violating persistently, on every plane of existence, the divine law of existence, until it has lost the very idea of Humanity, and—wholly unregenerate in Body, Mind, Heart, and Spirit—has reached the lowest depth of degradation compatible with existence. Thus, of modern society—as of Israel when reduced, through its own wickedness and folly, to the like evil plight—it may be said that “from the sole of the foot even unto the head, there is no soundness in it: but, wounds, and bruises, and putrefying sores.” And even though “the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint” at the view of its own hopeless theory of existence, it seeks to “revolt more and more ” by becoming increasingly pro- LECT. VIII.] 7A7A2 RAE ZOAXA/PT/OAV. 247 nounced in its denial of Being as a divine Reality, and so does its utmost to “bring upon itself swift destruction.” Such, to eyes in any degree percipient, is the spectacle pre- sented by the world in this “Year of Grace,” 1881. 48. As it was no part of the design of the Gospels to represent the whole course of the Man Regenerate, so neither was it a part of that design to provide, in respect of religious life and doctrine, a system whole and complete independently of any which had preceded it. Having a special relation to the Heart and Spirit of the Man, and thereby to the nucleus of the cell and the Holy of Holies of the Tabernacle, Christianity, in its original conception, relegated the regeneration of the Mind and Body—the covered House and open Court of the Tabernacle, or exterior dualism of the Microcosm—to systems already existent and widely known and practised. These systems were two in number, or rather were as two modes or expressions of the one system, the establishment of which constituted the “Message” which preceded Christianity by the cyclical period of six hundred years. This was the Message of which the “Angels” were represented in the Buddha Gautama and Pythagoras. Of these two nearly contemporary prophets and redeemers, the system was, both in doctrine and in practice, essentially one and the same. And their relation to the system of Jesus, as its necessary pioneers and forerunners, finds recognition in the Gospels under the allegory of the Transfiguration. For the forms beheld in this—of Moses and Elias—are the Hebrew correspondences of Buddha and Pythagoras. And they are described as beheld by the three Apostles in whom respectively are typified the functions severally ful- filled by Pythagoras, Buddha, and Jesus; namely, Works, 248 THE PERFEC 7" PVA V. Understanding, and Love, or Body, Mind, and Heart. And by their association on the Mount is denoted the junction of all three elements, and the completion of the whole system comprising them, in Jesus as the represen- tative of the Heart or Innermost, and as in a special sense the “beloved Son of God.” 49. Christianity, then, was introduced into the world with a special relation to the great religions of the East, and under the same divine control. And so far from being intended as a rival and supplanter of Buddhism, it was the direct and necessary sequel to that system; and the two are but parts of one continuous, harmonious whole, whereof the later division is but the indispensable supplement and com- plement of the earlier. Buddha and Jesus are, therefore, necessary the one to the other; and in the whole system thus completed, Buddha is the Mind, and Jesus is the Heart; Buddha is the general, Jesus is the particular; Buddha is the brother of the universe, Jesus is the brother of men ; Buddha is Philosophy, Jesus is Religion; Buddha is the Circumference, Jesus is the Within; Buddha is the System, Jesus is the Point of Radiation; Buddha is the Manifestation, Jesus is the Spirit; in a word, Buddha is the “Man,” Jesus is the “Woman.” But for Buddha, Jesus could not have been, nor would he have sufficed the whole man ; for the man must have the Mind illuminated before the Affections can be kindled. Nor would Buddha have been complete without Jesus. Buddha completed the regeneration of the Mind; and by his doctrine and practice men are prepared for the grace which comes by Jesus. Wherefore no man can be, properly, Christian, who is not also, and first, Buddhist. Thus the two religions constitute, respectively, the exterior and interior of the same Gospel, the foundation being in Buddhism—the term LECT. VIII.] THE AEA'A)/2AMA 7TWOAV. 249 including Pythagoreanism—and the illumination in Christi- anity. And as without Christianity Buddhism is incom- plete, so without Buddhism Christianity is unintelligible. The Regenerate Man of the Gospels stands upon the foundation represented by Buddha, the earlier stages, that is, of the same process of regeneration, so that without these he would be impossible. Hence the significance, already explained, of the Baptist's part. 5.o. The term Buddha, moreover, signifies the Word. And the Buddha and the Christ represent, though on dif- ferent planes, the same divine Logos or Reason, and are joint expressions of the “Message” which, in preceding cycles had been preached by “Zoroaster”—the Sun-star— as well as by Moses, and typified in Mithras, Osiris, and Krishna. Of all these the doctrine was one and the same, for it was the doctrine of the Man Regenerate, even the “Gospel of Christ.” It was, thus, the treasure—beyond all other priceless—of which Israel, fleeing, “spoiled the Egyptians;” of which, that is, the soul, escaping the power of the body, retains the possession, having gained it through its experience in the body. That Buddha, great as was his “Renunciation,” underwent no such extremity of ordeal as that ascribed to his counterpart of the Gospels, is due to the difference of the parts enacted, and the stages at- tained, by them. Suffering is not of the mind, but of the heart. And whereas, of their joint system, Buddha repre- sents the intellect, and Jesus represents the affections;– in Jesus, as its highest typical expression of the love- element, Humanity fulfils the injunction, “My son, give me thine heart.”" * This relation between the two systems, and the necessity of each to the other, have found recognition among the Buddhists themselves. Of this, one instance which may be cited, is that of a Cingalese chief 250 7A/E PERFEC7 WA Y. 51. Since of the spiritual union in the one faith of Buddha and Christ, will be born the world's coming re- demption, the relations between the two peoples through whom, on the physical plane, this union must be effected, become a subject of special interest and importance. Viewed from this aspect, the connection subsisting between England and India rises from the sphere political to the sphere spiritual. As typical peoples of the West and of the East, of the races light and dark, these two, as represen- tative Man and Woman of Humanity, will in due time constitute one Man, made in the image of God, regenerate and having power. And so shall the “lightning from the East,” after “illuminating the West,” be reflected back, purified and enhanced, “a light to lighten all nations and to be the glory of the spiritual Israel.” Thus, then, in Christ Jesus the holy systems of the past find their maturity and perfectionment. For by Christ is made possible the gift of the Divine Spirit—the “Paraclete’” —who could not come by Pythagoras nor by Buddha, because these represent the outer elements of the Microcosm; and the Nucleolus, or Spirit, can be manifest only in the inner element, or Nucleus, of which Jesus is the representative. And thus, as said in Genesis xv. 16, “in the fourth generation,” shall the spiritual seed of Abraham, or Brahma—for they are one and the same word and denote one and the same doctrine—“return" to the promised land of their inherit- ance; and, as said by Jesus, “many shall come from the who had sent his son to a Christian school; and who, on finding his consistency called in question by a Christian, replied that the two religions were to each other as the canoe of his country, and the con- trivance—called an outrigger—by means of which, when afloat, it is kept upright. “I add on,” he said, “your religion to my own, for I consider Christianity a very good outrigger to Buddhism.”—Tennant's Ceylon. LECT. VIII.] 7"AyAF RAE DA2MA 7TWOAZ 25 I East and West, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven.” 52. For, as the “three, Noah, Daniel, and Job’’ were for the Hebrews, types of Righteousness, so the three, “Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob’’ were types of Truth, pro- genitors of the spiritual Israel, and representatives of the several sacred mysteries of whose “kingdom " the Man Regenerate is always, and the world regenerate will be ultimately, by adoption and grace, the inheritor. The mysteries specially denoted by “Abraham ” are, as just indicated, those of India. They are the mysteries of the Spirit, or Innermost, and are sacred to the Supreme Being, Brahma, who represents Deity under process of self-mani- festationſ and, therefore, in activity. In this process, the Original Being, Brahm, becomes Brahma; God becomes 'the Lord, the Manifestor. And it is in recognition of this change, that Abram becomes Abraham. The history of this personage, his flight, always an invariable element in such histories, as witness that of Bacchus, of Israel, of the Holy Family, of Mohammed, and others, his adven- tures and wanderings, is the history of the migration of the mysteries of India, by way of Chaldaea, to that divinely- selected centre and pivot of all true religions, Egypt, a term denoting the body, which itself is the divinely-ap- pointed residence of the Soul during its term of probation." * In accordance with Hindu usage, which makes the masculine the passive, and the feminine the active principle of existence, the mysteries are represented by the wives of the divine persons. Thus, of Brahma the active principle is his wife Saraswati, after whom the wife of Abraham, who is also his active principle, is called Sara, “the Lady,” meaning, of heaven. The story of the long courtship and two wives of Jacob, is a parable of initiation into the mysteries, lesser and greater. And the finding of the wife of Isaac at a well—like the finding of Moses in a river by the king's daughter—indicates the woman, or soul, as the agent of intuition, and thereby of initiation and redemption. The 252 THE PERFECT WA Y. The next great order of mysteries refers to the soul, and is sacred to Isis, the goddess of the intuition, and “Mother” of the Christ. These mysteries were, for the Israelites, represented by Isaac, a name occultly connected with Isis and Jesus, as also with that of an important personage in the pedigree of this last, namely Jesse, the “father of David,” and a “keeper of sheep.” The third and remaining great order of the mysteries—that which refers to the body, and which early migrated to Greece—is sacred to Bacchus, whose mystic name Zacchos is identical with Jacob. Comprising the three great divisions of existence, and by implication the fourth division also, these three combined orders of mysteries formed, in the original conception of Christianity, a system of doctrine and life at once complete, harmonious, and sufficient for all needs and aspirations of humanity, both here and hereafter. And to this effect were the terms ascribed to Jesus in his reply to the inquiries made of him touching the resurrection of the dead. For, passing over the actual question, and coming at once to its mystic sense, he made a reply which referred, at least primarily, not to the individuals themselves who had been named, but to the systems implied in their names; and declaring those systems to be as full of vitality, and as essential to salvation, as when first divinely communicated to Moses in the words: “I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob,” he added that “God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.” Wherefore, according to this and the concurrent prophecy quoted above, these mysteries—which are at once Hindú, Chaldaean, Persian, Egyptian, Hebrew, Greek, and Chris- “Haran" and “Ur” from which Abram comes, denote the place of spiritual light; and the pedigrees imply primarily, not persons, but spiritual states. LECT. VIII.] 7TAZ Aº Aº DEMARTYOM. 253 tian—will, restored to their original purity, constitute the controlling doctrine of the ages to come. 53. In this forecast of the now imminent future is to be found the clue to the world's spiritual politics. Transferred from the mystical to the mundane plane, the “kings of the East” are they who hold political sovereignty over the pro- vinces of Hindustan. On the personal plane the title implies those who possess the “magical” knowledge, or keys of the kingdom of the Spirit, to have which is to be Magian. In both these senses the title henceforth belongs to us. Of one of the chief depositaries of this magical knowledge—the Bible—our country has long been the foremost guardian and champion. For three centuries and a half—a period suggestive of the mystic “time, times, and half a time,” and also of the “year of years” of the solar hero Enoch—has Britain lovingly and faithfully, albeit un- intelligently, cherished the Letter which now, by the finding of the interpretation, is—like its prototype—“translated ” to the plane of the Spirit. Possessing thus the Gnosis, in substance as well as in form, our country will be fitted for the loftier, because spiritual, sovereignty to which she is destined, and one which will outlast her material empire. For, finding then that they are essentially one as to faith and hope, even though diverse in respect of accidentals, the East and the West will be one in heart and aim, and to- gether beget as their joint offspring the philosophy, morality, and religion, in a word, the Humanity, of the future. All, therefore, that tends to bind England to the Orient is of Christ, and all that tends to sever them is of Antichrist. They who seek to wed Buddha to Jesus are of the celestial and upper; and they who interpose to forbid the banns are of the astral and nether. Between the two hemispheres stand the domain and faith of Islam, not to divide, but, as 254 THE PERFECT WA Y. umbilical cord, to unite them. And nought is there in Islamism to hinder its fulfilment of this high function, and keep it from being a partaker of the blessings to result therefrom. For, not only is it the one really monotheistic and non-idolatrous religion now existing; but its symbolic Star and Crescent are essentially one with the Cross of Christ, in that they also typify the elements masculine and feminine of the divine existence, and the relation of the soul to God. So that Islamism has but to accomplish that other stage of its natural evolution, which will enable it to claim an equal place in the brotherhood of the Elect. This is the practical recognition in “Allah” of Mother as well as of Father, by the exaltation of the woman to her rightful station on all planes of man's manifold nature, This accomplished, Esau and Ishmael will be joined to- gether with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in Christ. 54. In this recognition of the divine idea of humanity, and its ultimate results, will consist what are called the “Second Advent and millennial reign of Christ.” Of that advent—although described as resembling the coming of a thief in the night—the approach will not be unheeded. For, even in the darkest of spiritual nights, there are always on the alert some who, as faithful shepherds, keep Constant watch over the flocks of their own pure hearts, and who, “living the life, know of the doctrine.” And these, “dwell- ing by the well of clear vision,” and “discerning the signs of the times,” perceive already the mustering of the heavenly hosts, and the bright streamers of dawning of the long wished-for better Day." * See Appendices, Nos. V., VI., and VII. LECTURE THE NINTH. GOJO AS THE LORD : OR, TAE DIVINE IMAGE. PART I. 1. ALL sacred books, of whatever people, concur in adopting in respect of the Deity two apparently opposite and anta- gonistic modes of expression. According to one of these modes, the Divine Being is external, universal, diffused, unformulated, indefinable, and altogether inaccessible and beyond perception. According to the other, the Divine Being is near, particular, definite, formulated, personified, discernible, and readily accessible. Thus, on the one hand it is said that God is the high and holy One that inhabiteth eternity, and is past finding out ; that no man hath seen God at any time, neither heard God's voice, or can see God and live. And, on the other hand, it is declared that God has been heard and beheld face to face, and is nigh to all who call upon God, being within their hearts; and that the knowledge of God is not only the one knowledge worth having, but that it is open to all who seek for it ; and the pure in heart are promised, as their supreme reward, that they shall “see God.” 2. Numerous instances, moreover, are recorded of the actual sensible vision of God. Of the Hebrew prophets, Isaiah says that he saw the Lord “high and lifted up ; ” Ezekiel, that he beheld the “glory of the God of Israel” as a figure of fire ; Daniel, that he beheld God as a human 25S 256 THE PERATECT WA Y. form, enthroned in flame; and John records in the Apo- calypse a similar vision. The writers of the book of Exodus show their cognisance of such experiences by ascribing the vision not only to Moses, but to the whole of the elders and leaders of Israel, in all, seventy-four persons. And of these many are represented as competent to receive it in virtue of their own unaided faculties. For, by the statement that “upon the nobles Moses laid not his hands,” it is implied that their own spiritual condition was such that they needed no aid from the magnetism of the great hierarch their chief. The sight of the “God of Israel ” on this occasion is described as like that of “a devouring fire.” 3. Among similar experiences related in other Scriptures is that in the Bhagavat Gita, wherein the “Lord Krishna’’ exhibits to the gaze of Arjun his “supreme and heavenly form * “shining on all sides with light immeasurable, like the sun a thousand-fold,” and “containing in his breast all the Gods, or Powers, masculine and feminine, of the Universe.” 4. Yet, notwithstanding the difference of the two natures thus described, the Scriptures regard both as appertaining to one and the same Divine Being ; and, combining the names characteristic of both, declare that the Lord is God, and God is the Lord, and appoint the compound term Lord-God as the proper designation of Deity. 5. Besides the title Lord, many various names are applied to Deity as subsisting under this mode. In the Jewish and Christian Scriptures these names are Jehovah, El Shaddai, the Logos, the Ancient of Days, Alpha and Omega, Son of God, the Only Begotten, Adonai. The Hindús have Brahma, and also Ardha-Nari, identical with Adonai. The Persians, Ormuzd ; the Egyptians, Ra, or the Sun ; the Greeks, the Demiourgos ; the Kabbala has LECT. IX.] THE DIVIME ZMAGE. 257 Adam Kadmon ; and some later mystics employ the term “Grand Man.” 6. Of these last the most notable, Emmanual Sweden- borg, asserts the vision to be a fact in respect of the angels, —whom he claims as his informants, saying that the Lord is God manifested in the universe as a man, and is thus beheld, interiorly, by the angels. (Divine Love and Wis- dom, 97, etc., etc.) 7. Swedenborg, however, identifies the Lord who is thus discerned with the historical Jesus, maintaining the latter to be very Deity, Jehovah in person, who assumed a fleshly body, and manifested Himself as a man, in order to save men from hell, and commanded His disciples to call Him Lord. (True Christian Åeligion, 370 ; D. Z. and W., 282, etc., etc.) Swedenborg herein falls into the common error of confounding “our Lord ” with “the Lord,” the Christ in the man with Adonai in the heavens, of whom the former is the counterpart ;-an error due to his failure to recognise the distinction between the manifest and the unmanifest, and between the microcosmic and the macrocosmic deity." * In his presentation of the Incarnation, Swedenborg is at variance, not only with the Gnosis, but with himself. For in it he sets aside the canon of interpretation formulated by himself, his recovery and general application of which—together with the doctrine of correspondence— constitute his chief merit. Thus, to cite his own words:—“In the internal sense there is no respect to any person, or anything determined to a person. But there are three things which disappear from the sense of the letter of the Word, when the internal sense is unfolded ; that which is of time, that which is of space, and that which is of per- son.” “The Word is written by mere correspondence, and hence all its contents, to the most minute, signify things heavenly and spiritual” (Arcana Calestia, 52.53 and 1401). He also repeatedly declares that the literal sense of the Word is rarely the truth, but only the appearance of the truth, and that to take the literal sense for the true one is to destroy the truth itself, since everything in it relates to the heavenly and spiritual, and becomes falsified when transferred to a lower plane by being taken literally (see e.g. Z. C. A., 254, 258, etc.). According both to this rule and the Gnosis, that which is implied by the term S 258 7A/E PE/CFEC7' W.4 y. 8. In “the Lord ” the Formless assumes a form, the Nameless a name, the Infinite the definite, and these human. But, although “the Lord is God manifested as a man’’ in and to the souls of those to whom the vision is vouchsafed, it is not as man in the exclusive sense of the term and masculine only, but as man both masculine and feminine, at once man and woman, as is Humanity itself. The Lord is God manifested in substance, and is dual in form because Deity, though one in essence, and statically, is twofold in operation, or dynamically. And the vision of Deity under a definite form, dual and human,—or androgy- nous, though not as ordinarily apprehended,—has been universal and persistent from the beginning; and this, not as a conception merely mental and “subjective,” but as a perception objective to an interior faculty, in that it is . actually beheld. Hence it is that, in terms employed to denote Deity, both sexes are expressed or implied; and where one sex only is designated, it is not because the Incarnation is an event purely spiritual in its nature, potential in all men, and of perpetual occurrence, inasmuch as it takes place in every regenerate man, being at once the cause and effect of his regeneration. The authority twice cited by Swedenborg (T. C. R., Io2 and 827) in support of his doctrine,—namely, an apparition professing to be the spirit of the Mother of Jesus, is one which a duly instructed occultist would, at the least, have hesitated to regard as aught but a projection of his own magnetic aura, and as merely a mechanical reflect, there- fore, of his own thought. Swedenborg had learned little or nothing from books, was ignorant of any system other than the Christian, and also of the origin and meaning of the Christian symbology, and trusted for his information entirely to his own faculty ; and this, extraordinary as it was, was allied to a temperament too cold and unsympathetic to generate the enthusiasm by which alone the topmost heights of per- ception and inmost core of the consciousness can be attained. Never- theless, despite his limitations, Swedenborg was beyond question the foremost herald and initiator of the new era opening in the spiritual life of Christendom, and no student of religion can dispense with a knowledge of him. Only, he must be read with much discrimination and patience. LECT. IX.] 7 H.A., JOY WAVE YMAGAZ. 259 other is wanting, but because it is latent. And hence it is also, that, in order to be made in the image of God, the individual must comprise within himself the qualities mascu- line and feminine of existence, and be, spiritually, both man and woman. Man is perfect only when the whole humanity is manifested in him ; and this occurs only when the whole Spirit of Humanity—that is God—is manifested through him. Thus manifesting Himself, God, as the book of Genesis says, “creates man in His own Image, Male and Female.” 9. Such is the doctrine of all Hermetic Scriptures. And when it is said—as of the Kabbala—that these Scriptures were delivered by God first of all to Adam in Paradise, and then to Moses on Sinai, it is meant that the doctrine contained in them is that which man always discerns when he succeeds in attaining to that inner and celestial region of his nature where he is taught directly of his own Divine Spirit, and knows even as he is known. The attainment of this divine knowledge constitutes existence a paradise. And it is symbolised by the ascent of a mountain, variously designated Nyssa, Sinai, Sion, Olivet. Peculiar to no par- ticular period or place, the power to receive this knowledge is dependent entirely upon condition. And the condition is that of the understanding. Man attains to the Image of God in proportion as he comprehends the nature of God. Such knowledge constitutes, of itself, transmuta- tion. For man is that which he knows. And he knows only that which he is. Wherefore the recognition, first of God as the Lord, and next of the Lord as the divine Humanity, constitutes at once the means of salvation and salvation itself. This is the truth which makes free,_the supreme mystery, called by Paul the “mystery of godliness.” And it is by their relegation of this mystery to the category 26o 7THAE ZEAEAA’C 7' W.A. P. of the incomprehensible, that the priesthoods have barred to man the way of redemption. They have directed him, indeed, to a Macrocosmic God subsisting exteriorly to man, and having a nature altogether different from man's, and to a heaven remote and inaccessible. But they have sup- pressed altogether the Microcosmic God and the kingdom within, and have blotted the Lord and his true image out of all recognition. Now the main distinction between the uninitiate and the initiate, between the man who does not know and the man who does know, lies in this :—For the one, God, if subsisting at all, is wholly without. For the other, God is both within and without ; and the God within is all that the God without is. Io. It cannot be too emphatically stated, that the defini- tion which sets forth Mystery as something inconsistent with or contradictory of sense and reason, is a wrong defi- nition, and one in the highest degree pernicious. In its true signification, Mystery means only that which apper- tains to a region of which the external sense and reason are unable to take cognisance. It is, thus, the doctrine of Spirit and of the experiences connected therewith. And inasmuch as the spiritual is the within and source of the phenomenal, so far from any doctrine of Spirit contradicting and stultifying the experiences and conclusions of the ex- ternal faculties, it corrects and interprets them ;-precisely as does reason correct and interpret the sensible impression of the earth’s immobility, and of the diurnal revolution of the skies. That, therefore, which the degradation of the term Mystery to mean something incomprehensible, really represents, is the loss by the priesthoods of the faculty of comprehension. Declining, through “idolatry,” from the standard once attained by them, and losing the power either to discern or to interpret Substance, the Churches LECT. IX.] THE DAVIAWE ZMA GE. 261 abandoned the true definition of Mystery which referred it to things transcending the outer sense and reason, and adopted a definition implying something contradictory of all sense and reason. Thenceforth, so far from fulfilling their proper function of supplying man with the wholesome “bread " of a perfect system of thought, they gave him instead the indigestible “stones” of dogmas altogether unthinkable; and for the “fish,”—or interior mysteries of the soul, the “serpents,” or illusory reflects, of the astral. Reduced by this act to a choice between the suicide of an absolute surrender of the reason, and open revolt, the world adopted the lesser of the two evils. And this both rightly and of necessity. For man neither ought if he could, nor can if he would, suppress his reason. And now the Churches, having lost the cognition of Spirit, and sup- pressed the faculty whereby alone it could be attained, are absolutely without a system of Thought wherewith to oppose the progress of that fatal system of No-thought which is, fast engulfing the world. And so profound is the despair which reigns even in the highest ranks of Ecclesi- asticism, as recently, from one of its most distinguished members, to elicit the confession that he saw no hope for Religion save in a new Revelation." PART II. II. It is necessary to devote a brief space to an exposi- tion of the ancient and true doctrine in respect of the place and value of the Understanding in things religious. For So we shall both further minister to the rehabilitation of this Supreme faculty, and exhibit the extent to which sacerdo- talism has departed from the right course. Mention has * Related of Cardinal Newman, on his investiture at Rome. 262 7A7A2 AAEA F.A.C.T WA Y. already been made of Hermes as the “trainer of the Christs.” The phrase is of a kind with those more familiar phrases which describe Christ as the “Son of David’’ and as the “Seed of the Woman ’’; and, in short, with all statements respecting the genealogy of the Christ, including the declaration that the Rock on which the Church of Christ is built is the Understanding. For of all such statements the meaning is, that the doctrine represented by the term Christ—so far from being a Mystery, in the sacerdotal sense—is a truth necessary and self-evident, and requiring for its discernment as such, only the full and free exercise of Thought. Now, this term Thought is no other than the name of the Egyptian equivalent of Hermes, the God Zhaut, frequently written Zhoth, these being for the Greeks and Egyptians respectively the Divine Intelligence in its dynamic condition. It has already been stated that in the Celestial all properties and qualities are Persons, the fact being that it is always in the guise of a person that the Divine Spirit of a man holds intercourse with him, the mode adopted on the occasion corresponding to the function to be exercised. Thoth and Hermes are, then, names expressive of the personality assumed by the supreme Mous of the Microcosm when operating especially as the Intelligence or Understanding. In different nations, while the function is the same, the name and form vary according to the genius of the people. Thus, to a Hebrew the same Spirit becomes manifest as Raphael. In the Bhagavat-Gita the Supreme Being, speaking as the Lord (Krishna), declares that he himself is the Spirit of Under- standing. As the parent Spirit—the AVous, or divine Mind —is God, so the product Thought, or the “Word,” as a Son of God, is also God. Nor does the Divine procession cease at the first generation. For, whereas of such Divine Lect. IX.] THE DIV/AWE IMAGAZ. 263 Word the Christ is the manifestation “in ultimates,” the Christ also is Son of God, and therefore God. 12. But not the less, however, is “Christ " the “Son of David,” though not by physical descent—his line had long been extinct—but in a spiritual sense. Like the patriarchs —who were therefore said to live in concubinage—David was not “married to the Spirit,” but held only occasional communion with it, receiving but a measure of illumination. “Christ” implies full regeneration and illumination. The attainment of this state is the ultimate aim of the science called Hermetic and Alchemic, the earliest formulation of which is ascribed to the god Thoth, the Egyptian equiva- lent for the Divine Thought. Tracking the Christ-idea to this source, we have a yet further—though still but a secondary—signification for the saying, “Out of Egypt hast thou called thy Son.” . - - 13. One of the most general symbols of the Understand- ing, and of its importance in the work of regeneration, has always been the Ram. Hence the frequent portrayal of the representative of Hermes and Thoth with a ram's head. For by this was denoted the power of the faculty of which the head is the seat, the act of butting with the horns typi- fying the employment of the intellect whether for attack or defence. The command to cover the holy place of the Tabernacle with a ram's fleece, implied that only to the understanding were the mysteries of the Spirit accessible. The mighty walls of the “Jericho" of Doubt, are repre- sented as falling at the sound of rams' horns, after being “encompassed ” during the typical period of seven days. The narrative of the previous entry—that of the “spies”— into this stronghold through the agency of a woman, is similarly designed to exalt the understanding, the direct reference being to the intuition as essential to the under- 264 THAE AERA.A. C.7° W.A. V. standing, and therefore to the resolution of doubt. The ascription to this woman of the vocation of the Magda- len, accords with the mystical usage of regarding the soul as impure during the term—necessary for her education —of her association with Matter. This finished, she be- comes “virgin.” One of the chief glories of Hermes—his conquest of the hundred-eyed Argus—denotes the victory of the understanding over fate. For Argus represents the power of the stars over the unenfranchised soul. Where- fore Hera, the queen of the astral spheres and persecutrix of the soul thus subject, is said to have placed the eyes of Argus in the train of her vehicular bird, the peacock. 14. The story of the slaying of Goliath is a parable of like import. For Goliath is the formulation of the system represented by the “Philistines,”—that system of doubt . and denial which finds its inevitable outcome in Material- ism. The killing of Goliath signifies, thus, the discomfiture of Materialism by the Understanding. And David, more- over, is represented—on arraying himself for the conflict— as declining the “king's weapons,” or arms of the exterior reason, and choosing “a smooth stone out of a brook”; this being the “philosopher's stone” of a pure spirit, a firm will, and a clear perception, such as is attained only through the secret operation of the soul, of which the brook is the emblem. Such a stone, also, is that which, “cut out without hands,” Smites in pieces, as already explained, the giant image of Nebuchadnezzar. The reward of David's achievement—the possession of the king's daughter, the usual termination of such heroic adventure—denotes the attainment by the conqueror of the highest gifts and graces; —the daughter of Saul, or the outer Reason, being the inner Reason, or psychic faculty, developed from the “Man,” and constituting the “Woman” in the man. Hence by LECT. IX.] 7A/E ZOA V/AVE IMAGAZ. 265 David's subsequent history in relation to Michal, is implied a spiritual retrogression on the soul's part. 15. Similar reasons dictated the selection of a dog as specially sacred to Hermes, and his representation as the dog-headed Anubis; the intelligence and faithfulness of this animal making it an apt type of the understanding as the peculiar friend of man. Raphael—the Hebrew equivalent of Hermes, and like him called the “physician of souls”— is also represented as accompanied by a dog when travel- ling with Tobias. And the name of the special associate of Joshua, a name identical with Jesus, the final leader of the chosen people into the promised land of their spiritual perfection,-namely, Caleb, signifies a dog, and implies the necessity of intelligence to the successful quest of salvation. For the like reason were “rams,” and the “fat of rams,” used as symbolic terms to denote the offer- ing most acceptable to God. It was intended by them to teach that man ought to dedicate to the service of God all the powers of his mind raised to their highest perfection, and by no means to ignore or suppress them. 16. The like high rank is accorded to the Understanding in all Hermetic Scriptures. For, as in Isaiah xi. 2,--it is always placed second among the seven Elohim of God, the first place being assigned to Wisdom, which is accounted as one with Love. The same order is observed in the disposition of the solar system. For Mercury is Hermes, and his planet is next to the Sun. The ascription, in the mythologies, of a thievish disposition to this divinity, and the legends which represent him as the patron of thieves and adventurers, and stealing in turn from all the Gods, are modes of indicating the facility with which the under- standing annexes everything and makes it its own. For Hermes denotes that faculty of the divine part in man 266 7"//E AERAEEC 7' WA V. which seeks and obtains meanings out of every department of existence, intruding into the province of every “God,” and appropriating some portion of the goods of each. Thus the understanding has a finger upon all things, and converts them to its own use, whether it be the “arrows” of Apollo, the “girdle” of Aphrodite, the “oxen” of Adme- tus, the “trident’ of Poseidon, or the “tongs" of Hephai- stos. Not only is Hermes—as already said—the rock on which the true Church is built; he is also the divinity under whose immediate control all divine revelations are made, and all divine achievements performed. His are the rod of knowledge where with all things are measured, the wings of courage, the sword of the unconquerable will, and the cap of concealment or discretion. He is in turn the Star of the East, conducting the Magi; the Cloud from whose midst the holy Voice speaks; by day the pillar of Vapour, by night the shining Flame, leading the elect soul on her perilous path through the noisome wilderness of the world, as she flies from the Egypt of the Flesh, and guiding her in safety to the promised heaven. He, too, it is who is the shield of saints in the fiery furnace of persecution or affliction, and whose “form is like the Son of God.” And by him the candidate for spiritual knowledge attains full initiation. For he is also the Communicator, and without him is no salvation. For, although that which saves is faith, that is not faith which is without understanding. Happily for the so-called “simple,” this understanding is not necessarily of the outer man ; it suffices for salvation that the inner man have it." 17. “Hermes, as the messenger of God,” says the Neoplatonist Proclus, “reveals to us His paternal will, and — developing in us the intuition—imparts to us knowledge. * See Apps. XII. 6 and XIV. LECT. IX.] THE DAVIAWE AMAGE. 267 The knowledge which descends into the soul from above, excels any that can be attained by the mere exercise of the intellect. Intuition is the operation of the soul. The knowledge received through it from above, descending into the soul, fills it with the perception of the interior causes of things. The Gods announce it by their presence, and by illumination, and enable us to discern the universal order.” Commenting on these words of a philosopher regarded by his contemporaries with a veneration approaching to adora- tion, for his wisdom and miraculous powers, a recent leader of the prevailing school exclaims, “Thus is Proclus con- sistent in absurdity l’” Whereas, had the critic been aware of the truth concerning the reality, personality, and accessi- bility of the world celestial, so far from denouncing Proclus as “absurd,” he would have supremely envied him, and eagerly sought the secret and method of the Neoplaton- ists. “To know more,” says the writer in question, “we must be more.” But when the Mystic—who, in virtue of his supreme sense of the dignity and gravity of man's nature, affirms nothing lightly or rashly—offers his solemn assur- ance that we are more, and prescribes a simple rule, amply verified by himself, whereby to ascertain the fact, he turns away in disdain, and proceeds in his own manner to make himself infinitely less, by becoming a ringleader of that terrible school of Biology, which does not scruple, in the outraged name of Science, to indulge its passion for know- ledge to the utter disregard of humanity and morality, by the infliction of tortures the most atrocious and protracted, upon creatures harmless and helpless. Little wonder is it that between Mystic and Materialist should gulf so impassable, feud so irreconcilable, intervene ; seeing that while the one seeks by the sacrifice of his own lower nature - * G. H. Lewes, Blog. Hist. Phil. 268 TA/AE AEAERA.E.C.T WA V. to his higher, and of himself for others, to prove man poten- tial God, the other—turning vivisector—makes him actual fiend.1 18. To resume our exposition of the “mystery of godli- ness,” or doctrine of God as the Lord, and of the duality of the Divine image. According to the Zohar—the prin- cipal book of the Kabbala—the Divine word by which all things are created is the celestial archetypal Humanity, which—subsisting eternally in the Divine Mind—makes the universe in His own image. God, as absolute Being, having no form or name, cannot and may not be repre- sented under any image or appellation. Bent upon self- manifestation, or creation, the Divine Mind conceives the Ideal Humanity as a vehicle in which to descend from Being into Existence. This is the Merkaba, or Car, al- ready referred to ; and that which it denotes is Human Nature in its perfection, at once twofold in operation, fourfold in constitution, and sixfold in manifestation, and as a cube—Kaabeh-‘‘standing four-square to all the winds of heaven.” In virtue of its twofoldness this “vehicle” expresses the corresponding opposites, Will and Love, Justice and Mercy, Energy and Space, Life and Substance, Positive and Negative, in a word, Male and Female, both of which subsist in the Divine Nature in absolute plenitude and perfect equilibrium. Expressed in the Divine Idea— Adam Kadmon—the qualities masculine and feminine of existence are, in their union and co-operation, the life and salvation of the world; and in their division and antagon- * This paragraph was written with a view to its publication in the life-time of Mr. Lewes. Unhappily, the necessity for it has not ceased with his life. Hence its appearance now. Both in the schools and in the laboratory his writings and influence survive him. The work cited is a University text-book ; and a scholarship has been instituted in his name for the promotion of vivisectional research. LECT. IX.] THE DIVINE /MAGAZ. 269 ism, its death and destruction. One in the Absolute, but two in the Relative, this ideal—but not therefore the less real—Humanity resumes both in itself, and is king and queen of the universe, and as such is projected through every sphere of creation to the material and phenomenal, causing the outer, lower, and sensible world everywhere to be made in the image of the inner, upper, and spiritual : so that all that subsists in the latter belongs to us here below and is in our image ; and the two regions together make one uniform existence which is a vast Man, being, like the individual man, in constitution fourfold and in operation dual. 19. This doctrine of Correspondence finds expression through Paul, first, when he declares that “the invisible things of God from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things which are made ; ” and again, when—applying it in its dual relation to the sexes of humanity—he says “Neither is the man without the woman, nor the woman without the man in the Lord.” The purity of its doctrine in this respect constitutes a proof of the divinity of the Kabbala. For it shows that this famous compendium belongs to a period prior to that destruction by the priesthoods of the equilibrium of the sexes which constituted in one sense the “Fall.” Calling the woman the house and wall of the man, without whose bounding and redeeming influence he would inevitably be dissipated and lost in the abyss, the Kabbala describes her as constituting the centripetal and aspirational element in humanity, having a natural affinity for the pure and noble, to which, with herself, she always seeks to raise man, and being therefore his guide and initiator in things spiritual. Thus recognising in the sexes of humanity respectively, the manifestation of the qualities masculine and feminine of the 27o 7'HAZ AEA'AºEC7' W.A. Y. divine Nature, Its power and Its love, the Kabbala duly inculcates the worship of that true Lord God of Hosts, the knowledge of whom constitutes its possessors the “Israel of God.” “Not every one who says Lord, Lord, is of this heavenly kingdom ; but they only who do the will of the Father Who is in heaven,” and Who accordingly honour duly His “two Witnesses” on earth—the man and the woman—on every plane of man's fourfold nature. It is by reason of Christ's duality that humanity beholds in him its representative. And it is only in those who seek in this to be like him, that Christ can by any means be born. 20. Close as was the agreement between Paul and the Kabbala in respect—among other doctrines—of the dual nature of Deity, the agreement stopped short of the due issue of that doctrine. And it is mainly through Paul that the influence we have described as at once astral, rabinical, and Sacerdotal, found entrance into the Church. For, judged by the received text, Paul, when it came to a matter of practical teaching, exchanged the spirit of the Kabbala for that of the Talmud, and transmitted—aggravated and reinforced—to Christianity, the traditional contempt of his race for woman. The Talmud appoints to every pious Jew, as a daily prayer, these words:–“Blessed art thou, O Lord, that thou hast not made me a Gentile, an idiot, or a woman;” and while enjoining the instruction of his sons in the Law, prohibits that of the daughters on the ground that women are accursed. This reprobation of one whole moiety of the divine nature, instead of finding condem- nation from Paul as erroneous, was adopted by him as the basis of his instructions concerning the position of women in a Christian society. For, after rightly defining the doctrine of the equality of the sexes “in the Lord,” we find him writing to the Corinthians in the following strain : LECT. IX.] THE DAVWWE IMAGE. 271 “But I would have you know that the head of every man is Christ, and the head of the woman is the man. For a man indeed ought not to have his head veiled, forasmuch as he is the image and glory of God : but the woman is the glory of the man. For the man is not of the woman ; but the woman of the man : for neither was the man created for the woman, but the woman for the man; for this cause ought the woman to have a sign of authority on her head, because of the angels.” “Let a woman learn in quietness with all subjection. But I permit not a woman to teach, nor to have dominion over a man, but to be in quietness.” “Let the women keep silence in the churches; for it is not permitted unto them to speak, but let them be in subjection, as saith the Law. It is shameful for a woman to speak in the Church.” “For Adam was first formed, then Eve ; and Adam was not beguiled; but the woman being beguiled, fell into transgression.” To the same purport writes Peter, who, as he certainly did not derive the doctrine from his Master, had doubtless been overborne in respect of it by Paul. Thus enforced, the doctrine of the subjection of the woman became accepted as an integral part of the Christian system, constituting in it an element of inevitable self-destruction. 21. The utterance last cited from Paul gives the clue to * In I Pet. iii. 6, it is said that “Sara obeyed Abraham, calling him Jord; ” whereas, according to Genesis, Abraham rather obeyed Sarai, calling her lady; for the change made by him in her name—from Sarai to Sara—implies an accession of dignity. Thereby, from being “my lady,” she became “the lady,” and representative of the feminine ele- ment in Divinity. The Deity is represented moreover as impressing on Abraham this injunction :- “In all that Sara hath said unto thee, hearken unto her voice.” The fault of Adam lay not—as might be in- ferred from the passage as it stands in Genesis—in “hearkening to the voice of his wife,” but in doing so when she was under beguilement ‘‘ of the devil”—a qualification for the suppression of which the motive is obvious. 272 7THE A2EA’AºEC 7' W.A. V. the source and motive of his doctrine concerning woman. It is a perversion, due to the influences already specified, of the parable of the Fall. When speaking in the Spirit, Paul declares the man and the woman alike to be “in the Lord.” Subsiding from this level, and speaking—as ac- cording to his own admission, he was not unwont to speak —“foolishly,” or of his own lower reason, he contradicts this statement and affirms that the man alone is made in the image of God, the divine Idea of Humanity compri- sing the male element only,–and implies that the woman is but a mere after-thought, contrived to meet an unex- pected emergency, and made, therefore, in the image, not of God, but of the man. Thus substituting the Letter for the Spirit, and wholly losing sight of the latter, Paul de- grades the mystic Scripture from its proper plane and universal signification, to a level historical merely and local. By making Adam and Eve no longer types of the substan- tial humanity in its two essential modes, the outer and inner personality, but an actual material couple, the first physical projenitors of the race, he accepts in all its gross, impossible crudity the fable of the apple and the snake, and declares that because the first woman was beguiled, therefore her daughters—not her sons—must through all time to come bear the penalty of silence and servitude 22. That which Paul would have taught, had his vision been uniformly enlightened, is the truth that, so far from the woman being an inferior part of humanity, it is not until she is, on all its planes, exalted, crowned, and glorified, that humanity, whether in the individual or in the race, can attain to Christhood, seeing that she, and not the “man,” is the bruiser of the serpent’s head, the last to be mani- fested, and therefore the first in dignity. For this reason it is that only by the restoration of the woman, on all planes LECT. IX.] THE DIVIME IMAGE. 273 of her manifestation, can the equilibrium of man's nature, destroyed at the “Fall,” be re-established. As it is, the direct effect of the teaching of Paul in this, and in certain allied respects, notably the doctrine of atonement by vi- carious bloodshed,—has been to perpetuate the false balance introduced by the Fall, and therein to confirm the Curse, to remove which is the supreme mission of the Christ as the “seed of the woman.” On this subject Jesus himself had spoken very explicitly, though only in writings labelled “Apocryphal" are the utterances recorded. Of these, one, given by Clement, declares plainly that the kingdom of God can come only “when Two shall be One, and the Man as the Woman.” In the other, recorded in the Egyptian gospel,-Jesus, speaking mystically, says, “The kingdom of Heaven shall come when you women shall have re- nounced the dress of your sex;” meaning, when the repre- sentatives of the soul, namely women, no longer submit to ordinances which cause or imply inferiority on the part either of themselves or of that which they represent; but, with the soul, are restored to their proper place. But, apart from any specific utterances, the whole character and teaching of Jesus are at variance with the doctrine and usage which have prevailed. For that character and teaching were in complete accordance with the course already from the be- ginning marked out in the planisphere of the Zodiac, where- in the rising of the constellation Virgo is followed by Libra, the Balance,—emblem of the Divine Justice,—in token of the establishment of the Kingdom of Righteousness which should follow upon the rehabilitation of the “Woman.” Paul, on the contrary, in his astral and non-lucid mo- ments, enforces the curse which Jesus would have put away; appeals to the Law which at other times he repu- diates and denounces; and forges its chains anew by thrust- T 274 TAZAZ AAEA'A'EC 7' W.A. Y. ing them around the necks of those who—he himself says —should be “no more under the Law, but under Grace.”! 23. Thus does Paul, to whose writings chiefly the various doctrinal systems of Christianity owe their origin, divide the Churches, and diminish the Reason, by falling back on convention and tradition. Now the Reason is not the “intellect,”—this, as we have insisted represents but a moiety of the mind. The Reason is the whole humanity, which comprises the intuition as well as the intellect, and is in God's Image, male and female. This supreme Reason it is which finds its full expression in the Logos or Lord. Wherefore, in denying her true place to the woman in his scheme of society, Paul denies to the Lord his due manifestation on earth, and exalts for worship some image other than the divine. It is because they recognise in the Reason the heir of all things, that the devil and his agents always make it their first concern to cast it out and slay it. “This is the Heir,”—the Reason, the Logos, the Lord, “come let us kill him, and the inheritance shall be ours,” —say those ministers of Unreason, the materialistic ortho- doxies of Church and World. And no sooner is the Reason suppressed and cast out, than madness, folly, and evil of every kind step in and, taking possession, bear rule, making the last state—be it of community or of individual—worse than the first. For then in place of Christ and the divine image, is anti-Christ and the “man of sin”; and the rule is that of falsehood, superstition, and all manner of unclean spirits, having neither knowledge, nor power, nor wisdom, * According to the Apocryphal Epistles, and to ecclesiastical tradition, Paul, nevertheless, directed his own female associate—Theckla—to preach in public, and suffered her even to wear male attire. Paul, how- ever, following the Levitical Code (Lev. xxi. 13), draws a distinction between married women and virgins, saying he had no commandment about the latter. LECT. IX.] THE DIVINE IMAGE. 275 nor aught that in any respect corresponds to God. Of the mutilation and defacement of the Divine Reason by the Church, under the impulsion of Paul, the present state of both Church and World is the inevitable sequel. 24, Besides Paul, there are two others associated with the doctrine of the Logos, of names so notable as to necessitate a reference to them. These are Plato, and Philo called Judaeus. They also recognised the Lord as the Logos and Divine Reason of things. But they failed to recognise the Dualism of the Divine nature there- in, and by their failure ministered to the confirmation, rather than to the reversal, of the Fall and the Curse. Between Philo and Paul the points of resemblance are many and striking, foremost among them being the de- preciation of woman, and the advocacy of vicarious blood- shedding as a means of propitiating Deity. Philo, who in these respects is a thorough Sacerdotalist, claims to have been initiated into spiritual mysteries directly by the spirit of Moses. This, it will be now understood, is a distinct and positive proof, were any wanting, of the astral character of much at least of Philo's inspiration. He, too, like many in our day was beguiled by a spirit of the astral, which, personating the great prophet so long dead, insisted, in the name of Moses, on the Sacerdotal degradations of the teach- ing of Moses. Like Paul,—though never attaining his elevation,-Philo Oscillated continually between the Talmud and the Kabbala, the astral and the celestial, mixing error and truth accordingly, and ignored altogether the contrary presentation given of the divine Sophia in the inspired “Book of Wisdom,”—a book of which some have never- theless ascribed the authorship to Philo himself! 25. Plato and no less Aristotle, discerned in a perfect humanity the end and aim of creation, and in the universe 276 TP/E PERFEC 7' W.A. V. a prelude to and preparation for the perfect man. Recog- nising, however, the masculine element only of existence, Aristotle regarded every production of Nature other than a male of the human species, as a failure in the attempt to produce a man; and the woman as something maimed and imperfect, to be accounted for only on the hypothesis that Nature, though artist, is but blind. Similarly Plato— despite the intuition whereby he was enabled to recognise Intellect and Emotion as the two wings indispensable for man's ascent to his proper altitude—was wholly insensible to the correspondence by virtue of which the latter finds in woman its highest expression. For the strain in which he treated of her was so bitter and con- temptuous, as largely to minister to the making of his country—instead of the Eden which results where, and only where, the woman is honoured and unfallen—a veri- table rival of the “cities of the Plain.” In his view, only they who have previously disgraced themselves as men, become re-incarnated as animals and women. The Logos of Plato is, clearly, no prototype of the Logos of that Christianity which is based on the duality of the Divine Being, and requires of the Christ that he represent the whole humanity. 26. The Fathers of the Church—step-fathers, rather, were they to the true Christianity—for the most part vied with each other in their depreciation of woman ; and, denouncing her with every vile epithet, held it a degrada- tion for a saint to touch even his own aged mother with the hand in order to sustain her feeble steps. And the Church, falling under a domination exclusively sacerdotal, while doctrinally it exalted womanhood to a level beside, though not to its place in, the Godhead, practically sub- stituted priestly exclusiveness for Christian comprehension. LECT. IX.] THE DAVY.VE IMAGE. 277 For it declared woman unworthy, through inherent impurity, even to set foot within the sanctuaries of its temples; suffered her to exercise her functions of wife and mother only under the spell of a triple exorcism ; and denied her, when dead, burial in its more Sacred precincts, even though she were an abbess of undoubted sanctity. 27. The Reformation altered, but did not better, the condition of woman. Socially, it rescued her from the priest to make her the chattel of the husband; and doc- trinally, it expunged her altogether. Calvinism is, on all planes, a repudiation of the woman in favour of the man; inasmuch as it recognises only will and force, and rejects love and goodness, as essential qualities of Being, whether Divine or human. And Protestantism at large, both Uni- tarian and Trinitarian, finds in its definition of the Substance of existence, place only for the masculine element. Even the great bard of Nonconformism, John Milton, though finding woman so indispensable to him as to have thrice wedded,—disfigured his verse and belied his inspiration as poet, by his bitter and incessant depreciation of her without whom poetry itself would have no existence. For poetry is the function of genius, and genius, which is the product of sympathy, is not of the man, but of the woman in the man ; and she herself—as her typical name Venus implies—is the “Sweet Song of God.”". In the same spirit the chief instrument of the Reformation, Martin Luther, declared of the two sacred books which especially point to the woman as the agent of man's final redemption —the books of Esther and Revelation—that “so far as he * Such also is the signification of Anael, the Hebrew name of the “Angel” of her planet. Venus is said by some to be originally Phe-nus, having for root pmut. For an example of the nature of the true mysteries of this divinity, see Appendices, No. XIII. 278 THE PERFEC 7' W.A. V. esteemed them, it would be no loss if they were thrown into the river.” 28. The influence in question is not confined to the sphere of Christianity. It dictated the form assumed by Islamism. Originating in impulses derived from the celes- tial, this religion fell beneath the sway of the astral so soon as its founder, making a rich marriage, lived luxuri- ously and occupied himself with worldly matters. Sacer- dotalism failed, it is true, to find in Islamism its ordinary mode of expression. But the principle of the doctrine of vicarious sacrifice in propitiation of the Deity, showed itself in the recognition of bloodshed as a means of proselytism. And women were relegated to a position altogether inferior, being regarded as differing from men not merely in degree, but in kind. For they were denied the possession of a soul ; and their place in the Hereafter was supplied by astral equivalents under the scarcely disguised name of Houris. The Koran itself is little else than an imitation of the Old Testament, conceived under astral suggestion. A yet more unmitigated form of what may be called Astralism is the religion known as Mormonism; the sacred books of which are, throughout, but astral travesties of Scripture; its doctrine of “spiritual wives,” and of the position of woman generally, being similarly derived. It thus constitutes an instance in point, of the unceasing en- deavour of the spirits of the sub-human to establish a kingdom of their own, instead of that of the Lord and the Divine Idea of Humanity. The Moslem Sufis had all the truth. - PART III. 29. It will be well, before proceeding to our conclusion, to take note of the objections with which it is usually LECT. IX.] THE DIVIME IMAGE. 279 sought to discredit—under the name of Mysticism—the system in course of exposition. These objections are com- prised under two heads, of which the terms, respectively, are Plagiarism and Enthusiasm. By the former it is meant that the professors of Mysticism, instead of being the actual recipients of the experiences they record of themselves, borrow them from some common—but equally delusive—source. And by the latter it is implied that, at the best, the experiences, and the doctrines based upon them, are due to morbid conditions of mind. This, in plain language, means that the opponents of Mysticism—unable either to emulate or to confute it—try to get rid of it by Charging its professors with dishonesty or insanity. And So far from this line of treatment being exceptional or rare, it is persistent and constant throughout the whole range of the literature characteristic of the age, and this in every class from the lowest to the highest, and in every branch of intellectual activity. Instead of being submitted to examination even the most superficial, the entire system comprised under the term Mysticism—its witnesses, its facts, and its doctrines—has in that literature been rejected off-hand and without inquiry, by the simple process of abrupt contradiction, and the ascription, in no measured degree, to its representatives and exponents, of pretence, imposture, charlatanism, quackery, hallucination, and mad- ness—an ascription preposterous in the extreme in view of the status, moral and intellectual, of the persons as- persed. For of these the character and eminence have been such as, of themselves, to entitle their statements to attention the most respectful; and the Order to which, one and all, they have belonged, comprises the world's finest intellects, profoundest scholars, maturest judgments, noblest dispositions, ripest characters, and greatest benefactors; 28o 7 HE J2ERAVEC 7' W.4 V, and in short, as has already been said, all those sages, Saints, seers, prophets, and Christs, through whose re- deeming influence humanity has been raised out of the bottomless pit of its own lower nature, and preserved from the abyss of utter negation. Of these, and of numberless others, the testimony to the reality of mystical experiences and the truth of mystical doctrine, has been concurrent, continuous, positive, and maintained at the cost of liberty, reputation, property, family ties, social position, and every earthly good, even to life itself, and this over a period extending from before the beginning of history until now. So that it may with absolute confidence be main- tained, that if the declarations of Mystics are to be set aside as insufficient to establish their claims, all human testimony whatever is worthless as a criterion of fact, and all human intelligence as a criterion of truth. - 3o. The charge of Plagiarism is soon disposed of. It is true that the correspondence upon which the charge is founded subsists. But it is also true that this correspondence is only that which necessarily subsists between the accounts given of identical phenomena by different witnesses. The world's Mystics have been as a band of earnest explorers who, one after another, and often in complete ignorance of the results attained by their predecessors, have ascended the same giant mountain-range, and, returning, have brought back to the dwellers in the valleys below—too feeble or indifferent to make the ascent for themselves—the same report of its character and products, and of the tracts dis- cerned from its various aspects and altitudes, showing thereby a perfect coherence of faculty and testimony. Such is the agreement which has been made the pretext for a charge of plagiarism against Mystics, simply because the region visited and reported on by them is a spiritual LECT. IX.] THA. D/V/AVE WMAGE. 281 and not a material one, and Materialists will not have it that any other than a material subsists. Precisely the agreement which in all other cases is made indispensable as a proof of trustworthiness, is in this case interpreted as a token of collusion. 31. To come to the somewhat more plausible charge of Enthusiasm. It is alleged that the Mystics have conceived their system, not in that calm, philosophical frame of mind which alone is favourable to the discovery of truth, but in a spirit of excitement and enthusiasm of which the inevitable product is hallucination. Now, this allegation is not only contrary to fact, it is intrinsically absurd, whether as applied to the phenomena or to the philosophy of Mysticism. For one who, through the unfoldment of his spiritual faculties, is enabled to enjoy open conditions with the spiritual world, the suggestion that his consequent experiences are the result of hallucination, constitutes an act of presumption every whit as gross as would be the like suggestion con- cerning the material world if made by a blind man to one possessed of eyesight. For, as already observed, such is the nature of the experiences in question, that if they are to be disregarded as insufficient to demonstrate the reality of the spiritual world, no ground remains whereon to believe in that of the material world. It is true that the Materialist cannot—as a rule—be made a partaker of the evidences in question. But neither can the blind man have ocular proof of the existence of the material world. For him there is no sun in the sky if he refuse to credit those who alone possess the faculty wherewith to behold it, and persist in regarding himself as a representative man. 32. The case for the Mystic's intellectual results is equally strong. Such are the coherency and completeness of the mystical system of thought, that by all schools what- 282 THE AERFECT WA Y. ever of thinkers it has ever, with one consent, been pro- nounced to be inexpugnable, and that alone which would, if provable, constitute an explanation, altogether satisfactory, of the phenomena of existence. In this system, where ap- prehended in its proper integrity, Reason has in vain sought to detect a flaw; and they who have rejected it, have done so solely through their own inability to obtain that sensible evidence of the reality of the spiritual world, the power to receive and interpret which, constitutes the Mystic. 33. Nevertheless, of the fact of the Mystic's enthusiasm there is no question. But enthusiasm is neither his instru- ment of observation nor that of inference. And he is not more fairly chargeable with conceiving his system by the exercise of an imagination stimulated by enthusiasm, than is the believer in the world exclusively material. For, like the latter, he has sensible evidence of the facts whereon he builds ; and he observes all possible deliberation and circumspection in his deductions therefrom. The only difference between them in this relation, is that the senses principally appealed to by his facts, are those, not of the man physical, but of the man spiritual, or soul, which, as consisting of substance, is necessarily alone competent for the appreciation of the phenomena of substance. Con- stituted as is man, while in the body, of both Matter and Spirit, he is a complete being—and therefore fully man— only when he has developed the faculties requisite for the discernment of both elements of his nature. 34. In the promotion of this development enthusiasm is a prime factor. By means of it the man is elevated to that region, interior and superior, where alone serenity prevails and perception is unobstructed, where are the beginnings of the clues of all objects of his search, and where his facul- ties are at their best, inasmuch as it is their native place, LECT. IX.] 7A/E ZOA V/AWE AMA GA2. 283 and they are there exempt from the limitations of the material organism. Attaining thus to his full altitude, he no longer has need to reason and compare. For he sees and knows, and his mind is content. For him, in the divine order of his spiritual system, “the woman is carried to the throne of God.” The Zeus and Hera of his own celestial kingdom are wedded. The Adam, perfected, has found an infallible Eve. Existence is a garden of delights, whereof the fruits are the “golden apples” of knowledge and good- ness. For the intellect and intuition—divine man and woman of his perfected humanity—are at one in the blissful home of his parent Spirit, the Within or fourth dimension of space, whence all things have their procession, and where alone, therefore, they can be comprehended. As well re- fuse credit to the researches of the meteorologist on account of the upward impulses of the vehicle on which he gains the loftier strata of air, or of the superior purity of the medium in which he operates, as to those of the Mystic on account of the enthusiasm by means of which his ascent is accomplished. For enthusiasm is simply his impelling force, without which he could never have quitted the outer, nether and apparent, and gained the inner, upper and real. Wherefore, even when the abstraction from the outer world attains the intensity of Ecstasy, there is nought in the condition to invalidate the perceptions, sensible or mental, of the seer. But simply are his faculties heightened and perfected through the exclusion of all limiting or dis- turbing influences, and the consequent release of the con- sciousness from material trammel and bias. There is, as already said, no really “invisible world.” That which ecstasy does, is to open the vision to a world imperceptible to the exterior senses—that world of substance which, lying behind phenomenon, necessarily requires for its cognition 284 THE PERFECT WA V. faculties which are not of the phenomenal but of the sub- stantial man. Says one eminent Manualist concerning the Neoplatonic Mystics:–“Their teaching was a desperate over-leaping and destruction of all philosophy.” Says another:—“In the desperate spring made at Alexandria, reason was given up for ecstasy.” Whereas the truth is, that the only sense in which reason can be said to be given up by the Mystic, is that in which, not reason but reasoning is given up, when, after exhausting conjecture blindfold, a man opens his eyes and sees, and so requires no further ratio- cination. For ecstasy does but verify by actual vision the highest results of reason ; though it may, and frequently does, thus operate in advance of the stage in his reasoning reached at the time by the seer. And so far, moreover, from Superseding the necessity for the exercise of reason, it is impossible without previous mental culture, duly to appreciate the results of ecstatic, any more than of ordinary vision. For all understanding is of the mind; and neither the vision of things terrestrial nor that of things celestial can dispense with the exercise of this. Of course, with the advent of knowledge the necessity for reasoning ceases, and in this sense it is true that the Mystic “destroys philosophy by merging it in religion.” But in this sense only. For, in his hands, philosophy simply, and under compulsion of reason, acknowledges religion as its legitimate and inevitable terminus, when not, through a limitation of reason, arbitrarily withheld therefrom. And, in a world proceeding from God, no reason would be sound, no philosophy complete, of which the conclusion—as well as the beginning—was not religion. So far, also, from such religious philosophy involving, as constantly charged against it, the abnegation of self-con- 1 Schwegler, Manual of Philosophy. * G. H. Lewes, Biog. Æist. A hiº. Lect. IX.] THE DIVINE IMAGE. 285 sciousness; it involves and implies the due self-completion of the consciousness by the recognition of its true source and nature. Thus, so far from “losing,” the Mystic finds, himself thereby; for he finds God, the true and only Self of all. And if there be any who, recognising in these pages aught of goodness, truth, or beauty transcending the ordinary, inquire the source thereof, the reply is, that the source is no other than that just described, namely, the Spirit operating under conditions which a materialistic science, bent on the suppression of man's spiritual nature and the eradication of man's religious instinct, designates “morbid,” and certifies as qualifying the subject for seclusion on the ground of insanity.1 35. We will endeavour by a brief examination of the standpoints of the two parties respectively, to exhibit the genesis and nature of the Mystic's enthusiasm. The Ma- terialist—who regards Matter as the sole constituent of existence, and himself as derived from that which, for its defect in respect of consciousness, he deems mean and con- temptible—has for the supposed source and substance of his being, neither respect nor affection. No more than any one else can he love or honour the merely chemical or me- chanical. Hence, like those who, springing from a low origin, have gained for themselves distinction, the last thing he covets is a return to that from which he came. How it * In The Mineteenth Century for 1879, Dr. Maudsley declares his readi- mess to have certified the lunacy of various of the most eminent saints, seers, and prophets. And the medical profession generally—following the lead of France—treats the claim to be in open conditions with the spiritual world as proof positive of insanity. Said a member of this profession on a recent occasion, in support of such action on the part of his brethren :-"If we admit Spirits, we must admit Spiritualism, and what then becomes of the teachings of Materialism P” Thus, in an age which vaunts itself an age pre-eminently of free thought and experi- mental philosophy, are the expression of thought and confession of experience made in the highest degree perilous when they conflict with the tenets of the prevailing school. 286 7 HE AREA’AºEC 7' W.A. W. arises that, being wholly of Matter, he has in him any impulse or faculty whereby to transcend even in desire his original level; whence come the qualities and properties, moral and intellectual, subsisting in humanity, but of which the most exhaustive analysis of Matter reveals no trace ; whence the tendency of evolution in the direction of beauty, use, and goodness ; whence evolution itself;-these are problems which are insoluble on his hypothesis, and which —since he rejects the solution proffered by the Mystic— must for ever remain unsolved by him. 36. The Mystic, on the other hand, discerning through the intuition the spiritual nature of the substance of existence, recognises himself, not as superior to that from which he has sprung, but as a limitation and individuation of that which itself is unlimited and universal, even the absolutely pure and perfect Spirit which is no other than God. Know- ing himself to be thence derived and sustained, and only temporarily, and for a purpose conceived in infinite love and executed in infinite wisdom, subjected to inferior con- ditions, he yearns towards the whole of which he is a part, as a child towards its necessary parent, and strives, by divesting himself of the withholding influences of Matter, to rise into nearer resemblance to and contact with his divine Original. - 37. The materialist, on the contrary, regarding Matter as all, and its limitations as inherent in Being, sees in the endeavour to transcend those limitations but a suicidal attempt to escape from all Being. He strives, therefore, to attach himself yet more closely to Matter, little as he esteems it, and is content when he has succeeded in making from among things merely material, such selection as best ministers to his bodily satisfaction. And he cannot com- prehend one of sound mind seeking more. LECT. IX.] THE DIVINE IMAGE. 287 38. But such mistake of the phenomenal for the substan- tial, of the apparent for the real, cannot be made by one who to the sensations of the body adds the perceptions and recollections of the soul. Such a one knows by a divine and infallible instinct, which every succeeding experience serves but to confirm, that a perfection and satisfaction far transcending aught that Materialist can imagine or Matter realise, are in very truth possible to humanity. And there- fore the enthusiasm which inspires him is the enthusiasm, not of an earthly humanity, immature, rudimentary, and scarcely even suggestive of its own potentialities; not of a humanity which is exterior, transient, of form only and appearance; but of a humanity mature, developed, per- manent, and capable of realising its own best promise and highest aspirations; a humanity interior, substantial, and of the Spirit; a humanity, though human, divine, in that it is worthy of its progenitor God, and at its best is God. The Materialist knows not perfection, nor reality, nor Spirit, nor God; and, knowing none of these, he knows not enthusiasm. Now, not to know enthusiasm, is not to know love. And he who knows not love, is not yet man. For he has yet to develop in him that which alone completes and makes the man, namely, the woman. Herein, then, is the full solution of the mystery of the Mystic's enthusiasm, and of the Materialist's inability to comprehend it. The one is already man, and, knowing what Being is, loves. The other is not yet man, and, incapable of love, has all to learn. 39. Not always did Materialists contemn enthusiasm and repudiate its products. Of one, at least, history tells who with enthusiasm sang of enthusiasm as the energising force of genius. It was no other than such a flight as that of the rapt Mystic in his ecstasy, which Lucretius ascribed to the inspired Epicurus, when he celebrated his vivida vis animi; 288 THE PERFECT WA Y. for it was in virtue of his enthusiasm for a perfection tran- scending the animal, that Epicurus was enabled to overcome the limitations of the bodily sense, to “surpass the flaming walls of the world” material, to “traverse in spirit the whole immensity” of existence, and—returning—“to bring back to men the knowledge of possible and impossible.” It has been reserved for the present age to produce the Materialist of a humanity so stunted and meagre that he knows not the meaning or value of enthusiasm, and in his ignorance makes of it a scoff. PART IV. 40. Accepting without limitation or reserve the dictum —already cited—that “nothing imperceptible is real,” the Mystic applies it in respect of the most recondite of all subjects of thought, namely, Deity, and both modes—the mental and the sensible—of perception. In doing this, he claims the justification of his own personal experience. For not only can he think God, he can also see God; the mind with which he does the first being a mind purified from obscuration by Matter; and the eyes with which he does the last being those of a more or less regenerate self. Of the seers of all ages the supreme beatific experience— that which has constituted for them the crowning confirma- tion of their doctrine concerning not only the being but the nature of Deity—has been the vision of God as the Lord. For those to whom this vision has been vouchsafed, hope the most sanguine is swallowed up in realisation the most complete; belief the most implicit is merged in sight the most vivid; and knowledge the most absolute is attained, that the “kingdom of heaven is ” in very truth “within,” and that the king thereof is—where alone a king should be —in the midst of his kingdom. LECT. IX.] 7TAZ Z)/ V/AVAE ZMAGAZ. 289 41. And yet more than this. By the vision of God as the Lord, the seer knows also that of this celestial kingdom within, the King is also the Queen; that, in respect of form no less than of substance, man is created in God’s “own image, male and female; ” and that in ascending to and becoming “one with the Father,” man ascends to and becomes one with the Mother. For in the form beheld in the vision of Adomai, both HE and SHE are manifested. Who, then, is Adonai P. This is a question the reply to which involves the Mystery of the Trinity. 42. Manifestation—it has already been explained—is by generation. Now generation is not of one but of twain. And inasmuch as that which is generated partakes the nature of the generators, it also is dual. That, then, which in the current presentation of the doctrine of the Trinity is termed the Father and First Person in the Godhead, is really the Father-Mother. And that which is theologically said to be begotten of them and called the Second Person and Son, is also dual, being not “Son’ merely, but proto- type of both sexes, and called in token thereof Io, Je- hovah, El Shaddai, Adonai, names, each of which implies duality. 43. Having for Father the Spirit which is Life, and for Mother the “Great Deep ’’ which is Substance, Adonai possesses the potency of both, and wields the dual powers of all things. And from the Godhead thus constituted pro- ceeds, through Adonai, the uncreated creative Spirit, the informer and fashioner of all things. This Spirit it is Who, theologically, is called the Holy Ghost, and the Third Person, the aspect of God as the Mother having been ignored or suppressed by a priesthood desirous of preserving a purely masculine conception of the Godhead. By the above presentation both the Churches, Eastern and Western, U 290 7A/AE A2ZA’Aº C7' W.4 V, are right in what they affirm respecting the procession of the Holy Ghost, and wrong in what they deny. 44. This, the necessary method of the divine evolution and procession, for both Macrocosm and Microcosm, is duly set forth in the very commencement of the book of Genesis; being expressed in the words:–And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the Waters. and God SA/D, Let there be Zight, and there was Zight.” For, whenever and wherever creation—or manifestation by generation—occurs, God the Father co-operates with God the Mother—as Force, moving in Substance—and produces the Utterance, Word, Logos, or Adonai—at once God and the Expression of God. And of this Logos the Holy Spirit, in turn, is the Expression or creative medium. For, as Adonai is the Word or Expression whereby is manifested God, so the Holy Spirit, or Primal Light, Itself Sevenfold,—is the Radiance whereby is revealed and manifested the Lord. Now the manifestation of the Lord—which also is the manifestation of God—occurs through the working in Sub- stance of the Elohim or Seven Spirits of God—enumerated in our second discourse—from Whose number first of all the number seven derives its sanctity. They are the Powers under Whose immediate superintendence Creation, whether of great or small, occurs. And of Them is the whole of the Divine Substance pervaded,—the Substance of all that 1S. “These are the ZXivine Fires which burn before the Presence of God; which proceed from the Spirit, and are One with the Spirit. - “God is divided, yet not diminished; God is All, and God 1's One. - . “ For the Spirit of God is a Flame of Fire which the Word of God divideth into many, yet the Original Fame LECT. IX.] THE DIV/AWE ZMAGE. - 29 I is not decreased, nor the Power thereof, nor the Brightness thereof, lessened. “Thou mayes; light many lamps from the flame of one ; yet thou dost in nothing diminish that first flame. “AWow the Spirit of God is expressed by the Word of God, zehich is Adonai.” 45. This then is the order of the Divine Procession. First the Unity, or “Darkness” of the “Invisible Light.” Second, the Duality, the Spirit and the Deep, or Energy and Space. Thirdly, the Trinity, the Father, the Mother, and Their joint expression or “Word.” Last, the Plurality, the Sevenfold Light and Elohim of God. Such is the “generation ” of the Heavens or celestial region, both in the universal and in the individual. And within the experience of each individual lies the possibility of the verification thereof. For in due time, to each who seeks for it, “the Holy Spirit teaches all things and brings all things to remembrance.” 46. The Logos, or Adonai, is then God's Idea of God's Self, the Formulated, Personified Thought of the Divine Mind. And whereas God makes nothing save through this Idea, it is said of Adonai, - . “By Him all things are made, and without Him is not anything made zwhich is made. “Aſe is the true Zight zwhich lighteth every man that cometh into the zworld. “Ae is in the world, and the world is made by Him, and the world Azzozeeth Him not. “But as many as receive Him, to them. He giveth power to become Sons of God, even to them that believe on Aſis AWame. “Aſe is in the Beginning with God, and He is God. He is the Manifestor by Whom all things are discovered. 292 7A/E AERAEAEC 7' W.A. V. “And without Him is not anything made which is visible. “God the nameless doth not reveal God: but Adonai revealeth God from the Beginning. “Adonai disso/veth and resumeth : in His two hands are the dual powers of all things ; “Aazing the potency of both in Himself; and being Him- Self invisible, for He is the Cause, and moſſ the AEffect. “Aſe is the Manifesſor; and not that which is manifest. “Zhat which is manifest is the ZXivine Substance. “A very Monad Éhereof hath the potency of twain; as God is Zºwain in One. “And every Momad Zwhich is manifest, is manifest by the evolution of its Trinity. “Aor thus only can it bear record of itself, and become cognisable as an Entity.”! * As man, made in the “image ’’ of Adonai, is the expression of God, so is the expression or countenance of man the express image of God’s nature, and bears in its features the impress of the celestial, showing him to be thence derived. Thus, in the human face, by the straight, central, protruding, and vertical line of the organ of respir- ation, is denoted Individuality, the divine Ego, the I AM, of the man. Though single exteriorly, and constituting one organ, in token of the Divine Unity, within it is dual, having a double function, and two nostrils in which resides the power of the Breath or Spirit, and which represent the Divine Duality. This duality finds its especial symboli- sation in the two spheres of the eyes, which—placed on a level with the summit of the nose—denote respectively Intelligence and Love, or Father and Mother, as the supreme elements of Being. Though exteriorly two, interiorly they are one, as vision is one. And of the harmonious co-operation of the two personalities represented by them, proceeds, as child, a third personality, which is their joint expression or “Word.” Of this the Mouth is at once the organ and symbol, being in itself Dual,—when closed a line, when open a circle; and also twofold, being compounded of line and circle in the tongue and lips. And as the place of issue of the creative breath, it is below the other features, since creation, in coming from the Highest, is in its direction necessarily downwards. Thus, in the countenance of the “Image of God,” is expressed the nature of God, even the Holy Trinity. For “these three are one,” being essential modes of the same Being. LECT. IX.] 7A/A2 DZ WYAVAE IMAGAZ. 293 PART V. 47. We come to that which, both in its nature and in its import, is the most stupendous fact of mystical experience, and the crowning experience of seers in all ages from the remotest antiquity to the present day. This is the Vision of Adonai, a vision which proves that not only subjectively but objectively, not only mentally and theoretically, but sensibly and actually, God, as the Lord, is present and cognisable in each individual, ever operating to build him up in the Divine Image, and succeeding so far—and only so far—as the individual, by making the Divine Will his own will, consents to co-operate with God. 48. In respect of this vision, it matters not whether the seer have previous experience or knowledge on the sub- ject; for the result is altogether irrespective of anticipation. It is possible to him when—having purified his system, mental and physical, from all deteriorative and obstructive elements—he thinks inwardly, desires intensely, and im- agines centrally, resolved that nothing shall bar his ascent to his own highest and entrance to his own innermost. Doing this, and abstracting himself from the outer world of the phenomenal, he enters first the astral, where, more or less clearly, according to the measure of his percipience, he discerns successively the various spheres of its fourfold zone, together with their denizens. In the process he seems to himself, while still individual, to have lost the limitations of the finite, and to have become expanded into the universal. For, while traversing the several successive concentric spheres of his own being, and mounting, as by the steps of a ladder, from one to another, he is as palpably traversing also those not of the solar system only, but of the whole universe of being; and that which ultimately he 294 THE PERFECT WAY. reaches, is, manifestly, the centre of each, the initial point of radiation of himself and of all things. 49. Meanwhile, under the impulsion of the mighty enthu- siasm engendered in him of the Spirit, the component con- sciousnesses of his system become more and more completely polarised towards their Divine centre, and the animating, Divine Spirit of the man, from being diffused, latent, and formless, becomes concentred, manifest, and definite. For, bent on the highest, the astral does not long detain him ; and soon he passes the Cherubim—the guardians from without of the celestial—and enters within the veil of the holy of holies. Here he finds himself amid a company innumerable of beings each manifestly divine; for they are the angels and archangels, principalities and powers, and all the hierarchy of the “Heavens.” Pressing on, through these towards the centre, he next finds himself in presence of a light so intolerable in its lustre as well-nigh to beat him back from further quest. And of those who reach thus far, many adventure no farther, but, appalled, retire, well content, nevertheless, to have been privileged to ap- proach, and actually to behold, the “Great White Throne * of the Almighty. 50. Enshrined in this light is a Form radiant and glorious beyond all power of expression. For it is “made of the Substance of Light;" and the form is that of the “Only Begotten,” the Logos, the Idea, the Manifestor of God, the Personal Reason of all existence, the Lord God of Hosts, the Lord Adonai. From the right hand upraised in attitude indicative of will and command, proceeds, as a stream of living force, the Holy Life and Substance whereby and whereof Creation consists. With the left hand, depressed and open as in attitude of recall, the stream is indrawn, and Creation is sustained and redeemed. Thus projecting and LECT. IX.] THE DA V/AWE AMA G. E. 295 recalling, expanding and contracting, Adonai fulfils the functions expressed in the mystical formula Solve et Coagula. And as in this, so also in constitution and form, Adonai is dual, comprising the two modes of humanity, and appearing to the beholder alternately masculine and feminine accord- ing as the function exercised is of the man or the woman, and is centrifugal or centripetal. And as, continuing to gaze, the beholder acquires clearer vision, he discovers that, of the images thus combined, while one is manifested the more fully exteriorly, the other appertains rather to the interior, and shines in a measure through its fellow, itself remaining meanwhile in close contiguity to the heart and spirit. And whereas of these forms the inner is the feminine, the beholder learns that of the two modes of humanity, womanhood is the nearer to God. 51. Such is the “vision of Adonai.” And by whatever name denoted, no other source, centre, sustenance, or true Self can mortal or immortal find, than God as the Lord Who is thus beheld ; and no other can he who has once beheld it—however dimly or afar off—desire. For, finding Adonai, the soul is content ; the summit and centre of Being is reached; all ideals of Truth, Goodness, Beauty, and Power are realised ; there is no Beyond to which to aspire. For All is in Adonai; since in Adonai dwells the infinite sea of Power and Wisdom which is God. And all of God which can be revealed, all that the soul can grasp, be her powers expanded as they may, is revealed in Adonai. 52. Of the term Adonai, as already stated, the Hindú equivalent, “Ardha-Nari,” is represented as androgynous in form. But the personality denoted is that of Brahm, or pure Being, become Brahma, the Lord. And of the Hindú “Trimurti,” the right hand, which typifies the creative 296 THA. AAEA’AºA, C 7' W.A. V. energy, is Vishnu; the left, which represents the power of dissolution and return, is Siva, Adonai Himself being Brahma. The conditions on which this vision is vouch- Safed are thus set forth for the benefit of his “beloved disciple,” Arjun, by the “holy one,” Krishna :—“Thou hast beheld this My wondrous form, so difficult of apprehension, which even angels may in vain desire to see. But I am not to be seen as thou hast seen Me, by means of mortifica- tions, of sacrifices, of gifts, of alms. I am to be seen and truly known, and to be obtained by means of that worship which is offered to Me alone. He whose works are done for Me alone, who serves Me only, who cares naught for consequences, and who dwelleth among men without hatred, —he alone cometh unto Me.” PART VI. 53. This discourse and series of discourses will fitly close with an exposition of the relations subsisting between the Adonai, the Christ, and the Man. As Adonai the Lord is the manifestation of God in Sub- stance, so Christ is the manifestation of the Lord in Humanity. The former occurs by Generation ; the latter by Regenera- tion. The former is from within, outwards ; the latter is from below, upwards. Man, ascending by evolution from the material and lowermost stratum of existence, finds his highest development in the Christ. This is the point where the human stream, as it flows upwards into God, culminates. Reaching this point by regeneration, man is at once Son of Man and of God, and is perfect, receiving in consequence the baptism of the Logos or Word, Adonai. Being now “virgin" in respect of matter, and quickened by the “one life,” that of the Spirit, man becomes like unto God, in that he has the “Gift of God,” or Eternal Life through the LECT. IX.] TAZ/2 D/V/AWE A/A GA2. 297 power of self-perpetuation. The Logos is celestial; the man, terrestrial. Christ is their point of junction, without whom they could not touch each other. Attaining to this point by means of that inward purification which is the secret and method of the Christs, the man receives his suffusion by, or “anointing ” of, the Spirit, and forthwith has, and is, “Christ.” Christhood is attained by the reception into man's own spirit of the Logos. This accomplished, the two natures, the Divine and the human, combine ; the two streams, the ascending and the descending, meet; and the man knows and understands God. And this is said to occur through Christ, because for every man it occurs according to the same method, Christ being for all alike the only way. Having received the Logos, Who is Son of God, the man becomes also Son of God, as well as Son of Man,—this latter title being his in virtue of his representing a regener- ation or new birth out of humanity. And the Son of God in him reveals to him the “Father,” a term which includes the “Mother.” Knowing these, he knows the Life and Substance whereof he is constituted,—knows, therefore, his own nature and potentialities. Thus made “one with the Father,” through the Son, the man “in Christ” can say truly, “I and the Father are one.” This is the import of the confession of Stephen. “Behold,” he cried in his ecstasy, “I see the heavens open, and the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God.” For at that supreme moment the Spirit revealed to him, in visible image, the union through Christ of the Human and the Divine. Attaining to this union, man becomes “Christ-Jesus; ” “he dwells in God, and God in him;” he is “one with God and God with him.” It is at this point—Christ—that God and the man finally lay hold of each other and are drawn together. Thenceforth they flow, as two rivers united, in one stream. The man is 298 THE AERAEAEC 7' W.A. Y. finally made in the image of God; and God, as the Lord, is eternally manifested in him, making him an individuated portion of Divinity itself. Being thereby rendered incap- able of relapse into material conditions, he is called a “fixed God,”—a state which, as says Hermes in the Divine Pymander, “is the most perfect glory of the soul.” 54. Recognising thus divine truth as an eternal verity in perpetual process of realisation by the individual soul, and the words AVow and Within as the keys to all sacred mysteries, the Elect translate the symbols of their faith into terms of the present, and recite accordingly their Credo in this wise:– “I believe in one God, the Father and Mother Almighty; of Whose Substance are the generations of Heaven and of Earth; and in Christ-Jesus the Son of God, our Lord ; who is conceived of the Holy Ghost; born of the Virgin Mary; suffereth under the rulers of this world ; is crucified, dead, and buried; who descendeth into Hell; who riseth again from the dead; who ascendeth into Heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of God; by whose law the quick and the dead are judged. I believe in the Seven Spirits of God; the Kingdom of Heaven; the communion of the Elect; the passing-through of Souls; the redemption of the Body; the Life everlasting; and the Amen.” APPENDICES. APPEN DICES. NO. I. COAVCAEAEAV/AWG ZTHE ZAVTERAA’ E 7.4 7/OAW OF SCAE/ATUAEA. (A ARAGMEAVZ.) PART I. “IF, therefore, they be Mystic Books, they ought also to have a Mystic Consideration. But the Fault of most Writers lieth in this, that they distinguish not between the Books of Moses the Prophet, and those Books which are of an his- torical Nature. And this is the more surprising because not a few of such Critics have rightly discerned the esoteric Character, if not indeed the true Interpretation, of the Story of Eden; yet have they not applied to the Remainder or the Allegory the same Method which they found to fit the Beginning; but so soon as they are over the earlier Stanzas of the Poem, they would have the Rest of it to be of another Nature. “It is, then, pretty well established and accepted of most Authors, that the Legend of Adam and Eve, and of the Miraculous Tree and the Fruit which was the Occasion of Death, is, like the Story of Eros and Psyche, and so many others of all Religions, a Parable with a hidden, that is, with a Mystic Meaning. But so also is the Legend which follows 3or 3O2 THE PERATEC 7' W.4 Y. concerning the Sons of these Mystical Parents, the Story of Cain and Abel his Brother, the Story of the Flood, of the Ark, of the saving of the clean and unclean Beasts, of the Rainbow, of the twelve Sons of Jacob, and, not stopping there, of the whole Relation concerning the Flight out of Egypt. For it is not to be supposed that the two Sacrifices offered to God by the Sons of Adam, were real Sacrifices, any more than it is to be supposed that the Apple which caused the Doom of Mankind was a real Apple. It ought to be known, indeed, for the right Understanding of the Mystical Books, that in their esoteric Sense they deal, not with material Things, but with spiritual Realities; and that as Adam is not a Man, nor Eve a Woman, nor the Tree a Plant in its true Signification, so also are not the Beasts named in the same Books real Beasts, but that the Mystic Intention of them is implied. When, therefore, it is written that Abel took of the Firstlings of his Flock to offer unto the Lord, it signified that he offered that which a Lamb implies, and which is the holiest and highest of spiritual Gifts. Nor is Abel himself a real Person, but the Type and spiritual Presentation of the Race of the Prophets; of whom, also, Moses was a Member, together with the Patriarchs. Were the Prophets, then, Shedders of Blood P God forbid; they dealt not with Things material, but with spiritual Significa- tions. Their Lambs without Spot, their white Doves, their Goats, their Rams, and other sacred Creatures, are so many Signs and Symbols of the various Graces and Gifts which a Mystic People should offer to Heaven. Without such Sacrifices is no Remission of Sin. But when the Mystic Sense was lost, then Carnage followed, the Prophets ceased out of the Land, and the Priests bore rule over the People. Then, when again the Voice of the Prophets arose, they were constrained to speak plainly, and declared AAEAAEAWDZX /. 3O3 in a Tongue foreign to their Method, that the Sacrifices of God are not the Flesh of Bulls or the Blood of Goats, but holy Vows and sacred Thanksgivings, their Mystical Counterparts. As God is a Spirit, so also are His Sacrifices Spiritual. What Folly, what Ignorance, to offer material Flesh and Drink to pure power and essential Being ! Surely in vain have the Prophets spoken, and in vain have the Christs been manifested “Why will you have Adam to be Spirit and Eve Matter, since the Mystic Books deal only with spiritual Entities P The Tempter himself even is not Matter, but that which gives Matter the Precedence. Adam is, rather, intellectual Force : he is of Earth. Eve is the moral Conscience : she is the Mother of the Living. Intellect, then, is the male, and Intuition the female Principle. And the Sons of Intuition, herself fallen, shall at last recover Truth and redeem all Things. By her Fault, indeed, is the moral Conscience of Humanity made subject to the intellectual Force, and thereby all Manner of Evil and Confusion abounds, since her Desire is unto him, and he rules over her until now. But the End foretold by the Seer is not far off. Then shall the Woman be exalted, clothed with the Sun, and carried to the Throne of God. And her Sons shall make War with the Dragon, and have Victory over him. Intui- tion, therefore, pure and a Virgin, shall be the Mother and Redemptress of her fallen Sons, whom she bore under Bondage to her Husband the intellectual Force.” PART 2. “Moses, therefore, knowing the Mysteries of the Religion of the Egyptians, and having learned of their Occultists the 3O4 7A7A. AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. V. Value and Signification of all sacred Birds and Beasts, de- livered like Mysteries to his own People. But certain of the sacred Animals of Egypt he retained not in Honour, for Motives which were equally of Mystic Origin. And he taught his Initiated the Spirit of the heavenly Hieroglyphs, and bade them, when they made Festival before God, to carry with them in Procession, with Music and with Dancing, such of the sacred Animals as were, by their interior Signifi- cance, related to the Occasion. Now, of these Beasts, he chiefly selected Males of the first Year, without Spot or Blemish, to signify that it is beyond all Things needful that Man should dedicate to the Lord his Intellect and his Reason, and this from the Beginning and without the least Reserve. And that he was very wise in teaching this, is evident from the History of the World in all Ages, and par- ticularly in these last Days. For what is it that has led Men to renounce the Realities of the Spirit, and to propagate false Theories and corrupt Sciences, denying all Things save the Appearance which can be apprehended by the outer Senses, and making themselves one with the Dust of the Ground P It is their Intellect which, being unsanctified, has led them astray; it is the Force of the Mind in them, which, being corrupt, is the Cause of their own Ruin, and of that of their Disciples. As, then, the Intellect is apt to be the great Traitor against Heaven, so also is it the Force by which Men, following their pure Intuition, may also grasp and apprehend the Truth. For which Reason it is written that the Christs are subject to their Mothers. Not that by any means the Intellect is to be dishonoured; for it is the Heir of all Things, if only it be truly begotten and be no Bas- tard. “And besides all these Symbols, Moses taught the People AAEAEAWDZX Z. 305 to have beyond all Things an Abhorrence of Idolatry. What, then, is Idolatry, and what are False Gods P “To make an Idol is to materialise spiritual Mysteries. The Priests, then, were Idolaters, who, coming after Moses, and committing to Writing those Things which he by Word of Mouth had delivered unto Israel, replaced the true Things signified, by their material Symbols, and shed inno- cent Blood on the pure Altars of the Lord. “They also are Idolaters, who understand the Things of Sense where the Things of the Spirit are alone implied, and who conceal the true Features of the Gods with material and spurious Presentations. Idolatry is Materialism, the common and original Sin of Men, which replaces Spirit by Appearance, Substance by Illusion, and leads both the moral and intellectual Being into Error, so that they substi- tute the Nether for the Upper, and the Depth for the Height. It is that false Fruit which attracts the outer Senses, the Bait of the Serpent in the Beginning of the World. Until the Mystic Man and Woman had eaten of this Fruit, they knew only the Things of the Spirit, and found them suffice. But after their Fall, they began to apprehend Matter also, and gave it the Preference, making themselves Idolaters. And their Sin, and the Taint begotten of that false Fruit, have corrupted the Blood of the whole Race of Men, from which Corruption the Sons of God would have redeemed them.” NO. II. COMWCAEA’AVIAWG ZTHAE HAZRAEAA’7"E.R. WHEN a man parts at death with his material body, that of him which survives is divisible into three parts, the anima divina or, as in the Hebrew, AWeshamah, the anima bruta, or Ruach, which is the persona of the man ; and the shade, or AVephesh, which is the lowest mode of soul-sub- stance. In the great majority of persons the consciousness is gathered up and centered in the anima bruta, or Ruach ; in the few wise it is polarised in the anima divina. Now, that part of man which passes through, or transmigrates, the process whereof is called by the Hebrews Gilgal AVesha- moth, is the anima divina which is the immediate recep- tacle of the deific Spirit. And whereas there is in the world nothing save the human, actual or potential, the Meshamah subsists also in animals, though only as a mere spark, their consciousness being therefore rudimentary and diffuse. It is the AWeshamah which finally escapes from the world and is redeemed into eternal life. The anima bruta or earthly mind, is that part of man which retains all earthly and local memories, reminiscent affections, cares and personalities of the world or planetary sphere, and bears his family or earth- name. After death this anima bruta, or Ruach, remains in the “lower Eden,” within sight and call of the magnetic earth-sphere. But the anima divina, the AWeshamah, the name of which is known only to God, passes upwards and 306 A PPEAWD/X ZZ. 307 continues its evolutions, bearing with it only a small por- tion, and that the purest, of the outer soul, or mind. This anima divina is the true Man. It is not within hail of the magnetic atmosphere ; and only on the rarest and most solemn occasions, does it return to the planet unclothed. The astral shade, the AVºphesh, is dumb ; the earthly soul, the anima bruta, or Ruach, speaks and remembers ; the divine soul, the AVeshamah, which contains the divine Light, neither returns nor communicates, that is, in the ordinary way. That which the anima bruta remembers, is the his- tory of one incarnation only, because it is part of the astral man, and the astral man is renewed at every incarnation of the Meshamah. But very advanced men become re-incar- nate, not on this planet, but on some other nearer the Sun. The anima bruta has lived but once, and will never be re- incarnate. It continues in the “lower Eden,” a personality in relation to the earth, and retaining the memories, both good and bad, of its one past life. If it have done evil, it suffers indeed, but is not condemned ; if it have done well, it is happy, but not beatified. It continues in thought its favourite pursuits of earth, and creates for itself houses, gardens, flowers, books, and so forth, out of the astral light. It remains in this condition more or less strongly defined, according to the personality it had acquired, until the anima divina, one of whose temples it was, has accomplished all its Avatārs. Then, with all the other earthly souls belong- ing to that divine soul, it is drawn up into the celestial Eden, or upper heaven, and returns into the essence of the Meshamah. But all of it does not return ; only the good memories; the bad sink to the lowest stratum of the astral light, where they disintegrate. For, if the divine soul were permanently, in its perfected state, to retain the memories of all its evil doings, its misfortunes, its earthly griefs, its 308 7A/E PAEA’AºA2C 7' W.4 V. earthly loves, it would not be perfectly happy. Therefore only those loves and memories return to the Neshamah, which have penetrated the earthly soul sufficiently to reach the divine soul, and to make part of the man. It is said that all Marriages are made in Heaven. This means that all true Love-unions are made in the Celestial within the man. The mere affections of the anima bruta are evanes- cent, and belong only to it. When this, the Aºuach, is interrogated, it can speak only of one life, for it has lived but one. Of that one it retains all the memories and all the affections. If these have been strong, it remains near those persons whom especially it loved, and overshadows them. A single AVeshamah may have as many of these former selves in the astral light, as a man may have changes of raiment. But when the divine soul is perfected and about to be received into “the Sun,” or Mirvána, she in- draws all these past selves, and possesses herself of their memories; but only of the worthy parts of these, and such as will not deprive her of eternal calm. In “the planets,” the soul forgets; in “the Suns,” she remembers. For, in memorić attermá erit Justus.” Not until a man has accomp- lished his regeneration, and become a son of God, a Christ, can he have these memories of his past lives. Such memories as a man, on the upward path, can have of his past incarnations, are by reflection only ; and the memories are not of events usually, but of principles and truths and habits formerly acquired. If these memories relate to events, they are vague and fitful, because they are reflec- tions from the overshadowing of his former selves in the astral light. For the former selves, the deserted temples of the anima divina, frequent her sphere and are attracted .* Ps. A.V. cxii., D.W. cxi. 6. AAEAEEAWDIX II. 309 towards her, especially under certain conditions. From them she learns through the intermediary of the Genius, or “Moon,” who lights up the camera obscura of the mind, and reflects on its tablet the memories cast by the overshadow- ing Past. The anima bruta seems to itself to progress, because it has a vague sense that sooner or later it will be lifted to higher spheres. But of the method of this it is ignorant, because it can only know the Celestial by union with it. The learning which makes it seem to itself to progress, is acquired by reflected soul-rays coming from the terrestrial. Advanced men on the earth assist and teach the astral soul, and hence its fondness for their spheres. It learns by reflected intellectual images, or Thoughts. The Ruach is right when it says it is immortal. For the better part of it will in the end be absorbed into the Mesh- amah. But if one interrogate a Ruach of even two or three centuries old, it seldom knows more than it knew in its earth-life, unless, indeed, it gain fresh knowledge from its interrogator. The reason why some communications are astral, and others celestial, is simply that some persons— the greater number—communicate by means of the anima bruta in themselves, and others—the few purified—by means of their anima divina. For, Like attracts Like. The earthly souls of animals are rarely met with ; they come into communion with animals rather than with man, unless an affection between a man and an animal have been very strong. If a man would meet and recognise his Beloved in Mirvána, he must make his affection one of the AVesh- amah, not of the Ruach. There are many degrees of Love. True Love is stronger than a thousand deaths. For though one die a thousand times, a single Love may yet perpetuate itself past every death from birth to birth, growing and cul- minating in intensity and might. 3IO THE A2A2A’AºEC 7 WA V. Now all these three, Nephesh, Ruach, and Neshamah, are discrete modes of one and the same universal Being which is at once Life and Substance and is instinct with Consciousness, inasmuch as it is, under whatever mode, Holy Spirit. Wherefore there inheres in them all a Divine potency. Evolution, which is the manifestation of that which is inherent, is the manifestation of this potency. The first formulation of this inherency, above the plane of the material, is the Nephesh, this being the soul by which are impelled the lower and earlier forms of life. It is the “moving” soul that breathes and kindles. The next— the Ruach—is the “Wind” that rushes forth to vivify the mind. Higher, because more inward and central, is the Neshamah, which, borne on the bosom of the Ruach, is the immediate receptacle of the Divine Particle, and without which this cannot be individuated and become an indiffus- ible personality. Both the “Wind” and the “Flame” are Spirit; but the Wind is general, the Flame particular ; the Wind fills the House; the Flame designates the Person. The Wind is the Divine Voice resounding in the ear of the Apostle and passing away where it listeth ; the Flame is the Divine Tongue uttering itself in the word of the Apostle. Thus, then, in the Soul impersonal are perceived the breath and afflatus of God; but in the Soul personal is formulate the express Utterance of God. Now, both of Nephesh and Ruach that which is gathered up and endures, is Neshamah. - NO. III. CONCERAVING PROPHESYZAWG : AAVD A A'ROPHECY. PART 1. CONCERNING PROPHESYING. YOU ask the method and nature of Inspiration, and the means whereby God revealeth the Truth. 2. Know that there is no enlightenment from without : the secret of things is revealed from within. 3. From without Cometh no Divine Revelation: but the Spirit within beareth witness. 4. Think not I tell you that which you know not : for except you know it, it cannot be given to you. 5. To him that hath it is given, and he hath the more abundantly. - 6. None is a prophet save he who knoweth : the Instructor of the people is a man of many lives. 7. Inborn knowledge and the Perception of things, these are the sources of Revelation : the Soul of the man in- structeth him, having already learned by experience. 8. Intuition is Inborn Experience; that which the Soul knoweth of old and of former years. 9. And Illumination is the Light of Wisdom, whereby a man perceiveth heavenly secrets. Io. Which Light is the Spirit of God within the man, showing unto him the things of God. II. Think not that I tell you anything you know not ; 3II 3I2 7F/E A2ERFA2C 7' W.4 V. all cometh from within : the Spirit that informeth is the Spirit of God in the prophet. 12. What, then, you ask, is the Medium ; and how are to be regarded the utterances of one speaking in trance P 13. God speaketh through no man in the way you sup- pose ; for the Spirit of the Prophet beholdeth God with open eyes. If he fall into a trance, his eyes are open, and his interior man knoweth what is spoken by him. 14. But when a man speaketh that which he knoweth not, he is obsessed : an impure Spirit, or one that is bound, hath entered into him. 15. There are many such, but their words are as the words of men who know not : these are not prophets nor inspired. - 16. God obsesseth no man ; God is revealed: and he to whom God is revealed speaketh that which he knoweth. 17. Christ Jesus 1 understandeth God: he knoweth that of which he beareth witness. 18. But they who, being Mediums, utter in trance things of which they have no knowledge, and of which their own Spirit is uninformed : these are obsessed with a spirit of divination, a strange spirit, not their own. 19. Of such beware, for they speak many lies, and are deceivers, working often for gain or for pleasure sake: and they are a grief and a snare to the faithful. 20. Inspiration may indeed be mediumship, but it is con- scious ; and the knowledge of the prophet instructeth him. 21. Even though he speak in an ecstasy, he uttereth nothing that he knoweth not. 22. Thou who art a prophet hast had many lives: yea, thou hast taught many nations, and hast stood before kings. * Here implying the Christ Jesus within, namely, the regenerated human nature in whomsoever occurring. AAAAEAVADAX ZXY. 3I3 23. And God hath instructed thee in the years that are past ; and in the former times of the earth. 24. By prayer, by fasting, by meditation, by painful seeking, hast thou attained that thou knowest. 25. There is no knowledge but by labour : there is no intuition but by experience. 26. I have seen thee on the hills of the East: I have followed thy steps in the Wilderness: I have seen thee adore at sunrise: I have marked thy night watches in the caves of the mountains. - 27. Thou hast attained with patience, O prophet: God hath revealed the truth to thee from within. PART 2. A PROPHECY. 28. And now I show you a Mystery and a new thing, which is part of the Mystery of the Fourth Day of Creation. 29. The word which shall come to save the world, shall be uttered by a Woman. s 30. A Woman shall conceive, and shall bring forth the tidings of Salvation. 31. For the reign of Adam is at its last hour; and God shall crown all things by the creation of Eve. 32. Hitherto the Man hath been alone, and hath had dominion over the earth. * 33. But when the Woman shall be created, God shall give unto her the kingdom ; and she shall be first in rule and highest in dignity. 34. Yea, the last shall be first ; and the elder shall serve the younger. 35. So that women shall no more lament for their woman- hood : but men shall rather say, “Oh that we had been born women l’’ - 3I4 7//E PERATEC 7' W.A. V. 36. For the strong shall be put down from their seat ; and the meek shall be exalted to their place. 37. The days of the Covenant of Manifestation are pass- ing away : the Gospel of Interpretation cometh. 38. There shall nothing new be told ; but that which is ancient shall be interpreted. 39. So that Man the Manifestor shall resign his office; and Woman the Interpreter shall give light to the world. 40. Hers is the Fourth Office: she revealeth that which the Lord hath manifested. - 41. Hers is the Light of the Heavens, and the brightest of the planets of the Holy Seven. 42. She is the Fourth Dimension ; the Eyes which en- lighten; the Power which draweth inward to God. 43. And her kingdom cometh; the day of the exaltation of Woman. 44. And her reign shall be greater than the reign of the Man: for Adam shall be put down from his place; and she shall have dominion for ever. 45. And she who is alone shall bring forth more children to God, than she who hath a husband. 46. There shall no more be a reproach against women : but against men shall be the reproach. 47. For the Woman is the crown of Man, and the final manifestation of Humanity. 48. She is the nearest to the Throne of God, when she shall be revealed. 49. But the creation of Woman is not yet complete : but it shall be complete in the time which is at hand. 50. All things are thine, O Mother of God: all things are thine, O Thou who risest from the Sea; and Thou shalt have dominion over all the worlds. NO, IV. COAVCAERAVAWG 7A/A2 AVA 7TURA2 OF SAM. As is the Outer so is the Inner: He that worketh is One. 2. As the small is, so is the great: there is one Law. 3. Nothing is small and nothing is great in the Divine Economy. 4. If thou wouldst understand the method of the world's corruption, and the condition to which sin hath reduced the work of God, 5. Meditate upon the aspect of a Corpse; and consider the method of the putrefaction of its tissues and humours. 6. For the secret of Death is the same, whether of the Outer or of the Inner. 7. The Body dieth when the Central Will of its system no longer bindeth in obedience the elements of its Sub- Stance. . 8. Every Cell is a living Entity, whether of vegetable or of animal potency. 9. In the healthy body every Cell is polarised in subjec- tion to the Central Will, the Adonai of the physical system. Io. Health, therefore, is Order, Obedience, and Govern- ment, - 11. But wherever Disease is, there is Disunion, Rebellion, and Insubordination. 31.5 316 THE PERA'A CT WA V. I2. And the deeper the seat of the confusion, the more dangerous the malady, and the harder to quell it. 13. That which is superficial may be more easily healed; or, if need be, the disorderly elements may be rooted out, and the body shall be whole and at unity again. 14. But if the disobedient molecules corrupt each other continually, and the perversity spread, and the rebellious tracts multiply their elements ; the whole body shall fall into Dissolution, which is Death. 15. For the Central Will that should dominate all the kingdom of the body, is no longer obeyed ; and every element is become its own ruler, and hath a divergent will of its own. d 16. So that the poles of the cells incline in divers direct- tions; and the binding power which is the life of the body is dissolved and destroyed. 17. And when Dissolution is complete, then follow Corruption and Putrefaction. 18. Now, that which is true of the Physical, is true like- wise of its prototype. - 19. The whole world is full of Revolt; and every element hath a will divergent from God. 20. Whereas there ought to be but one Will, attracting and ruling the whole Man. 21. But there is no longer Brotherhood among you ; nor Order, nor Mutual Sustenance. 22. Every Cell is its own Arbiter ; and every Member is become a Sect. 23. Ye are not bound one to another : ye have con- founded your offices, and abandoned your functions. 24. Ye have reversed the direction of your magnetic currents: ye are fallen into confusion, and have given place to the Spirit of Misrule. - A PPEAWDIX ZV. 317 25. Your Wills are many and diverse; and every one of you is an Anarchy. 26. A house that is divided against itself, falleth. 27. O wretched Man; who shall deliver you from this body of Death P NO. V. CONCERNING THE “GRAEA 7' WORK,” THE REDEMPTION, AND THE SHARAE OF CHRIST /AESUS ZHAERAE/M. “For this cause is Christ manifest, that he may destroy the works of the devil.” 2. In this text of the holy writings is contained the explanation of the mission of the Christ, and the nature of the Great Work. 3. Now the devil, or old serpent, the enemy of God, is that which gives pre-eminence to Matter. 4. He is disorder, confusion, distortion, falsification, error. He is not personal, he is not positive, he is not formulated. Whatever God is, that the devil is not. 5. God is Light, Truth, Order, Harmony, Reason ; and God's Works are Illumination, Knowledge, Understanding, Love, and Sanity. 6. Therefore the devil is darkness, falsehood, disorder, discord, ignorance; and his works are confusion, folly, division, hatred, and delirium. 7. The devil is therefore the negation of God's Positive. God is I AM : the devil is NOT. He has no individuality and no existence; for he represents the not-being. Wher- ever God’s kingdom is not, the devil reigns. 8. Now the Great Work is the redemption of Spirit from Matter; that is, the establishment of the Kingdom of God. 9. Jesus being asked when the Kingdom of God should 318 A PPAEAWD/X V. 319 come, answered, “When Two shall be as One, and that which is Without as that which is Within.” Io. In saying this, he expressed the nature of the Great Work. The Two are Spirit and Matter: the Within is the real invisible; the Without is the illusory visible. 11. The Kingdom of God shall come when Spirit and Matter shall be one substance, and the phenomenal shall be absorbed into the real. 12. His design was therefore to destroy the dominion of Matter, and to dissipate the devil and his works. 13. And this he intended to accomplish by proclaiming the knowledge of the Universal Dissolvent, and giving to men the keys of the Kingdom of God. 14. Now, the Kingdom of God is within us; that is, it is interior, invisible, mystic, spiritual. 15. There is a power by means of which the Outer may be absorbed into the Inner. 16. There is a power by means of which Matter may be ingested into its original substance. 17. He who possesses this power is Christ, and he has the devil under foot. 18. For he reduces chaos to order, and indraws the external to the centre. 19. He has learnt that Matter is illusion, and that Spirit alone is real. 20. He has found his own Central Point; and all power is given unto him in heaven and on earth. 2 I. Now, the Central Point is the number Thirteen : it is the number of the Marriage of the Son of God. 22. And all the members of the microcosm are bidden to the banquet of the marriage. 23. But if there chance to be even one among them which has not on a wedding garment; 32O TAZE PERATECT WA V. 24. Such a one is a Traitor; and the microcosm is found divided against itself. 25. And that it may be wholly regenerate, it is necessary that Judas be cast out. 26. Now the members of the microcosm are Twelve : of the Senses three, of the Mind three, of the Heart three, and of the Conscience three. 27. For of the Body there are four elements; and the sign of the four is Sense, in the which are three Gates; 28. The gate of the Eye, the gate of the Ear, and the gate of the Touch. 29. Renounce vanity, and be poor: renounce praise, and be humble : renounce luxury, and be chaste. 30. Offer unto God a pure oblation : let the fire of the altar search thee, and prove thy fortitude. 31. Cleanse thy sight, thine hands, and thy feet : carry the censer of thy worship into the courts of the Lord ; and let thy vows be unto the Most High. 32. And for the Magnetic Man there are four elements; and the covering of the four is Mind, in the which are three gates; 33. The gate of Desire, the gate of Labour, and the gate of Illumination. 34. Renounce the world, and aspire heavenward : labour not for the meat which perishes, but ask of God thy daily bread: beware of wandering doctrines; and let the Word of the Lord be thy light. 35. Also of the Soul there are four elements; and the seat of the four is the Heart, whereof likewise there are three gates; 36. The gate of Obedience, the gate of Prayer, and the gate of Discernment. 37. Renounce thine own will, and let the Law of God only AAPA’EAVOXX V. 32 I be within thee: renounce doubt: pray always and faint not: be pure of heart also, and thou shalt see God. 38. And within the Soul is the Spirit; and the Spirit is One, yet has it likewise three elements. 39. And these are the gates of the Oracle of God, which is the Ark of the Covenant; 40. The Rod, the Host, and the Law : 41. The Force which solves, and transmutes, and divines : the Bread of Heaven which is the substance of all things and the food of Angels: the Table of the Law, which is the Will of God, written with the Finger of the Lord. 42. If these three be within thy spirit, then shall the Spirit of God be within thee. 43. And the glory shall be upon the Propitiatory, in the holy place of thy prayer. 44. These are the twelve gates of Regeneration; through which if a man enter he shall have right to the Tree of Life, 45. For the number of that Tree is Thirteen. 46. It may happen to a man to have three, to another five, to another seven, to another ten. 47. But until a man have twelve, he is not master over the last enemy. 48. Therefore was Jesus betrayed to death by Judas; be- cause he was not yet perfected. 49. But he was perfected through suffering; yea, by the Passion, the Cross, and the Burial. 50. For he could not wholly die: neither could his body see corruption, 51. So he revived: for the elements of death were not in his flesh; and his molecules retained the polarity of life eternal. 52. He therefore was raised and became perfect: having the power of the Dissolvent and of Transmutation. Y 322 7"HA2 PAERATEC7' W.A. V. 53. And God glorified the Son of Man; yea, he as- cended into heaven, and sits at the right hand of the Majesty on high. 54. Thence also the Christ shall come again, in power like unto the power of his ascension. 55. For as yet the devil is undissipated: the Virgin in- deed has crushed his head ; but still he lies in wait for her heel. 56. Therefore the great work is yet to be accomplished. 57. When the Leaven shall have leavened the whole lump; when the Seed shall have become a tree; when the Net shall have gathered all things into it. 58. For in the same power and glory he had at his as- cension, shall Christ Jesus be manifested from heaven before angels and men. 59. For when the cycle of the creation is completed, whether of the macrocosm or of the microcosm, the Great Work is accomplished. 60. Six for the Manifestation, and six for the Interpreta- tion : six for the Outgoing, and six for the Ingathering : six for the Man, and six for the Woman. 61. Then shall be the Sabbath of the Lord God. NO. VI. THE 7TWMAE OF 7 FA2 EAWD. THE token whereby the approach of the End shall be known, will be the spectacle of “the Abomination of Deso- lation standing in the holy place.” Now the “holy place” is always—whether in the universal or the individual, in the Macrocosm or the Microcosm—the place of God and the Soul. And “the Abomination of Desolation ”—or “that which maketh desolate ’—is that system of thought which, putting matter in the chief place, and making it the source, substance, and object of existence, abolishes God out of the universe and the Soul out of man, and thus, depriving existence of its light and life, makes it empty, desolate, and barren, a very “abomination of desolation.” Jesus, recalling this prophecy, and citing the words of Daniel's Angel, also foretold the same event as marking the end of that “adulterous” generation [a term identical with idolatrous as denoting the worship of and illicit asso- ciation with Matter], and the coming of the kingdom of God; and warned the Elect in mystic phrase, thus to be interpreted — “When, therefore, ye shall see Matter exalted to the holy place of God and the Soul, and made the all and in all of existence ; 323 324 7 HE PERFEC 7' W.A. Y. “Then let the spiritual Israel betake themselves to the hills where alone salvation is to be found, even the heights and fastnesses of the Divine Life. * “And let him who has overcome the body, beware lest he return to the love of the flesh, or seek the things of the world. “Neither let him who is freed from the body, become again re-incarnate. “And woe to the soul whose travail is yet unaccom- plished, and which has not yet become weaned from the body. - “And beseech God that these things find you not at a season either of spiritual depression and’ feebleness, or of spiritual repose and unwatchfulness. “For the tribulation shall be without parallel ; “And such that except those days shall be few in num- ber, escape from the body would be impossible. “But for the Elect's sake they shall be few. “And if any shall then declare that here, or there, the Christ has appeared as a Person, believe it not. For there shall arise delusive apparitions and manifestations, together with great signs and marvels, such as might well deceive even the Elect. Remember, I have told you beforehand. Wherefore, if they shall say unto you, Behold he is in the desert, whether of the East or of the West,-join him not. Or, Behold he is in darkened rooms and secret assemblies, —pay no regard. “For, like lightning coming out of the East and illumin- ating the West, so shall be the world's spiritual awakening to the recognition of the Divine in Humanity. “But wheresoever the dead carcase of error remains, around it, like vultures, will gather both deceivers and de- ceived. A PPEAVOAX VI. 325 “And upon them, the profane, there shall be darkness; the Spirit shall be quenched and the Soul extinct ; and there shall be no more any light in heaven, or in heavenly science any truth and meaning. And the power of heaven upon men shall be shaken. “Then shall appear the new sign, the Man in Heaven, upon the rain-clouds of the last Chrism and Mystery, with great power and glory. & “And his missioners shall gather the Elect with a great voice, from the four winds and from the farthest bounds of heaven. “Behold the FIG-TREE, and learn her parable. When the branch thereof shall become tender, and her buds appear, know that the day of God is upon you.” Wherefore, then, saith the Lord that the budding of the Fig-Tree shall foretell the end? Because the Fig-Tree is the symbol of the Divine Woman, as the Vine of the Divine Man. The Fig is the similitude of the Matrix, containing inward buds, bearing blossoms on its placenta, and bringing forth fruit in darkness. It is the Cup of Life, and its flesh is the seed-ground of new births. The stems of the Fig-Tree run with milk: her leaves are as human hands, like the leaves of her brother the Vine. And when the Fig-Tree shall bear figs, then shall be the Second Advent, the new sign of the Man bearing Water, and the manifestation of the Virgin-Mother crowned. For when the Lord would enter the holy city, to cele- brate his Last Supper with his disciples, he sent before him the Fisherman Peter to meet the Man of the Coming Sign. ºries shall meet you a Man bearing a pitcher of Water.” 326 7A7A. AAEA'AºA2C 7' W.A. V. Because, as the Lord was first manifest at a wine-feast in the morning, so must he consummate his work at a wine- feast in the evening. It is his Pass-Over ; for thereafter the Sun must pass into a new Sign. After the Fish, the Water-Carrier; but the Lamb of God remains always in the place of victory, being slain from the foundation of the world. For his place is the place of the Sun's triumph. After the Vine the Fig ; for Adam is first formed, then Eve. And because our Lady is not yet manifest, Our Lord is crucified. - Therefore came he vainly seeking fruit upon the Fig-Tree, “for the time of figs was not yet.” - And from that day forth, because of the curse of Eve, no man has eaten fruit of the Fig-Tree. For the inward understanding has withered away, there is no discernment any more in men. They have crucified the Lord because of their ignorance, not knowing what they did. Wherefore, indeed, said our Lord to our Lady:—“Woman, what is between me and thee? For even my hour is not yet come.” Because until the hour of the Man is accomplished and fulfilled, the hour of the Woman must be deferred. Jesus is the Vine; Mary is the Fig-Tree. And the vint- age must be completed and the wine trodden out, or ever the harvest of the Figs be gathered. 3. But when the hour of our Lord is achieved; hanging on his Cross, he gives our Lady to the faithful. The chalice is drained, the lees are wrung out : then says he to his Elect:-‘‘Behold thy Mother | * A PPEAV/D/X PA. 327 But so long as the grapes remain unplucked, the Vine has nought to do with the Fig-Tree, nor Jesus with Mary. He is first revealed, for he is the Word ; afterwards shall come the hour of its Interpretation. And in that day every man shall sit under the VINE and the FIG-TREE ; the Dayspring shall arise in the Orient, and the Fig-Tree shall bear her fruit.} For, from the beginning, the Fig-leaf covered the shame of Incarnation, because the riddle of existence can be ex- pounded only by him who has the Woman's secret. It is the riddle of the Sphinx. Look for that Tree which alone of all Trees bears a fruit blossoming interiorly, in concealment, and thou shalt dis- cover the Fig. Look for the sufficient meaning of the manifest universe and of the written Word, and thou shalt find only their mystical sense. Cover the nakedness of Matter and of Nature with the Fig-leaf, and thou hast hidden all their shame. For the Fig is the Interpreter. So when the hour of Interpretation comes, and the Fig- Tree puts forth her buds, know that the time of the End and the dawning of the new Day are at hand,-‘‘ even at the doors.” * Zech. iii. Io; Mic. iv. 4; Cant. ii. 13. NO. VII. THA HIGHER ALCAHA.M.P. ALL things in Heaven and in Earth are of God, both the Invisible and the Visible. 2. Such as is the Invisible is the Visible also ; for there is no impassable bound between Spirit and Matter. 3. Matter is Spirit made exteriorly cognisable by the force of the Divine Word. 4. And when God shall resume all things by Love, the Material shall be resolved into the Spiritual, and there shall be a new Heaven and a new Earth. 5. Not that Matter shall be destroyed ; for it came forth from God and is of God, indestructible and eternal. 6. But it shall be indrawn, and resolved into its true Self. - 7. It shall put off corruption, and remain incorruptible. 8. It shall put off mortality, and remain immortal. 9. So that nothing be lost of the Divine Substance. Io. It was material Entity; it shall be Spiritual Entity. II. For there is nothing which can go out from the Presence of God. - 12. This is the doctrine of the Resurrection of the Dead; that is, the Transfiguration of the Body. 13. For the Body, which is Matter, is but the Manifesta- tion of Spirit; and the Word of God shall transmute it into its inner being. 328 A PPEAVO/X VII. . 329 14. The Will of God is the alchemic Crucible; and the Dross which is cast therein is Matter. 15. And the Dross shall become pure Gold, seven times refined ; even perfect Spirit. * 16. It shall leave behind it nothing; but shall be trans- formed into the Divine Image. - 17. For it is not a new Substance; but its alchemic polarity is changed, and it is converted. 18. But except it were Gold in its true nature, it could not be resumed into the aspect of Gold. 19. And except Matter were Spirit, it could not revert to Spirit. 20. To make Gold the Alchemist must have Gold. 2 I. But he knows that to be Gold which others take to be Dross. 22. Cast thyself into the Will of God, and thou shalt be- come as God. 23 For thou art God if thy will be the Divine Will. 24. This is the Great Secret; it is the Mystery of Re- demption, NO. VIII. cowczRNING REVELATIow. ALL true and worthy Illuminations are Revelations, or Re- veilings. Mark the meaning of this word. There can be no true or worthy Illumination which destroys distances and exposes the details of things. Look at this Landscape. Behold how its Mountains and Forests are suffused with soft and delicate Mist, which half conceals and half discloses their shapes and tints. See how this Mist like a tender veil enwraps the distances, and merges the reaches of the Land with the Clouds of Heaven How beautiful it is, how orderly and wholesome its fitness, and the delicacy of its appeal to the eye and heart And how false would be that sense which should desire to tear away this clinging veil, to bring far objects near, and to reduce everything to foreground in which details only should be apparent, and all outlines sharply defined Distance and Mist make the beauty of Nature: and no Poet would desire to behold her otherwise than through this lovely and modest veil. And as with Exoteric, so with Esoteric Nature: the secrets of every human Soul are sacred and known only to herself; the Ego is inviolable, and its personality is its own right for ever. Therefore mathematical rules and algebraic formulae can- not be forced into the study of human lives; nor can human 330 AAAEENDIX VIII. 331 personalities be dealt with as though they were mere ciphers or arithmetical quantities. The Soul is too subtle, too instinct with Life and Will for treatment such as this. One may dissect a corpse; one may analyse and classify chemical constituents; but it is impossible to dissect or analyse any living thing. The moment it is so treated it escapes. Life is not sub- ject to dissection. The opening of the Shrine will always find it empty: the God is gone. A Soul may know her own past, and may see in her own light : but none can see it for her if she see it not. Herein is the beauty and sanctity of Personality. The Ego is self-centred and not diffused; for the tendency of all Evolution is towards Centralisation and Individualism. And Life is so various, and so beautifully diverse in its Unity, that no hard and fast mathematical law-making can imprison its manifoldness. All is Order: but the elements of this order harmonise by means of their infinite diversities and gradations. The true Mysteries remained always content with Nature's harmony: they sought not to drag distances into fore- grounds; or to dissipate the mountain nebula, in whose bosom the Sun is reflected. For these sacred Mists are the media of Light, and the glorifiers of Nature. Therefore the Doctrine of the Mysteries is truly Reveila- tion,-a veiling and a re-veiling of that which it is not pos- sible for eye to behold without violating all the Order and Sanctities of Nature. For distance and visual rays causing the diversities of far and near, of perspective and mergent tints, of horizon and 332 THE AREAEAZAZCT WAY. foreground, are part of Natural Order and Sequence; and the Law expressed in their properties cannot be violated. For no Law is ever broken. The hues and aspects of Distance and Mist indeed may vary and dissolve according to the quality and quantity of the Light which falls upon them: but they are there always, and no human eye can annul or annihilate them. Even words, even pictures are symbols and veils. Truth itself is unutterable, save by God to God. NO. IX. COAVCAERAVIAWG ZTELE POE 7. THou mayest the more easily gather somewhat of the character of the heavenly Personality by considering the Quality of that of the highest type of mankind on Earth, —the Poet. The Poet hath no Self apart from his larger Self. Other men pass indifferent through Life and the World, because the Selfhood of Earth and Heaven is a thing apart from them, and toucheth them not. The Wealth of Beauty in Earth and Sky and Sea lieth outside their being, and speaketh not to their heart. Their interests are individual and limited : their Home is by one Hearth: four walls are the boundary of their kingdom, so small is it ! But the Personality of the Poet is Divine: and being Divine it hath no limits. He is supreme and ubiquitous in consciousness: his heart beats in every Element. The Pulses of all the infinite Deep of Heaven vibrate in his own; and responding to their strength and their pleni- tude, he feels more intensely than other men. Not merely he sees and examines these Rocks and Trees: these variable Waters, and these glittering Peaks. Not merely he hears this plaintive Wind, these rolling Peals : 333 334 7 HE PERA'ZCT WA Y. But he is all these : and with them—nay, in them—he rejoices and weeps, he shines and aspires, he sighs and thunders. And when he sings, it is not he—the Man—whose Voice is heard: it is the Voice of all the Manifold Nature herself. In his Verse the Sunshine laughs; the Mountains give forth their sonorous Echoes; the swift Lightnings flash. The great continual cadence of universal Life moves and becomes articulate in human language. O Joy profound ! O boundless Selfhood O God-like Personality All the Gold of the Sunset is thine; the Pillars of Chry- solite; and the purple Vault of Immensity The Sea is thine with its solemn Speech, its misty Dis- tance, and its radiant Shallows The Daughters of Earth love thee: the Water-nymphs tell thee their secrets; thou knowest the Spirit of all silent things Sunbeams are thy Laughter, and the Rain-drops of Heaven thy Tears: in the wrath of the Storm thine Heart is shaken; and thy Prayer goeth up with the Wind unto God. Thou art multiplied in the Conscience of all living Crea- tures; thou art young with the Youth of Nature ; thou art all-seeing as the Starry Skies; Like unto the Gods,-therefore art thou their Beloved : yea, if thou wilt They shall tell thee all things; Because thou only understandest, among all the Sons of Men ! No. X. cowCERNING THE ONE LIFE. (1) THE Spirit absorbed in Man or in the Planet does not exhaust Deity. - - Nor does the Soul evolved upward through Matter ex- haust Substance. There remain then ever in the Fourth Dimension—the Principium—above the manifest, unmanifest God and Soul. The Perfection of Man and of the Planet is attained when the Soul of the one and of the other is throughout illuminate by Spirit. - But Spirit is never the same thing as Soul. It is always celestial Energy, and Soul is always Substance. That which creates is Spirit (God). The immanent consciousnesses (spirits) of all the cells of a man's entity, cause by their polarisation a central unity of consciousness, which is more than the sum total of all their consciousnesses, because it is on a higher round or plane. For in spiritual science everything depends upon levels; and the man's evolution works round spirally, as does the planetary evolution. In this relation consider the Worlds of Form and Formless Worlds of Hindú theosophy. 33S 336 THE PERFECT WA Y. Similarly the soul of the planet is more than the associated essences of the souls upon it: because this soul also is on a higher plane than they. Similarly, too, the consciousness of the solar system is more than that of the associated world-consciousnesses. And the consciousness of the manifest universe is greater than that of its corporate systems. ‘. But that of the Unmanifest is higher and greater still: as (except in Substance) God the Father is greater than God the Son. (2) The Elemental Kingdoms represent Spirit on its down- ward path into Matter. There are three of these before the Mineral is reached. These are the formless worlds before the worlds of form. They are in the Planet, and also in Man. All the planets inhabited by manifest forms are themselves manifest. After the form-worlds come other formless worlds, caused by the upward arc of ascending Spirit: but these also are in the planet. They are also in the man ; and are the states of pure thought. The Thinker, therefore, who is son of Hermes, is as far beyond the Medium who is controlled and who is not self- conscious, as the formless worlds of the ascending arc are beyond the formless worlds of the elemental, or descending, alſc. In the planet and in the man they only seem contiguous because each round is spiral. But each round takes the One Life higher in the spiral. AAEPENDIX X. 337 Neither the planet-soul nor the man-soul goes over ex- actly the same ground again. But perverse and disobedient will may reverse the direc- tion of the spiral. Individuals in whom the will so acts, are finally aban- doned by the planet to the outer sphere. (3) The One Life is the point of consciousness. The will is the impulse which moves it. In the Celestial the One Life is the Elohim; and the Will is the Father. The One Life is manifest by Effulgence (the Son). So then the Will begets in Substance the Effulgence, which is the manifestation of the One Life. In man and the planet the Effulgence is dim and diffuse until it moves into the soul. Then only Christ is born. The One Life is invisible until Christ manifests it. Christ in Man has for counterpart Adonai in the Heavens. So then the One Life is in the Father-Mother latently, until manifest by the Son (Effulgence). Herein is the difference reconciled between the Greek and Latin Churches. The point of consciousness shineth more and more unto the Perfect Day of Brightness (“Nativity of Christ”). (4) The object of creation is the production of “Ancients.” 1 They are the first-fruits of the souls of the planets; or “First Resurrection.” 1 A.V., “Elders,” Apoc, iv. 338 THE PERFECT WA Y. They are not themselves creators; but are regenerators of that which is created ; Being vehicles for the Holy Spirit, who is the regenerator through Christ. Because Will can create only when it is in the abstract: the derived does not create. The Father creates through Adonai by means of the Holy Spirit. The Will of the Perfect Man renovates through the Effulgence of his One Life. - His Karma is poured out over the world to save mankind He is the Saviour through his precious life. There are twenty-four Ancients, because there are twelve Avatārs of the Lord, and every one is dual. (5) Will, when it is derived through existence, begets Karma. God has no Karma. God does not ex-ist: God IS. Karma is the channel of Initiation. God is not initiated. The Perfect Man saves himself and saves others by his Righteousness. The two terms of existence are Creation and Redemption. The first is God's work: the second is the work of Christ :-God in Man. The reason why the Ancient cannot create is because he is not infinite. He is immortal, not eternal : he is derived, not self- subsistent. His is the point of Grace: not the point of Projection. The thrones of the Ancients are round about the Throne of God and below it. * k sº sº # No. XI. CO.VCEAEAVIAWG 7TP/E MYSTERYES. IT is necessary, in relation to the Mysteries, to distinguish between the Unmanifest and the Manifest, and between the Macrocosm and the Microcosm. These last, however, are identical, in that the process of the universal and the process of the individual are one. Mary is the Soul, and as such the Matrix of the Divine Principle—God—made Man by Individuation, through descent into the “Virgin's Womb.” But the Seven Prin- ciples of universal Spirit are concerned in this conception; since it is through their operation in the Soul that she becomes capable of polarising Divinity. [This is the secret aspect of the Mosaic week of Creation, each day of which week denotes the operation of one of the Seven creative Elohim or Divine Potencies concerned in the elaboration of the spiritual Microcosm.] It is said that the Blessed Virgin Mary is the Daughter, Spouse, and Mother of God. But, inasmuch as Spiritual Energy has two conditions, one of Passivity and one of Activity, which latter is styled the Holy Spirit, it is said that Mary's Spouse is not the Father, but the Holy Ghost, these terms implying respectively the static and the dynamic modes of Deity. For the Father denotes the Motionless, 339 34O 7THE AERATEC 7' W.A. V. the Force passive and potential, in Whom all things are— subjectively. But the Holy Ghost represents Will in action, —Creative Energy, Motion and Generative Function. Of this union of the Divine Will in action—the Holy Ghost— with the human soul, the product is Christ, the God-Man, and our Lord. And through Christ, the Divine Spirit, by whom he is begotten, flows and operates. In the Trinity of the Unmanifest, the Great Deep, or Ocean of Infinitude—Sophia (Wisdom)—corresponds to Mary, and has for Spouse the creative Energy of whom is begotten the Manifestor, Adonai, the Lord. This “Mother” is co-equal with the Father, being primary and eternal. In Manifestation the “Mother ” is derived, being born of Time (Anna), and has for Father the Planet-God, for our planet Iacchos (Joachim); so that the paternity of the First Person of the Trinity is vicarious only. The Church, therefore, being a Church of the Manifest, deals with Mary (Substance), under this aspect alone, and hence does not specify her as co-equal with the First Principle. In the Un- manifest, being underived, she has no relation to Time. * And also Jacob, as in Ps. xxiv. 6, crxxii. 2, 5, etc., where he is specially invoked as the God of Might. The name is applied equally to the Planet-God and to his elect people. NO. XII. A PMAV 7"O ZAZAE A*/AAVE 7. GO/O. (1) O FATHER Iacchos; thou art Lord of the Body, God mani- fest in the Flesh; 2. Twice-born, baptized with fire, quickened by the Spirit, instructed in secret things beneath the Earth: 3. Who wearest the horns of the Ram, who ridest upon an Ass, whose symbol is the Vine, and the new Wine thy Blood ; 4. Whose Father is the Lord God of Hosts; whose Mother is the Daughter of the King. 5. Evoi, Iacchos, Lord of Initiation : for by means of the Body is the Soul initiated: 6. By Birth, by Marriage, by Virginity, by Sleep, by Waking, and by Death : 7. By Fasting and Vigil, by Dreams and Penance, by Joy, and by Weariness of the Flesh. 8. The Body is the Chamber of Ordeal : therein is the Soul of Man tried. 9. Thine Initiates, O Master, are they who come out of great tribulation ; whose robes are washed in the Blood of the Vine. Io. Give me to drink of the Wine of thy Cup, that I may live for evermore : 34T 342 7 H.A. PERFECT WA. P. II. And to eat of the Bread whose grain cometh up from the Earth, as the Corn in the Ear. 12. Yea; for the Body in which Man is redeemed, is of the Earth; it is broken upon the cross, cut down by the sickle, crushed between grindstones. 13. For by the suffering of the Outer is the Inner set free. 14. Therefore the Body which Thou givest is Meat indeed; and the Word of thy Blood is Drink indeed. 15. For Man shall live by the Word of God. 16. Evoi, Father Iacchos: bind thy Church to the Vine, and her elect to the choice Vine. 17. And let them wash their garments in wine; and their vesture in the blood of grapes. (2) 18. Evoi, Iacchos: Lord of the Body; and of the House whose Symbol is the Fig; 19. Whereof the image is the figure of the Matrix, and the leaf as a man's hand : whose stems bring forth milk. 20. For the Woman is the Mother of the Living ; and the crown and perfection of Humanity. 21. Her Body is the highest step in the ladder of Incar- nation, 22. Which leadeth from Earth to Heaven ; upon which the Spirits of God ascend and descend. 23. Thou art not perfected, O Soul, that hast not known Womanhood. 24. Evoi, Iacchos: for the day cometh wherein thy sons shall eat of the fruit of the Fig : yea the Vine shall yield new grapes; and the Fig-tree shall be no more barren. 25. For the Interpretation of hidden things is at hand; and men shall eat of the precious fruits of God. A PPEAWDAY XII. 343 26. They shall eat manna from Heaven; and shall drink of the river of Salem. 27. The Lord maketh all things new : he taketh away the Letter to establish the Spirit. 28. Then spakest thou with veiled face, in parable and dark saying: for the time of Figs was not yet. 29. And they who came unto the Tree of Life, sought fruit thereon and found it not. 3o. And from thenceforth until now, hath no man eaten of the fruit of that Tree. 31. But now is the Gospel of Interpretation come, and the Kingdom of the Mother of God. 32. Evoi, Iacchos, Lord of the Body; who art crowned with the Vine and with the Fig. 33. For as the Fig containeth many perfect fruits in itself; so the House of Man containeth many spirits. 34. Within thee, O Man, is the Universe: the Thrones of all the Gods are in thy Temple. 35. I have said unto men, Ye are Gods: ye are all in the Image of the Most High. 36. No man can know God unless he first understand himself. 37. God is nothing that Man is not. 38. What Man is, that God is likewise. 39. As God is at the heart of the outer world, so also is God at the heart of the world within thee. 40. When the God within thee shall be wholly united to the God without, then shalt thou be one with the Most High. 41. Thy Will shall be God's Will, and the Son shall be as the Father. 42. Thou art ruler of a world, O Man: thy name is Legion ; thou hast many under thee. 43. Thou sayest to this one, Go, and he goeth: and to 344 7A/E AREA’AºA2C 7' W.A. V. another, Come, and he cometh; and to another, Do this and he doeth it. 44. What thou knowest is told thee from Within ; what thou workest is worked from Within. - 45. When thou prayest, thou invokest the God within thee; and from the God within thee thou receivest thy good things. - 46. Thy manifestations are inward ; and the spirits which speak unto thee are of thine own kingdom. 47. And the spirit which is greatest in thy kingdom, the same is thy Master and thy Lord. 48. Let thy Master be the Christ of God, whose Father is the Lord Iacchos. 49. And Christ shall be thy Lover and the Saviour of thy body : yea, he shall be thy Lord God, and thou shalt adore him. . 5.o. But if thou wilt not, then a stronger than thou art shall bind thee, and spoil thine house and thy goods. 51. An uncleanly temple shalt thou be ; the hold of ah manner of strife and evil beasts. 52. For a man's foes are of his own household. 53. But scourge thou thence the money-changers and the merchants; lest the House of thy Prayer become unto thee a den of thieves. (3) 54. Evoi, Father Iacchos: Lord of the Thyrsos and of the Pine-Cone. 55. As are the involutions of the leaves of the Cone, so is the spiral of Generation,-the progress and passing-through of the Soul; - 56. From the lower to the higher; from the coarse to the fine; from the base to the apex; • AAEAEAWDMX X/Z. 345 57. From the outer to the inner; yea, from the dust Of the ground to the Throne of the Most High. (4) 58. Evoi, Io Nysaee: God of the Garden and of the Tree bearing fruit. - 59. The dry land is thine, and all the beauty of earth ; the vineyard, the garland, and the valleys of corn : 60. The forests, the secrets of the springs, the hidden wells, and the treasures of the caverns : 61. The harvest, the dance, and the festival ; the Snows of winter, and the icy winds of death. 62. Yea, Lord Iacchos; who girdest destruction with promise, and graftest comeliness upon ruin. 63. As the green Ivy covereth the blasted tree, and the waste places of earth where no grass groweth ; 64. So thy touch giveth life and hope and meaning to decay. 65. Whoso understandeth thy mysteries, O Lord of the Ivy, hath overcome Death and the fear thereof. (5) 66. Evoi, Father Iacchos, Lord God of Egypt: initiate thy servants in the halls of thy Temple ; 67. Upon whose walls are the forms of every creature : of every beast of the earth, and of every fowl of the air; 68. The lynx, and the lion, and the bull; the ibis and the serpent: the scorpion and every flying thing. 69. And the columns thereof are human shapes; having the heads of eagles and the hoofs of the ox. 70. All these are of thy kingdom ; they are the chambers of ordeal, and the houses of the initiation of the Soul. 346 THA PERFEC 7' W.A. V. 7 I. For the Soul passeth from form to form ; and the mansions of her pilgrimage are manifold. - •. 72. Thou callest her from the deep, and from the secret places of the earth; from the dust of the ground, and from the herb of the field. 73. Thou coverest her nakedness with an apron of Fig- leaves: thou clothest her with the skins of beasts. 74. Thou art from of old, O Soul of Man ; yea, thou art from the everlasting. - 75. Thou puttest off thy bodies as raiment; and as vesture dost thou fold them up. 76. They perish, but thou remainest : the wind rendeth and scattereth them ; and the place of them shall no more be known. - 77. For the Wind is the Spirit of God in Man, which bloweth where it listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, nor whither it shall go. 78. Even so is the Spirit of Man, which cometh from afar off and tarrieth not, but passeth away to a place thou knowest not. - (6) 79. Evoi, Iacchos, Lord of the Sphinx: who linkest the lowest to the highest; the loins of the wild beast to the head and breast of the woman. 8o. Thou holdest the Chalice of Divination : all the forms of Nature are reflected therein. 81. Thou turnest man to destruction : then thou sayest, Come again, ye children of my hand. 82. Yea, blessed and holy art thou, O Master of Earth : Lord of the Cross and the Tree of Salvation. 83. Vine of God, whose Blood redeemeth: Bread of Heaven, broken on the Altar of Death. * APPENDIX XYZ. 347 84. There is Corn in Egypt: go thou down into her, O my Soul, with joy. 85. For in the kingdom of the Body, thou shalt eat the Bread of Thine Initiation. 86. But beware lest thou become subject to the Flesh, and a bond-slave in the land of thy sojourn. 87. Serve not the idols of Egypt; and let not the Senses be thy taskmasters. 88. For they will bow thy neck to their yoke : they will bitterly oppress the Israel of God. 89. An evil time shall come upon thee; and the Lord shall Smite Egypt with plagues for thy sake. 90. Thy body shall be broken on the wheel of God: thy flesh shall see trouble and the worm. 91. Thy house shall be smitten with grievous plagues ; blood, and pestilence, and great darkness: fire shall devour thy goods; and thou shalt be a prey to the locust and creeping thing. 92. Thy glory shall be brought down to the dust; hail and storm shall smite thine harvest; yea, thy beloved and thy first-born shall the hand of the Lord destroy ; 93. Until the Body let the Soul go free ; that she may serve the Lord God. • 94. Arise in the night, O Soul, and fly, lest thou be consumed in Egypt. '95. The Angel of the Understanding shall know thee for his Elect, if thou offer unto God a reasonable faith. 96. Savour thy Reason with Learning, with Labour, and with Obedience. 97. Let the Rod of thy Desire be in thy right hand : put the Sandals of Hermes on thy feet; and gird thy loins with Strength. 98. Then shalt thou pass through the Waters of cleans- ing: which is the First Death in the Body. 348 THE PERFECT WA Y. 99. The Waters shall be a Wall unto thee on thy right hand and on thy left. * * Ioo. And Hermes the Redeemer shall go before thee: for he is thy cloud of Darkness by Day, and thy Pillar of Fire by Night. - IoI. All the horsemen of Egypt and the chariots thereof; her princes, her counsellors, and her mighty men: Io2. These shall pursue thee, O Soul, that fliest ; and shall seek to bring thee back into bondage. Io3. Fly for thy life: fear not the Deep: stretch out thy Rod over the Sea; and lift thy Desire unto God. IoA. Thou hast learnt Wisdom in Egypt: thou hast spoiled the Egyptians: thou hast carried away their fine gold and their precious things. Io5. Thou hast enriched thyself in the Body; but the Body shall not hold thee: neither shall the waters of the Deep swallow thee up. - Ioff. Thou shalt wash thy robes in the Sea of Regenera- tion : the Blood of Atonement shall redeem thee to God. Io?. This is thy Chrism and Anointing, O Soul; this is the First Death; thou art the Israel of the Lord, - Io8. Who hath redeemed thee from the dominion of the Body; and hath called thee from the grave, and from the house of bondage, . Io9. Unto the Way of the Cross, and to the Path in the midst of the Wilderness; I Io. Where are the adder and the serpent, the mirage and the burning sand. III. For the feet of the Saint are set in the way of the Desert. - II 2. But be thou of good courage, and fail thou not : then shall thy raiment endure, and thy sandals shall not wax old upon thee. APPENDIX XII. 349 II.3. And thy Desire shall heal thy diseases: it shall bring streams for thee out of the stony rock; it shall lead thee to Paradise. II4. Evoi, Father Iacchos, Jehovah-Nissi: Lord of the Garden and of the Vineyard: - II5. Initiator and Lawgiver : God of the Cloud and of the Mount. . I 16. Evoi, Father Iacchos; out of Egypt hast thou called thy Son. No. XIII. FRAGMENTS FROM THE “GOLDEN BOOK OF VENUS.” PART I. THE HYMN OF APHRODITE. (1) I AM the Dawn, Daughter of Heaven and of the Deep: the sea-mist covers my beauty with a veil of tremulous light. 2. I am Aphrodite, the sister of Phoibos, opener of Heaven's gates, the beginning of Wisdom, the herald of the Perfect Day. 3. Long had darkness covered the deep : the Soul of all things slumbered : the valleys were filled with shadows : only the mountains and the stars held commune together. 4. There was no light on the ways of the earth : the rolling world moved outward on her axe: gloom and mystery shrouded the faces of the Gods. 5. Then from out the Deep I arose, dispeller of Night: the firmament of heaven kindled with joy beholding me. 6. The secrets of the waters were revealed : the eyes of Zeus looked down into the heart thereof. 7. Ruddy as wine were the depths: the raiment of Earth was transfigured; as one arising from the dead she arose, full of favour and grace. 350 APPENDIX XIII. 351 (2) 8. Of God and the Soul is Love born: in the silence of twilight; in the mystery of sleep. 9. In the fourth dimension of space; in the womb of the heavenly Principle; in the heart of the Man of God; —there is Love enshrined. Io. Yea, I am before all things : Desire is born of me: I impel the springs of Life inward unto God: by me the earth and heavens are drawn together. 11. But I am hidden until the time of the Day's appear- ing: I lie beneath the waters of the sea, in the deeps of the Soul: the bird of night seeth me not, the herds in the val- leys, nor the wild goat in the cleft of the hill. 12. As the fishes of the sea am I covered : I am secret and veiled from sight as the children of the deep. 13. That which is occult hath the Fish for a symbol; for the fish is hidden in darkness and silence: he knoweth the secret places of the earth, and the springs of the hollow Sea. 14. Even so Love reacheth to the uttermost : so find I the secrets of all things ; having my beginning and my end in the Wisdom of God. 15. The Spirit of Counsel is begotten in the Soul; even as the fish in the bosom of the waters. 16. From the sanctuary of the Deep Love ariseth : Sal- vation is of the sea. (3) 17. I am the Crown of manifold births and deaths: I am the Interpreter of mysteries and the Enlightener of Souls. 18. In the elements of the Body is Love imprisoned; 352 THE A2A2A&AEECT WA Y. lying asleep in the caves of Iacchos; in the crib of the oxen of Demeter. 19. But when the Day-star of the soul ariseth over the earth, then is the Epiphany of Love. 20. Therefore until the labour of the Third Day be ful- filled, the light of Love is unmanifest. 21. Then shall I unlock the gates of Dawn; and the glory of God shall ascend before the eyes of men. (4) 22. The secret of the angel Anael is at the heart of the world : the Song of God is the sound of the stars in their COUltSČS. 23. O Love, thou art the latent heat of the earth; the strength of the wine; the joy of the orchard and the corn- field : thou art the Spirit of song and laughter, and of the desire of Life 24. By thee, O Goddess, pure-eyed and golden, the Sun and the Moon are revealed : Love is the Counsellor of Heaven. 25. Cloud and vapour melt before thee: thou unveilest to earth the Rulers of the immeasurable skies. 26. Thou makest all things luminous: thou discoverest all deeps ; 27. From the womb of the sea to the heights of heaven; from the shadowy Abyss to the Throne of the Lord. 28. Thy Beloved is as a Ring-dove, wearing the ensign of the Spirit, and knowing the secrets thereof. 29. Fly, fly, O Dove; the time of Spring cometh: in the far east the Dawn ariseth : she hath a message for thee to bear from earth to heaven No. XIII. A'RA GMAEAV7'S FROM THAE “ GOAA) EAW AOOK OF VEAVOS.” PART II. I. A DISCOURSE OF THE COMMUNION OF SOULS, AND OF THE DSES OF LOVE BETWEEN CREATURE AND CREATURE. HEREIN is Love's secret, and the mystery of the Com- munion of Saints. 2. Love redeemeth, Love lifteth up, Love enlighteneth, Love advanceth souls. 3. Love dissolveth not, neither forgetteth : for she is of the soul, and hath everlasting remembrance. 4. Verily love is doubly blessed, for she enricheth both giver and receiver. 5. Thou who lovest, givest of thyself to thy beloved, and he is dowered withal. 6. And if any creature whom thou lovest, suffereth death and departeth from thee, 7. Fain wouldst thou give of thine heart's blood to have him live always; to sweeten the changes before him, and to lift him to some happy place. 8. Thou droppest tears on the broken body of thy beloved : thy desire goeth after him, and thou criest unto his ghost; 9. “O Dearest, would God that I might be with thee where now thou art ; and know what now thou doest 353 A A 354 7"HE AERATEC'7 WA Y. Io. “Would God that I might still guard and protect thee; that I might defend thee from all pain and wrong and affliction 1 t - II. “But what manner of change is before thee I know not : neither can mine eyes follow thy steps. 12. “Many are the lives set before thee: and the years, O Beloved, are long and weary that shall part us! 13. “Shall I know thee again when I see thee: and will the Spirit of God say to thee in that day, ‘This is thy beloved ’P 14. “O soul of my soul I would God I were one with thee, even though it were in death ! 15. “Thou hast all of my love, my desire, and my sorrow : yea, my life is mingled with thine, and is gone forth with thee - 16. “Visit me in dreams: comfort me in the night- watches; let my ghost meet thine in the land of shadows and of sleep. 17. “Every night with fervent longing will I seek thee: Persephone and slumber shall give me back the past. 18. “Yea, death shall not take thee wholly from me: for part of me is in thee, and where thou goest, Dearest, there my heart followeth !” 19. So weepest thou and lamentest, because the soul thou lovest is taken from thy sight. 20. And life seemeth to thee a bitter thing : yea, thou cursest the destiny of all living creatures. - 21. And thou deemest thy love of no avail, and th tears as idle drops. 22. Behold I Love is a ransom, and the tears thereof are prayers. .. 23. And if thou have lived purely, thy fervent desire shall be counted grace to the soul of thy dead. APPEAVOAX XIII. 355 24. For the burning and continual prayer of the just availeth much. w - 25. Yea, thy love shall enfold the soul which thou lovest : it shall be unto him a wedding garment, and a vesture of blessing. 26. The baptism of thy sorrow shall baptize thy dead; and he shall rise because of it. 27. Thy prayers shall lift him up, and thy tears shall encompass his steps: thy love shall be to him a light shining upon the upward way. 28. And the Angels of God shall say unto him, “O happy soul, that art so well-beloved : that art made so strong with all these tears and sighs. 29. “Praise the Father of Spirits therefor: for this great love shall save thee many incarnations. 30. “Thou art advanced thereby: thou art drawn aloft and carried upward by cords of grace.” 31. For in such wise do souls profit one another, and have communion, and receive and give blessing: the departed of the living, and the living of the de- parted. . - 32. And so much the more as the heart within them is clean; and the way of their intention innocent in the sight of God. 33. Yea, the Saint is a strong redeemer: the Spirit of God striveth within him. 34. And God withstandeth not God : for love and God are One. - 35. As the love of Christ hath power with the elect, so hath power in its degree the love of a man for his friend. - 36. Yea, though the soul beloved be little and mean: a creature not made in the likeness of men. 356 THE PERATEC7' W.A. V. 37. For in the eyes of love there is nothing little nor poor, nor unworthy of prayer. - 38. O little Soul, thou art mighty if a child of God love thee : yea, poor and simple Soul, thou art possessed of great riches 39. Better is thy portion than the portion of kings whom the curse of the oppressed pursueth. 4o. For as Love is strong to redeem and to advance a soul, so is hatred strong to torment and to detain. 41. Blessed is the soul whom the just commemorate before God: for whom the poor and the orphan and the dumb creature weep. 42. And thou, O righteous man, that with burning love bewailest the death of the innocent, whom thou canst not save from the hands of the unjust : 43. Thou who wouldst freely give of thine own blood to redeem thy brother, and to loosen the bonds of his pain : 44. Know that in the hour of thy supreme desire, God accepteth thine oblation. 45. And thy love shall not return unto thee empty : according to the greatness of her degree, she shall accom- plish thy will. 46. And thy sorrow and tears and the travail of thy spirit, shall be grace and blessing to the soul thou wouldst redeem. 47. Count not as lost thy suffering on behalf of other souls: for every cry is a prayer, and all prayer is power. 48. That thou willest to do is done : thine intention is united to the will of Divine Love. 49. Nothing is lost of that which thou layest out for God and for thy brother. 50. And it is Love alone who redeemeth; and Love hath nothing of her own. NO. XIV. Aſ WMAW 7"O HEACAMAZ.S. I. As a moving light between heaven and earth; as a white cloud assuming many shapes; 2. He descends and rises, he guides and illumines, he transmutes himself from small to great, from bright to shadowy, from the opaque image to the diaphanous mist. 3. Star of the East conducting the Magi: cloud from whose midst the holy voice speaketh : by day a pillar of vapour, by night a shining flame. 4. I behold thee, Hermes, Son of God, slayer of Argus, archangel, who bearest the rod of knowledge, by which all things in heaven or on earth are measured. 5. Double serpents entwine it, because as serpents they must be wise who desire God. 6. And upon thy feet are living wings, bearing thee fear- less through space and over the abyss of darkness; because they must be without dread to dare the void and the deep, who desire to attain and to achieve. 7. Upon thy side thou wearest a sword of a single stone, two-edged, whose temper resisteth all things. 8. For they who would slay or save must be armed with a strong and perfect will, defying and penetrating with no uncertain force. 9. This is Herpe, the sword which destroyeth demons; 357 358 7 HE PERATEC 7' W.4 y. by whose aid the hero overcometh, and the saviour is able to deliver. Io. Except thou bind it upon thy thigh thou shalt be overborne, and blades of mortal making shall prevail against thee. II. Nor is this all thine equipment, Son of God; the covering of darkness is upon thine head, and none is able to strike thee. 12. This is the magic hat, brought from Hades, the region of silence, where they are who speak not. 13. He who bears the world on his shoulders shall give it to thee, lest the world fall on thee, and thou be ground into powder. 14. For he who has perfect wisdom and knowledge, he whose steps are without fear, and whose will is single and all-pervading ; 15. Even he must also know how to keep the divine secret, and not to expose the holy mysteries of God to the senses of the wicked. 16. Keep a bridle upon thy lips, and cover thy head in the day of battle. 17. These are the four excellent things, the rod, the wings, the sword, and the hat. 18. Knowledge, which thou must gain with labour : the spirit of holy boldness, which cometh by faith in God; a mighty will, and a complete discretion, 19. He who discovers' the holy mysteries is lost. 20. Go thy way in silence, and see thou tell no man. * Z.e., uncovers, or discloses, to profane eyes. No. XV. THE SECRA. T OF SATAW. (1.) AND on the seventh day there went forth from the presence of God a mighty Angel, full of wrath and consuming, and God gave unto him the dominion of the outermost sphere. 2. Eternity brought forth Time; the Boundless gave birth to Limit; Being descended into Generation. 3. As lightning I beheld Satan fall from heaven, splendid in strength and fury. 4. Among the Gods is none like unto him, into whose hand are committed the kingdoms, the power and the glory of the worlds: 9. 5. Thrones and empires, the dynasties of kings, the fall of nations, the birth of churches, the triumphs of Time. 6. They arise and pass, they were and are not ; the sea and the dust and the immense mystery of space devour them. 7. The tramp of armies, the voices of joy and of pain, the cry of the new-born babe, the shout of the warrior mortally smitten : 8. Marriage, divorce, division, violent deaths, martyr- doms, tyrannous ignorances, the impotence of passionate protest, and the mad longing for oblivion: 9. The eyes of the tiger in the jungle, the fang of the 359 360 THAE AERAAECT WA Y. snake, the foetor of slaughter-houses, the wail of innocent beasts in pain: Io. The innumerable incarnations of Spirit, the strife to- wards Manhood, the ceaseless pulse and current of Desire:— II. These are his who beareth all the Gods on his shoul- ders; who establisheth the pillars of Necessity and Fate. 12. Many names hath God given him, names of mystery, secret and terrible. 13. God called him Satan the Adversary, because Matter opposeth Spirit, and Time accuseth even the saints of the Lord. 14. And the Destroyer, for his arm breaketh and grindeth to pieces; wherefore the fear and the dread of him are upon all flesh. 15. And the Avenger, for he is the anger of God; his breath shall burn up all the souls of the wicked. 16. And the Sifter, for he straineth all things through his sieve, dividing the husk from the grain; discovering the thoughts of the heart; proving and purifying the spirit of II] all. 17. And the Deceiver, for he maketh the False appear true, and concealeth the Real under the mask of Illusion. 18. And the Tempter, for he setteth snares before the feet of the elect ; he beguileth with vain shows, and seduceth with enchantments. 19. Blessed are they who withstand his subtlety: they shall be called the sons of God, and shall enter in at the beautiful gates. 20. For Satan is the doorkeeper of the Temple of the King : he standeth in Solomon's porch ; he holdeth the Keys of the Sanctuary ; 21. That no man may enter therein save the anointed, having the arcanum of Hermes. APPENDIX xv. 361 22. For Satan is the Spirit of the fear of the Lord, which is the beginning of wisdom.” . 23. He is the devourer of the unwise and the evil: they shall all be meat and drink to him. 24. Whatsoever he devoureth, that shall never more re- turn into being. 25. Fear him, for after he hath killed, he hath power to cast into hell. - 26. But he is the servant of the sons of God, and of the children of light. 27. They shall go before him, and he shall follow the steps of the wise. 28. Stand in awe of him and sin not : speak his name with trembling; and beseech God daily to deliver thee. 29. For Satan is the magistrate of the Justice of God: he beareth the balance and the sword, 30. To execute judgment and vengeance upon all who come short of the commandments of God; to weigh their works, to measure their desire, and to number their days. 31. For to him are committed Weight and Measure and Number. 32. And all things must pass under the rod and through the balance, and be fathomed by the sounding-lead. 33. Therefore Satan is the Minister of God, Lord of the seven mansions of Hades, the Angel of the manifest worlds. 34. And God hath put a girdle about his loins, and the name of the girdle is Death. 35. Threefold are its coils, for threefold is the power of Death, dissolving the body, the ghost, and the soul. * Ps. A.V. cxi., D.V. cx. Io ; Is. xi. 2, 3. The first and “eldest of the gods” in the order of microcosmic evolution, Saturn (Satan) is the seventh and last in the order of macrocosmic emanation, being the cir- cumference of the kingdom of which Phoibos (wisdom) is the centre. 362 THE PERFECT WA Y. 36. And that girdle is black within, but where Phoibos strikes it is silver. 37. None of the Gods is girt save Satan, for upon him only is the shame of generation. 38. He has lost his virginal estate : uncovering heavenly Secrets, he hath entered into bondage. 39. He encompasseth with bonds and limits all things which are made : he putteth chains round about the worlds, and determineth their orbits. 40. By him are Creation and Appearance; by him Birth and Transformation; the day of Begetting and the night of Death. 41. The glory of Satan is the shadow of the Lord : the throne of Satan is the footstool of Adonai. 42. Twain are the armies of God : in heaven the hosts of Michael ; in the abyss the legions of Satan. 43. These are the Unmanifest and the Manifest ; the free and the bound; the virginal and the fallen. 44. And both are the ministers of the Father, fulfilling the Word divine. 45. The legions of Satan are the Creative Emanations, having the shapes of dragons, of Titans, and of elemental gods; 46. Forsaking the Intelligible World, seeking manifesta- tion, renouncing their first estate; 47. Which were cast out into chaos, neither was their place found any more in heaven. (2.) 48. Evil is the result of limitation, and Satan is the Lord of Limit. 49. He is the Father of Lies, because Matter is the cause of Illusion. - APPEAVO IX X 17. 363 5o. To understand the secret of the Kingdom of God, and to read the riddle of Maya, this is to have Satan under foot. 51. He only can put Satan under foot who is released by Thought from the bonds of Desire. 52. Nature is the allegory of Spirit: all that appeareth to the sense is deceit: to know the Truth, this alone shall make men free. 53. For the kingdom of Satan is the house of Matter : yea his mansion is the sepulchre of Golgotha, wherein on the seventh day the Lord lay sleeping, keeping the Sabbath of the Unmanifest. 54. For the day of Satan is the night of Spirit : the manifestation of the worlds of Form is the rest of the worlds informulate. - 55. Holy and venerable is the Sabbath of God : blessed and sanctified is the name of the Angel of Hades; 56. Whom the Anointed shall overcome, rising again from the dead on the first day of the week. - 57. For the place of Satan is the bourne of divine impul- sion: there is the arrest of the outgoing force; Luza, the station of pause and slumber : 58. Where Jacob lay down and dreamed, beholding the ladder which reached from earth to heaven. 59. For Jacob is the planetary Angel Iacchos, the Lord of the Body; 60. Who hath left his Father's House, and is gone out into a far country. 61. Yet is Luza none other than Bethel ; the kingdom of Satan is become the kingdom of God and of His Christ. 62. For there the Anointed awakeneth, arising from sleep, and goeth his way rejoicing; 63. Having seen the vision of God, and beheld the secret of Satan; - 364 THE PERATECT WA V. 64. Even as the Lord arose from the dead and brake the seal of the Sepulchre; 65. Which is the portal of heaven, Luza, the house of separation, the place of stony sleep; 66. Where is born the centripetal force, drawing the soul upward and inward to God; 67. Recalling Existence into Being, resuming the king- doms of Matter in Spirit; 68. Until Satan return unto his first estate, and enter again into the heavenly obedience; 69. Having fulfilled the Will of the Father, and accom- plished his holy Ministry; 7o. Which was ordained of God before the worlds, for the splendour of the Manifest, and for the generation of Christ our Lord ; 71. Who shall judge the quick and the dead, putting all things under his feet; whose are the dominion, the power, the glory, and the Amen. IND EX. INDEX OF SUBJECTS AND PRINCIPAL WORDS. The Roman numerals refer to the number of the Lecture, or of the Appendix ; the Arabic numerals to the paragraph quoted; App. is for Appendix: ; Pref. for Preface; Pref. R.E. for Preface to A'evised Edition ; Pt. for Part; and n for footnote. Abomination of Desolation, App. VI. Abraham, Brahma, viii. 51. Children of, i. 33; vi. 1, 2. Acts of Soul, vi. 2; viii. 28. Adam, iv. 31 ; v. Io; vi. I, 2, 15, 19, 20, 22, 25, 32; vii. 20, 2I, 32 ; viii. 27, 41 ; ix. 9, 20; App. i. I ; iii. Pt. 2. Adam Kadmon, ix. 5, 18. Adam, Old, iv. 24; viii. 7. Adept, iv. 30; v. 39; viii. 12. Admetus, his oxen, ix. 16. Adonai, vi. 4, 5, 36; viii. I4; ix. 5, 8, 41, 42, 46, 50, 51, 52, 53; App. iv. 9; x. (3); xi. Advent, vi. 39. Second, App. vi. Affinity, Celestial, iii. 40. Agnostic, ii. 39 ; v. 27; vi. 29. Alchemic Science, ix. I2. Alchemists, viii. 43. Alchemy, Higher, App. vii. Allah, viii. 53. Alpha and Omega, Pref. R.E. vii; v. 18; ix. 5. Ambrose, vi. 8. Amoeba, v. 2. Amun-Ra, vi. I5, Anael, ix. 27, n; App. xiii. Pt. I (4). Ancients, App. x. (4). Anima Bruta, ii. 21, 24; v. 25, 26, 35; vii. I4 ; App. ii. Divina, ii. 24; vii. I4; viii. 42 ; App. ii. Mundi, v. 39. Animals, iii. 21 ; vii. 53. First appearance of, i. 40. Anna, v. 43 ; App. xi. Annihilation, ii. 17; vii. 17. Antichrist, iv. 28; viii. 53; ix. 23. Anubis, ix. I5. Aphrodite, ii. 35 ; v. 40; viii. 28. Hymn of App. xiii., Pt. I. Girdle of, ix. I6. Apocalypse, vi. 3; vii. 27; viii. 34, 36, 41, 43; ix. 2. Apollo, Arrows of, ix. 16. Apollonius, i. 38. Apollos, iv. 9. Aquarius, App. vi. Arche, ii. 34; v. 4, 14; vi. 6, 31. Ardha-Nari, ix. 5, 52. Argus, ix. I3 ; App. xiv. 368 JAWDEX. Aristotle, ix. 25. Arjun, viii. I2; ix. 3, 52. Ark, ii. 37; vi. 3 ; viii. 44; App. i. I ; v. 39. Arnold, Edwin, iv. I5. Matthew, Pref. R.E. iii. Artemis, ii. 35. See also Diana. Arthur or Ar-thor, viii. 44. Ascension, Pref. R.E. ix; viii. 8, 28, 40; and Descension, iii. 53; iv. 3 I ; vi. 2. Asceticism, viii. I4. Assumption of Virgin, v. 44, 45; viii. 40. Assyria, vi. 6. Astraea, vi. 36 ; vii. 55. Astral Body, ii. I3; iii. 2, 4. Fluid, i. 26; ii. 21. Medium, iv. I6. Phantoms, iii. 28. Plane, ii. I4. Soul, v. 35, 4 I. Sphere, v. 37. Atheism, i. 55e ; ii. 24; vi. 29. Atman, i. 7. Atonement, iii. 3; iv. I, I6 ; vi. 39; viii. 4, 6, 47 ; ix. 22. Current Doctrine of, iv. 3. Fourfold, iv. 2. Augustine, i. 45 ; viii. 39. Avatār, ii. 24; v.'4I ; App. ii. ; x. (4). Azote, Heb. Azoth, ii. 20. Baalzebub, ii. 18. Bacchos, v. I6; viii. 52. Baptism, iii. 53; vi. 2; viii. I9, 28. for Dead, App. xiii., Pt. 2, 26. or Betrothal, viii. 28. with Fire and Water, i. 7. Baptist, viii. 38, 49. Bath-Kol, i. 25. Beatific Vision, iv. 19. Bells of High Priest, iv. 13. Bethel, vi. I ; App. xv. (2). Beyond, The, iii. 3. Bhagavat Gita, ix. 3, II. Bible, ii. 46; vi. 9; vii. 18; viii. 3. Biblical Interpretation, vii. 33. Requisites for, i. 47. Biologist, v. 33. Biology, ix. I7. Birth, Second or New, v, 45; App. xii. (I). Bitterness, Sea of, ii. 36; viii. 32. Blavatsky, Isis Unveiled, iv. 12, n. Blood, iv. I2; vi. 32, 42 ; vii. 29, 52; viii. 16. of Christ, mystical, iv. 19, 23. Partakers of, iv. 6, 8, 19. Bloody Sacrifice, iv. 6, II; App. i. 1. Body, vi. 20 ; viii. I, 3, I3, I4. Fourfold, iii. 4. Redemption of, ix. 54; App. xii. (2). Transfiguration of, App. vii. 12. Boehme, iii. 33. Book Worship, i. 24. of Revelation, vii. 19. See also Apocalypse. Borrowing of Egyptians, vi. 12. Bow, Heavenly, vi. 36. Brahma, vi. 2; viii. 51, 52 ; ix. 52. Bosom of, iii. 16. Bride, The Soul as, v. I4 ; viii. 41, 43. Buddha, i. 44; ii. 46; viii. I2, 25, 49, 50, 5 I. Buddhism, v. 43, n. IWAXAX. 369 Burial, vi. 2; viii. 8, 28; App. v. 49. - Butler, S., v. 2, n. Caesar, viii. 36. Caiaphas, iv. 9. Cain, iii. 21 ; vii. 52; App. i. I. Caleb, ix. I5. Calvinists, vi. 21 ; ix. 27. Cana, iii. 50 ; iv. 25. Carpocrates, i. 39. Catholic Doctrine, v. 43. Causes and Effects, World of, v. 8. Cave, viii. 37. Cell, Physiologic, i. 27 ; v. I5, 34; viii. 44, 48; App. iv. Centurion, iii. 35. Cerberus, viii. 22. Cerebration, Unconscious, v. 33. Ceremonial Rites, iv. 7. Ceylon, viii. 50, n. I. Chaldaea, viii. 52. Chalice, iv. 25. Golden, vi. 42 ; vii. 3. Chaos, vii. 13 ; App. xv. (I). Character as Destiny, ii. 25. Chastity, viii. 20. Chaucer, v. 35, n. Chavah, vi. I5, 23, 31. Cherubic, iii. 4. Cherubim, iii. 36; vi. 2, 4, 13; ix. . . 49. Chrism, App. vi. ; xii. IO7. * Christ Jesus, i. 42, 5o; iv. 8, 27; , viii. 27, 51. . as Person, App. vi. Christ Jesus, Share in Redemption, App. v. - The Advent Millennial Reign of viii. 54. The Blood of, iv. 25. Christ, The, Pref. R. E. zii: ; iii. I4, 53; iv. 26, 27; vi. 15, 39; vii. I8, 26; viii. 4, 13; ix. II, 53; App. x. (3). Christs, The, iv. 30 ; vii. 49 ; viii. I2, I5, 16, 27, 45; ix. II, 29. The Ideal, i. 552; viii. 4, 45, 51. Christhood, vii. 43–45; viii. 18; ix. 22, 53. Christian Belief, i. 44. Christianity, Pref. R.E. i ; vii. 19 ; viii. 49. Degradation of, iii. 30. Dogmas and Symbols of, Pref. R.E. iv. Failure of, i. 55c ; viii. 26. Historic, i. 50: 55%. Identical with other Systems, Pref. R.E. iv.; i. 43–45. Church, Pref. vi. 2, 27, 28, 29, 30; vii. 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 59: IX. IO. Fathers of, ix. 26. Lodge, or Mystic Community, vi. I4. of Christ, v. 46. Rests on Custom, i. 50. Churches, Eastern and Western, ix. 43; App. x. (3). Civilization, Present, vii. 55. Clemens, Alex., vi. 8; ix. 22 ; App. V. 9. . Clifford, Professor, i. 35, n. Colleges of Mysteries, i. 44; vii. 4 I. Common Sense, i. 23. Communion, Holy, iv. 36, 37. of Souls, App. xiii., Pt. 2. Community, Mystic, vii. 43, 44. B B 370 AWD EX. Cone, App. xii. (3). Conjunctions, Planetary, ii. 25. Conscience, i. 52; vi. 27; vii. 1, 23; App. i. I. Consciousness, i. 33 ; v. 2, 3, 7, 12, 23, 25, 31 ; vi. I7, 19 ; vii. Io, I4, 37; viii. 5; ix. 34; App. ii. ; x. (i). Point of, v. 30. Constantine, i. 555. Consummation, v. 34; viii. 41. Controls, iii. 20, 48, 59. Correspondences, i. Io, 14 ; vii. 2, 7; ix. I9. Counterparts, Astral, iii. 7. Covering Angels, iii. 36. Creation, i. 29 ; ii. 9, Io; iii. 3 ; v. 41 ; vi. 2, 8; vii. 4, 44; viii. 5, 41 ; ix. 44. Creative Week, vii. 5o ; viii. 28, App. xi. Credo of the Elect, ix. 54. Creed, Transition of, Pref. R. E. zii. Cremation, viii. 9. Cross, i. 56; iv. 9; vi. I5 ; viii. 53; App. v. 49. Fourfold Meaning of, iv. 21. Prehistoric, on Monuments, iv. 2O. Sign of, in Heaven, iv. 30. Sun's Equinoctial Passage of Ecliptic, iv. 20. Tree of Life, iv. 20. Why Fourfold, iv. 21. Crucible, Alchemic, App. vii. I4. Crucifixion, i. 49; iv. 29, 31 ; vii. 43; viii. 7, 8, 28, 37, 41, 42 ; App. vi. Mystery of, iv. 22. of God, iv. 35. Crustacea, iii. 21. Curse of Eve, vi. I6, 39 ; vii. 55. Cyrus, Pref. Daemon. See Genii. Daniel, viii. 52; ix. 2. His Angel, App. vi. David, viii. 27, 45; ix. I4. Son of, ix. I2. Death, v. 21 ; App. ii. ; iv.; xii. 6, Io'7; xiii. Pt. 2. First, App. xii. (6), 98, Io'7. Sting of, v. 34. Decan, vi. 37. Deity, Two Modes of, i. 28, 29 ; v. 18; ix. 9; App. xi. Delphi, ii. 3. Demeter, vi. 4; viii. 28, 29, 37; App. xiii. (3). Depolarisation, vi. 20. Destiny, ii. 25. Moral, of Planets, v. 41. Deucalion and Pyrrha, i. 33. Development, i. 32. Devil, i. 46; ii. 6, II ; iii. 9–15, 21 ; iv. 31 ; vii. 29 ; viii. 3, 13; App. v. 3. No Personal, iii. 9. Dharmasāstra Sutras, v. 4.1, n. Diana, iv. I4. See also Artemis. Dimension, Fourth, ii. 34; App. iii. Pt. 2, 41 ; x. ; xiii. Pt. I, (2). Dionysos, i. 56; v. I6. Dissolution, v. 35. Dissolvent, viii. 12; App. v. 52. Divination, Chalice of, App. xii. (6). Divine Impersonal, v. 23. Dragon, Pref. vii. 42 ; App. i. I. of Apocalypse, vi. 37. Dryads, iii. 34. JAWDEX. 371 Dualism, i. 34; iii. 29; vii. 2, II, I2; viii. 3; ix.42, 45. of Nature, ii. 42 ; vii. I ; ix. 24. See God, Man. Dyaus, Deus, Theos, ii. 42. Dynamite, i. 55e. Eagle, vi. 4; viii. 29. Earth, vi. I9; vii. 12, n. I. Life, Inequalities of, i. 41. Spirits of, iii. I7. East, viii. 23, 36. Kings of, viii. 36, 53. Easter, vi. 31. Ecclesiasticism, Despair of, ix. IO. Ecstacy, ix. 34. - Eden, vi. 6, 19, 38; vii. 5, 18, 30, 36; ix. 25; App. i. I. Rivers of, i. Io; vi. 6, 7, 14. Effulgence, App. x. (3). Ego, The, Pref. R. E. iii, vi, viii.; v. 3, 12, 30, 31 ; App. viii. Noumenal, v. 28. Egypt, viii. 30, 31, 52; ix. I2. Egyptian Evidences; Thebes, Ele- phantine, Edfou, Karnak, vi. I3, I8. Gospel, ix. 22. Mysteries, vi. I2, I3; App. i. 2. Eidolon, i. 54; iv. I5 ; v. 35. Eirenicon, Pref. R. E. x ; Pref. viii. Ejective, v. 31, 33. Elect, App. vi. ; xi. n ; xiii. Pt. 2. Credo of the, ix. 54. Electric Current, iii. 22. Elemental Kingdoms, App. x. (2). Elementals, iii. 5, 17, 20, 34; vi. 4, 26. Elias, viii. 48. Eliphas Levi, Pref. R. E. x ; iv. I2, n ; vi. 32. Elixir of Life, viii. II. Elohim, ii. 21, 32; iii. 37; vi. 5; ix. 16, 44, 45; App. xi. El-Shaddai, ii. 42; ix. 5, 42. Elves, iii. 34. Emanation, App. xv. 22, n. Emanations, iii. 6; iv. I6, 17. Embalming, viii. 9. Embryonic Development, v. 18. Emotion and Intellect, ix. 25. End, Time of the, App. vi. England and the East, viii. 51, 53. Enoch, viii. 53. Enthusiasm, ix. 29, 31, 33–39. Environment, v. 29. Epicurus, ix. 39. Epiphanius, iv. I3. Epiphany of Love, App. xiii. Pt. I (3). Epopt, i. 35. Esau, ii. 39. Esther, vi. 31. Eternal Life, iv. 31; vi. 21; viii. 41 ; ix. 53. Ethiopia, Pref. vi. 6. Eucharistic Wafer, vi. 34, viii. 4I. Euphrates, vi. 6; viii. 36, 53. Eve, Pref. R. E. ix; v. Io; vi. 15, I6, 17, 19, 20, 22, 23, 31 ; vii. 20, 21 ; viii. 32, 35, 39, 41; ix. 2O ; App. i. Pt. I. Everard, Dr., Pref. R. E. vii. Evil, ii. 9; vii. 17. Spirits, iii. I5. Evolution, i. 32, 40; v. I, Io, 32, 45; vi. 14; vii. 37; viii. 27, 32, 37, 41 ; ix. 53; App. ii. Occult Law of, v. 32. 372 AWDACX. Evolution, Post-mortem, iii. 19. Spiritual, i. 8. Exile, Pref. R. E. ix; iv. 31. 3I ; vii. 7, 17, 37, 49; viii. 5, 43; ix. 9, 18; App. ii. Previous, and Ezra, vi. Io. Exodus, ix. 2 ; App. xii. (6). Experience, ii. Io; viii. 4. Ezekiel, iii. 5; vi. 3, 34; viii. 36 ; ix. 2. Fairies, iii. 34. Faith, i. 51 ; vi. 27. of Christendom, Pref. R. E. iv.; i. 55. Fall, Pref. R. E. zi; i. 52; iv. 31 ; vi. 7, Io, I3, 29, 31; vii. I, 5.1; viii. I ; App. i. 2. Mosaic Account, Allegorical, vi. 8. of Angels, viii. 5; App. xv. (2). Fig-tree, Parable of, App. vi. ; xii. (2). Finding Christ, i. II ; ii. 47; vi. 19. Fire and Motion, ii. 22. Spirits, iii. 17. Fish, Occult Significance of, viii. 28; ix. Io; App. xiii. Pt. I, (2). Fixation of the Volatile, iv. 31 ; vi. 2O ; vii. 39 ; viii. 22. Flesh, Diet of, iii. 6o; iv. 18; vi. 24. Flight, Mystic, viii. 52; App. i. I ; xii. (6). Flood, App. i. I. Forbidden Fruit, viii. Io; App. i. I. Force, v. 4; vii. 13, 40; ix. 44. Centripetal and Centrifugal, v. 5. Free Love, iii. 30. Gadarene Demoniacs, iii. 15. Gates, App. v. 33–44. Gautama Buddha, i. 38; iv. I5 ; vi. 42 ; viii. 48. Gehenna, vi. 6. Gehon, vi. 6. Genealogy, ix. II. Genesis, vi. 6, 7; vii. 32. by Ezra, not Moses, vi. Io. Genii, iii. 37, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 55. Loci, iii. 34. Ghost, iii. 19 ; v. 36–38. of Events, i. 16; iii. 7. Gilgal Neshamoth, App. ii. Globe, Igneous, v.24, 26. .Gnosis, Pref. R. E. : ; vi. 9, 25, 26; vii. 48; viii. 53; ix. 7, 7t. God, ii. 16; v. 25, 31 ; ix. I, 8, 40, 41 ; App. v. 5; xii. (2). Androgynous, ix. 8, 41. As Lord, ix. 2-9. Blood of, viii. 16. Duality of, ii. 34; ix. 45, 50. God-consciousness, v. 16, 28, 32. Immolation of, viii. 41. Ringdom of, Pref. R.E. vii; ii. 32. of Hosts, ii. 4I. Personal and Impersonal, v. 9. Vision of, see Sight. Works of, ii. 32; App. v. God-Man, viii. II. Gods and Goddesses, ii. 43. not limited in number, v. 19. Personality Indefeasible, v. 42. Golden Age, ii. 18; vi. I4, 16, 24, 38; vii. 40, 50, 55. Goliath, ix. I4. Gospel of Interpretation, vii. 53; App. iii. Pt. 2, 36. AWDEX. 373 Gospels, viii. 24, 28, 29, 32, 42. of Love and Force, i. 556. Grand Man, ix. 5. Gravitation, Spiritual, vii. 18. Great Work, viii. 23; App. v. 56. Gregory of Nazianzen, vi. 8. Gregory of Nyssa, vi. 8. Guardian Angel, iii. 29, 37, 46–58. Guides, iii. 20. Gulf, Great, iii. 16. Hades, Seven Mansions of, App. xv. Hayman, Dr., v. 35, n. Healing Powers, iii. 18. Heaven, i. 8; iv. 16; vi. 19. and Earth, New, App. vii. 4. Hegel, Pref. R. E. ziii. Hell, iii. 9; vi. 21; ix. 7; App. xv. Hephaistus, Tongs of, ix. 16. Hera, vii. 42. - Heracles, v. 35; vii. 42; viii. 19, 22. Ascension of, i. 49. Hereafter, The, App. ii. Heredity, vii. 17. Heritage of Elect, iv. 25. Hermes, Pref.; v. 20, 41 ; viii. I2 ; ix. II, 13, 15, 16, 17; App. xii. (5); xiv. Hymn to, App. xiv. Hermes Trismegistus, i. 36; v. 16, n. Hermetic Philosophy, Pref. R. E. z ; vii. 3. Herod, viii. 31. Heroes, viii. 18. Herpé, App. xiv. Hestia, ii. 13; vi. 31. Heterisation, Pref. R. E. zii, viii. Hiddekel, vi. 6. Hierarch, viii. 19, 22, 23. Hierarchy of Heaven, iii. 37, 60 ; ix. 49. <! Hieroglyph, Pref. R. E. vi; ii. 46; viii. 26; App. i. 2. Hierophant, iii. 53. Hindú Myths, vi. 12. IHindustan, viii. 53. Holy City, vi. 24; viii. 19. Holy Family, viii. 52. Holy Ghost, or Spirit, Pref. R. E. £r; ix. 42, 43, 44; App. xi. | Holy of Holies, viii. 28, 48; ix.49. Holy Place, App. vi. Horus, i. 49. Host, vi. 34; App. v. 40. Hosts, God of, ii. 4I. Houris, ix. 28. Human Kingdom, vi. 4. Humanity, Pref. ; ii. 32; vi. 24; vii. I I, 13, 20, 5o; viii. 6, 47, 51,54; ix. 8, 18, 22; App. ii. Hydrogen, ii. 20. Hygieia, vii. 55. Hymn of Aphrodite, App. xiii., Pt. I. to Hermes, App. xiv. to the Planet-God, App. xii. Iacchos, i. 44; v. 4o ; viii. 28, 37; App. xi., xv. Hymn to, App. xii. Ideas, ii. 19 ; iv. I6 ; v. 20; viii. 3, ; ix. 50. Archetypal, v. 21. Divine, ii. 14. Religious, i. 54. Idolatry, ii. 8; iv. 3; vi. 25, 26; vii. 6, 52 ; viii. Io, 26; ix. Io; App. i. - Ill Living, iii. 45. Illumination, Pref. R. E. x: ; i. 7, 35; iii. 52, 53 ; App. iii. 8. 374 AAWDAEX. Image of God, i. 53; ii. II, 44; v. 18; vi. 2, 14, 24; vii. 5, 26, 39, 5.I; viii. 4, II; ix. 8, 9,46, n., Imitation of God, ii. 11. Immaculate, Conception, v. 44, 45. Mother of God, Pref. R. E. ix. Immanuel, iv. 32. Immortality, ii. 26; vi. 8. Incantation, iii. 9; iv. 7. Incarnation, Pref. R. E. ix ; iv. 31 ; vi. 31; viii. 40; ix. 7, n. ; App. xii. (2); xiii. Pt. 2 ; ii. 28. India, viii. 51, 52. Individual, ii. 15; vii. 7 ; viii. 3; ix. 46, n. Individualism, v. 2. Individuality, v. 5, 32, 43. Influx, Divine, i. 8. Initiate, Initiation, iii. 18; viii. 31. Inspiration, App. iii., Pt. I. Intellect, ix. 25; App. i. I. Interpretation, Day of, at hand, App. iii. Pt. 2; xii. (2); xiii. Pt. I (4). Intuition, Pref. R. E. ii ; Pref.; i. 5, 6, 7 ; ii. 38, 41; v. 33 ; vii. I3, 30 ; ix. I7; App. i. I ; iii. 7. a Mode of Mind, i. 5. Method of, i. 12, 15. Irenaeus, vi. 8. Isaac, viii. 52. Isaiah, viii. 25; ix. 2. Isha, vi. I5, 23. Isis, ii. 35 ; iii. 42, 51 ; iv. 27 ; vi. 18; viii. 52. Islam, viii. 53; ix. 28. Israel, vii. 48, 55 ; viii. 30, 47, 50, 52. Issa, iv. 27. Jacob, viii. 52. See also Iacchos. Twelve Sons of, App. i. I. Jakshas, iv. I2. Janus Bifrons, i. 2 I. Jasper, vi. 4. Jehovah, ii. 42 ; iii. 28; vi. 31; ix. 5, 7, 42. * Jericho, ix. I3. Jerome, vi. 3, n., 8. Jerusalem, New, vii. 30 ; viii. 43. Jesse, viii. 52. Jesus, Pref. R. E. v ; ii. 46; vi. 3, 42 ; viii. 12, 17, 24, 49, 52 ; App. vi. Buddha, & Pythagoras, viii. 48– 51. Chrestos, iv. 30. Liberator, viii. 27. versus Paul, ix. 22. Joachim, App. xi. Job, viii. 52. John, viii. 12. the Divine, 29. Baptist, viii. 38, 49. Jordan, viii. 39. Joseph, as Mind, viii. 30, 31. Joshua, ix. I5. Judaism, i. 556. Judas, iv. 9; viii. 44; App. v. 25. Julian the Apostate, iv. I4. Justice, Divine, viii. 2. Justin Martyr, vi. 8. Kaabah, vi. 1, 2, 3 ; ix. 18. Kabbala, Pref. R. E. x, xi ; v. 20; ix. 9, 18, 19, 20, 24. Kabbalistic Philosophy, Pref. R. E. . i; v. 21. ZAVZ) A3 (. 375 Kalpa, i. 29 ; iv. 35 ; v. 4I ; vi. 31, 34. Kant, Pref. R. E. zizi. Karma, v. 14, 41 ; App. x. (4). Karoub Tree, i. 25. Kelpis, iii. 34. Keys of the Kingdom, i. 21. Sanctuary, App. xv. 20. King's Chamber, v. 22 ; viii. 28. Kingdom of Heaven, iii. 3; iv. 31 ; vi. 26; ix. 22, 40. of God, Pref. R. E. ziz ; App. v. Kings of East, viii. 36, 53. Knowledge, Self, ii. 3; vii. Io. Koran, vi. I ; ix. 28. Krishna, i. 38, 44, 49, 56; ii. 46; viii. I2, 5o ; ix. 3, II, 52. Kronia, vi. 35. Ladder of Incarnation, App. xii. (2). Lamb, App. i. I. of God, iv. 30 ; viii. 4I. Marriage of, vi. 2; viii. 4I. Lares and Penates, iii. 8, 20. Larvae, iii. 20. Law, App. v. 40. and Gospel, ii. 42. Lazarus, iii. 16; viii. 28. Leibnitz on Reincarnation, i. 38. Leo, vi. 39. Leo XIII. v. 44 n. ; vi. 39. Lethe, iii. 20. Levi, Tribe of, viii. 45. See Eliphas. Lewes, G. H., ix. I7, n., 34, n. Libra, vi. 37; ix. 22. Life, v. Io; ix. 43. Life-process, v. 18. Light Invisible, ii. 30 ; ix. 45. Light, atent, iii. 24. of Asia, iv. I5. Limbo, Limbic, iii. 4, 8. Lion, vi. 4; viii. 29. Loaves and Fishes, viii. 28. Logos, v. 20; viii. 17, 5o ; ix. 23, 24, 44, 46, 50, 53. Lord, Our, and the Lord, ix. 7, 8. Lot's Wife, vi. 20. Love, Divine, iv. 25, 34; vii. I3. Lucretius, ix. 39. Luke, viii. 29. Lunar Months, viii. 44. Luza, App. xv. Maccabees, vi. I I. Macrocosm and Microcosm, Pref. R. E. viz.: ; i. Io; ii. 19, 22, 36, 37; iii. 3, 38, 51 ; iv. I5, 31 ; v. 25 ; vi. 21 ; vii. 5; viii. 5, 36, 43, 51 ; ix. 9, 44; App. v. 59. Magdalen, viii. 32, 35 ; ix. I3. Magi, Magian, vii. 48 ; viii. 22, 36, 53. Magic Number, iii. 4. Magical Age, vi. 3; viii. 19, 31. Magie, la Haute, El. Levi, iv. 12, 11 : V. 39. sº Magnetic Atmosphere, i. 54; ii. 18; iii. 18; App. ii. Body, iii. 5. Factor, ii. 21. Force, ii. 13. Man, App. v. 32. Maimonides, i. 25 ; vi. 8. Man, ii. 38; vii. 51 ; viii. 49, 51 ; ix. 38, 53; App. xii. (2). as Microcosm, iv. 31. Astral, App. ii. 376 AVD.E.X. Man, Dematerialisation of, i. 14. Fourfold Nature of, i. 9, Io; vii. 7, 9–I4. his Divine Part, i. 13. his own Creator, ii. 25. Natural, iii. 3. - of Sin, i. 55e ; ix. 23. Regenerate, ii. 46; iv. 24; v. 44; viii. 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, 31, 33, 38, 41, 45, 48, 49 ; ix. I2. Spiritual, iii. 3. Manes, or Shades, iii. 7, 8. Manetho, vi. I3. Manhood, ii. 38; vii. 39. Manifestation, viii. 5; ix. 42, 44. of God, v. 17, 18. Mark, viii. 29. Marriage, iii. 55; vii. 12. Divine, vi. 39 ; vii. 50 ; viii. 4I, 43; App. v. 21–23. Mary, or Maria, Pref. R.E. ix; ii. 34, 35 ; vi. I9, 23, 37; viii. 30, 32, 35, 39, 40 ; App. vi. xi. Annunciation of, viii. 39. Assumption of, v. 43–6. Materialism, ii. 7 ; ix. I4, 30, 31, 35, 37, 38, 39; App. i. 2. Materialists and Mystics, ix. 35– 39. Matter, i. 28; v. 8, 11, 12 ; vii. 15; I6, 25 ; viii. 5; ix. 35 ; App. VII. Antithesis of Spirit, ii. 4. Dynamic and Static, i. 29. Dynamic Condition of Substance, i. 28, 29. Manifestation of Spirit, ii. 9. not evil, is Spirit, ii. 8. not Soul, ii. 2. Matthew, viii. 29. Maudsley, Dr., ix. 34, n. Maut, vi. I5. Maya, vi. 25, 26, 31, 33 ; App XV. 5O. Mecca, vi. I. - Mediator, The Soul as, i. 18, 21 ; vii. I3. Medium, iii. 23; viii. 15, 16, 18; App. iii. I I, I7; x. 2. Medusa, Pref. Memory, Intuitional, i. 7, 8 ; vi. Io; vii. 40; App. ii. - Two Kinds of, iii. 5o ; v. 2, 31. Recovery of, iii. 52. Merkaba, vi. 2; ix. I8. Meru, Mount, vi. 5. Messiah, iv. 8; viii. 45, 47. Metallic Region of Planet, ii. 18. Metempsychosis, iii. 20. Microcosm, see Macrocosm. Migration of Cosmic Souls, v. 42. Milton, iii. 33 ; ix. 27. Mind, v. 8, 9, 20. Joseph as, viii. 30, 31. Miracles, i. 24, 25; viii. 28. Mirror, Protoplasmic, iii. 7. Mithras, i. 44, 49, 56; ii. 46; vi. 37; viii. 25, 50. Mohammed, vi. I ; viii. 52. Molech, iv. I4. - Molecules, i. 28; v. 2, 3, 32; App. iv. I4. Monad, v. 32. Dualism of, ii. 29. Monstrance, vi. 34. Moon, The Genius as, iii. 39–47, 51, 52 ; App. ii. The Apocalyptic, vii. 27. Mormonism, ix. 28. 7; vii. ZAWDAX. 377 Moses, iii. 49 ; iv. 7; vi. Io, II, 12, 13, 15 ; viii. 48, 5o ; ix. 2, 9, 24. Books of App. 1 (see Pentateuch). Mosheim, vi. 8. Mother, viii. 30, 32, 35, 39, 40; ix. 53 ; App. xi. of Sorrows, Joys, ii. 36. Motion, ii. 22 ; v. 3; vi. 31, 33. Mount, Celestial, The, vii. 43–49. Mysteries, Pref. ; i. 44; iv. 31 ; v. 22, 46; vi. 2; vii. 4I ; viii. 28, 52; App. xi. Secrecy of, iii. 28. Not Incomprehensible, ix. Io. Taught Transmigration, i. 35–41. Mystery of Godliness, ix. 9, 18. Mysticism, ii. 4; vii. Io; ix. 29–36. Mystics, v. 28, 29; viii. 25. and Materialists, ix. 35–39. Myths, Parabolic in Hebrew Scrip- tures, vi. I2. Naiads, iii. 34. Naros, vi. 35. Nature, iii. 21 ; vii. 51 ; viii. 3; App. ix. Nebuchadnezzar, Dream of, vii. 55. Image of, ix. 14. Necessity, the Will of God, v. 12. Negation, Pref. ; ii. 7 ; iv. 28; vi. • 22. Neoplatonists, i. 7 ; ix. 34. Nephesh, i. 4o, n. ; v. 35 ; App. ii. Neshamah, v. 35, 41; App. ii. Newman, Cardinal, ix. Io, n. Nicodemus, v. 45. Night Time of Soul, iii. 31. Nirvāna, Pref. R.E. ix; i. 29; ii. I6; iii. 29; v. 37, 43, n. ; vi. 31 ; viii. 28, 43; App. ii. Noah, Daniel, and Job, viii. 52. No-God, The, ii. 9; iii. Io; vii. 17. Nonentity, ii. 6; iii. 14; v. 28. Not-Being, iii. 11. Nothing, viii. 5. Nous, iii. 55; v. I6; ix. II. Now, vii. 4; and Within, ix. 54. Nucleolus, iii. 57; v. 44; viii. 29, 44, 5 I. & Nucleus, iii. 57; v. 4, 44; viii. 48. Nysa-Nissi, ix. 9 ; App. xii. (4); (6). , - Obelisk, iii. 37. Objective, Pref. R. E. z ; v. 33. Oblation of God, iv. 22, 35, 36. Occult Science, v. I. Ocean of Infinitude, ii. 34. Odic, or Astral, ii. 19, 21. Odysseus, v. 35. Olivet, ix. 9. Olympus, Pref. ; iv. 35 ; vi. 5. One Life, Concerning the, App. x. Only Begotten, viii. 17 ; ix. 5. Ordeal, iii. 8; viii. 22 ; App. xii. (5). Organism, v. 8. Original, Divine, ix. 36. Orthodoxies, ix. 23. Osiris, i. 44, 56; ii. 46; viii. 25, SO. Ovary, vii. 3. Ovid, vi. I4, 24. Ox, Oxen, vi. 4; viii. 29, 37; App. xiii., Pt. I. (3). Oxygen, ii. 20. Pallas or Minerva, ii. 35. Papias, vi. 8. Paracelsus, iv. I2. 378 AVD EX. Paraclete, i. 7 ; viii. 51. Paradise, vi. 2, 6; vii. 51 ; ix. 9. Lost and Regained, vi. 24. Parenchyma, v. 39. Particle Divine, App. ii. Passion, iv. 3 I ; vi. 2; viii. 7, 8, 28, 39, 41 ; App. v. 49. Passion Week, six Days of Creation, iv. 35. Paul, Pref. R. E. iv.; iii. 33 ; iv. 9; vi. 19, 20 ; viii. 27 ; ix. 9, I9–24. Pearl, viii. 43. Penance, iii. 8 ; vi. 31. Pentateuch on Sacrifice, iv. 6. Not by Moses, iv. 7 ; vi. I 1. Perceptive Point, v. 30, 33. Perfect Man, iv. 27, 29. Perſect Way, Pref. R. E. ; i. 7 ; ii. 47; vi. 24. Perfection, iii. 54; vi. 6; vii. 5, 45 ; viii. 4, 7, 8, II, 38; App. X. Mount of, vii. 45, 47; ix. 9. Original, viii. I. System of, i. 2; ii. 5, 7. See Christs. Perisoul, or Astral Body, i. 9; ii. 13, 18; iii. 4, 5. Perseus, Pref. Person of Microcosm, vi. 4; ix. II. in Godhead, ii. 29 ; v. I7. in Trinity, v. 4; ix. 42. Persona, v. 9; App. ii. Personality, i. 32 ; iii. 32; v. 9, II, 12, 17, 42, 43, n. ; App. viii., 1X. Personation of Spirits, iii. 25. Peter, vii. 32. Catholic Tradition, i. 21. Peter, Confession of, i. 204 Phantasmagoria, iii. 28. Phantasms, vii. 13. Phantoms, v. 27, 35, 36, 37. Death of, v. 38. Pharaoh, vi. 6. Pharisees, vi. II. Phenomena and Substance, ii. 5. Incapable of Self-cognition, v. 3I. Philistines, ix. I4. Philo, iii. 33 ; ix. 24. Philosopher's Stone, viii. I I ; ix. I4. Phison, vi. 6, 14. Pillar of Cloud and Fire, ix. 16 : App. xii. (6). * Pindar, ii. 22 ; v. 35, n. Plagiarists, Mystics not, ix. 29, 30. Planes, Pref. R. E. z/2 ; i. 30 ; iii. 56, 57. - Planet, Memory of, i. 16; ii. 18; v. 16, 17 ; vii. 7. Astral Counterpart of, v. 39. Planet, Consciousness of, v. I7. Soul of, v. I7, 39; App. x. Planet-God, App. xii. Planisphere, Zodiacal, vi. 36. Plato, i. 38; iii. 33; vi. 24; vii. 4I ; ix. 24, 25. Plurality of God, ix. 45. Poet, ii. 27; App. ix. Point of Consciousness, Radiant, v. 23–26, 30. Polarisation, v. 22 ; ix.49. Polarities, v. 33. Pontius Pilate, iv. 9. Pope, see Leo. Popes, Signet of, v. I6, n. II ; viii. Io, 18, AWOAZX. 379 Poseidon, iii. 16; ix. 16. Positive Doctrine, ii. 5. Possession, iii. 15. Postel, Pref. R. E. xz. Potency, Divine, ix. 46; App. xi. Potentiality of Man, ii. 1, 28, 29; , iv. 31 ; vii. Io, 39; viii. 18; App. xii. 2. Poverty, viii. 20. Pralaya, v. 40. Prayer, iii. 49 ; App. xiii. II, 46. Prerogative of Man, Revelation, i. I7. Present Time a New Era, i. 55. Presiding Spirits, iii. 34. Priest and Prophet, iv. 7, Io. Priesthoods, Error of, i. 22; iv. 5; vi. 28; vii. 19. Principles, Separability of, v. 35. Prism, iii. 60 ; iv. 25. Procession of Spirit, iii. 37; ix. 45. of Holy Ghost, ix. 43. Proclus, ix. 17. Procrustes, Pref. R. E. viii. Prodigal Son, ii. 9. Prometheus, vi. 19. Prophecy, A, App. iii., Pt. 2. Prophesying, On, App. iii., Pt. I. Prophet, ii. 43 ; iii. 53; iv. 7, Io; vii. 49 ; App. iii. Propitiation, iv. 9. - Protestantism and Woman, ix. 27. Protoplast, v. 19. Psyche, v. 4, 6, 13, 25, 31. Detachment of, v. 34. Purgation, v. 13, 37, 38. Purgatory, iii. 4, 8, 20. Purification, iii. 16; ix. 53. Purity, Condition of, as Means to Salvation, vii. 18. Pymander, i. 36; ix. 53. Pyramid, iii. 37; vi. 2; vii. 55; viii. 28. Pythagoras, i. 38; ii. 46; viii. 48,51. Python, ii. I2; vi. 36. Qualification of Writers, i. 4. Queen's Chamber, viii. 28. Rabbi Eliezer, i. 25. Rabbinical Interpretations, vi. I2. Race, Correspondence of, with In- dividual, vii. 7. Radiant Point, God as, v. 25. Rahab, viii. 32 ; ix. I3. Ram, ix. I3, I5. Raphael, ix. I I. Reality, Spiritual only, Pref. R. E. zil, ix; vii. Io; App. I. Reason, Pure, Pref. ; i. 23; vi. 27. Reconciliation, iv. I6, 24. Reconstruction, i. 56. Redeemers, vii. 49. Redemption, Pref. R. E. ix ; ii. Io; iv. 31 ; vi. 20, 31, 38; vii. 26; viii. 2, 5, 6, 7, 41; App. vii. 24' Reflection, iii. 33. Reflective States, iii. 31. Reflects, iii. 25 ; ix. 7, n. Reformation, ix. 27. Refraction, iii. 33. Regeneration, iii. 50, 53; v. 30 ; vi. 24; viii. 12, 31, 43 ; ix. 7, n., 53 Religion, Pref. R. E., i, iii, vi; vii. 49; viii. 24. Degenerate, i. 55 f: vi. 25. Historic, i. 43. Keynote of, iv. 4. . 38o AVD EX. Religion, Real, i. 48; ii. 12. Renunciation, viii. 38, 50. Representative Men, ii. 5. Reservation of Jesus, i. 556. Rest, or Static Condition, i. 29. Resurrection, Pref. R. E. ix. ; vi. 2; viii. 8, 9, Io, 40, 52 ; App. vii. I 2. Resuscitation, viii. 9. Revealer, i. 7. Reveilation, App. viii. Revelation, Book of, vii. 19. See also Apocalypse. Proper Prerogative of Man, i. 17 ; ii. I2; App. viii. - Rod, viii. 30 ; ix. I6 ; App. v. 40 ; xii. 97; xiv. Rosary, viii. 20, 39. Rosicrucian, iii. 34. Round Table, viii. 44. Ruach, Anima Bruta, v. 35, 37, 38, 40 ; App. ii. Rudimentary Men, vi. 14 ; vii. Io. Sabbath, iii. 54 ; vi. 2, 14, 16, 31 ; vii. 55; viii. 28 ; App. v. 61 ; xv. (2). Sacerdotal Interpolations, vi. 12. Sacerdotalism, i. 55%; vii. 34, 41 ; viii. 26. Sacrament of Eucharist, iv. 36, 37. Sacramental Host, vi. 34; App. v. 4O. Sacred Books, i. 43. Sacrifice in Pentateuch, Jeremiah, iv. 6. Doctrine of, iv. 16; App. i. I. Salamanders, iii. 34. Salt, vi. 20 ; viii. Io. Isaiah, Salvation, Pref. R. E. zii ; i. 42 ; ii. 12; iii. II, 22 ; vii. 4, 5, 6, 18, 28; viii. 27. Captain of, viii. 4. Sangreal, iv. 19 ; viii. II. Sapphire, vi. 4. Sara, viii. 52, n. ; ix. 20, n. Satan, iii. 13 ; Secret of, App. xv. Saturn, v. 37; App. xv., n. Saturnalia, vi. 35. Saving Faith, its Nature, i. 19. Saviour, Pref. ; ii. 46 ; iv. 27 ; vii. 18; viii. 18; App. xii (2). Personal, iv. 27. Scale, iii. 6o. Scandinavian Theology, v. 41. Scheffler, i. 56 ; viii. 35. Schelling, Pref. iii. 5. Schwegler, ix. 34. Science, i. 51. Scripture, Mystic Sense of, Pref. R. E. z ; vii. 3–8.; ix. 7, n. ; App. i., vi. Sea of Bitterness, viii. 32. Seasons in Spiritual Life, vii. 50. Sects of Persia, iv. I2. Segregation, v. 2. Self, viii. 3 ; ix. 34, 51. Self-consciousness, v. 28. Selfhood, Pref. R. E. zi, ziii.; v. 18, 43, n., 44; viii. 27; App. ix. Self-propagation, iii. 32. Sensation and Knowledge, i. 54 ; ii. 6; ix. 38. Sensitive, iii. 19. Sensitiveness, v. 29. Separability of Principles, v. 33, 35. Septimianus, vi. 35. Sepulchre, viii. 26 ; App. xv. (2). Seraph, vi. I5, 31, 34. AAWDACX. 381 Serpent, ii. 42; iv. 17, 28; vi. 13, 15, 22, 25, 34; vii. 5, 26; viii. 39. Brazen, vi. I5. Serpents, ix. Io. Sesha, i. 29. Seven Hills, vii. 31. Spirits of God, ii. 32 ; ix. 44. Sex, ii. 4I ; vii. I I, 13; ix. 8. Shades, iii. 5, 19, 25. Shechina, viii. 44. Shiloh, vi. 39. Shrine, App. viii. Sideral Body, ii. 21. Sight of God, i. 18; ix. 1, 40, 41, 48, 51. * Sin, v. I4 ; vi. 19, 20 ; vii. 4, 22, 24, 51 ; viii. I, 47. Nature of, App. iv. Wilderness of, vi. 15. Sinai, ix. 9. Sion, vi. 5; ix. 9. Siva, ix. 52. Six Crowns, viii. 28, 43. Socrates, Daemon of, iii. 44. and Re-incarnation, i. 38. Sodium, ii. 35. ' Sodom and Gomorrha, vi. 30. Solar System, Man a, ix. 48. $olemnisation, viii. 34, 40. Son, ix. 42. and Word, i. 30. of God, viii. 44; ix. 5, 42, 53. of Man, viii. 4, 26; ix. 53. Sons of God, vi. I4 ; vii. 48. Sophia, ii. 34 ; vi. I5; ix. 24. Sorcery, iv. 12. Soul, Pref. R. E. ix. ; i. 26; ii.; iii. I ; iv. 4 ; v. 5, 7, Io, I I ; vi. 4, 6 ; vii. I, 6, 13, 27; viii. I, 3 ; App. viii. Soul and Spirit, v. 5–11 ; App. x. (I). Astral, v. 39, 41. Breath of, iii. 27. Condemnation of, i. 36. Evolution of, i. 4o ; ii. 13, 23. Houses of Initiation of, App. xii (5). Immortality of, i. 36; ii. 13. Incarnation of, viii. 6. in Plants and Animals, ii. 23. Loss of, iii. 22. Mediation of, i. 18. Memory of, i. 6; iii. 30 ; App. ii. Migration of, i. 36, 37; ii. 15 ; W. 4I. Monad of Divine Substance, i. 3O. Nephesh, Lowest Mode of, i, 40, Il, Perceptions and Recollections of, Pref. R. E. iii.; iii. 50 ; ix. 38. Perfectibility of, i. 8. Personal and Impersonal, App. ii. Pre-existence of, i. 8. Previous Incarnations, i. 37, 38; 11. 24 ; V1. IO. s Progression of, i. 37. Rational, iii. 55. Reality of, Pref. R. E. iii. Rebirths of, Pref. R. E. iii; i. 7. Redescends, iii. 21. its Reflective Power, ii. 45. Returns to New Bodies, i. 39. Substance of, i. 8. Universal, i. 4o ; ii. 44. - Souls, Communion of, App. xiii. Pt. 2. Passing through of, ix. 54; App. xii. (3). 382 JAWADEX. Spectral Companion, iv. 12. Spectrum, ii. 35. Spheres, iii. 1, 5; vi. 34 ; ix. 48. Sphinx, i. 4I ; ix. 19 ; App. vi. ; xii. (6). Spinoza, vi. II. Spirals, i. 34; App. xii. 3. Spirit and Matter, i. 28 ; no boun- dary line between, i. 34; v. Io, II ; App. vii. x. and Soul, Difference between, v. 5-II ; App. x. (I). Holy, ii. 18; iv. 31 ; vi. 22. Descent of, i. 7. of God, vii. 5, 15, 25, 26; viii. 4, 5; App. iii. 9. Spirits, iii. I, 23, 32. Spiritualism, Astral and Celestial, iii. 24; vii. 54. and Materialism, ii. 4-12. Stable, viii. 37. Star of East, viii. 37; ix. I6 ; App. xiv. Stephen, ix. 53. Stigmata, Five Wounds, iv. 24; viii. 19. Stones, i. 33 ; ix. IO, I4. Subjective, Pref. R. E. zi; v. 31, 33. Substance, i. 26, 28; ii. 2, 29 ; vii. 5, Io, 37; ix. Io, 43; App. x. Celestial, ii. 17. Divine, i. 30 ; viii. 5, 46; ix. 46. of Soul and Deity, i. 30. Monads of, i. 30 ; ii. 29 ; ix. 46. Suffering, viii. 4. Sufi, i. 7 ; ix. 28. Sun, ii. 46; iii. 52; vi. 2, 4, 15, 34, 37; App. 2. Hieroglyph of God, iv. 27. Sun of the Soul, iv. 27. Worship of, i. 55%. Sun-gods, ii. 46. Superstition, vi. 27. Swedenborg, ix. 6, 7, n. Foremost Herald, ix. 7, n. Synagogue, vi. I I. Synthesis, v. 32. Tabernacle, vi. 5; viii. 44, 48; ix. I3. Talents, Parable of, ii. 26. Talmud, i. 25 ; vi. Io ; ix. 20, 24. Temple, vii. 30. Services of iv. 8. Veil of, viii. 28. Temptation, vi. 2, 13; viii. 28. Tennant, viii. 50, n. Testament, Old and New, iv. 8; vii. 6. Theckla, ix. 22, n. Theocracy, v. 23. Theologia, i. 47. Theosophy, v. 22 ; App. x. (I). Thirteen, iii. 4; viii. 44; App. v. 21. Thirteenth Personage, viii. 44. Thoth, v. 20 ; ix. I I, I2, I 3. See also Hermes. Thought, ix. I I. of God, viii. 5; ix. 46. Tides, vii. 50. Time of the End, App. vi. Time, Times, and a Half, viii. 53. Tradition, i. 556. Trainer of the Christs, viii. 12 ; ix. II. Transfiguration, viii. 48. Transmigration of Souls, i. 36; v. 4 I. Transmigrations many, viii. 18. AVDAE.X. 383 Transmutation, iv. 25, 27; vi. 21 ; viii. 12, 43 ; App. v. 52; vii. I3. Tree of Divination of Good and Evil, vi. 33. of Life and Knowledge, vi. 8, 21, 25, 27, 35, 39; vii. 18; App. i. I. of the Hesperides, vi. 36. Trimurti, ix. 52. Trinity, i. 30 ; v. 4; ix. 41, 42, 43, 45, 46, n. ; App. xi. Trismegistus, i. 36. Tablet of, why Emerald, v. 16, n. Trithemius, Pref. R. E. xi. Twelve Apostles, viii. 44. Gates, viii. 19, 43. Houses, viii. 43. Twice-born, App. xii. (1). Typhon, vi. 22. Ultimates, iii. 2. Understanding, ix. II, 13, 16. Unit and Cipher, ii. 41 ; ix. 42. Unity, v. 32. - of Soul and Spirit, viii. 3. Universal Medicine, viii. II. Universals, Pref. R. E. vi. Universe, Consciousness of, v. 17. Principle of, i. II ; ii. 29; ix. 48. Procession of, viii. 5. Soul of, vi. 16. Utopia, vii. 40. Vampires, iii. 28. Vegetable Diet, viii. 14. Vehicles, Pref. R. E. zi. ; iii. 32, 56; v. 22 ; vi. 2. Veil, ii. 34; viii. 28; App. xiii., Pt. I. Venus, ii. 35 ; vi. I, 2 ; ix. 27, n. Golden Book of, App. xiii. Vestal Virgins, vi. 31. Via Dolorosa, iv. 23; viii. 21. Vibration, Universality of, v. 3. Vicarious Bloodshed, ix. 24. Redemption, viii. 2. Sacrifice, iii. 30 ; ix. 22, 28. Victories, Our Lady of, ii. 35. Virgil, vii. 55. Virgin, Celestial, vi. 36, 39. Cultus of, v. 45. Mary, ii. 35. Soul, vii. 26; ix. I3, 53. Virgo, v. 45 ; ix. 22. Vishnu, ix. 52. Vision of Adonai, ix. 47–52. of the Astrals, iv. I4. of the Three Veils, vii. 42. Vital Spirits, iv. 12. Vivisection, iii. 21 ; vii. 54; ix. I7. Volatilisation of the Fixed, vi. 20. Water, v. 14, 16; vii. 13, n. ; viii. 28. and the Spirit, v. 45 ; viii. 4, 30. Waves, Spiritual, vii. 50. Weigelius, Pref. R. E. vii. Will, v. 12; vii. 40. Central, viii. 1, 3, 4 ; App. iv. I 5. Wind and Flame, Spirit as, App. 2. Witches, iv. 12. Within and Without, vii. 8, 44; viii. 3, 15, 49 ; ix. 9; App. iii. 2; v. 9, Io. Within, Now and, ix. 54. Witnesses, Two Apocalyptic, iv. 23; vii. 55; ix. I9. 384 AVZ).A.X. Woman, ii. 34, 48; iii. 28 ; vi. 18, 38; vii. 12, 19, 30, 51, 53; viii. 44, 49, 51 ; ix. 20, 25, 38; App. i. I : iii. Pt. 2 ; xii. (2). of Apocalypse, vi. 37. Soul or Essential, ii. 44. Temptation of by Serpent, and of Man by Woman, vi. 13. Word, v. 4; vi. 9. World, Fxemplary, v. 21. Worlds, One Law for all, v. 15. of Form and Formless, App. x., xv. Yakuts, iv. 12. Year 1881, viii. 47. Yes, Jesus as the divine, iv. 27. Yezidis, iv. 12. Zachariah, iv. 13. Zeus, Pref. ix. ; ii. 21, 42 ; vi. I9; vii. 42. Zodiac, ii. 46; vi. 40, 41 ; vii. 26; viii. 19, 43. New Sign, App. vi. Zoroaster, i. 44; ii. 46; viii. 50. Third Edition, Revised, price 7s. 6a. THE PERFECT WAY; or, The Finding of Christ. By ANNA (BONUS) KINGSFORD, M.D. (Paris), and EDWARD MAITLAND, B.A. (Cantab.) 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