Man is essentially a spiritual being.
The source of this spiritual Omniscience
we may not, in our finite intelligence, fully cognize,
because full cognition would preclude the possibility
of finite expression.
The destiny of man is perfection.
Man perfected becomes a god.
“Only the gods are immortal,” we are told.
Let us consider what this means, supposing
it to be an axiom of truth.
Mortality is subject to change and
death. Mortality is the manifest-the
stage upon which “man in his life plays many
parts.”
Immortality, is what the word says
it is-godhood re-cognized in the mortal.
“Im” or, “Om”-the
more general term-stands for the Changeless.
Birthless. Deathless. Unnamable Power that
holds the worlds in space, and puts intelligence into
man.
Biologists, even though they were
to succeed in reproducing life by chemical processes
from so-called “lifeless” (sterilized)
matter, making so high a form of manifestation
as man himself, yet could never name the power
by which they accomplished it.
Always there must remain the Unknownable-the
Absolute.
“Om,” therefore, is the
word we use to express this Omniscient, Omnipotent
and Omnipresent power.
The term “mortal” we have
already defined. The compound immortal, applied
to individual man, stands for one who has made his
“at-one-ment” with Om, and who has, while
still in the mortal body, re-cognized himself as one
with Om.
This is what it means to escape the
“second death,” to which the merely mortal
consciousness is subject.
This is the goal of every human life;
this is the essence, the substance of all religious
systems and all philosophies.
The only chance for disputation among
theologians and philosophers, lies in the way of accomplishing
this at-one-ment. There is not the slightest
opportunity for a difference of opinion as what they
wish to accomplish.
Admitting then, that the goal of every
soul is the same-immortality-(the
mortal consciousness cognizing itself as Om), we come
to a consideration of the evidence we may find in
support of this axiom. This evidence we do not
find satisfactory, in spirit communication; in psychic
experiences; in hypnotic phenomena; and astral trips;
important, and reliable as these many psychic research
phenomena are.
These are not satisfactory or convincing
evidences of our at-one-ment with Om, because they
do not preclude the probability of the “second
death;” but on the contrary, they verify it.
However, aside from all these psychic
phenomena, there is a phase of human experience, much
more rare but becoming somewhat general, that transcends
phenomena of every kind.
The western world has given to these
experiences the term “cosmic consciousness,”
which term is self explanatory.
The Orientals have long known
of this goal of the soul, and they have terms to express
this, varying with the many types of the Oriental mind,
but all meaning the same thing. This meaning,
from our Occidental viewpoint, is best translated
in the term liberation, signifying to be set free from
the limitations of sense, and of self-consciousness,
and to have glimpsed the larger area of consciousness,
that takes in the very cosmos.
This experience is accompanied by
a great light, whether this light is manifested as
spiritual, or as intellectual power, determines its
expression.
The object of this book is to call
attention to some of the more pronounced instances
of this Illumination, and to classify them, according
as they have been expressed through religions enthusiasm;
poetical fervor; or great intellectual power.
But we have also one other argument
to make, and this we present with a conviction of
its truth, while conceding that it must remain
a theory, until proven, each individual, man
or woman, for himself and herself. The postulate
is this: immortality (i.e. godhood) is bi-sexual.
No male person can by any possibility become an immortal
god, in, of and by himself; no female person can be
complete without the “other half” that
makes the ONE.
Each and every SOUL, therefore, has
its spiritual counterpart-its “other
half,” with which it unites on the spiritual
plane, when the time comes for attainment of immortality.
Sex is an eternal verity. The
entire Cosmos is bi-sexual. Everything in the
visible universe; in the manifest, is the result of
this universal principle. “As above so
below,” is a safe rule, as far as the IDEA goes.
This hypothesis does not preclude perfection
above, of that which we find below, but any radical
reversion or repudiation of nature is inconceivable.
“Male and female created he
them.” This being true, male and female
must they return to the source from which they sprung,
completing the circle, and gaining what?
Consciousness of godhood; of completeness
in counterpartal union. Not absorption of
consciousness, but union, which is quite a different
idea.
Out of this counterpartal union a
race of gods will be born, and these supermen,
shall “inherit the earth” making it a “fit
dwelling place for the gods.”
This earth is now being made fit.
This fact may seem a far distant hope if we do not
judge with the eyes of the seer, but its proof lies
in the emancipation of woman. Its evidences are
many and varied, but the awakening of woman is the
cause.
This awakening of woman constitutes
the first rays of the dawn-that long-looked
for Millénium, which many of us have regarded
as a mere figure of speech, instead of as a literal
truth.
The argument is not that there has
been no individual awakening until the present time;
but that never before in the finite history of the
world has there been such a general awakening, and
as it is self evident that conditions will reflect
the idea of the majority, the fact that woman is being
given her rightful place in the sense-conscious life,
proves that the earth will be a fit dwelling place
for a higher order of beings than have hitherto constituted
the majority.
The numerous instances of Illumination,
or cosmic consciousness which are forcing attention
at the present time, prove that there is a race-awakening
to a realization of our unity with Om.
Another point which we trust these
pages will make clear is this: So-called “revelation”
is neither a personal “discovery,” nor
any special act of a divine power. “God
spake thus and so to me,” is a phrase which the
self-conscious initiate employs, because he has
lost sight of the cosmic light, or because he
finds it expedient to use that phraseology in delivering
the message of cosmic consciousness.
If we will substitute the term “initiation,”
for the term “revelation,” we will
have a clearer idea of the truth.
Perhaps some of our readers will feel
that the terms mean the same, but for the most part,
those who have employed the word “revelation,”
have used it as implying that the plan of the cosmos
was unfinished, and that the Creator, having found
some person suitable to convey the latest decision
to mankind, natural laws had been suspended and the
revelation made.
It is to correct this view, that we
emphasize the distinction between the two words.
The cosmos is complete. “As
it was in the beginning, it is now and ever shall
be, worlds without end.”
A circle is without beginning or end.
We, in our individual consciousness may traverse this
circle, but our failure to realize its completeness
does not change the fact that it is finished.
We can not add to the universal consciousness;
nor take away therefrom.
But we can extend our own area of
consciousness from the narrow limits of the personal
self, into the heights and depths of the atman and
who shall set limitations to the power of the atman,
the higher Self, when it has attained at-one-ment
with Om?
It is not the purpose of this book
to trace the spiritual ascent of man further than
to point out the wide gulf between the degrees of
consciousness manifested in the lower animals and that
of human consciousness; again tracing in the human,
the ever-widening area of his cognition of the personal
self, and its needs, to the awakening of the soul
and its needs; which needs include the welfare of all
living things as an absolute necessity to individual
happiness.
Altruism, therefore, is not a virtue.
It is a means of self-preservation-without
this degree of initiation into the boundless area
of universal, or cosmic consciousness, we may not escape
the karmic law.
The revelations, therefore, upon which
are founded the numerous religious systems, are comparable
with the many and various degrees of initiation into
THAT WHICH IS.
They represent the degree which the
initiate has taken in the lodge.
It may be argued that this fact of
individual initiation into the ever-present truth
of Being, as into a lodge, offers no proof that this
earth is to ultimately become a heaven. It may
be that this planet is the outer-most lodge room and
that there will never be a sufficient number of initiates
to make the earth a fit dwelling place for a higher
order of beings than now inhabit it. This may,
indeed, be true. But all evidence tends toward
the hope that even the planet itself will come under
the regenerating power of Illumination.
All prophecies embody this promise;
all that we know of what materialists call “evolution”
and occultists might well name “uncovering of
consciousness,” points to a time when “God’s
will,” “shall be done on earth as it is
in heaven.”
All who have attained to cosmic consciousness
in whatever degree, have prophecied a time,
when this blessing would descend upon every one; but
the difficulty in adequately explaining this great
gift seems also to have been the burden of their cry.
Jesus sought repeatedly to describe
to his hearers the wonders of the cosmic sense, but
realized that he was too far in advance of the cyclic
end; but even as at that time, a number of disciples
were capable of receiving the Illumination, so to-day,
a larger number are capable of attainment. If
this number is great enough to bring about the regeneration-the
perfecting-of the earth conditions, then
it must be accomplished.
We believe that it is. We make
the claim that the Millénium has dawned;
and although it may be many years before the light
of the morning breaks into the full light of the day,
yet the rays of the dawn are dispelling the world’s
long night.
In his powerful and prophetic story
“In the Days of the Comet,” H.G. Wells,
tells of a great change that comes over the
world following an atmospheric phenomenon in which
a “green vapor” is generated in the clouds
and falls upon the earth with instantaneous effect.
As this peculiar vapor descends, it
has the effect of putting every one to sleep; this
sleep continues for three days and when people finally
awake, their interior nature has undergone a complete
change.
Where before they “saw dimly,”
they now see clearly; the petty differences and quarrels
are perceived in their true perspective. Instead
of place, and power, and influence, and wealth, being
all-important goals of ambition as before the change,
every one now strives to be of service to the world.
Love and kindness become greater factors than commercial
expediency and business success.
In many respects, Wells’ description
of the great change and its effect upon people, corresponds
with the effect of Illumination.
The sense of entering into the very
heart of things; of growing plants; the birds and
the little wood animals; the intense sympathy and understanding
of life described by him, sounds like the effect of
cosmic consciousness, as related by nearly all who
have attained it.
How the world’s activities are
resumed after the change, and under what vastly different
incentives people work, form a part of the story, which
is written as fiction, but which contains the seed
of a great truth.
This truth is expressed in science,
as human achievement, and in religion as fulfilled
prophecy, but the truth is the same.
Both religion and science point to
a time when this earth will know freedom from
strife and suffering. Even the elements which
have hitherto been regarded as beyond the boundaries
of man’s will, may be completely controlled;
not may be, but will be. Manual
labor will cease. National Eugenic societies
will put a stop to war, when they come to the inevitable
conclusion, that no race can by any possibility be
improved, while the most perfect physical species
are reserved for armies.
Awakening woman will refuse-indeed
they are now refusing-to bear children
to be shot down in warfare, and crushed under the juggernaut
of commercial competition.
Those who realize the signs of the
times, look for the birth of cosmic consciousness
as a race-consciousness, foreshadowing the new day;
the “second coming of Christ,” not as
a personal, vicarious sacrifice, but as a factor in
human attainment.
“For I am persuaded,”
said St. Paul, “that neither death nor life,
nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present,
nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor depth,
nor any other creature shall be able to separate us
from the love of God.”
If we interpret this in the light
of cosmic consciousness, we realize that we shall
know, and experience that boundless, deathless,
perfect, satisfying, complete and all-embracing love
which is the goal of immortality; which is an attribute
(we may say the one attribute) of God.
We are not looking for the birth of
a Christ-child, but of the Christ-child;
we are not looking for a second coming of a
man who shall be as Jesus was, but we are anticipating
the coming of the man (homo), who shall be
cosmically conscious, even as was Jesus of Nazareth;
as was Guatama, the Buddha.
That there may be one man and one
woman who shall first achieve this consciousness and
realization is barely possible, but the preponderance
of evidence is for a more general awakening to the
light of Illumination.
“We shall not all sleep, but
we shall all be changed in the twinkling of an eye,”
said St. Paul.
The prophecy of “the woman clothed
with the sun, and with the moon under her feet,”
is not of a woman, but of Woman, in the light
of a race of men who have attained cosmic consciousness.
Nothing more is needed to make a heaven
of earth, than that the great light and love that
comes of Illumination, shall become dominant.
It will solve all problems, because
problems arise only because we are groping in the
dark. The elimination of selfishness; of condemnation;
of fear and anger, and doubt, must have far greater
power for universal happiness and well-being than
all the systems which theology or science or politics
could devise. Indeed, all these systems are sporadic
and empirical attempts to express the vague dawning
of Illumination.
In the fullness of its light, the
need for systems will have passed away.