Resting for a short time before His
formal entry into Jerusalem, the Master sought the
seclusion of the sparsely settled districts near the
wilderness. In and around the village of Ephraim,
in Perea, in parts of Galilee, He wandered with the
Twelve. But even there He continued His work
of healing and teaching.
But even this temporary respite from
the inevitable lasted but a short time. Jesus
determined to march direct to the seat of the ecclesiastical
and temporal authority which was arrayed against Him.
And so, just before the coming of the Passover time,
He gathered together the Twelve and set out on the
final stage of the journey. The pilgrims journeying
to the capital were burning with curiosity and excitement
concerning this journey of the Master to the home of
His foes. Rumors were circulated that He intended
to gather His forces together and sweep the enemy
from its seats of power. It was known that the
Sanhedrin intended to attempt to punish Him, and the
people asked why should He move on to face His foes
unless He contemplated a fight to the finish?
This belief in His determination caused
a revulsion of feeling of the people in His favor,
and many who had deserted Him now again gathered around
Him. They dreamt again of victory, and scented
again an unfailing supply of loaves and fishes.
They crowded around Him wishing to be among the victorious
host. But He encouraged them not neither
spoke He a word to them. He knew them for the
time-servers that they were.
The crowds of Jerusalem hearing of
His approach, and moved by curiosity to witness His
triumphant entry into the City, flocked around the
suburbs through which He would approach. At last
the cry went up, “Here He comes!” and
to their amazement and disgust the crowd saw Him riding
quietly info the City mounted on an ass, without display,
pretense or pose. The crowd scattered, sneering
and reviling Him. But the pilgrims were becoming
more and more enthusiastic, and they strewed His way
with palms, shouting, “Blessed be our Messiah!
The King of Israel approacheth.”
The Master proceeded directly to the
Temple and performed the customary rites. So
amazed were the authorities by His fearless demeanor,
that they deferred laying violent hands upon Him.
They feared a trap, and moved cautiously. They
even allowed Him to retire to Bethany and spend the
night. The next morning He returned to the city
and dwelt among His friends there. He attended
the Temple regularly, and pursued His work of teaching
and healing in its very shadows.
Meanwhile the clouds of the persecuting
forces gathered closely around His head. One
of the Twelve, Judas Iscariot, who was sorely disappointed
at the Master having refused to take advantage of the
support of the crowd to assist His claim as the Messiah
and King of the Jews, and also fearing that he would
become involved in His inevitable downfall, began
a series of bargainings and dickerings with the authorities,
which had for their object the betrayal of the Master
into the hands of the authorities, the reward to be
immunity from persecution for himself and a few pieces
of silver for his pocket in addition.
And so the time passed on, the nights
being spent at Bethany and the days at the Temple
in the capital. Finally the priests made an important
move. They confronted Him in their official capacity
and demanded that He prove His ordination as a Jewish
Rabbi and consequent right to preach to the orthodox
members of the church. Jesus answered them by
asking questions that they feared to answer. Then
they began to question Him, hoping to involve Him
in ecclesiastical hérésies which would give them
their excuse to arrest Him. But He evaded them
skilfully. They sought also to compel Him to state
opinions contrary to the Roman authority, but He likewise
escaped this net.
Finally, however, they drew from Him
a savage attack upon authority, and He cried out in
indignation:
“Woe unto you, ye generation
of vipers! Ye serpents! Ye hypocrites!
Ye oppressors of the poor! Ye professed shepherds,
who are but as wolves in disguise, seeking but to
devour the sheep whom ye have in charge!
Woe unto you, ye Scribes, Hypocrites, Pharisees!”
Then He left the Temple and returned
to Bethany to spend the night, after foretelling the
destruction of the Temple, when there should not be
left one of its stones upon another.
That night he had a heart-to-heart
talk with the Twelve. He told them that the end
was in sight that He was to die before many
hours had passed that they, the Twelve,
were to become wanderers on the face of the earth hunted
and persecuted in His name and for His sake. A
terrible revelation to some among them who had dreamt
of earthly grandeur and high positions for themselves!
And then Judas felt that the time to act had come,
and he stole away to meet the High-priest and to close
the frightful bargain with him which was to make his
name the synonym for treachery throughout the ages.
The next day, Wednesday, He rested
in Bethany the whole twenty-four hours, evidently
gathering together his reserve forces to meet the
ordeal which He now knew was before Him. He kept
apart from even His disciples and spent the time in
meditation. And likewise was passed the early
part of the following day, Thursday. But when
the even time had come, He sent for the Twelve and
gathered them around Him for the Paschal Supper, one
of the rites of the Passover time.
Even this last solemn occasion was
marred by a petty squabble among the disciples regarding
the order of precedence to be observed in their seats
at the table. Judas succeeded in gaining the seat
of honor next to the Master. Jesus startled the
company by insisting upon washing the feet of the
Twelve, an act which placed them on a pedestal above
Him. This occult ceremony, which was not comprehended
by the Twelve, apparently was one which the Hierophants
of the Occult Brotherhoods performed for their associates
when the latter had been chosen to carry out some
important office or mission, or when a successor was
about to take the place of one of them. And Jesus
evidently so intended it. Then He bade them wash
one another’s feet, in token of the recognition
of each of the high mission of the others.
Then Jesus, overcome by the knowledge
of the morrow, burst out in anguished tones, saying:
“And even one of you, my chosen ones, shall
betray me!” And several asked Him in turn, in
a tone of reproach, “Is it I?” And Jesus
shook His head at each question. But Judas asked
not, but overcome with confusion he reached over and
took a portion of bread from the plate before the
Master. Then Jesus took a bit of bread and, moistening
it from His plate, handed it to Judas, saying to him
firmly, “Judas, do thy work without loss of time.”
And Judas, abashed, slunk away from the table.
Then began that remarkable conversation
of the Last Supper, as recorded in the Gospels.
Then also was performed that first celebration of
the Holy Communion, the Mystic significance of which
shall be explained in a later lesson. Then Jesus
chanted the Passover hymn.
Then shortly after, the company left
the room and walked into the streets, and over the
meadows near by. Then under the trees of the
Garden of Gethsemane, apart from His disciples, now
reduced to Eleven, He gave Himself up to prayer and
meditation. He called aloud to The Father to
give Him strength for the final ordeal. Struggling
with His doubts and fears and misgivings conquering
His physical inclination and impulses He
gave utterance to that supreme cry: “O Father,
Thy will, not mine, be done!” and in so saying
He cast behind Him forever His right of choice to
stay the awful course of events which was pressing
upon Him. Resigning His mighty occult power of
defense, He laid Himself upon the altar of sacrifice
even as the Paschal Lamb.
Leaving behind Him the Garden in which
He had just performed this greatest miracle of all the
miracle of Renunciation He stepped out
among His disciples, saying, “The hour has come the
betrayer is here to do his work.”
Then were heard sounds of clanking
arms, and martial tread, and in a moment the military
guard appeared on the scene, accompanied by a delegation
of ecclesiastics, and with them, walking in advance,
was Judas Iscariot. Judas, walking as one in
a trance, approached the Master and, saluting Him
with a kiss, cried, “Hail, Master,” which
was the signal to the guard, arranged between Judas
and the High Priest. Then cried Jesus, “Ah,
with a kiss thou, Judas, betrayeth the Son
of Man with a kiss! Oh!” And in that moment
it seemed that the Master’s grief had reached
its utmost limit. Then the guard closed around
Him and carried Him away.
But He resisted them not. As
they approached Him He called out, “Whom seek
ye?” And the leader answered, “We seek
him whom men call Jesus of Nazareth.” Then
answered the Master, “I am He whom thou seeketh!”
But the disciples resisted the arrest, and Peter cut
off the ear of one of the party, a servant of the
High-priest. But Jesus bade His followers desist,
and, approaching the wounded man, placed his severed
ear in place and healed it instantly. Then He
rebuked His disciples, telling them that, had He so
desired, the whole of the legions of heaven would
have come to His assistance. Then He bade the
leader conduct Him from the place. But alas!
as He left, He turned to bid farewell to His disciples,
and lo! to a man they had fled and deserted Him, leaving
Him alone in His hour of trial yea! as every
humble soul must be alone in its moments of supreme
struggle alone with its Creator.
Then down toward the city they led
Him the Master of All Power, an humble
captive, non-resistant and awaiting the course of The
Will. They took Him to the palace of the Jewish
High-priest, where the Sanhedrin was assembled in
secret session awaiting His coming. And there
He stood erect before these ecclesiastical tyrants
to be judged bound with the cord as a common
criminal. He, whose single effort of His will
would have shattered the whole palace to pieces and
have destroyed every human being within its walls!
And this was but the beginning.
During the next eight hours He was subjected to six
separate trials, if indeed such mock proceedings might
be so designated. Subjected to blows, and all
manner of low insults, the Master remained a Master.
Perjured witnesses testified, and all manner of crimes
and hérésies were charged against Him. Then
Caiaphas asked Him the all-important question, “Art
thou the Christ?” and Jesus broke His silence
to answer positively, “I am!” Then the
High-priest cried out vehemently, rending His sacred
robes in his pious indignation, “He has blasphemed!”
From that moment there was no possible
chance of escape for the Master. He had virtually
condemned Himself by His own words. There was
no retreat or reprieve. He was roughly pushed
from the hall and like a common criminal was turned
over to the taunts and revilings of the mob, which
availed itself of its privileges to the full in this
case. Insults, curses, revilings, taunts, and
even blows, came fast and furiously upon Him.
But He stood it all without a murmur. Already
His thoughts had left earthly things behind, and dwelt
on planes of being far above the wildest dreams of
men. With His mind firmly fixed on the Real,
the Unreal vanished from His consciousness.
In the early part of the day following
the night of His arrest, Jesus was taken before Pontius
Pilate, the Roman official, for His trial by the civil
authorities. Pilate, in his heart, was not disposed
to condemn Jesus, for he believed that the whole trouble
consisted in theological and ecclesiastical differences
with which the civil law should not concern itself.
His wife had warned him against becoming involved
in the dispute, for she had a secret sympathy for the
Master, for some reason. But he found arrayed
against him the solid influence of the Jewish priesthood,
whose power must not be opposed lightly, according
to the policy of Rome. Then the priests had made
out a civil case against Jesus, claiming that He had
sought to incite a rebellion and proclaim Himself
King of the Jews; that He had created public disorder;
that He had urged the people to refuse to pay taxes
to Rome. The case against Him was weak, and Pilate
was at a loss what to do. Then some one of the
priests suggested that as Jesus was a Galilean, He
be turned over for trial to Herod, in whose territory
the principal crimes were committed, and Pilate gladly
availed himself of this technical excuse to rid himself
of responsibility in the matter. And so the case
was transferred to Herod, who happened to be in Jerusalem
at that time on a visit. To Herod’s palace
the captive was taken, and after suffering indignities
and humiliation at the hand of the tyrant, He was
remanded back to Pilate for trial, under Herod’s
orders.
Back to Pilate’s court, followed
by the crowd, went Jesus. Pilate was greatly
annoyed that Herod should have shifted the responsibility
once more upon his (Pilate’s) court. Then
he bethought himself of an expedient. He took
advantage of the Jewish custom, observed by the Roman
rulers, which led to the pardoning of a notorious criminal
on the occasion of the Passover. And so he announced
that he would pardon Jesus according to custom.
But from the Jewish authorities came back the answer
that they would not accept Jesus as the subject of
the pardon, but demanded that Barabbas, a celebrated
criminal, be pardoned instead of the Nazarene.
Pilate found himself unable to escape the designs
of the Jewish priesthood, and so, yielding in disgust,
he pardoned Barabbas, and condemned Jesus to death.
The cries of the mob, incited by the priests, sounded
around the court. “Crucify him! Crucify
him!” Pilate appeared before the priests and
the populace, and, washing his hands in a basin, according
to the Oriental custom, he cried to the Jews, “I
wash my hands of this man’s blood upon
you be it!” And the crowd responded with a great
shout, “Upon us and our children be his blood!”
Jesus, in the meantime, had been cruelly
scourged by the barbarous instruments of torture of
the time. His body was lacerated and bleeding,
and He was faint from the torture and loss of blood.
Upon His head had been thrust, in ghastly mockery,
a crown of thorns which pressed deep into His flesh.
He was refused the usual respite of several days before
sentence and execution He was to die that
very day.
His cross was tied to His back and
He was compelled to carry it, fainting though He was
from fatigue and torture. He staggered along
and fell, unable to bear His heavy burden. Finally
Golgotha, the place of the crucifixion, was reached,
and the Man of Sorrows was nailed to the cross and
raised aloft to die a lingering and painful death.
On either side was a criminal two thieves His
companions in suffering.
He refused to partake of the drug
which was granted to criminals to relieve their intense
suffering. He preferred to die in full possession
of His faculties. Above His head was a tablet
bearing the inscription, “The King of the Jews,”
which had been placed there by Pilate in a spirit
of ironical mockery of the Jews who had forced him
to place this man on the cross.
As the cross was raised into position
the Master cried aloud, “O Father, forgive them they
know not what they do.”
Taunted by the crowds, He hung and
suffered the terrible agonies of the cross. Even
one of the crucified criminals reviled Him, asking
Him why He did not save Himself and them? The
crowd asked Him why He who saved others could not
save Himself? But He, who could have brought
forces to bear which would have wrought the miracle
they demanded, answered not, but awaited the end.
Then set in the delirium of death
in which He cried aloud to the Father, asking if He
had been forsaken in His misery. But the end was
near.
There arose a strange storm darkness
fell over the place weird electrical disturbances
manifested themselves. The winds abated and a
strange quiet fell over all the scene, which was lighted
by a ghastly glow. And then came the earthquake,
with strange groanings and moanings of the earth;
with frightful stenches of sulphur and gas. And
the very foundations of Jerusalem quaked and shivered.
The rocks before the tombs flew off, and the dead
bodies were exposed to view. In the Temple, the
veil before the Holy of Holies was rent in twain.
The cries of the people as they rushed
to and fro in mortal terror took the attention of
all from the cross. Then the Roman officer in
charge of the execution, glancing upward, saw that
all was over, and, falling before the cross, he cried
out, “Verily, this man was a god!”
Jesus the Master had passed out from
the body which had served as His tenement for thirty-three
years. His body was borne away for burial, in
a secret place. Embalmed by loving friends, it
was carried to a place of last earthly rest.
And now we come to a portion of the
narrative in which the occult traditions and teachings
diverge from the account stated in the Gospels.
We should have said apparently diverge, for
the two accounts vary only because of the varying
points of view and different degrees of understanding
of the teachers.
We allude to the events of the Resurrection.
It must be remembered that Jesus had
informed His disciples that in three days He would
“rise from the dead” and appear once more
among them. To the ordinary understanding these
events seem to indicate that the Master would once
more occupy His physical body, and that His reappearance
was to be so understood. And the Gospel narrative
certainly seems to verify this idea, and was undoubtedly
so stated that it might be more readily understood
by the popular mind.
But the occult traditions hold otherwise.
They hold that Jesus really appeared to His disciples
three days after His death, and abode with them for
a time teaching and instructing them in the deeper
mysteries and secret doctrines. But the mystics
have always held and taught that His reappearance
was in the Astral Body, and not in the discarded
physical form.
To the popular mind the physical body
was almost everything, as we have shown in one of
the earlier lessons of this series. So much was
this so that the mass of the people expected that all
mankind would arise from the dead at the Last Day
clad in their former physical forms. And so,
any other teaching would have been unintelligible to
them.
But to the occultists and mystics
who understood the truth about the more ethereal vehicles
of the soul, such an idea appeared crude and unscientific,
and they readily grasped the Inner Teachings regarding
the Resurrection, and understood the reason why Jesus
would use the Astral Body as the vehicle of His reappearance.
The Gospel narrative informs us that
a guard was placed around the tomb to prevent the
body being stolen and a consequent assertion of the
Resurrection which the priests well knew to be expected.
It further states that the tomb was sealed and guarded
by a squad of Roman soldiers, but that notwithstanding
these precautions the body of the Master actually
came to life and emerged from the tomb, and that His
followers were disturbed by the evidences that His
body had been stolen.
The occult traditions, however, state
that the close friends of Jesus, aided by a prominent
Jew who was a secret believer, obtained from the willing
Pilate a secret order which enabled them to deposit
the body in a safe and secret resting place where
it gradually resolved itself into the dust to which
all that is mortal must return. These men knew
that the Resurrection of the Master had naught to do
with mortal fleshly form or body. They knew that
the immaterial soul of the Master still lived and
would reappear to them clad in the more ethereal body
made manifest to their mortal senses. Every occultist
will understand this without further comment.
To others we advise that they read the occult teachings
concerning the Astral Body and its characteristics.
This is no place in which to again describe at length
the phenomena of the Astral Body of Man.
The first to see the Master in His
Astral Form was Mary of Magdala, a woman admirer and
follower of her Lord. She was weeping beside the
empty tomb, when looking up she saw a form approaching.
The Astral Form was indistinct and unfamiliar, and
at first she did not recognize it. Then a voice
called her name, and looking up she saw the form growing
more distinct and familiar, and she recognized the
features of her Master.
More than this, the occult legends
assert the truth of some of the traditions of the
early Christian Church, namely, that in the three
days succeeding the scene of Calvary there appeared
in and around Jerusalem the disembodied forms of many
persons who had died a short time previously.
It is said that the Astral Bodies of many dead Jews
revisited the scenes of their former life, and were
witnessed by friends and relatives.
Then Jesus appeared in His Astral
Body to the disciples. The traditions have it
that two of the eleven met Him on the afternoon of
the day when He first appeared to Mary Easter
Sunday. Strange to say, they did not at first
recognize Him, although they walked the road with
Him and afterward ate at the same table. This
failure to recognize the Master is wholly beyond ordinary
explanation and the churches make no real attempt
to make it understandable. But the occult traditions
say that Jesus had not wholly materialized His Astral
Body at first, for reason of prudence, and that consequently
His features were not distinctly and clearly marked;
then at the meal He caused His features to be fully
materialized so that the disciples might readily recognize
Him. All occultists who have witnessed the materialization
of an Astral Body will readily understand this statement.
The orthodox theory of Jesus having reappeared in His
physical body wholly fails to explain this nonrecognition
by His disciples, who had been His everyday companions
before His death. The slightest consideration
should show which statement is nearer the bounds of
reasonable probability.
Jesus remained visible to the chosen
few for forty days. The testimony of several
hundred people attested the fact. There are a
number of mystic legends about some of His appearances,
which are not mentioned in the Gospel narratives.
One of these states that He appeared before Pontius
Pilate and forgave him for the part he had played in
the tragedy. Another that Herod witnessed His
form in his bedchamber. Another that He confronted
the High-priests in the Temple and brought them to
their knees in terror. Another that He came one
night to the Eleven, who sat behind bolted doors in
hiding, and saying to them, “Peace be unto you,
my beloved,” vanished from sight.
The Gospels record another appearance
before the Eleven, upon which occasion Thomas, the
doubter, satisfied himself of the identity of the
Astral Body by placing his fingers in the wounds, which,
of course, were reproduced in the Astral Form according
to the well known laws regarding the same.
This coming and going of Jesus these
sudden appearances and disappearances these
manifestations of His form only to those whom He wished
to see Him, and His concealment from those whom He
desired to remain in ignorance of His return, all
show conclusively to every occultist the nature of
the vehicle which He used for manifestation upon His
return. It would seem incredible that there could
be any general doubt on the subject were the public
informed on the laws concerning the Astral World phenomena.
The Gospel narrative shows that the
disciples recognized that Jesus was not a “spirit”
in the sense of being an airy, unsubstantial form.
They felt His body, and saw Him eat but
what of that? The laws of materialization of
Astral forms make it possible, under certain conditions,
that the Astral Form become so thoroughly materialized
that it may not only be seen but actually felt.
Even the records of the English Society for Psychical
Research prove this fact, leaving out of account the
phenomena with which all advanced occultists are familiar.
Then, one day He appeared to the disciples,
and they accompanied Him to the hills, Jesus talking
to them regarding their future work on earth.
He then bade them farewell, and began to fade away
from their sight. The common account pictures
Him as ascending into the air until out of sight,
but the mystic account informs us that His astral form
began to slowly dematerialize and He gradually faded
away from the sight of His beloved followers, who
stood gazing in wistful longing at His form which,
each moment, grew more and more ethereal in structure,
until finally the dematerialization was complete and
His soul had cast off all material form, shape and
substance, and so passed on to the higher planes of
being.
In view of this explanation, does
not the commonly accepted version seem childish and
crude? Can any one at all familiar with the laws
and phenomena of the land Behind the Veil, suppose
that a physical body could or would pass on
to the planes in which the ordinary forms of matter
do not exist? Such ideas are fit only for minds
which find it necessary to think of the “resurrection
of the body” of all departed souls, in order
to conceive of Immortality. To the occultist,
the physical body is merely a temporary vehicle for
the soul which the latter discards at the proper time.
It has nothing to do with the real being of the soul.
It is merely the shell which is discarded by the soul,
as the chrysalis shell is discarded by the butterfly
when it spreads its wings for its aerial flight into
a new world.
All these ideas about the immortality
of the mortal body are the product of materialistic
minds unused to thinking of the higher planes of life,
and unable to grasp even the mental concept regarding
the same. Of the earth, earthly, are these conceptions
and ideas. And the sooner that Christianity sheds
them as discarded shells the sooner will the church
experience that revival of true spirituality that
devout souls see the need of, and for which they are
so earnestly praying.
The churches are so wedded to materialistic
thought that a preacher does not even hint at the
existence of phases of life above the physical lest
he be termed “a spiritualist” or accused
of being “spooky.” In the name of
Truth, is the teaching, that man is a spiritual
being, inconsistent with the teachings of Christ
and the records of the Scripture? Must one forego
all such beliefs, in favor of a heathenish creed of
“physical body” resurrection of the dead an
immortality in the worn-out mortal body long since
discarded? Which is the true spiritual teaching?
Can there be any doubt regarding the same in a mind
willing to think for itself? It seems sad that
the orthodox churches do not see this, and cease forcing
out of their congregations all thinkers who dare assert
the existence of a soul independent of the physical
body.
What is the use of a soul, if the
physical bodies of the dead are to be resurrected
in order that their owners may enjoy immortality?
And where are the souls of these dead bodies now residing
and abiding pending the coming of the Last Day?
Are the souls of the dead with their bodies?
If not, then they must be living a life independent
of the physical body and if such be the
case, why should they afterward be required to take
on their worn-out physical bodies which they have
managed so well without during their disembodied life?
What becomes of those who had diseased, deformed or
frail bodies during their mortal life will
they be compelled to inhabit these bodies through all
eternity? Will the owners of aged, worn out bodies
be compelled to re-assume them at the Last Day?
If not, why the necessity of a physical body at all,
in the future life? Do the angels have physical
bodies? If not, why should souls require them
on higher planes? Think over these questions
and then realize how materialistic is the current
Christian conception, when compared with that of Mystic
Christianity, which teaches spiritual evolution from
lower to higher planes of being, and on to planes
of being beyond even the faintest conception of men
of the present day.
The occult traditions teach that during
the forty days of Jesus’ appearance in the Astral
Body, He imparted many of the Higher Truths to His
disciples. They state that He even took some of
them out of their bodies and showed them the higher
Astral Planes of Being. He also informed them
regarding the real nature of His mission which He
now clearly saw with His spiritual mind, the cloud
of His mortal mind being now removed.
He told them that the real work of
His followers was the sowing of the seed of the Truth,
without regard to immediate results. He told them
that the real fruition would not come for many centuries yea,
not until the passing of over two thousand years or
more. He told them that the passage of the centuries
would be like the preparing of the soil for the great
work of the Truth, and that afar in the distance would
be the real fruit season.
He taught them regarding the Second
Coming of Christ, when the real Truth of His teachings
should become apparent to mankind and the true Life
of the Spirit should be lived by the race. He
taught them that their work was to keep alight the
Flame of the Spirit and to pass it on to worthy followers.
This and many other things He told
them, before He passed on.
And the mystics teach that He still
lives in the world, diffused among all the living
souls on earth, striving ever to lead them to a recognition
of the Real Self the Spirit Within.
He is with us ever as an Abiding Spirit, a Comforter,
a Helper, an Elder Brother.
He is not gone from us! He is
here with us now and forever, in Actual Spirit Communion!
The Lord hath indeed Risen Risen
from Mortal Form to Immortal Spiritual Existence!