The doctrine of Metempsychosis or
Re-incarnation has its roots deeply imbedded in the
soil of all religions that is, in the Inner
Teachings or Esoteric phase of all religious systems.
And this is true of the Inner Teachings of the Christian
Church as well as of the other systems. The Christian
Mysteries comprised this as well as the other fundamental
occult doctrines, and the Early Church held such teachings
in its Inner Circle.
And, in its essence, the doctrine
of Re-birth is the only one that is in full accord
with the Christian conception of ultimate justice and
“fairness.” As a well known writer
has said concerning this subject:
“It relieves us of many and great
difficulties. It is impossible for any one
who looks around him and sees the sorrow and
suffering in the world, and the horrible inequality
in the lives of men not inequality in wealth
merely, but inequality in opportunity of progress to
harmonize these facts with the love and justice
of God, unless he is willing to accept this theory
that this one life is not all, but that it is
only a day in the real life of the soul, and
that each soul therefore has made its place for
itself, and is receiving just such training as is best
for its evolution. Surely the only theory
which enables a man rationally to believe in
Divine justice, without shutting his eyes to
obvious facts, is a theory worthy of study.
“Modern theology concerns itself
principally with a plan for evading divine justice,
which it elects to call ‘Salvation,’ and
it makes this plan depend entirely upon what a man
believes, or rather upon what he says that he
believes. This whole theory of ‘salvation,’
and indeed the theory that there is anything
to be ‘saved’ from, seems to be based upon
a misunderstanding of a few texts of scripture.
We do not believe in this idea of a so-called
divine wrath; we think that to attribute to God
our own vices of anger and cruelty is a terrible
blasphemy. We hold to the theory of steady evolution
and final attainment for all; and we think that the
man’s progress depends not upon what he believes,
but upon what he does. And there is surely
very much in the bible to support this idea.
Do you remember St. Paul’s remark, ’Be
not deceived, God is not mocked; whatsoever a man
soweth, that shall he also reap’? And again,
Christ said that ’They that have done
good shall go unto the resurrection of life’ not
they that have believed some particular doctrine.
And when He describes the day of judgment, you
will notice that no question is raised as to what
anybody has believed, but only as to the works which
he has done.”
In this connection, we think that
it is advisable to quote from the address of a well
known English churchman upon this important subject.
The gentleman in question is The Ven. Archdeacon
Colley, Rector of Stockton, Warwickshire, England,
who said:
“In the realm of the occult and
transcendental, moved to its exploration from
the Sadducean bias of my early days, I have for
the best part of half a century had experiences rarely
equaled by any, and I am sure, surpassed by none;
yet have they led me up till now, I admit, to
no very definite conclusions. With suspension
of judgment, therefore, not being given to dogmatize
on anything, and with open mind I trust, in equipoise
of thought desiring to hold an even balance of
opinion ’twixt this and that, I am studious still
of being receptive of light from every source rejecting
nothing that in the least degree makes for righteousness,
hence my taking the chair here tonight, hoping
to learn what may help to resolve a few of the
many perplexities of life, to wit: Why some
live to the ripe old age of my dear father while
others live but for a moment, to be born, gasp and
die. Why some are born rich and others poor;
some having wealth only to corrupt, defile, deprave
others therewith, while meritorious poverty struggles
and toils for human betterment all unaided.
Some gifted with mentality; others pitiably lacking
capacity. Some royal-souled from the first naturally,
others with brutal, criminal propensities from beginning
to end.
“The sins of the fathers visited
upon the children unto the third and fourth generation
may in heredity account for much, but I want
to see through the mystery of a good father at
times having a bad son, as also of one showing genius
and splendid faculties the offspring
of parentage the reverse of anything suggesting
qualities contributive thereto. Then as
a clergyman, I have in my reading noted texts of Holy
Scripture, and come across passages in the writings
of the Fathers of the Early Church which seem
to be root-thoughts, or survivals of the old
classic idea of re-incarnation.
“The prophet Jeremiah (1:5) writes,
’The word of the Lord came unto me saying,
before I formed thee, I knew thee, and before
thou wast born I sanctified thee and ordained thee
a prophet.’
“Does this mean that the Eternal-Uncreate
chose, from foreknowledge of what Jeremiah would be,
the created Ego of His immaterialized servant in heaven
ere he clothed his soul with the mortal integument
of flesh in human birth schooling him above
for the part he had to play here below as a prophet
to dramatize in his life and teaching the will of
the Unseen? To the impotent man at the Pool of
Bethesda, whose infirmity was the cruel experience
of eight and thirty years, the Founder of our religion
said (John 5:14.), ’Behold, thou art made
whole; sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee.’
Was it (fitting the punishment to the crime proportionately)
some outrageous sin as a boy, in the spring of years
and days of his inexperienced youth of bodily life,
that brought on him such physical sorrow, which youthful
sin in its repetition would necessitate an even worse
ill than this nearly forty years of sore affliction?
’Who did sin, this man or his parents, that
he was born blind?’ (John 9:2.), was the
question of the disciples to Jesus. And our query
is Sinned before he was born to
deserve the penalty of being born blind?
“Then of John the Baptist was
he a reincarnation of Elijah, the prophet, who was
to come again? (Malachi 4:5.). Jesus said
he was Elijah, who indeed had come, and the
evil-minded Jews had done unto him whatsoever they
listed. Herod had beheaded him (Mat:14
and 17:12.).
“Elijah and John the Baptist
appear from our reference Bibles and Cruden’s
Concordance to concur and commingle in one. The
eighth verse of the first chapter of the second Book
of Kings and the fourth verse of the third chapter
of St. Matthew’s Gospel note similarities in
them and peculiarities of dress. Elijah, as we
read, was a ’hairy man and girt a leathern girdle
about his loins,’ while John the Baptist had
‘his raiment of camel’s hair and a leathern
girdle about his loins.’ Their home was
the solitude of the desert. Elijah journeyed forty
days and forty nights unto Horeb, the mount of God
in the Wilderness of Sinai. John the Baptist
was in the wilderness of Judea beyond Jordan baptizing.
And their life in exile a self-renunciating
and voluntary withdrawal from the haunts of men was
sustained in a parallel remarkable way by food (bird brought
on wing borne). ’I have commanded
the ravens to feed thee,’ said the voice of Divinity
to the prophet; while locusts and wild honey were
the food of the Baptist.
“‘And above all,’
said our Lord of John the Baptist to the disciples,
‘if ye will receive it, this is Elias
which was for to come.’
“Origen, in the second century,
one of the most learned of the Fathers of the early
Church, says that this declares the pre-existence of
John the Baptist as Elijah before his decreed later
existence as Christ’s forerunner.
“Origen also says on the text,
’Jacob I have loved, but Esau I have hated,’
that if our course be not marked out according to our
works before this present life that now is, how would
it not be untrue and unjust in God that the elder
brother should serve the younger and be hated by God
(though blessed of righteous Abraham’s son, of
Isaac) before Esau had done anything deserving of
servitude or given any occasion for the merciful Almighty’s
hatred?
“Further, on the text (Ephesians
1:4.), ’God who hath chosen us before the
foundation of the world,’ Origen says that this
suggests our pre-existence ere the world was.
“While Jerome, agreeing with
Origen, speaks of our rest above, where rational creatures
dwell before their descent to this lower world, and
prior to their removal from the invisible life of the
spiritual sphere to the visible life here on earth,
teaching, as he says, the necessity of their again
having material bodies ere, as saints and men made
‘perfect as our Father which is in heaven is
perfect,’ they once more enjoy in the angel-world
their former blessedness.
“Justin Martyr also speaks of
the soul inhabiting the human body more than once,
but thinks as a rule (instanced in the case of John
the Baptist forgetting that he had been Elijah) it
is not permitted us to remember our former experiences
of this life while yet again we are in exile here
as strangers and pilgrims in an uncongenial clime away
from our heavenly home.
“Clemens Alexandrinus,
and others of the Fathers, refer to re-incarnation
(or transmigration or metempsychosis, as it is called
in the years that are passed of classic times and later
now as re-birth) to remind us of the vital
truth taught by our Lord in the words, ‘Ye
must be born again.’”
These words, falling from the lips
of a man so eminent in the staid conservative ranks
of the Church of England, must attract the attention
of every earnest seeker after the Truth of Christian
Doctrine. If such a man, reared in such an environment,
could find himself able to bear such eloquent testimony
to the truth of a philosophy usually deemed foreign
to his accepted creed, what might we not expect from
a Church liberated from the narrow formal bounds of
orthodoxy, and once more free to consider, learn and
teach those noble doctrines originally held and taught
by the Early Fathers of the Church of Christ?
While the majority of modern Christians
bitterly oppose the idea that the doctrine of Metempsychosis
ever formed any part of the Christian Doctrine, and
prefer to regard it as a “heathenish” teaching,
still the fact remains that the careful and unprejudiced
student will find indisputable evidence in the writings
of the Early Christian Fathers pointing surely to
the conclusion that the doctrine of Metempsychosis
was believed and taught in the Inner Circle of the
Early Church.
The doctrine unquestionably formed
a part of the Christian Mysteries, and has faded into
comparative obscurity with the decay of spirituality
in the Church, until now the average churchman no longer
holds to it, and in fact regards as barbarous and heathenish
that part of the teachings originally imparted and
taught by the Early Fathers of the Church the
Saints and Leaders.
The Early Christians were somewhat
divided in their beliefs concerning the details of
Re-birth. One sect or body held to the idea that
the soul of man was eternal, coming from the Father.
Also that there were many degrees and kinds of souls,
some of which have never incarnated in human bodies
but which are living on many planes of life unknown
to us, passing from plane to plane, world to world.
This sect held that some of these souls had chosen
to experiment with life on the physical plane, and
were now passing through the various stages of the
physical-plane life, with all of its pains and sorrows,
being held by the Law of Re-birth until a full experience
had been gained, when they would pass out of the circle
of influence of the physical plane, and return to
their original freedom.
Another sect held to the more scientific
occult form of the gradual evolution of the soul,
by repeated rebirth, on the physical plane, from Lower
to Higher, as we have set forth in our lessons on “Gnani
Yoga.” The difference in the teachings arose
from the different conceptions of the great leaders,
some being influenced by the Jewish Occult Teachings
which held to the first above mentioned doctrine,
while the second school held to the doctrine taught
by the Greek Mystics and the Hindu Occultists.
And each interpreted the Inner Teachings by the light
of his previous affiliations.
And so, some of the early writings
speak of “pre-existence,” while others
speak of repeated “rebirth.” But the
underlying principle is the same, and in a sense they
were both right, as the advanced occultists know full
well. The fundamental principle of both conceptions
is that the soul comes forth as an emanation from the
Father in the shape of Spirit; that the Spirit becomes
plunged in the confining sheaths of Matter, and is
then known as “a soul,” losing for a time
its pristine purity; that the soul passes on through
rebirth, from lower to higher, gaining fresh experiences
at each incarnation; that the advancing soul passes
from world to world, returning at last to its home
laden with the varied experiences of life and becomes
once more pure Spirit.
The early Christian Fathers became
involved in a bitter controversy with the Greek and
Roman philosophers, over the conception held by some
of the latter concerning the absurd doctrine of the
transmigration of the human soul into the body of an
animal. The Fathers of the Church fought this
erroneous teaching with great energy, their arguments
bringing out forcibly the distinction between the
true occult teachings and this erroneous and degenerate
perversion in the doctrines of transmigration into
animal bodies. This conflict caused a vigorous
denunciation of the teachings of the Pythagorean and
Platonic schools, which held to the perverted doctrine
that a human soul could degenerate into the state
of the animal.
Among other passages quoted by Origen
and Jerome to prove the pre-existence of the soul
was that from Jeremiah (1:5): “Before thou
comest from the womb I sanctified thee and I ordained
thee a prophet.” The early writers held
that this passage confirmed their particular views
regarding the pre-existence of the soul and the possession
of certain characteristics and qualities acquired
during previous birth, for, they argued, it would
be injustice that a man, before birth, be endowed
with uncarnal qualities; and that such qualities and
ability could justly be the result only of best work
and action. They also dwelt upon the prophecy
of the return of Elijah, in Malachi 4:5. And
also upon the (uncanonical) book “The Wisdom
of Solomon,” in which Solomon says: “I
was a witty child, and had a good Spirit. Yea,
rather, being good, I came into a body undefiled.”
They also quoted from Josephus, in
his book styled “De Bello Judico,”
in which the eminent Jewish writer says: “They
say that all souls are incorruptible; but that the
souls of good men are only removed into other bodies but
that the souls of bad men are subject to eternal punishment.”
They also quoted from Josephus, regarding the Jewish
belief in Rebirth as evidenced by the recital of the
instance in which, at the siege of the fortress of
Jotapota, he sought the shelter of a cave in which
were a number of soldiers, who discussed the advisability
of committing suicide for the purpose of avoiding being
taken prisoners by the Romans. Josephus remonstrated
with them as follows:
“Do ye not remember that all
pure spirits who are in conformity with the divine
dispensation live on in the loveliest of heavenly
places, and in the course of time they are sent
down to inhabit sinless bodies; but the souls of those
who have committed self-destruction are doomed to a
region in the darkness of the underworld?”
Recent writers hold that this shows
that he accepted the doctrine of Re-birth himself,
and also as showing that it must have been familiar
to the Jewish soldiery.
There seems to be no doubt regarding
the familiarity of the Jewish people of that time
with the general teachings regarding Metempsychosis.
Philo positively states the doctrine as forming part
of the teachings of the Jewish Alexandrian school.
And again the question asked Jesus regarding the “sin
of the man born blind” shows how familiar the
people were with the general doctrine.
And so, the teachings of Jesus on
that point did not need to be particularly emphasized
to the common people, He reserving this instruction
on the inner teachings regarding the details of Re-birth
for his chosen disciples. But still the subject
is mentioned in a number of places in the New Testament,
as we shall see.
Jesus stated positively that John
the Baptist was “Elias,” whose return
had been predicted by Malachi (4:5). Jesus stated
this twice, positively, i.e., “This is
Elijah that is to come” (Mat:14);
and again, “But I say unto you that Elijah is
come already, but they knew him not, but did unto
him whatsoever they would.... Then understood
the disciples that he spoke unto them of John the Baptist.”
(Mat:12-13.) The Mystics point out that
Jesus saw clearly the fact that John was Elijah re-incarnated,
although John had denied this fact, owing to his lack
of memory of his past incarnation. Jesus the
Master saw clearly that which John the Forerunner had
failed to perceive concerning himself. The plainly
perceptible characteristics of Elijah reappearing
in John bear out the twice-repeated, positive assertion
of the Master that John the Baptist was the re-incarnated
Elijah.
And this surely is sufficient authority
for Christians to accept the doctrine of Re-birth
as having a place in the Church Teachings. But
still, the orthodox churchmen murmur “He meant
something else!” There are none so blind
as those who refuse to see.
Another notable instance of the recognition
of the doctrine by Jesus and His disciples occurs
in the case of “the man born blind.”
It may be well to quote the story.
“And as he passed by he saw a
man blind from his birth. And his disciples
asked him, saying, ’Rabbi, who sinned, this
man or his parents, that he should be born blind?’
Jesus answered, ‘Neither did this man sin
nor his parents.’” (John 9:1-3.)
Surely there can be no mistake about
the meaning of this question, “Who did sin,
this man or his parents?” for how
could a man sin before his birth, unless he had lived
in a previous incarnation? And the answer of
Jesus simply states that the man was born blind neither
from the sins of a past life, nor from those of his
parents, but from a third cause. Had the idea
of re-incarnation been repugnant to the teachings,
would not He have denounced it to His disciples?
Does not the fact that His disciples asked Him the
question show that they were in the habit of discoursing
the problems of Re-birth and Karma with Him, and receiving
instructions and answers to questions propounded to
Him along these lines?
There are many other passages of the
New Testament which go to prove the familiarity of
the disciples and followers of Jesus with the doctrine
of Re-birth, but we prefer to pass on to a consideration
of the writings of the Early Christian Fathers in
order to show what they thought and taught regarding
the matter of Re-birth and Karma.
Among the great authorities and writers
in the Early Church, Origen stands out pre-eminently
as a great light. Let us quote from a leading
writer, regarding this man and his teachings:
“In Origen’s writings we
have a mine of information as to the teachings
of the early Christians. Origen held a splendid
and grandiose view of the whole of the evolution of
our system. I put it to you briefly.
You can read it in all its carefully, logically-worked-out
arguments, if you will have the patience to read
his treatise for yourselves. His view, then,
was the evolutionary view. He taught that forth
from God came all Spirits that exist, all being
dowered with free-will; that some of these refused
to turn aside from the path of righteousness,
and, as a reward, took the place which we speak
of as that of the angels; that then there came
others who, in the exercise of their free-will, turned
aside from the path of deity, and then passed
into the human race to recover, by righteous
and noble living, the angel condition which they
had not been able to preserve; that others, still
in the exercise of their free-will, descended still
deeper into evil and became evil spirits or devils.
So that all these Spirits were originally good;
but good by innocence, not by knowledge.
And he points out also that angels may become
men, and even the evil ones themselves may climb
up once more, and become men and angels again.
Some of you will remember that one of the doctrines
condemned in Origen in later days was that glorious
doctrine that, even for the worst of men, redemption
and restoration were possible, and that there
was no such thing as an eternity of evil in a
universe that came from the Eternal Goodness, and
would return whence it came.”
And from the writings of this great
man we shall now quote.
In his great work “De Principiis,”
Origen begins with the statement that only God Himself
is fundamentally and by virtue of His essential nature,
Good. God is the only Good the absolute
perfect Good. When we consider the lesser stages
of Good, we find that the Goodness is derived and
acquired, instead of being fundamental and essential.
Origen then says that God bestows free-will upon all
spirits alike, and that if they do not use the same
in the direction of righteousness, then they fall
to lower estates “one more rapidly, another
more slowly, one in a greater, another in a less degree,
each being the cause of his own downfall.”
He refers to John the Baptist being
filled with the Holy Ghost in his mother’s womb
and says that it is a false notion to imagine “that
God fills individuals with His Holy Spirit, and bestows
upon them sanctification, not on the grounds of justice
and according to their deserts, but undeservedly.
And how shall we escape the declaration, ‘Is
there respect of persons with God?’ God forbid.
Or this, ’Is there unrighteousness with God?’
God forbid this also. For such is the defense
of those who maintain that souls come into existence
with bodies.” He then shows his belief
in re-birth by arguing that John had earned the Divine
favor by reason of right-living in a previous incarnation.
Then he considers the important question
of the apparent injustice displayed in the matter
of the inequalities existing among men. He says,
“Some are barbarians, others Greeks, and of the
barbarians some are savage and fierce and others of
a milder disposition, and certain of them live under
laws that have been thoroughly approved, others, again,
under laws of a more common or severe kind; while,
some, again, possess customs of an inhumane and savage
character rather than laws; and certain of them, from
the hour of their birth, are reduced to humiliation
and subjection, and brought up as slaves, being placed
under the dominion either of masters, or princes, or
tyrants. Some with sound bodies, some with bodies
diseased from their early years, some defective in
vision, others in bearing and speech; some born in
that condition, others deprived of the use of their
senses immediately after birth. But why should
I repeat and enumerate all the horrors of human misery?
Why should this be?”
Origen then goes on to combat the
ideas advanced by some thinkers of his times, that
the differences were caused by some essential difference
in the nature and quality of the souls of individuals.
He states emphatically that all souls are essentially
equal in nature and quality and that the differences
arise from the various exercise of their power of
free-will. He says of his opponents:
“Their argument accordingly is
this: If there be this great diversity of
circumstances, and this diverse and varying condition
by birth, in which the faculty of free-will has no
scope (for no one chooses for himself either where,
or with whom, or in what condition he is born);
if, then, this is not caused by the difference
in the nature of souls, i.e., that a soul
of an evil nature is destined for a wicked nation
and a good soul for a righteous nation, what other
conclusion remains than that these things must
be supposed to be regulated by accident or chance?
And, if that be admitted, then it will be no
longer believed that the world was made by God,
or administered by His providence.”
Origen continues:
“God who deemed it just to arrange
His creatures according to their merit, brought
down these different understandings into the
harmony of one world, that He might adorn, as it were,
one dwelling, in which there ought to be not only
vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and
clay (and some, indeed, to honor, and others
to dishonor) with their different vessels, or
souls, or understandings. On which account
the Creator will neither appear to be unjust in distributing
(for the causes already mentioned) to every one according
to his wants, nor will the happiness or unhappiness
of each one’s birth, or whatever be the condition
that falls to his lot, be accidental.”
He then asserts that the condition
of each man is the result of his own deeds.
He then considers the case of Jacob
and Esau, which a certain set of thinkers had used
to illustrate the unjust and cruel discrimination of
the Creator toward His creatures. Origen contended
that in this case it would be most unjust for God
to love Jacob and hate Esau before the children were
born, and that the only true interpretation of the
matter was the theory that Jacob was being rewarded
for the good deeds of past lives, while Esau was being
punished for his misdeeds in past incarnations.
And not only Origen takes this stand,
but Jerome also, for the latter says: “If
we examine the case of Esau we may find he was condemned
because of his ancient sins in a worse course of life.”
(Jerome’s letter to Avitus.) Origen says:
“It is found not to be unrighteous
that even in womb Jacob supplanted his brother,
if we feel that he was worthily beloved by God,
according to the deserts of his previous life,
so as to deserve to be preferred before his brother.”
Origen adds, “This must be carefully
applied to the case of all other creatures, because,
as we formerly remarked, the righteousness of the
Creator ought to appear in everything.”
And again, “The inequality of circumstances
preserves the justice of a retribution according to
merit.”
Annie Besant (to whom we are indebted
for a number of these quotations), says, concerning
this position of Origen:
“Thus we find this doctrine made
the defense of the justice of God. If a
soul can be made good, then to make a soul evil is
to a God of justice and love impossible. It cannot
be done. There is no justification for it,
and the moment you recognize that men are born
criminal, you are either forced into the blasphemous
position that a perfect and loving God creates
a ruined soul and then punishes it for being what He
has made it, or else that He is dealing with growing,
developing creatures whom He is training for ultimate
blessedness, and if in any life a man is born
wicked and evil, it is because he has done amiss
and must reap in sorrow the results of evil in
order that he may learn wisdom and turn to good.”
Origen also considers the story of
Pharaoh, of whom the Biblical writers say that “his
heart was hardened by God.” Origen declares
that the hardening of the heart was caused by God
so that Pharaoh would more readily learn the effect
of evil, so that in his future incarnations he might
profit by his bitter experience. He says:
“Sometimes it does not lead to
good results for a man to be cured too quickly,
especially if the disease, being shut up in the
inner parts of the body, rage with greater fierceness.
The growth of the soul must be understood as being
brought about not suddenly, but slowly and gradually,
seeing that the process of amendment and correction
will take place imperceptibly in the individual
instances, during the lapse of countless and
unmeasured ages, some outstripping others, and
tending by a swifter course towards perfection,
while others, again, follow close at hand, and some,
again, a long way behind.”
He also says: “Those who,
departing this life in virtue of that death which
is common to all, are arranged in conformity with their
actions and deserts according as they shall
be deemed worthy some in the place called
the ‘infernus,’ others in the bosom
of Abraham, and in different localities or mansions.
So also from these places, as if dying there, if the
expression can be used, they come down from the ‘upper
world’ to this ‘hell.’ For that
‘hell’ to which the souls of the dead
are conducted from this world is, I believe, on account
of this destruction, called ‘the lower hell.’
Everyone accordingly of those who descend to the earth
is, according to his deserts, or agreeably to the
position that he occupied there, ordained to be born
in this world in a different country, or among a different
nation, or in a different mode of life, or surrounded
by infirmities of a different kind, or to be descended
from religious parents, or parents who are not religious;
so that it may sometimes happen that an Israelite
descends among the Scythians, and a poor Egyptian is
brought down to Judea.” (Origen against Celsus.)
Can you doubt, after reading the above
quotation that Metempsychosis, Re-incarnation or Re-birth
and Karma was held and taught as a true doctrine by
the Fathers of the Early Christian Church? Can
you not see that imbedded in the very bosom of the
Early Church were the twin-doctrine of Re-incarnation
and Karma. Then why persist in treating it as
a thing imported from India, Egypt or Persia to disturb
the peaceful slumber of the Christian Church?
It is but the return home of a part of the original
Inner Doctrine so long an outcast from
the home of its childhood.
The Teaching was rendered an outlaw
by certain influences in the Church in the Sixth Century.
The Second Council of Constantinople (A.D. 553) condemned
it as a heresy, and from that time official Christianity
frowned upon it, and drove it out by sword, stake and
prison cell. The light was kept burning for many
years, however, by that sect so persecuted by the
Church the Albigenses who furnished
hundreds of martyrs to the tyranny of the Church authorities,
by reason of their clinging faith to the Inner Teachings
of the Church concerning Reincarnation and Karma.
Smothered by the pall of superstition
that descended like a dense cloud over Europe in the
Middle Ages, the Truth has nevertheless survived,
and, after many fitful attempts to again burst out
into flame, has at last, in this glorious Twentieth
Century, managed to again show forth its light and
heat to the world, bringing back Christianity to the
original conceptions of those glorious minds of the
Early Church. Once more returned to its own, the
Truth will move forward, brushing from its path all
the petty objections and obstacles that held it captive
for so many centuries.
Let us conclude this lesson with those
inspiring words of the poet Wordsworth, whose soul
rose to a perception of the Truth, in spite of the
conventional restrictions placed upon him by his age
and land.
“Our birth is
but a sleep and a forgetting,
The
soul that rises with us, our life’s star,
Hath elsewhere
had its setting,
And
cometh from afar.
Not in entire
forgetfulness,
And not in utter
nakedness,
But trailing clouds
of glory do we come
From God, who
is our home.”