We now approach that deeper side of
the Christ story that gives it its real hold upon
the hearts of men. We approach that perennial
life which bubbles up from an unseen source, and so
baptises its representative with its lucent flood
that human hearts cling round the Christ, and feel
that they could almost more readily reject the apparent
facts of history than deny that which they intuitively
feel to be a vital, an essential truth of the higher
life. We draw near the sacred portal of the Mysteries,
and lift a corner of the veil that hides the sanctuary.
We have seen that, go back as far
as we may into antiquity, we find everywhere recognised
the existence of a hidden teaching, a secret doctrine,
given under strict and exacting conditions to approved
candidates by the Masters of Wisdom. Such candidates
were initiated into “The Mysteries” — a
name that covers in antiquity, as we have seen, all
that was most spiritual in religion, all that was most
profound in philosophy, all that was most valuable
in science. Every great Teacher of antiquity
passed through the Mysteries and the greatest were
the Hierophants of the Mysteries; each who came forth
into the world to speak of the invisible worlds had
passed through the portal of Initiation and had learned
the secret of the Holy Ones from Their own lips:
each who came forth came forth with the same story,
and the solar myths are all versions of this story,
identical in their essential features, varying only
in their local colour.
This story is primarily that of the
descent of the Logos into matter, and the Sun-God
is aptly His symbol, since the Sun is His body, and
He is often described as “He that dwelleth in
the Sun.” In one aspect, the Christ of
the Mysteries is the Logos descending into matter,
and the great Sun-Myth is the popular teaching of
this sublime truth. As in previous cases, the
Divine Teacher, who brought the Ancient Wisdom and
republished it in the world, was regarded as a special
manifestation of the Logos, and the Jesus of the Churches
was gradually draped with the stories which belonged
to this great One; thus He became identified, in Christian
nomenclature, with the Second Person in the Trinity,
the Logos, or Word of God, and the salient events
recounted in the myth of the Sun-God became the salient
events of the story of Jesus, regarded as the incarnate
Deity, the “mythic Christ.” As in
the macrocosm, the kosmos, the Christ of the Mysteries
represents the Logos, the Second Person in the Trinity,
so in the microcosm, man, does He represent the second
aspect of the Divine Spirit in man — hence
called in man “the Christ." The second
aspect of the Christ of the Mysteries is then the
life of the Initiate, the life which is entered on
at the first great Initiation, at which the Christ
is born in man, and after which He develops in man.
To make this quite intelligible, we must consider the
conditions imposed on the candidate for Initiation,
and the nature of the Spirit in man.
Only those could be recognised as
candidates for Initiation who were already good as
men count goodness, according to the strict measure
of the law. Pure, holy, without defilement, clean
from sin, living without transgression — such
were some of the descriptive phrases used of them.
Intelligent also must they be, of well-developed and
well-trained minds. The evolution carried on in
the world life after life, developing and mastering
the powers of the mind, the emotions, and the moral
sense, learning through exoteric religions, practising
the discharge of duties, seeking to help and lift others — all
this belongs to the ordinary life of an evolving man.
When all this is done, the man has become “a
good man,” the Chrestos of the Greeks, and this
he must be ere he can become the Christos, the Anointed.
Having accomplished the exoteric good life, he becomes
a candidate for the esoteric life, and enters on the
preparation for Initiation, which consists in the
fulfilment of certain conditions.
These conditions mark out the attributes
he is to acquire, and while he is labouring to create
these, he is sometimes said to be treading the Probationary
Path, the Path which leads up to the “Strait
Gate,” beyond which is the “Narrow Way,”
or the “Path of Holiness,” the “Way
of the Cross.” He is not expected to develop
these attributes perfectly, but he must have made
some progress in all of them, ere the Christ can be
born in him. He must prepare a pure home for
that Divine Child who is to develop within him.
The first of these attributes — they
are all mental and moral — is Discrimination;
this means that the aspirant must begin to separate
in his mind the Eternal from the Temporary, the Real
from the Unreal, the True from the False, the Heavenly
from the Earthly. “The things which are
seen are temporal,” says the Apostle; “but
the things which are not seen are eternal." Men
are constantly living under the glamour of the seen,
and are blinded by it to the unseen. The aspirant
must learn to discriminate between them, so that what
is unreal to the world may become real to him, and
that which is real to the world may to him become
unreal, for thus only is it possible to “walk
by faith, not by sight." And thus also must a
man become one of those of whom the Apostle says that
they “are of full age, even those who by reason
of use have their senses exercised to discern both
good and evil." Next, this sense of unreality
must breed in him Disgust with the unreal and
the fleeting, the mere husks of life, unfit to satisfy
hunger, save the hunger of swine. This stage
is described in the emphatic language of Jesus:
“If any man come to me, and hate not his father,
and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren,
and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot
be my disciple." Truly a “hard saying,”
and yet out of this hatred will spring a deeper, truer,
love, and the stage may not be escaped on the way
to the Strait Gate. Then the aspirant must learn
Control of thoughts, and this will lead to Control
of actions, the thought being, to the inner eye,
the same as the action: “Whosoever looketh
on a woman to lust after her, hath committed adultery
with her already in his heart." He must acquire
Endurance, for they who aspire to tread “the
Way of the Cross” will have to brave long and
bitter sufferings, and they must be able to endure,
“as seeing Him who is invisible." He must
add to these Tolerance, if he would be the
child of Him who “maketh His sun to rise on the
evil, and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just
and on the unjust," the disciple of Him who bade
His apostles not to forbid a man to use His name because
he did not follow with them. Further, he must
acquire the Faith to which nothing is impossible,
and the Balance which is described by the Apostle.
Lastly, he must seek only “those things which
are above," and long to reach the beatitude of
the vision of and union with God. When a man
has wrought these qualities into his character he
is regarded as fit for Initiation, and the Guardians
of the Mysteries will open for him the Strait Gate.
Thus, but thus only, he becomes the prepared candidate.
Now, the Spirit in man is the gift
of the Supreme God, and contains within itself the
three aspects of the Divine Life — Intelligence,
Love, Will — being the Image of God.
As it evolves, it first develops the aspect of Intelligence,
develops the intellect, and this evolution is effected
in the ordinary life in the world. To have done
this to a high point, accompanying it with moral development,
brings the evolving man to the condition of the candidate.
The second aspect of the Spirit is that of Love, and
the evolution of that is the evolution of the Christ.
In the true Mysteries this evolution is undergone — the
disciple’s life is the Mystery Drama, and the
Great Initiations mark its stages. In the Mysteries
performed on the physical plane these used to be dramatically
represented, and the ceremonies followed in many respects
“the pattern” ever shown forth “on
the Mount,” for they were the shadows in a deteriorating
age of the mighty Realities in the spiritual world.
The Mystic Christ, then, is twofold — the
Logos, the Second Person of the Trinity, descending
into matter, and the Love, or second, aspect of the
unfolding Divine Spirit in man. The one represents
kosmic processes carried on in the past and is the
root of the Solar Myth; the other represents a process
carried on in the individual, the concluding stage
of his human evolution, and added many details in the
Myth. Both of these have contributed to the Gospel
story, and together form the Image of the “Mystic
Christ.”
Let us consider first the kosmic Christ,
Deity becoming enveloped in matter, the becoming incarnate
of the Logos, the clothing of God in “flesh.”
When the matter which is to form our
solar system is separated off from the infinite ocean
of matter which fills space, the Third Person of the
Trinity — the Holy Spirit — pours
His Life into this matter to vivify it, that it may
presently take form. It is then drawn together,
and form is given to it by the life of the Logos,
the Second Person of the Trinity, who sacrifices Himself
by putting on the limitations of matter, becoming
the “Heavenly Man,” in whose Body all forms
exist, of whose Body all forms are part. This
was the kosmic story, dramatically shown in the Mysteries — in
the true Mysteries seen as it occurred in space, in
the physical plane Mysteries represented by magical
or other means, and in some parts by actors.
These processes are very distinctly
stated in the Bible; when the “Spirit
of God moved upon the face of the waters” in
the darkness that was “upon the face of the
deep," the great deep of matter showed no forms,
it was void, inchoate. Form was given by the Logos,
the Word, of whom it is written that “all things
were made by Him; and without Him was not anything
made that was made." C. W. Leadbeater has well
put it: “The result of this first great
outpouring [the ‘moving’ of the Spirit]
is the quickening of that wonderful and glorious vitality
which pervades all matter (inert though it may seem
to our dim physical eyes), so that the atoms of the
various planes develop, when electrified by it, all
sorts of previously latent attractions and repulsions,
and enter into combinations of all kinds."
Only when this work of the Spirit
has been done can the Logos, the kosmic Mystic Christ,
take on Himself the clothing of matter, entering in
very truth the Virgin’s womb, the womb of Matter
as yet virgin, unproductive. This matter had
been vivified by the Holy Spirit, who, overshadowing
the Virgin, poured into it His life, thus preparing
it to receive the life of the Second Logos, who took
this matter as the vehicle for His energies.
This is the becoming incarnate of the Christ, the
taking flesh — “Thou did’st not
despise the Virgin’s womb.”
In the Latin and English translations
of the original Greek text of the Nicene Creed, the
phrase which describes this phase of the descent has
changed the prepositions and so changed the sense.
The original ran: “and was incarnate of
the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary,” whereas
the translation reads: “and was incarnate
by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary."
The Christ “takes form not of the ‘Virgin’
matter alone, but of matter which is already instinct
and pulsating with the life of the Third Logos,
so that both the life and the matter surround Him
as a vesture."
This is the descent of the Logos into
matter, described as the birth of the Christ of a
Virgin, and this, in the Solar Myth, becomes the birth
of the Sun-God as the sign Virgo rises.
Then come the early workings of the
Logos in matter, aptly typified by the infancy of
the myth. To all the feebleness of infancy His
majestic powers bow themselves, letting but little
play forth on the tender forms they ensoul. Matter
imprisons, seems as though threatening to slay, its
infant King, whose glory is veiled by the limitations
He has assumed. Slowly He shapes it towards high
ends, and lifts it into manhood, and then stretches
Himself on the cross of matter that He may pour forth
from that cross all the powers of His surrendered life.
This is the Logos of whom Plato said that He was in
the figure of a cross on the universe; this is the
Heavenly Man, standing in space, with arms outstretched
in blessing; this is the Christ crucified, whose death
on the cross of matter fills all matter with His life.
Dead He seems and buried out of sight, but He rises
again clothed in the very matter in which He seemed
to perish, and carries up His body of now radiant
matter into heaven, where it receives the downpouring
life of the Father, and becomes the vehicle of man’s
immortal life. For it is the life of the Logos
which forms the garment of the Soul in man, and He
gives it that men may live through the ages and grow
to the measure of His own stature. Truly are
we clothed in Him, first materially and then spiritually.
He sacrificed Himself to bring many sons into glory,
and He is with us always, even to the end of the age.
The crucifixion of Christ, then, is
part of the great kosmic sacrifice, and the allegorical
representation of this in the physical Mysteries,
and the sacred symbol of the crucified man in space,
became materialised into an actual death by crucifixion,
and a crucifix bearing a dying human form; then this
story, now the story of a man, was attached to the
Divine Teacher, Jesus, and became the story of His
physical death, while the birth from a Virgin, the
danger-encircled infancy, the resurrection and ascension,
became also incidents in His human life. The Mysteries
disappeared, but their grandiose and graphic representations
of the kosmic work of the Logos encircled and uplifted
the beloved figure of the Teacher of Judaea, and the
kosmic Christ of the Mysteries, with the linéaments
of the Jesus of history, thus became the central Figure
of the Christian Church.
But even this was not all; the last
touch of fascination is added to the Christ-story
by the fact that there is another Christ of the Mysteries,
close and dear to the human heart — the Christ
of the human Spirit, the Christ who is in every one
of us, is born and lives, is crucified, rises from
the dead, and ascends into heaven, in every suffering
and triumphant “Son of Man.”
The life-story of every Initiate into
the true, the heavenly Mysteries, is told in its salient
features in the Gospel biography. For this reason,
S. Paul speaks as we have seen of the birth of
the Christ in the disciple, and of His evolution and
His full stature therein. Every man is a potential
Christ, and the unfolding of the Christ-life in a
man follows the outline of the Gospel story in its
striking incidents, which we have seen to be universal,
and not particular.
There are five great Initiations in
the life of a Christ, each one marking a stage in
the unfolding of the Life of Love. They are given
now, as of old, and the last marks the final triumph
of the Man who has developed into Divinity, who has
transcended humanity, and has become a Saviour of
the world.
Let us trace this life-story, ever
newly repeated in spiritual experience, and see the
Initiate living out the life of the Christ.
At the first great Initiation the
Christ is born in the disciple; it is then that he
realises for the first time in himself the outpouring
of the divine Love, and experiences that marvellous
change which makes him feel himself to be one with
all that lives. This is the “Second Birth,”
and at that birth the heavenly ones rejoice, for he
is born into “the kingdom of heaven,”
as one of the “little ones,” as “a
little child” — the names ever given
to the new Initiates. Such is the meaning of
the words of Jesus, that a man must become a little
child to enter into the Kingdom. It is significantly
said in some of the early Christian writers that Jesus
was “born in a cave” — the “stable”
of the gospel narrative; the “Cave of Initiation”
is a well-known ancient phrase, and the Initiate is
ever born therein; over that cave “where the
young child” is burns the “Star of Initiation,”
the Star that ever shines forth in the East when a
Child-Christ is born. Every such child is surrounded
by perils and menaces, strange dangers that befall
not other babes; for he is anointed with the chrism
of the second birth and the Dark Powers of the unseen
world ever seek his undoing. Despite all trials,
however, he grows into manhood, for the Christ once
born can never perish, the Christ once beginning to
develop can never fail in his evolution; his fair
life expands and grows, ever-increasing in wisdom
and in spiritual stature, until the time comes for
the second great Initiation, the Baptism of the Christ
by Water and the Spirit, that gives him the powers
necessary for the Teacher, who is to go forth and
labour in the world as “the beloved Son.”
Then there descends upon him in rich
measure the divine Spirit, and the glory of the unseen
Father pours down its pure radiance on him; but from
that scene of blessing is he led by the Spirit into
the wilderness and is once more exposed to the ordeal
of fierce temptations. For now the powers of
the Spirit are unfolding themselves in him, and the
Dark Ones strive to lure him from his path by these
very powers, bidding him use them for his own helping
instead of resting on his Father in patient trust.
In the swift, sudden transitions which test his strength
and faith, the whisper of the embodied Tempter follows
the voice of the Father, and the burning sands of
the wilderness scorch the feet erstwhile laved in
the cool waters of the holy river. Conqueror over
these temptations he passes into the world of men to
use for their helping the powers he would not put
forth for his own needs, and he who would not turn
one stone to bread for the stilling of his own cravings
feeds “five thousand men, besides women and children,”
with a few loaves.
Into his life of ceaseless service
comes another brief period of glory, when he ascends
“a high mountain apart” — the
sacred Mount of Initiation. There he is transfigured
and there meets some of his great Forerunners, the
Mighty Ones of old who trod where he now is treading.
He passes thus the third great Initiation, and then
the shadow of his coming Passion falls on him, and
he steadfastly sets his face to go to Jerusalem — repelling
the tempting words of one of his disciples — Jerusalem,
where awaits him the baptism of the Holy Ghost and
of Fire. After the Birth, the attack by Herod;
after the Baptism, the temptation in the wilderness;
after the Transfiguration, the setting forth towards
the last stage of the Way of the Cross. Thus is
triumph ever followed by ordeal, until the goal is
reached.
Still grows the life of love, ever
fuller and more perfect, the Son of Man shining forth
more clearly as the Son of God, until the time draws
near for his final battle; and the fourth great Initiation
leads him in triumph into Jerusalem, into sight of
Gethsemane and Calvary. He is now the Christ
ready to be offered, ready for the sacrifice on the
cross. He is now to face the bitter agony in
the Garden, where even his chosen ones sleep while
he wrestles with his mortal anguish, and for a moment
prays that the cup may pass from his lips; but the
strong will triumphs and he stretches out his hand
to take and drink, and in his loneliness an angel
comes to him and strengthens him, as angels are wont
to do when they see a Son of Man bending beneath his
load of agony. The drinking of the bitter cup
of betrayal, of desertion, of denial, meets him as
he goes forth, and alone amid his jeering foes he
passes to his last fierce trial. Scourged by
physical pain, pierced by cruel thorns of suspicion,
stripped of his fair garments of purity in the eyes
of the world, left in the hands of his foes, deserted
apparently by God and man, he endures patiently all
that befalls him, wistfully looking in his last extremity
for aid. Left still to suffer, crucified, to die
to the life of form, to surrender all life that belongs
to the lower world, surrounded by triumphant foes
who mock him, the last horror of great darkness envelopes
him, and in the darkness he meets all the forces of
evil; his inner vision is blinded, he finds himself
alone, utterly alone, till the strong heart, sinking
in despair, cries out to the Father who seems to have
abandoned him, and the human soul faces, in uttermost
loneliness, the crushing agony of apparent defeat.
Yet, summoning all the strength of the “unconquerable
spirit,” the lower life is yielded up, its death
is willingly embraced, the body of desire is abandoned,
and the Initiate “descends into hell,”
that no region of the universe he is to help may remain
untrodden by him, that none may be too outcast to be
reached by his all-embracing love. And then springing
upwards from the darkness, he sees the light once
more, feels himself again as the Son, inseparable
from the Father whose he is, rises to the life that
knows no ending, radiant in the consciousness of death
faced and overcome, strong to help to the uttermost
every child of man, able to pour out his life into
every struggling soul. Among his disciples he
remains awhile to teach, unveiling to them the mysteries
of the spiritual worlds, preparing them also to tread
the path he has trodden, until, the earth-life over,
he ascends to the Father, and, in the fifth great
Initiation, becomes the Master triumphant, the link
between God and man.
Such was the story lived through in
the true Mysteries of old and now, and dramatically
pourtrayed in symbols in the physical plane Mysteries,
half veiled, half shown. Such is the Christ of
the Mysteries in His dual aspect, Logos and man, kosmic
and individual. Is it any wonder that this story,
dimly felt, even when unknown, by the mystic, has woven
itself into the heart, and served as an inspiration
to all noble living? The Christ of the human
heart is, for the most part, Jesus seen as the mystic
human Christ, struggling, suffering, dying, finally
triumphant, the Man in whom humanity is seen crucified
and risen, whose victory is the promise of victory
to every one who, like Him, is faithful through death
and beyond — the Christ who can never be forgotten
while He is born again and again in humanity, while
the world needs Saviours, and Saviours give themselves
for men.