The first and main phase of the Inner
Teachings of Mystic Christianity is that connected
with the Mystery of the Life of Jesus. The outer
teachings give but an imperfect view of the real life
and nature of the Master, and theologians have built
up an edifice of dogmatic theory around the same.
The Mystery of the Life of Jesus forms the subject
of some important Inner Teachings of the Mystic Fraternities
and Occult Brotherhoods, and is considered by them
to be the foundation of the other teachings.
And so we shall consider this phase of the subject
at this point.
In the first place we must remember
that the soul of Jesus was different from the souls
of other men. His was a “virgin birth” not
in the commonly accepted sense of the term, but in
the occult sense as explained in the second lesson
of this series. His soul was fresh from the hand
of the Creator His spirit had not been compelled
to work through repeated incarnations, pressing forward
for expression through humble and ignoble forms.
It was free from taint, and as pure as the Fountain
from which is flowed. It was a virgin soul in
every sense of the term.
This being so, it follows that it
was not bound by the Karma of previous incarnations as
is the case with the ordinary soul. It had no
entangling ties it had no seeds of desire
and action planted in previous lives, which were pressing
forward toward expression in His life. He was
a Free Spirit an Unbound Soul. And
therefore He was not only unbound by any Karma of
His own, but was also free (by nature) from the Karma
of the race or of the world.
The absence of personal Karma left
Him free from the selfish personal Desire which binds
men to the wheel of action and personal ambition.
He had no desire or thought for personal aggrandizement
or glory, and was perfectly free (by nature) to work
for the good of the race as an outside observer and
helper, without suffering the pains and sorrows of
race-life, had He so wished. But He chose otherwise,
as we shall see in a moment.
The absence of Race-Karma, or World-Karma,
freed Him from the necessity of the pains of humanity,
which are a part of its collective Karma. He
would have been perfectly able to live a life absolutely
free from the pains, trials and troubles that are the
common lot of Man, owing to the Race-Karma. He
would have escaped persecution, physical and mental
pains, and even death, had He so elected. But
He chose these things of His own free will, in order
to accomplish the great work that He saw before Him
as a World-Savior.
In order for Jesus to enact His part
as the Redeemer and Savior of the race, it was necessary
for Him to take upon Himself His share of the Karma
of the race virtually taking upon Himself
the “sins of the world.” Before He
could lift the burden from the race of men, He must
become a man among men.
To understand this more clearly we
must remember that to a being such as Jesus a
soul free from Karma there would be no such
thing as temptation, longings, desires, or any of
the mental states of the ordinary man with the Karma
of successive past incarnations resting within him
as seeds of action pressing forward ever for unfoldment
and expression.
Jesus, the free soul, would have been
practically an outside observer of the world’s
affairs, and not influenced by any of its ordinary
incentives to action. In this state He could have
aided the world as a teacher and instructor, but He
would not have been able to accomplish His great task
of Redeeming the world, in its highest spiritual significance,
as we shall see as we proceed. It was necessary
for Him to take upon Himself the burden of the earth-life
in order to become the Savior of the people of the
earth.
The occult teachings inform us that
during His sojourn abroad, Jesus was simply a teacher,
with but a dim perception of His real mission.
But gradually He began to experience periods of Illumination
in which He recognized His real nature and the difference
between Himself and other men. Then came to Him
the conviction of the mighty work that lay before
Him in the redemption of the race, and He began to
see the necessity of entering into the Karmic circle
of the race in order to carry out the plan. This
came gradually, by slow degrees, and the final sacrifice
was made only in the Wilderness after His Baptism by
John.
In the Wilderness, after His long
fast and His days of meditation, the way opened up
for Him to take upon Himself the burden of the Karma
of the earth people. In that scene of the most
tremendous spiritual struggle that the earth has ever
witnessed, Jesus deliberately bent His shoulders that
the weight be placed upon His back. From that
moment the earth-souls received a blessing far beyond
the comprehension of the mind of the ordinary man.
Into the Karma-bound circle came this mighty soul,
animated by Pure Spirit, for the purpose of lifting
a great portion of the burden, and of joining in the
work of the actual unfoldment and redemption of the
race.
For be it remembered that, being a
free soul animated by Pure Spirit, Jesus was A GOD not
a man, although inhabiting the fleshly garments of
humanity. His power was superior to that of many
of the high intelligences scattered throughout the
universe, and playing important parts in the cosmic
processes. Jesus was Pure Spirit incarnate in
human form, with all the powers of a God. Although
of course subordinate in expression to the
Absolute the Great Spirit of Spirit He
was in His essential nature the same in substance.
Verily, as He Himself said, “I and the Father
are One.”
His youthful mind was not able to
grasp the truth of His real nature, but as that human
instrument became perfected by age and training, He
realized the Truth and perceived His own Divinity.
But even a God, such as he, could
not raise up the world from its burden of Karma, by
acting from the outside. Under the Cosmic
Laws, established by the Absolute, such work could
be performed only from within the circle of
earth-life. And so Jesus saw that to raise up
Man, He must become a Man. That is, to help lift
the earth’s Karma, He must enter into it, and
place Himself within its Circle of Influence. And
this He did.
We wonder if our readers can realize,
even faintly, just what this sacrifice meant?
Think of a Pure Spirit a Free Soul so
filled with the love for the race of men as to renounce
deliberately, for aeons of time, total immunity from
all mortal existence, and willingly to place itself
under the burden of pain, woe, misery and sin which
formed the earth-people’s Karma. It was
a thousand-fold greater sacrifice than would be that
of a Man of the Highest spiritual and mental development an
Emerson, for example who, in order to raise
up the race of earth-worms, would deliberately place
himself within the being and nature of the Group-Soul
animating the race of earthworms, and then stay within
its influence, striving ever upward and onward until
finally, after aeons and aeons of time, he was able
to bring up the earthworm Group Soul to the level
of Man. Think of this, and then realize what
a sacrifice Jesus made of Himself.
In the Wilderness, when Jesus took
the final steps of renunciation and sacrifice, He
at once passed within the circle of the Race Karma
and laid Himself open to all the pain, misery, temptations
and limitations of a Man. His power, of course,
remained with Him, but He was no longer a God outside
of the world-life, but an imprisoned God working from
within the race, using His mighty power, but bound
by the Karmic Law. He became open to influences
from which previously He had been immune. For
instance when He was “tempted” by the Devil
of Personal Attainment, and urged to seek worldly
glory and renown, He was tempted only because He had
taken on the world’s Karma and was subject to
its laws. As a God, He would not have felt the
temptation any more than a man would feel the temptation
of the earthworm. But as a man He was subject
to the desires and ambitions that perplex and “devil”
the race. And according to the rule that the
greater the mental development the greater the power
of such temptation toward self-aggrandizement (because
of the mind being able to see more clearly the opportunities),
Jesus was subjected to a test that would have been
impossible to an ordinary man.
Jesus, knowing full well that He had
in His possession the power to manifest the things
with which He was tempted, was compelled to fight
off the temptation to place Himself at the head of
the race as its ruler as the King of the
World. He was shown this picture to compare with
the other whose last scene was Calvary and
He was called upon to feel the desire of the race
for such things, even unto its highest degree.
Imagine the desire for personal aggrandizement of all
the world thought beating upon His mind demanding
the expression which could be had through Him alone.
And then imagine the struggle required to defeat this
opposing power. Think of what the ordinary man
has to meet and overcome to conquer the desire for
Personal Aggrandizement and then think
of what the Master had to fight, with the focussed
desire of the entire Race-Thought striving to express
itself through Him! Truly the Sins of the World
bore down upon Him with their mighty weight.
And yet He knew that He had taken upon Himself this
affliction by entering upon the Life of Man. And
He met it like a Man of Men.
It was only by fixing His mind fully
and firmly upon what He knew to be His Real Self the
Spirit Within His soul, and holding His mind “one-pointed”
upon the fact that He was able to fight
the fight and conquer. Seeing the Truth, He could
see the folly and illusion of all that the world had
to offer, and He could put forth His mighty Will bidding
the Tempter retire from the scene and from His mind.
It was in this full knowledge of His Spirit His
Real Self that He was able to rebuke the
Tempter, saying, “Thou shalt not tempt the Lord,
thy God!” He held fast to His realization of
the God Within the Spirit that was within
Him and all men and thus denied out of existence
the power of the earth-things the illusions
of mortality the maya of the race.
But not alone this and other weaknesses
of man’s mortal nature were constantly besieging
the mind of the Master after He had taken upon Himself
the Karma of the Earth. He had also taken upon
Himself the mortal life consequent of the human frame
which He inhabited. He must live, suffer and
die even as all men and according
to the law of mortality. And so He moved forward
toward the end, knowing fully what lay before Him.
He, a God, had taken upon Himself all these attributes
of mortality, in order to be able to perform His work
as the Redeemer and Savior of the race.
And so, He lived, and suffered and
died even as you and I. He drank the cup
to the dregs, suffering as only such a finely organized
mental nature could suffer. And, men, poor creatures,
speak of His sufferings as terminating with the last
breath upon the cross. Why, they only began
there!
For know ye, that Jesus the Christ
is still within the race of men, suffering their woes,
paying with them their penalty, every day, every hour yea,
and must remain so throughout the ages, until finally
the soul of every man, yea, even that of the last
man; the most degraded man in the world, is fully
cleansed of the Karmic taint, and thus fully “redeemed”
and “saved.” And within the soul of
every man is found the Christ Principle, striving
ever to elevate and lift up the individual toward
that realization of the Real Self and this
is what “redemption” and “salvation”
really means. Not a saving from hell-fire, but
a saving from the fire of carnality, and mortality.
Not a redemption from imaginary sins, but a redemption
from the muck and mire of earth-life. The God
within you is like the fabled Hindu god who descended
into the body of a pig and then forgot Himself.
It is to bring you to a realization that you are a
god and not a pig, that Jesus, the Master, is working
within your soul as the Christ Principle. Have
you never heard His voice, crying from within your
soul, “Come out come out of your pig-nature
and realize the god that you verily are!” It
is this “recognition, realization and manifestation
of the god within you” that constitutes “salvation”
and “redemption.”
The Occult Teachings tell us that
Jesus, after His final disappearance from before the
eyes of His apostles, passed on to the higher planes
of the Astral World where He rapidly discarded all
of His astral and mental vehicles which the soul had
used in its manifestation. The Astral Body and
its corresponding higher sheaths were cast off and
discarded. That is, all except the very highest
of all. Had He discarded every vestige of individual
soul-existence His spirit would have immediately merged
itself with the One Spirit the Absolute from
which it had originally proceeded and Jesus, as an
entity, would have disappeared entirely within the
Ocean of the One Spirit. This highest state of
all He had deliberately resigned until the passage
of ages, in order that He might accomplish His work
as the World-Savior.
He retained the highest vehicle the
Spiritual Mind in its highest shade of expression in
order that as an entity He might labor for the race.
And so, He exists at this time one in substance
with the Father, but yet maintaining an apparently
separate entity-existence. But this must be remembered,
that Jesus, as Jesus the son of Mary and Joseph,
no longer exists. When He cast off the lower vehicles
of His personality, His personality disappeared.
But His individuality persisted that
is, He is still HE, although His personality has disappeared,
leaving Him the real Him existing
as the CHRIST PRINCIPLE.
By the above statement, we mean that
when a soul reaches the highest spiritual stage short
of absolute absorption into the One Spirit, it
is no longer a person, but exists as a principle.
But that principle is not an inanimate mechanical
force it is a living, knowing, acting principle
of life. This occult fact cannot be explained
in the words of men, for no terms have been coined
by which men can speak of it. It is only indirectly
that we can hope to have even the advanced student
grasp the fact.
Jesus exists today, as the Christ
Principle which actually lives and acts, but
which is not confined in a body of any kind, using
the word “body” in its accustomed sense.
As the Christ Principle or “The Christ”
He is mingled with the life of the human race, and
may be found immanent in the mind of every man, woman
and child that has ever existed, does now exist, or
will exist so long as Man is Man. Not
only is this true of those who have lived since His
passage from the physical body, but it is equally
true of those who lived before His birth. This
apparently paradoxical statement may be understood
when we remember that these souls did not “die,”
but only “passed on” to the Astral Plane,
from whence they re-incarnated in due time. The
Christ (for so we shall speak of the present-state
of Jesus) even entered into, and still abides in,
the Astral Plane, as well as upon the Material Plane,
for wherever the souls of men abide or whatever
place their residence may be there is found
The Christ, ever working for the salvation and redemption
of the race.
On the Astral Plane He is working
in the minds of the souls abiding there, urging them
to cast off the dross of earth-desires and to fix
the aim upon higher things, to the end that their re-incarnations
may be under improved conditions. On the Physical
Plane He is working in the hearts and minds of the
earth-people, striving ever to uplift to higher things.
His aim is ever toward the liberation of the Spirit
from its material bonds the Realization
of the Real Self. And so, in the hearts of all
men, Christ is living, suffering, and being crucified
every day, and this must continue until Man is redeemed
and saved, even the last man.
This wonderful sacrifice of Christ
far surpasses the physical sacrifice of Jesus, the
man. Try to imagine, if you can, even the faintest
pangs of a being so exalted compelled to dwell in the
world of the hearts and minds of a humanity so steeped
in materiality as our race, knowing always the possibilities
of the souls if they would but reach upward to higher
things, and yet constantly suffering the knowledge
of the base, carnal, material thoughts and acts flowing
from these souls. Is not this the extreme refinement
of torture? Does not the agony of the cross sink
into insignificance beside such spiritual agony?
You rail at the cruelty of the Jews who crucified their
Savior, and yet you crucify your Savior, with
a thousandfold degree of torture, every day of your
life, by your persistence in the carnalities and foolishness
of mortal thought and action.
The mighty uplift of the world since
the death of Jesus, of which the present is but a
faint prophecy of the future, has been due largely
to the energizing influence of The Christ in the hearts
and minds of the race. The sense of the Fatherhood
of God and the Brotherhood of Man, which is now manifesting
so powerfully in the world of Men, is but an instance
of the work of the Christ the Savior and
Redeemer. And the highest dreams of the exalted
souls of this generation are but inadequate visions
of what the future will hold for the race. The
work is just beginning to bud the blossom
and the fruit will render this earth a far more glorious
place than even the highest ideals of heaven entertained
by the faithful in the past. But even these things
of the future will be poor things, when compared with
the life of the higher planes which await the race
when it has demonstrated its fitness to pass on and
on and on to these greater glories. And ever and
ever The Christ is working, and toiling and striving
and suffering, in His efforts to raise humanity even
one petty degree in the spiritual scale of being.
The Christ is always with us, and
if we but recognize His presence we shall be able
to feel that warm, loving response to our soul-hunger
and spiritual thirst which will result in our being
given that we are so longingly craving. Here
within us dwells The Christ, ever responding to the
cry of Faith, “Believe in Me and ye shall be
saved.” What a promise this is seen to
be when properly understood! What a source of
power and comfort is opened up to every human soul
when the Inner Truth underlying the teachings is understood!
Mystic Christianity brings this Message of Truth to
each and all of you who read these lines. Will
you accept it?
We would ask our students to pause
at this point and contrast the teachings of Mystic
Christianity regarding the doctrine of Christ, the
Savior, with the corresponding teachings of the current
Orthodox Theology.
On the one hand we have Jesus the
God-Man deliberately choosing the work of the World
Redemption and Salvation, and descending into the
circle of the World-Karma, relinquishing the privilege
of His Godhood and taking upon Himself the penalties
of Manhood; not only undergoing the sufferings of
the physical man, but also binding Himself upon the
Cross of Humanity for ages, that by His spiritual presence
in and of the race He might lift up humanity to godhood.
On the other hand, we have a picture
of an angry Deity, manifesting purely human emotion
and temper, bent on revenging himself upon the race
which he had created, and demanding its eternal punishment
in hell-fire; then the same Deity creating a Son whom
he sent into the world, that this Son might be the
victim of a blood-atonement and death upon the cross,
that the Deity’s wrath might be appeased and
the blood of this Divine Lamb be accepted to wash
out the sins of the world.
Can you not see which is The Truth
and which is the perversion? The one is from
the pure fountain of Spiritual knowledge the
other originated in the minds of ignorant theologians
who were unable to grasp and understand the Mystic
teachings, but who built up a system of theology in
accordance with their own undeveloped minds; making
a God who was but a reflection of their own cruel
animal natures, demanding, as did they themselves,
blood and pain physical torture and death in
order to appease a most un-Divine wrath and vengeance.
Which of the two conceptions seems most in accord with
the intuitive promptings of the Something Within?
Which brings the greater approval from The Christ
within your heart?
THE CHRISTIAN CREED
There are three creeds recognized
by the Christian Church the Apostles’
Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed.
Of these, the first two are commonly used, the third
being not so well known and being seldom used.
The Apostles’ Creed, which is
the most commonly used, is believed (in its present
form) to be of later origin than the Nicene Creed,
and many authorities believe it to be a corrupted
rendering of the original declaration of faith of
the Early Christians. It is as follows:
“I believe in God the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; and in Jesus
Christ his only Son our Lord, who was conceived
by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, suffered
under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried;
he descended into hell; the third day he arose again
from the dead; he ascended into heaven, and sitteth
on the right hand of God the Father Almighty;
from thence he shall come to judge the quick
and the dead. I believe in the Holy Ghost,
the holy Catholic Church, the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the
body, and the life everlasting.”
The Nicene Creed was drawn up and
adopted by the Council of Nice in the year A.D. 325.
As originally adopted it ended with the words “I
believe in the Holy Ghost,” the present concluding
clauses being added by the Council of Constantinople
in A.D. 381, excepting the words “and the Son,”
which were inserted by the Council of Toledo, A.D.
589. It is as follows:
“I believe in one God, the Father,
Almighty, Maker of Heaven and earth, and all
things visible and invisible; and in one Lord
Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten
of his Father before all worlds, God of God,
Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten,
not made, being of one substance with the Father,
by whom all things were made; who for us men
and for our salvation came down from heaven and was
incarnate by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary, and
was made man, and was crucified also for us under
Pontius Pilate; he suffered and was buried and
the third day he rose again according to the
scriptures and ascended into heaven, and sitteth
on the right hand of the Father; and he shall come
again with glory to judge both the quick and the dead,
whose kingdom shall have no end. And I believe
in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and Giver of Life,
who proceedeth from the Father and the Son, who
with the Father and Son is worshipped and glorified,
who spoke by the prophets; and I believe in one
catholic and apostolic church; I acknowledge one
baptism for the remission of sins, and I look for the
resurrection of the dead and the life of the world
to come.”
Let us now briefly examine the principal
statements of these creeds, which were compiled centuries
after Jesus’ death, viewing them by the light
of Mystic Christianity.
“I believe in one God, the Father
Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and all things
visible and invisible.” (Nicene
Creed.)
The form of the above fundamental
principle of Christian belief is taken from the Nicene
Creed, which is somewhat fuller than the similar declaration
in the Apostles’ Creed. It requires no comment.
It is a statement of belief in a One Creative Power,
from which all things have proceeded. There is
no attempt made to “explain” the nature
of the Absolute, or to endow it with any of the human
attributes which theologians have delighted in bestowing
upon the One. It merely asserts a belief in the
existence of One Supreme Being which is
all that is possible to man all else is
ignorant impertinence.
“And in Jesus Christ his only
Son our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Ghost.” (Apostles’
Creed.)
“And in one Lord Jesus Christ,
the only begotten Son of God, begotten of his Father
before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very
God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one
substance with the Father.” (Nicene
Creed.)
In this declaration, the belief in
the Divinity of Jesus is made. The Apostles’
Creed shows the cruder conception, rather inclining
toward the perverted idea of the conception of the
Virgin by the aid of the Holy Ghost, similar to the
origin of the hero-gods of the different religions
in which the father was one of the gods and the mother
a woman. But the Nicene creed gives at least
a strong hint of the mystic teachings. It speaks
of Him as “begotten of his Father” “begotten,
not made.” The expressions, “God of
God; Light of Light; very God of very God,”
show the idea of identical spiritual substance in the
Spirit. And then the remarkable expression, “being
of one substance with the Father,” shows a wonderful
understanding of the Mystery of The Christ. For,
as the mystic teachings show, Jesus was a pure Spirit,
free from the entangling desires and clogging Karma
of the world. Identical in substance with the
Father. “The Father and I are one,”
as He said. Is there anything in the Orthodox
Theology that throws such light on this subject as
is shed by Mystic Christianity’s teaching regarding
the nature of the soul of Jesus?
“Born of the Virgin Mary.” (Apostles’
Creed.)
“Who for us men and for our
salvation came down from heaven, and was incarnate
by the Holy Ghost of the Virgin Mary, and was made
man.” (Nicene Creed.)
The Nicene Creed here gives a surprisingly
clear statement of the Mystic teachings. “Who
for us men and our salvation came down from heaven”
shows the purpose of the incarnation. “Came
down from heaven” shows pre-existence in the
bosom of the Absolute. “And was incarnate”
shows the descent of the Spirit into the flesh in the
womb of Mary. “And was made man”
shows the taking on of the physical body of the infant
in the womb. Does not the Mystic teaching give
a clearer light on this statement of the Creed?
“Was crucified, dead and buried;
he descended into hell; the third day he rose again
from the dead.” (Apostles’
Creed.)
“He suffered and was buried,
and the third day he rose again according to the scriptures,
and sitteth on the right hand of the Father.” (Nicene
Creed.)
The “descent into hell”
of the Apostles’ Creed of course meant the passing
to the place of disembodied souls the lower
Astral Plane. Even the orthodox teachers do not
now pretend that the term “hell” meant
the place of torture presided over by the Devil, which
theology has invented to frighten people into the
churches. “The third day he arose from
the dead” (and the corresponding passage in the
Nicene Creed) refers to the appearance in the Astral
Body the return from the Astral Plane in
which He had sojourned for the three days following
the crucifixion. “And ascended into heaven” this
passage shows the belief that He returned to the place
from which He came, for the Nicene Creed has stated
that he “came down from heaven and was
incarnate ... and was made man.”
The passage in both creeds stating
that He then took his place “on the right hand
of the Father” is intended to show that He took
the place of the highest honor in the gift of the
Father. The mystic teachings explain this by
showing that The Christ is separated from The Father
by but the most ethereal intervening of spiritual substance,
and that He is a Cosmic Principle second in importance
only to the Father. Truly this is the place of
honor on “the right hand of the Father.”
“He shall come to fudge the quick and the dead.”
In this passage we see the intimation
that not only with the “quick” or living
people is The Christ concerned, but also with the “dead,”
that is, with those who “passed out” before
and after His time and who have passed on to the Astral
World, as we have explained in this lesson. Whether
or not the framers of the Creed so understood it whether
or not they were deluded by the tradition of the “Day
of Judgment” certainly the Early
Christians, or rather, the mystics among them, understood
the teachings as we have given them and spoke of Him
as “living in the dead as well as in the living,”
as one of the occult records expresses it.
“The communion of saints”
is the spiritual understanding of the Mysteries by
the Illumined Ones. “The forgiveness of
sins” is the overcoming of the carnal mind and
desires. “The resurrection of the dead
and the life of the world to come” is the promise
of life beyond the grave, and not the crude idea of
the physical resurrection of the body, which has crept
into the Apostles’ Creed, evidently having been
inserted at a later date in order to bolster up the
pet theories of a school of theologians. Note
that the Nicene Creed says merely “the dead”
and not “the body.” The version of
the teachings preserved by the Mystics has a corresponding
passage, “And we know the truth of the
deathlessness of the soul.” (The italics
are ours.)
The consideration of remaining passages
in the creeds, relating to the existence of the “Holy
Ghost,” must be deferred until our next lesson.