In our last lesson we promised to
tell you the esoteric story of the youth of Jesus.
And there is such a story to tell, although the churches
know little or nothing about it. The churches
have nothing but the husks that have always been the
property of the masses. The real kernels of truth
have been possessed by but the few elect ones.
The legends of the mystic brotherhoods and occult orders
have preserved the story intact, and you shall now
be given the essence of the mystic legends and traditions.
At the end of our first lesson we
left Joseph, Mary and the infant Jesus in Egypt, the
land to which they had flown to escape the wrath of
the tyrant Herod. They dwelt in Egypt for a few
years, until the death of Herod. Then Joseph
retraced his steps, and returned toward his own country,
bringing with him his wife and the babe. For some
reasons unknown to those familiar with the legends
and traditions, Joseph decided not to locate in Judea,
but instead, bent his way toward the coast and returned
to Nazareth where Mary and he had originally met and
become betrothed. And, so, in Nazareth, the humble
little mountain town the boyhood days of Jesus were
spent, the grinding poverty of the family being relieved
(according to the occult legends) by the yearly presents
of gold from the hands of disguised messengers of
the Magi.
The traditions relate that Jesus began
His study of the Hebrew Law when He was but five years
of age. It is related that He displayed an unusual
ability and talent in the direction of mastering not
only the text, but also the spirit of the Hebrew Scripture,
and far outstripped His fellow students. It is
also related that He displayed an early impatience
at the dreary formalism of His Hebrew teachers, and
a disposition to go right to the heart of the text
before Him, that He might discern the spirit animating
it. So much was this the case that He frequently
brought down upon His head the censure of His instructors
who overlooked the spirit of the teachings in their
devotion to the forms and words.
Nazareth was an old-fashioned place
and it and its inhabitants were made the target for
the jests and witticisms of the people of Judea.
The word “Nazarene” was synonymous with
“lout”; “boor”; “peasant”;
etc., to the residents of the more fashionable
regions. The very remoteness of the town served
to separate it in spirit from the rest of the country.
But this very remoteness played an important part in
the early life of Jesus. Nazareth, by reason of
its peculiar location, was on the line of several
caravan routes. Travelers from many lands traveled
through the town, and rested there overnight, or sometimes
for several days. Travelers from Samaria, Jerusalem,
Damascus, Greece, Rome, Arabia, Syria, Persia, Phoenicia,
and other lands mingled with the Nazarenes. And
the traditions relate that Jesus, the child, would
steal away and talk with such of these travelers as
were versed in occult and mystic lore, and would imbibe
from their varied founts of learning, until He was
as thoroughly informed on these subjects as many a
mystic of middle age. The traditions have it that
the boy would often delight and astonish these traveling
occultists with His wonderful insight into their secret
doctrines and knowledge. And it is also told
that some of the wisest of these, seeing the nature
of the child, would overstay their allotted time of
sojourn, that they might add here and there to the
various parts of general occult lore possessed by
the child. It is also taught that the Magi informed
some of these travelers regarding the boy, that they
might impart to him some truth or teaching for which
He was ready.
And so the boy grew in knowledge and
wisdom, day by day, year by year, until, finally,
there occurred an event in His life, which has since
been the subject of greatest interest to all Christians
and students of the New Testament, but which without
the above explanation is not readily understood.
The Feast of the Passover occurred
in its allotted time of the year April when
Jesus was in his thirteenth year. This feast was
one of the most important in the Jewish calendar,
and its observance was held as a most sacred duty
by all Hebrews. It was the feast set down for
the remembrance and perpetuation of that most important
event in the history of the Jewish people when the
Angel of Death swept over all of Egypt’s land
smiting the first-born child of every house of the
natives, high and low, but sparing all the houses of
the captive Hebrews who marked their door-sills with
the sacrificial blood as a token of their faith.
This is no place to give the explanation of this apparently
miraculous event, which students now know to be due
to natural causes. We merely mention it in passing.
The Law-givers of Israel had appointed
the Feast of the Passover as a perpetual symbol of
this event so important by the nation, and every self-respecting
Jew felt obligated to take part in the observance and
sacrament. Every pious Jew made it a point to
perform a pilgrimage to Jerusalem at the time of the
Feast of the Passover, if he could in any way manage
to do so.
At the time of the Passover celebration
of which we are speaking, Jesus had just entered into
His thirteenth year, which age entitled Him, under
the ecclesiastical law, to the privilege of sitting
with the adult men of His race at the Passover supper,
and also to publicly join with the male congregation
in the thanksgiving service in the synagogues.
And so, on this year, He accompanied
His father and mother to Jerusalem and made His second
visit to the Holy City. It will be remembered
that His first visit there was made when as
an infant He was carried thither from Bethlehem in
His mother’s arms in accordance with the Jewish
law, and at which time an aged priest and an old prophetess
had publicly acknowledged the divine nature of the
child.
The father, mother and child the
divine trinity of Human relationship traveled
slowly over the highway that led from Nazareth to
Jerusalem. The father and mother were concerned
with the details of the journey, mingled with pious
thoughts concerning the sacred feast in which they
were to take part. But the boy’s mind was
far away from the things that were occupying his parent’s
thoughts. He was thinking over the deep mystic
truths which He had so readily absorbed during the
past few years, and He was looking forward in delightful
anticipation to His expected meeting with the older
mystics in the temples and public places of Jerusalem.
It must be remembered that underlying
the Jewish ecclesiastical teachings and formalism,
which were all that the mass of the people knew, there
was a great store of Jewish occultism and Mysticism
known to the few elect. The Kaballah or Jewish
occult writings were closely studied by the learned
Jews, and this work with other similar teachings were
transmitted verbally from teacher to student, and
constituted the Secret Doctrine of the Hebrew religion.
And it was toward the learned teachers of this Secret
Doctrine that Jesus directed His mind and steps, although
His parents knew it not.
Four or five days were consumed in
the journey, and at last the Holy City Jerusalem came
into full view, the wonderful Temple of Israel showing
plainly above the other buildings. The bands of
pilgrims, of which the family of Joseph formed a part,
formed into orderly array and led by flute-players
they solemnly marched into the streets of the Holy
City, singing and chanting the Sacred Songs used by
the faithful upon this solemn occasion. And the
boy walked with the rest, with bowed head, and eyes
that seemed to see things far removed from the scene
around them.
The Passover rites were carried out the
duties were performed the ceremonies were
observed. The Passover Feast extended over a full
week, of which the first two days were the most important,
and during which two days the obligatory ceremonies
were performed. Each family made the offering
of the sacrificial lamb each family baked
and ate the unleavened bread. The beautiful idea
of the Passover had degenerated into a horrible feast
of blood, for it is related that upon these occasions
over a quarter-million of poor innocent lambs were
slaughtered and offered up as a sacrifice pleasing
to Jéhovah, who was supposed to delight in this flood
of the blood of innocents. In pursuance of this
barbarous idea, the altars and courts of the Temple
of the Living God ran red with the life-blood of these
poor creatures, and the hands and garments of the
anointed priests of Jéhovah were stained like those
of butchers, that the vanity of a barbarous conception
of Deity might be fed.
All this for “the Glory of God!”
Think of it! And think of the feeling that must
have been aroused in the mystic mind of Jesus at this
horrible sight. How His soul must have been outraged
at this prostitution of the sacred rite! And
what would have been His thoughts had He known that
centuries after, a great religion would stand, bearing
His name, the followers of which would be carried away
with this same false idea of sacrificial blood, which
would be voiced in hymns about “A fountain filled
with blood, flowing from Immanuel’s veins,”
and about “sinners plunged beneath that bloody
flood losing all their guilty stains?” Alas,
for the prostitution of sacred truths and teachings.
No wonder that a people so saturated with the abominable
ideas of a Deity delighting in this flow of blood should
have afterward put to death the greatest man of their
race a Being who came to bring them the
highest mystic and occult truths. And their prototypes
have survived through the centuries, even unto today,
insisting upon this idea of blood sacrifice and death
atonement, unworthy of any people except the worshipers
of some heathen devil-god in the remote sections of
darkest Africa.
Disgusted and outraged by this barbarous
sight, Jesus, the boy, stole away from the side of
His parents, and sought the remote chambers and corridors
of the Temple where were to be found the great teachers
of the Law and of the Kaballah, surrounded by their
students. Here the boy sat and listened to the
teachings and disputations of the teachers and exponents
of the doctrines. From one group to another He
wandered, and listened, and pondered, and thought.
He compared the teachings, and submitted the various
ideas to the touchstone of the truth as He found it
within His own mind. The hours rapidly passed
by unnoticed by the boy, who found Himself amidst
such congenial environments for the first time.
The talks with the travelers of the caravans paled
into insignificance when compared with these of the
great occult teachers of Israel. For be it remembered
that it was the custom of the great teachers of that
day to so instruct those who were attracted to their
company. And Jerusalem being the centre of the
culture and learning of Israel, the great teachers
dwelt there. And so it will be seen that Jesus
now found Himself at the very fountain-head of the
Hebrew Secret Doctrines, and in the actual presence
of the great teachers.
On the third day, there began a breaking-up
of the vast gathering of the two million of people
who had made the pilgrimage to the Holy City.
Those poorer in purse were the first to leave, after
the obligatory rites of the first two days had been
performed. And Joseph and Mary were among those
preparing to retrace their steps to their distant
homes. Their friends and neighbors gathered together,
and the preparations for the return were completed.
But at the last moment, the parents discovered that
the boy, Jesus, was missing. They were alarmed,
but friends told them that their boy had been seen
in the company of kinsmen and neighbors traveling
along the same road, who had preceded them but a few
hours. Somewhat reassured, the parents left with
their company, hoping that they would overtake the
boy before nightfall. But when they reached the
first station on the caravan route a village
called Beroth and the night descended upon
them, and the boy failed to appear among the neighbors
and kinsmen, the parents were sorely distressed.
They slept but little that night, and when the first
rays of dawn appeared, they parted from the company,
and retraced their way back to Jerusalem, in search
of the boy apparently lost in the great capital amid
the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims.
Every mother and father will enter
into the feelings of Joseph and Mary in their frantic
return to the city, and in their subsequent search
for the lost child. They inquired here and there
for the boy, but not a trace of him was found.
And night came without a ray of hope. And the
next day was likewise barren of results. And the
next day after. For three days the devoted parents
searched high and low for their beloved child but
no word of encouragement came to them. The boy
had seemingly dropped out of sight in the vast crowds
and winding streets. The parents reproached themselves
for their lack of care and caution. None but
a parent can imagine their anguish and terror.
They visited the many courts of the
Temple many times, but no sight or word of the boy
rewarded their search. The bloody altars, the
showy costumes of the priests; the chants; the readings;
seemed like mockery to them. They wished themselves
back in their humble village, with their boy by their
side. They prayed and besought Jéhovah to grant
their hopes and desire, but no answer came.
Then, on the last day, a strange event
occurred. The weary and heart broken parents
wandered once more into the Temple this
time visiting one of the less frequented courts.
They saw a crowd gathered something of
importance was occurring. Almost instinctively
they drew near to the crowd. And then amidst
the unusual silence of the people they heard a boyish
voice raised to a pitch adapted to a large circle of
hearers, and speaking in the tones of authority.
It was the voice of the boy, Jesus!
With eager feet the couple pushed
forward, unto the very inner row of the circle.
And there, wonder of wonders, they saw their child
in the centre of the most celebrated teachers and
doctors of the Law in all Israel. With a rapt
expression in his eyes, as if He were gazing upon
things not of this world, the boy Jesus was standing
in a position and attitude of authority, and around
him were grouped the greatest minds of the day and
land, in respectful attention, while at a further
distance stood the great circle of the common people.
When one remembers the Jewish racial
trait of reverence for age, and the consequent submission
of Youth, one will better understand the unusual spectacle
that burst upon the gaze of Joseph and Mary. A
mere boy a child daring to even
speak boldly in the presence of the aged teachers
was unheard of, and the thought of such a one actually
presuming to dispute, argue and teach, in such an assembly,
was like unto a miracle. And such it was!
The boy spoke with the air and in
the tones of a Master. He met the most subtle
arguments and objections of the Elders with the power
of the keenest intellect and spiritual insight.
He brushed aside the sophistries with a contemptuous
phrase, and brought back the argument to the vital
point.
The crowd gathered in greater volume,
the gray heads and beards grew more and more respectful.
It was evident to all that a Master had arisen in
Israel in the form of a boy of thirteen. The MASTER
was apparent in tone, gesture, and thought. The
Mystic had found his first audience, and his congregation
was composed of the leading thinkers and teachers
of the land. The insight of the Magi was verified!
Then in a momentary pause in the argument,
the stifled cry of a woman was heard the
voice of the Mother. The crowd turned impatient,
reproachful glances upon Mary, who had been unable
to restrain her emotion. But the boy, looking
sadly but affectionately at his lost parents, gave
her a reassuring glance, which at the same time bade
her remain still until he had finished his discourse.
And the parents obeyed the newly awakened will of
their child.
The teaching ended, the boy stepped
from his position with the air of one of the Elders,
and rejoined his parents, who passed as rapidly as
possible from the wondering crowd. Then his mother
reproached him, telling him of their distress and
wearisome search. The boy listened calmly and
patiently until she had finished. Then he asked,
with his newly acquired air of authority, “Why
sought ye me?” And when they answered him in
the customary manner of parents, the boy took on still
a greater air of authority, and in tones that though
kindly, were full of power, he replied, “Knew
ye not, that I must be in my Father’s House?
I must be about the things of my Father.”
And the parents, feeling themselves in the presence
of the Mystery that had ever been about the child,
followed Him silently from the Temple grounds.
And here closes the New Testament
story of the boy Jesus at the age of thirteen, which
story is not resumed until His appearance at the place
of the preaching of John the Baptist, over seventeen
years later, when the boy had reached the age
of a man of thirty years. When and how did he
spend those seventeen years? The New Testament
is totally silent on this score. Can anyone who
has read the above imagine that Jesus spent these
years as a growing youth and young man, working at
His father’s carpenter bench in the village of
Nazareth? Would not the Master, having found
his strength and power, have insisted upon developing
the same? Could the Divine Genius once self-recognized
be content to be obscured amid material pursuits?
The New Testament is silent, but the Occult Traditions
and Mystic Legends tell us the story of the missing
seventeen years, and these we shall now give to you.
The legends and traditions of the
mystic and occult organizations and brotherhoods tell
us that after the occurrence of Jesus and the Elders
in the Temple, and his recovery by his parents, the
latter were approached by members of the secret organization
to which the Magi belonged, who pointed out to the
parents the injustice of the plan of keeping the lad
at the carpenter’s bench when He had shown evidences
of such a marvelous spiritual development and such
a wonderful intellectual grasp of weighty subjects.
It is told that after a long and serious consideration
of the matter the parents finally consented to the
plan advanced by the Magi, and allowed them to take
the lad with them into their own land and retreats
that He might there receive the instructions for which
His soul craved, and for which His mind was fitted.
It is true that the New Testament
does not corroborate these occult legends, but it
is likewise true that it says nothing to the contrary.
It is silent regarding this important period of between
seventeen and eighteen years. It is to be remembered
that when He appeared upon the scene of John’s
ministration, the latter did not recognize Him, whereas
had Jesus remained about His home, John, his cousin,
would have been acquainted with his features and personal
appearance.
The occult teachings inform us that
the seventeen or eighteen years of Jesus’ life
regarding which the Gospels are silent, were filled
with travels in far and distant lands, where the youth
and young man was instructed in the occult lore and
wisdom of the different schools. It is taught
that He was taken into India, and Egypt, and Persia,
and other far regions, living for several years at
each important center, and being initiated into the
various brotherhoods, orders, and bodies having their
headquarters there. Some of the Egyptians’
orders have traditions of a young Master who sojourned
among them, and such is likewise the case in Persia
and in India. Even among the lamasaries hidden
in Thibet and in the Himalayan Mountains are to be
found legends and stories regarding the marvelous
young Master who once visited there and absorbed their
wisdom and secret knowledge.
More than this, there are traditions
among the Brahmáns, Buddhists and Zoroastrians,
telling of a strange young teacher who appeared among
them, who taught marvelous truths and who aroused great
opposition among the priests of the various religions
of India and Persia, owing to his preaching against
priestcraft and formalism, and also by his bitter
opposition to all forms of caste distinctions and restrictions.
And this, too, is in accord with the occult legends
which teach that from about the age of twenty-one
until the age of nearly thirty years Jesus pursued
a ministry among the people of India and Persia and
neighboring countries, returning at last to his native
land where He conducted a ministry extending over
the last three years of His life.
The occult legends inform us that
He aroused great interest among the people of each
land visited by Him, and that He also aroused the most
bitter opposition among the priests, for He always
opposed formalism and priestcraft, and sought to lead
the people back to the Spirit of the Truth, and away
from the ceremonies and forms which have always served
to dim and becloud the Light of the Spirit. He
taught always the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood
of Man. He sought to bring the great Occult Truths
down to the comprehension of the masses of people
who had lost the Spirit of the Truth in their observance
of outward forms and pretentious ceremonies.
It is related that in India He brought
down upon His head the wrath of the Brahmin upholders
of the caste distinctions, that curse of India.
He dwelt in the huts of the Sudras, the lowest of all
of the Hindu castes, and was therefore regarded as
a pariah by the higher classes. Everywhere He
was regarded as a firebrand and a disturber of established
social order by the priests and high-caste people.
He was an agitator, a rebel, a religious renegade,
a socialist, a dangerous man, an “undesirable
citizen,” to those in authority in those lands.
But the seeds of His wisdom were sown
right and left, and in the Hindu religions of today,
and in the teachings of other Oriental countries,
may be found traces of Truth, the resemblance of which
to the recorded teachings of Jesus, show that they
came from the same source, and have sorely disturbed
the Christian missionaries that have since visited
these lands.
And so, slowly and patiently, Jesus
wended his way homeward toward Israel, where He was
to complete His ministry by three years’ work
among His own race, and where He was to again raise
up against Himself the opposition of the priests and
the upper classes which would finally result in His
death. He was a rebel against the established
order of things, and He met the fate reserved for those
who live ahead of their time.
And, as from the first days of His
ministry to His last, so it is today, the real teachings
of the Man of Sorrows reach more readily the heart
of the plain people, while they are reviled and combatted
by those in ecclesiastical and temporal authority,
even though these people claim allegiance to Him and
wear His livery. He was ever the friend of the
poor and oppressed, and hated by those in authority.
And so, you see the Occult teachings
show Jesus to have been a world-wide teacher, instead
of a mere Jewish prophet. The world was his audience,
and all races His hearers.
He planted His seeds of Truth in the
bosom of many religions instead of but one, and these
seeds are beginning to bear their best fruit even
now at this late day, when the truth of the Fatherhood
of God and the Brotherhood of Man is beginning to
be felt by all nations alike, and is growing strong
enough to break down the old which have divided brother
from brother, and creed from creed. Christianity true
Christianity is not a mere creed, but a
great human and divine Truth that will rise above
all petty distinctions of race and creed and will
at last shine on all men alike, gathering them into
one fold of Universal Brotherhood.
May the Great Day be hastened!
And so we leave Jesus, wending his
way slowly homeward toward Judea, the land of His
father and the place of His birth. Dropping a
word here planting a seed there onward
He pursued His way. Visiting this mystic brotherhood,
and resting a while in another occult retreat, He
slowly retraced the journey of His youth. But
while His outward journey was that of a student traveling
forth to complete His education, He returned as a
Master and Teacher, bearing and sowing the seeds of
a great Truth, which was to grow and bring forth great
fruit, and which, in time, would spread over all the
world in its primitive purity, notwithstanding its
betrayal and corruption at the hands of those in whose
keeping He left it when he passed away from the scene
of His labors.
Jesus came as a World Prophet, not
as a mere Jewish holy-man, and still less as a Hebrew
Messiah destined to sit upon the throne of His father
David. And He left His mark upon all of the great
peoples of earth by His journey among them. Throughout
Persia are found many traditions of Issa, the young
Master who appeared in that land centuries ago, and
who taught the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood
of Man. Among the Hindus are found strange traditions
of Jesoph or Josa, a young ascetic, who passed
through the Hind long since, denouncing the established
laws of caste, and consorting with the common people,
who, as in Israel, “heard him gladly.”
Even in China are found similar tales of the young
religious firebrand, preaching ever the Brotherhood
of Man ever known as the Friend of the
Poor. On and on He went, sowing the seeds of human
freedom and the casting off of the yoke of ecclesiastical
tyranny and formalism, which seeds are springing unto
growth even at this late day. Yea, the Spirit
of His real teachings are even now bearing fruit in
the hearts of men, and though nearly two thousand
years have passed by the “soul” of His
social teachings still “goes marching on”
round and round the world.