Christian Esoterism
Christian EsoterismFOREWORD.Chapter I. THE HIDDEN SIDE OF RELIGIONS.Chapter II. THE HIDDEN SIDE OF CHRISTIANITY.Chapter III. THE HISTORICAL CHRIST.Chapter IV. THE MYTHIC CHRIST.Chapter V. THE MYSTIC CHRIST.Chapter VI. THE ATONEMENT.Chapter VII. RESURRECTION AND ASCENSION.Chapter VIII. THE TRINITY.Chapter IX. PRAYER.[294]Chapter X. THE FORGIVENESS OF SINS.Chapter XI. SACRAMENTS.Chapter XII. REVELATION.FOOTNOTES:Copyright
Christian Esoterism
Annie Besant
FOREWORD.
The object of this book is to suggest certain lines of thought as
to the deep truths underlying Christianity, truths generally
overlooked, and only too often denied. The generous wish to share
with all what is precious, to spread broadcast priceless truths, to
shut out none from the illumination of true knowledge, has resulted
in a zeal without discretion that has vulgarised Christianity, and
has presented its teachings in a form that often repels the heart
and alienates the intellect. The command to "preach the Gospel to
every creature"[1]—though admittedly of doubtful authenticity—has
been interpreted as forbidding the teaching of the Gnosis to a few,
and has apparently erased the less popular saying of the same Great
Teacher: "Give not that which is holy unto the dogs, neither cast
ye your pearls before swine."[2]
This spurious sentimentality—which refuses to recognise the obvious
inequalities of intelligence and morality, and thereby reduces the
teaching of the highly developed to the level attainable by the
least evolved, sacrificing the higher to the lower in a way that
injures both—had no place in the virile common sense of the early
Christians. S. Clement of Alexandria says quite bluntly, after
alluding to the Mysteries: "Even now I fear, as it is said, 'to
cast the pearls before swine, lest they tread them underfoot, and
turn and rend us.' For it is difficult to exhibit the really pure
and transparent words respecting the true Light to swinish and
untrained hearers."[3]
If true knowledge, the Gnosis, is again to form a part of Christian
teachings, it can only be under the old restrictions, and the idea
of levelling down to the capacities of the least developed must be
definitely surrendered. Only by teaching above the grasp of the
little evolved can the way be opened up for a restoration of arcane
knowledge, and the study of the Lesser Mysteries must precede that
of the Greater. The Greater will never be published through the
printing-press; they can only be given by Teacher to pupil, "from
mouth to ear." But the Lesser Mysteries, the partial unveiling of
deep truths, can even now be restored, and such a volume as the
present is intended to outline these, and to show the nature of the
teachings which have to be mastered. Where only hints are given,
quiet meditation on the truths hinted at will cause their outlines
to become visible, and the clearer light obtained by continued
meditation will gradually show them more fully. For meditation
quiets the lower mind, ever engaged in thinking about external
objects, and when the lower mind is tranquil then only can it be
illuminated by the Spirit. Knowledge of spiritual truths must be
thus obtained, from within and not from without, from the divine
Spirit whose temple we are[4] and not from an external Teacher.
These things are "spiritually discerned" by that divine indwelling
Spirit, that "mind of Christ," whereof speaks the Great Apostle,[5]
and that inner light is shed upon the lower mind.
This is the way of the Divine Wisdom, the true Theosophy. It is
not, as some think, a diluted version of Hinduism, or Buddhism, or
Taoism, or of any special religion. It is Esoteric Christianity as
truly as it is Esoteric Buddhism, and belongs equally to all
religions, exclusively to none. This is the source of the
suggestions made in this little volume, for the helping of those
who seek the Light—that "true Light which lighteth every man that
cometh into the world,"[6] though most have not yet opened their
eyes to it. It does not bring the Light. It only says: "Behold the
Light!" For thus have we heard. It appeals only to the few who
hunger for more than the exoteric teachings give them. For those
who are fully satisfied with the exoteric teachings, it is not
intended; for why should bread be forced on those who are not
hungry? For those who hunger, may it prove bread, and not a
stone.
Chapter I. THE HIDDEN SIDE OF RELIGIONS.
Many, perhaps most, who see the title of this book will at once
traverse it, and will deny that there is anything valuable which
can be rightly described as "Esoteric Christianity." There is a
wide-spread, and withal a popular, idea that there is no such thing
as an occult teaching in connection with Christianity, and that
"The Mysteries," whether Lesser or Greater, were a purely Pagan
institution. The very name of "The Mysteries of Jesus," so familiar
in the ears of the Christians of the first centuries, would come
with a shock of surprise on those of their modern successors, and,
if spoken as denoting a special and definite institution in the
Early Church, would cause a smile of incredulity. It has actually
been made a matter of boast that Christianity has no secrets, that
whatever it has to say it says to all, and whatever it has to teach
it teaches to all. Its truths are supposed to be so simple, that "a
way-faring man, though a fool, may not err therein," and the
"simple Gospel" has become a stock phrase.
It is necessary, therefore, to prove clearly that in the Early
Church, at least, Christianity was no whit behind other great
religions in possessing a hidden side, and that it guarded, as a
priceless treasure, the secrets revealed only to a select few in
its Mysteries. But ere doing this it will be well to consider the
whole question of this hidden side of religions, and to see why
such a side must exist if a religion is to be strong and stable;
for thus its existence in Christianity will appear as a foregone
conclusion, and the references to it in the writings of the
Christian Fathers will appear simple and natural instead of
surprising and unintelligible. As a historical fact, the existence
of this esotericism is demonstrable; but it may also be shown that
intellectually it is a necessity.
The first question we have to answer is: What is the object of
religions? They are given to the world by men wiser than the masses
of the people on whom they are bestowed, and are intended to
quicken human evolution. In order to do this effectively they must
reach individuals and influence them. Now all men are not at the
same level of evolution, but evolution might be figured as a rising
gradient, with men stationed on it at every point. The most highly
evolved are far above the least evolved, both in intelligence and
character; the capacity alike to understand and to act varies at
every stage. It is, therefore, useless to give to all the same
religious teaching; that which would help the intellectual man
would be entirely unintelligible to the stupid, while that which
would throw the saint into ecstasy would leave the criminal
untouched. If, on the other hand, the teaching be suitable to help
the unintelligent, it is intolerably crude and jejune to the
philosopher, while that which redeems the criminal is utterly
useless to the saint. Yet all the types need religion, so that each
may reach upward to a life higher than that which he is leading,
and no type or grade should be sacrificed to any other. Religion
must be as graduated as evolution, else it fails in its
object.
Next comes the question: In what way do religions seek to quicken
human evolution? Religions seek to evolve the moral and
intellectual natures, and to aid the spiritual nature to unfold
itself. Regarding man as a complex being, they seek to meet him at
every point of his constitution, and therefore to bring messages
suitable for each, teachings adequate to the most diverse human
needs. Teachings must therefore be adapted to each mind and heart
to which they are addressed. If a religion does not reach and
master the intelligence, if it does not purify and inspire the
emotions, it has failed in its object, so far as the person
addressed is concerned.
Not only does it thus direct itself to the intelligence and the
emotions, but it seeks, as said, to stimulate the unfoldment of the
spiritual nature. It answers to that inner impulse which exists in
humanity, and which is ever pushing the race onwards. For deeply
within the heart of all—often overlaid by transitory conditions,
often submerged under pressing interests and anxieties—there exists
a continual seeking after God. "As the hart panteth after the
water-brooks, so panteth"[7] humanity after God. The search is
sometimes checked for a space, and the yearning seems to disappear.
Phases recur in civilisation and in thought, wherein this cry of
the human Spirit for the divine—seeking its source as water seeks
its level, to borrow a simile from Giordano Bruno—this yearning of
the human Spirit for that which is akin to it in the universe, of
the part for the whole, seems to be stilled, to have vanished; none
the less does that yearning reappear, and once more the same cry
rings out from the Spirit. Trampled on for a time, apparently
destroyed, though the tendency may be, it rises again and again
with inextinguishable persistence, it repeats itself again and
again, no matter how often it is silenced; and it thus proves
itself to be an inherent tendency in human nature, an ineradicable
constituent thereof. Those who declare triumphantly, "Lo! it is
dead!" find it facing them again with undiminished vitality. Those
who build without allowing for it find their well-constructed
edifices riven as by an earthquake. Those who hold it to be
outgrown find the wildest superstitions succeed its denial. So much
is it an integral part of humanity, that man will have some answer
to his questionings; rather an answer that is false, than none. If
he cannot find religious truth, he will take religious error rather
than no religion, and will accept the crudest and most incongruous
ideals rather than admit that the ideal is non-existent.
Religion, then, meets this craving, and taking hold of the
constituent in human nature that gives rise to it, trains it,
strengthens it, purifies it and guides it towards its proper
ending—the union of the human Spirit with the divine, so "that God
may be all in all."[8]
The next question which meets us in our enquiry is: What is the
source of religions? To this question two answers have been given
in modern times—that of the Comparative Mythologists and that of
the Comparative Religionists. Both base their answers on a common
basis of admitted facts. Research has indisputably proved that the
religions of the world are markedly similar in their main
teachings, in their possession of Founders who display superhuman
powers and extraordinary moral elevation, in their ethical
precepts, in their use of means to come into touch with invisible
worlds, and in the symbols by which they express their leading
beliefs. This similarity, amounting in many cases to identity,
proves—according to both the above schools—a common origin.
But on the nature of this common origin the two schools are at
issue. The Comparative Mythologists contend that the common origin
is the common ignorance, and that the loftiest religious doctrines
are simply refined expressions of the crude and barbarous guesses
of savages, of primitive men, regarding themselves and their
surroundings. Animism, fetishism, nature-worship, sun-worship—these
are the constituents of the primeval mud out of which has grown the
splendid lily of religion. A Kṛiṣhṇa, a Buddha, a Lao-tze, a Jesus,
are the highly civilised but lineal descendants of the whirling
medicine-man of the savage. God is a composite photograph of the
innumerable Gods who are the personifications of the forces of
nature. And so forth. It is all summed up in the phrase: Religions
are branches from a common trunk—human ignorance.
The Comparative Religionists consider, on the other hand, that all
religions originate from the teachings of Divine Men, who give out
to the different nations of the world, from time to time, such
parts of the fundamental verities of religion as the people are
capable of receiving, teaching ever the same morality, inculcating
the use of similar means, employing the same significant symbols.
The savage religions—animism and the rest—are degenerations, the
results of decadence, distorted and dwarfed descendants of true
religious beliefs. Sun-worship and pure forms of nature-worship
were, in their day, noble religions, highly allegorical but full of
profound truth and knowledge. The great Teachers—it is alleged by
Hindus, Buddhists, and by some Comparative Religionists, such as
Theosophists—form an enduring Brotherhood of men who have risen
beyond humanity, who appear at certain periods to enlighten the
world, and who are the spiritual guardians of the human race. This
view may be summed up in the phrase: "Religions are branches from a
common trunk—Divine Wisdom."
This Divine Wisdom is spoken of as the Wisdom, the Gnosis, the
Theosophia, and some, in different ages of the world, have so
desired to emphasise their belief in this unity of religions, that
they have preferred the eclectic name of Theosophist to any
narrower designation.
The relative value of the contentions of these two opposed schools
must be judged by the cogency of the evidence put forth by each.
The appearance of a degenerate form of a noble idea may closely
resemble that of a refined product of a coarse idea, and the only
method of deciding between degeneration and evolution would be the
examination, if possible, of intermediate and remote ancestors. The
evidence brought forward by believers in the Wisdom is of this
kind. They allege: that the Founders of religions, judged by the
records of their teachings, were far above the level of average
humanity; that the Scriptures of religions contain moral precepts,
sublime ideals, poetical aspirations, profound philosophical
statements, which are not even approached in beauty and elevation
by later writings in the same religions—that is, that the old is
higher than the new, instead of the new being higher than the old;
that no case can be shown of the refining and improving process
alleged to be the source of current religions, whereas many cases
of degeneracy from pure teachings can be adduced; that even among
savages, if their religions be carefully studied, many traces of
lofty ideas can be found, ideas which are obviously above the
productive capacity of the savages themselves.
This last idea has been worked out by Mr. Andrew Lang, who—judging
by his book on The Making of Religion—should be classed as a
Comparative Religionist rather than as a Comparative Mythologist.
He points to the existence of a common tradition, which, he
alleges, cannot have been evolved by the savages for themselves,
being men whose ordinary beliefs are of the crudest kind and whose
minds are little developed. He shows, under crude beliefs and
degraded views, lofty traditions of a sublime character, touching
the nature of the Divine Being and His relations with men. The
deities who are worshipped are, for the most part, the veriest
devils, but behind, beyond all these, there is a dim but glorious
over-arching Presence, seldom or never named, but whispered of as
source of all, as power and love and goodness, too tender to awaken
terror, too good to require supplication. Such ideas manifestly
cannot have been conceived by the savages among whom they are
found, and they remain as eloquent witnesses of the revelations
made by some great Teacher—dim tradition of whom is generally also
discoverable—who was a Son of the Wisdom, and imparted some of its
teachings in a long bye-gone age.
The reason, and, indeed, the justification, of the view taken by
the Comparative Mythologists is patent. They found in every
direction low forms of religious belief, existing among savage
tribes. These were seen to accompany general lack of civilisation.
Regarding civilised men as evolving from uncivilised, what more
natural than to regard civilised religion as evolving from
uncivilised? It is the first obvious idea. Only later and deeper
study can show that the savages of to-day are not our ancestral
types, but are the degenerated offsprings of great civilised stocks
of the past, and that man in his infancy was not left to grow up
untrained, but was nursed and educated by his elders, from whom he
received his first guidance alike in religion and civilisation.
This view is being substantiated by such facts as those dwelt on by
Lang, and will presently raise the question, "Who were these
elders, of whom traditions are everywhere found?"
Still pursuing our enquiry, we come next to the question: To what
people were religions given? And here we come at once to the
difficulty with which every Founder of a religion must deal, that
already spoken of as bearing on the primary object of religion
itself, the quickening of human evolution, with its corollary that
all grades of evolving humanity must be considered by Him. Men are
at every stage of evolution, from the most barbarous to the most
developed; men are found of lofty intelligence, but also of the
most unevolved mentality; in one place there is a highly developed
and complex civilisation, in another a crude and simple polity.
Even within any given civilisation we find the most varied
types—the most ignorant and the most educated, the most thoughtful
and the most careless, the most spiritual and the most brutal; yet
each one of these types must be reached, and each must be helped in
the place where he is. If evolution be true, this difficulty is
inevitable, and must be faced and overcome by the divine Teacher,
else will His work be a failure. If man is evolving as all around
him is evolving, these differences of development, these varied
grades of intelligence, must be a characteristic of humanity
everywhere, and must be provided for in each of the religions of
the world.
We are thus brought face to face with the position that we cannot
have one and the same religious teaching even for a single nation,
still less for a single civilisation, or for the whole world. If
there be but one teaching, a large number of those to whom it is
addressed will entirely escape its influence. If it be made
suitable for those whose intelligence is limited, whose morality is
elementary, whose perceptions are obtuse, so that it may help and
train them, and thus enable them to evolve, it will be a religion
utterly unsuitable for those men, living in the same nation,
forming part of the same civilisation, who have keen and delicate
moral perceptions, bright and subtle intelligence, and evolving
spirituality. But if, on the other hand, this latter class is to be
helped, if intelligence is to be given a philosophy that it can
regard as admirable, if delicate moral perceptions are to be still
further refined, if the dawning spiritual nature is to be enabled
to develope into the perfect day, then the religion will be so
spiritual, so intellectual, and so moral, that when it is preached
to the former class it will not touch their minds or their hearts,
it will be to them a string of meaningless phrases, incapable of
arousing their latent intelligence, or of giving them any motive
for conduct which will help them to grow into a purer
morality.
Looking, then, at these facts concerning religion, considering its
object, its means, its origin, the nature and varying needs of the
people to whom it is addressed, recognising the evolution of
spiritual, intellectual, and moral faculties in man, and the need
of each man for such training as is suitable for the stage of
evolution at which he has arrived, we are led to the absolute
necessity of a varied and graduated religious teaching, such as
will meet these different needs and help each man in his own
place.
There is yet another reason why esoteric teaching is desirable with
respect to a certain class of truths. It is eminently the fact in
regard to this class that "knowledge is power." The public
promulgation of a philosophy profoundly intellectual, sufficient to
train an already highly developed intellect, and to draw the
allegiance of a lofty mind, cannot injure any. It can be preached
without hesitation, for it does not attract the ignorant, who turn
away from it as dry, stiff, and uninteresting. But there are
teachings which deal with the constitution of nature, explain
recondite laws, and throw light on hidden processes, the knowledge
of which gives control over natural energies, and enables its
possessor to direct these energies to certain ends, as a chemist
deals with the production of chemical compounds. Such knowledge may
be very useful to highly developed men, and may much increase their
power of serving the race. But if this knowledge were published to
the world, it might and would be misused, just as the knowledge of
subtle poisons was misused in the Middle Ages by the Borgias and by
others. It would pass into the hands of people of strong intellect,
but of unregulated desires, men moved by separative instincts,
seeking the gain of their separate selves and careless of the
common good. They would be attracted by the idea of gaining powers
which would raise them above the general level, and place ordinary
humanity at their mercy, and would rush to acquire the knowledge
which exalts its possessors to a superhuman rank. They would, by
its possession, become yet more selfish and confirmed in their
separateness, their pride would be nourished and their sense of
aloofness intensified, and thus they would inevitably be driven
along the road which leads to diabolism, the Left Hand Path, whose
goal is isolation and not union. And they would not only themselves
suffer in their inner nature, but they would also become a menace
to Society, already suffering sufficiently at the hands of men
whose intellect is more evolved than their conscience. Hence arises
the necessity of withholding certain teachings from those who,
morally, are as yet unfitted to receive them; and this necessity
presses on every Teacher who is able to impart such knowledge. He
desires to give it to those who will use the powers it confers for
the general good, for quickening human evolution; but he equally
desires to be no party to giving it to those who would use it for
their own aggrandisement at the cost of others.
Nor is this a matter of theory only, according to the Occult
Records, which give the details of the events alluded to in Genesis
vi. et seq. This knowledge was, in those ancient times and on the
continent of Atlantis, given without any rigid conditions as to the
moral elevation, purity, and unselfishness of the candidates. Those
who were intellectually qualified were taught, just as men are
taught ordinary science in modern days. The publicity now so
imperiously demanded was then given, with the result that men
became giants in knowledge but also giants in evil, till the earth
groaned under her oppressors and the cry of a trampled humanity
rang through the worlds. Then came the destruction of Atlantis, the
whelming of that vast continent beneath the waters of the ocean,
some particulars of which are given in the Hebrew Scriptures in the
story of the Noachian deluge, and in the Hindu Scriptures of the
further East in the story of Vaivasvata Manu.
Since that experience of the danger of allowing unpurified hands to
grasp the knowledge which is power, the great Teachers have imposed
rigid conditions as regards purity, unselfishness, and self-control
on all candidates for such instruction. They distinctly refuse to
impart knowledge of this kind to any who will not consent to a
rigid discipline, intended to eliminate separateness of feeling and
interest. They measure the moral strength of the candidate even
more than his intellectual development, for the teaching itself
will develope the intellect while it puts a strain on the moral
nature. Far better that the Great Ones should be assailed by the
ignorant for Their supposed selfishness in withholding knowledge,
than that They should precipitate the world into another Atlantean
catastrophe.
So much of theory we lay down as bearing on the necessity of a
hidden side in all religions. When from theory we turn to facts, we
naturally ask: Has this hidden side existed in the past, forming a
part of the religions of the world? The answer must be an immediate
and unhesitating affirmative; every great religion has claimed to
possess a hidden teaching, and has declared that it is the
repository of theoretical mystic, and further of practical mystic,
or occult, knowledge. The mystic explanation of popular teaching
was public, and expounded the latter as an allegory, giving to
crude and irrational statements and stories a meaning which the
intellect could accept. Behind this theoretical mysticism, as it
was behind the popular, there existed further the practical
mysticism, a hidden spiritual teaching, which was only imparted
under definite conditions, conditions known and published, that
must be fulfilled by every candidate. S. Clement of Alexandria
mentions this division of the Mysteries. After purification, he
says, "are the Minor Mysteries, which have some foundation of
instruction and of preliminary preparation for what is to come
after; and the Great Mysteries, in which nothing remains to be
learned of the universe, but only to contemplate and comprehend
nature and things."[9]
This position cannot be controverted as regards the ancient
religions. The Mysteries of Egypt were the glory of that ancient
land, and the noblest sons of Greece, such as Plato, went to Saïs
and to Thebes to be initiated by Egyptian Teachers of Wisdom. The
Mithraic Mysteries of the Persians, the Orphic and Bacchic
Mysteries and the later Eleusinian semi-Mysteries of the Greeks,
the Mysteries of Samothrace, Scythia, Chaldea, are familiar in
name, at least, as household words. Even in the extremely diluted
form of the Eleusinian Mysteries, their value is most highly
praised by the most eminent men of Greece, as Pindar, Sophocles,
Isocrates, Plutarch, and Plato. Especially were they regarded as
useful with regard to post-mortem existence, as the Initiated
learned that which ensured his future happiness. Sopater further
alleged that Initiation established a kinship of the soul with the
divine Nature, and in the exoteric Hymn to Demeter covert
references are made to the holy child, Iacchus, and to his death
and resurrection, as dealt with in the Mysteries.[10]
From Iamblichus, the great theurgist of the third and fourth
centuries A.D., much may be learned as to the object of the
Mysteries. Theurgy was magic, "the last part of the sacerdotal
science,"[11] and was practised in the Greater Mysteries, to evoke
the appearance of superior Beings. The theory on which these
Mysteries were based may be very briefly thus stated: There is One,
prior to all beings, immovable, abiding in the solitude of His own
unity. From That arises the Supreme God, the Self-begotten, the
Good, the Source of all things, the Root, the God of Gods, the
First Cause, unfolding Himself into Light.[12] From Him springs the
Intelligible World, or ideal universe, the Universal Mind, the Nous
and the incorporeal or intelligible Gods belong to this. From this
the World-Soul, to which belong the "divine intellectual forms
which are present with the visible bodies of the Gods."[13] Then
come various hierarchies of superhuman beings, Archangels, Archons
(Rulers) or Cosmocratores, Angels, Daimons, &c. Man is a being
of a lower order, allied to these in his nature, and is capable of
knowing them; this knowledge was achieved in the Mysteries, and it
led to union with God.[14] In the Mysteries these doctrines are
expounded, "the progression from, and the regression of all things
to, the One, and the entire domination of the One,"[15] and,
further, these different Beings were evoked, and appeared,
sometimes to teach, sometimes, by Their mere presence, to elevate
and purify. "The Gods," says Iamblichus, "being benevolent and
propitious, impart their light to theurgists in unenvying
abundance, calling upwards their souls to themselves, procuring
them a union with themselves, and accustoming them, while they are
yet in body, to be separated from bodies, and to be led round to
their eternal and intelligible principle."[16] For "the soul having
a twofold life, one being in conjunction with body, but the other
being separate from all body,"[17] it is most necessary to learn to
separate it from the body, that thus it may unite itself with the
Gods by its intellectual and divine part, and learn the genuine
principles of knowledge, and the truths of the intelligible
world.[18] "The presence of the Gods, indeed, imparts to us health
of body, virtue of soul, purity of intellect, and, in one word,
elevates everything in us to its proper nature. It exhibits that
which is not body as body to the eyes of the soul, through those of
the body."[19] When the Gods appear, the soul receives "a
liberation from the passions, a transcendent perfection, and an
energy entirely more excellent, and participates of divine love and
an immense joy."[20] By this we gain a divine life, and are
rendered in reality divine.[21]
The culminating point of the Mysteries was when the Initiate became
a God, whether by union with a divine Being outside himself, or by
the realisation of the divine Self within him. This was termed
ecstasy, and was a state of what the Indian Yogî would term high
Samâdhi, the gross body being entranced and the freed soul
effecting its own union with the Great One. This "ecstasy is not a
faculty properly so called, it is a state of the soul, which
transforms it in such a way that it then perceives what was
previously hidden from it. The state will not be permanent until
our union with God is irrevocable; here, in earth life, ecstasy is
but a flash.... Man can cease to become man, and become God; but
man cannot be God and man at the same time."[22] Plotinus states
that he had reached this state "but three times as yet."
So also Proclus taught that the one salvation of the soul was to
return to her intellectual form, and thus escape from the "circle
of generation, from abundant wanderings," and reach true Being, "to
the uniform and simple energy of the period of sameness, instead of
the abundantly wandering motion of the period which is
characterised by difference." This is the life sought by those
initiated by Orpheus into the Mysteries of Bacchus and Proserpine,
and this is the result of the practice of the purificatory, or
cathartic, virtues.[23]
These virtues were necessary for the Greater Mysteries, as they
concerned the purifying of the subtle body, in which the soul
worked when out of the gross body. The political or practical
virtues belonged to man's ordinary life, and were required to some
extent before he could be a candidate even for such a School as is
described below. Then came the cathartic virtues, by which the
subtle body, that of the emotions and lower mind, was purified;
thirdly the intellectual, belonging to the Augöeides, or the
light-form of the intellect; fourthly the contemplative, or
paradigmatic, by which union with God was realised. Porphyry
writes: "He who energises according to the practical virtues is a
worthy man; but he who energises according to the purifying virtues
is an angelic man, or is also a good daimon. He who energises
according to the intellectual virtues alone is a God; but he who
energises according to the paradigmatic virtues is the Father of
the Gods."[24]
Much instruction was also given in the Mysteries by the archangelic
and other hierarchies, and Pythagoras, the great teacher who was
initiated in India, and who gave "the knowledge of things that are"
to his pledged disciples, is said to have possessed such a
knowledge of music that he could use it for the controlling of
men's wildest passions, and the illuminating of their minds. Of
this, instances are given by Iamblichus in his Life of Pythagoras.
It seems probable that the title of Theodidaktos, given to Ammonius
Saccas, the master of Plotinus, referred less to the sublimity of
his teachings than to this divine instruction received by him in
the Mysteries.
Some of the symbols used are explained by Iamblichus,[25] who bids
Porphyry remove from his thought the image of the thing symbolised
and reach its intellectual meaning. Thus "mire" meant everything
that was bodily and material; the "God sitting above the lotus"
signified that God transcended both the mire and the intellect,
symbolised by the lotus, and was established in Himself, being
seated. If "sailing in a ship," His rule over the world was
pictured. And so on.[26] On this use of symbols Proclus remarks
that "the Orphic method aimed at revealing divine things by means
of symbols, a method common to all writers of divine
lore."[27]
The Pythagorean School in Magna Græcia was closed at the end of the
sixth century B.C., owing to the persecution of the civil power,
but other communities existed, keeping up the sacred tradition.[28]
Mead states that Plato intellectualised it, in order to protect it
from an increasing profanation, and the Eleusinian rites preserved
some of its forms, having lost its substance. The Neo-Platonists
inherited from Pythagoras and Plato, and their works should be
studied by those who would realise something of the grandeur and
the beauty preserved for the world in the Mysteries.
The Pythagorean School itself may serve as a type of the discipline
enforced. On this Mead gives many interesting details,[29] and
remarks: "The authors of antiquity are agreed that this discipline
had succeeded in producing the highest examples, not only of the
purest chastity and sentiment, but also a simplicity of manners, a
delicacy, and a taste for serious pursuits which was unparalleled.
This is admitted even by Christian writers." The School had outer
disciples, leading the family and social life, and the above
quotation refers to these. In the inner School were three
degrees—the first of Hearers, who studied for two years in silence,
doing their best to master the teachings; the second degree was of
Mathematici, wherein were taught geometry and music, the nature of
number, form, colour, and sound; the third degree was of Physici,
who mastered cosmogony and metaphysics. This led up to the true
Mysteries. Candidates for the School must be "of an unblemished
reputation and of a contented disposition."
The close identity between the methods and aims pursued in these
various Mysteries and those of Yoga in India is patent to the most
superficial observer. It is not, however, necessary to suppose that
the nations of antiquity drew from India; all alike drew from the
one source, the Grand Lodge of Central Asia, which sent out its
Initiates to every land. They all taught the same doctrines, and
pursued the same methods, leading to the same ends. But there was
much intercommunication between the Initiates of all nations, and
there was a common language and a common symbolism. Thus Pythagoras
journeyed among the Indians, and received in India a high
Initiation, and Apollonius of Tyana later followed in his steps.
Quite Indian in phrase as well as thought were the dying words of
Plotinus: "Now I seek to lead back the Self within me to the
All-self."[30]
Among the Hindus the duty of teaching the supreme knowledge only to
the worthy was strictly insisted on. "The deepest mystery of the
end of knowledge ... is not to be declared to one who is not a son
or a pupil, and who is not tranquil in mind."[31] So again, after a
sketch of Yoga we read: "Stand up! awake! having found the Great
Ones, listen! The road is as difficult to tread as the sharp edge
of a razor. Thus say the wise."[32] The Teacher is needed, for
written teaching alone does not suffice. The "end of knowledge" is
to know God—not only to believe; to become one with God—not only to
worship afar off. Man must know the reality of the divine
Existence, and then know—not only vaguely believe and hope—that his
own innermost Self is one with God, and that the aim of life is to
realise that unity. Unless religion can guide a man to that
realisation, it is but "as sounding brass or a tinkling
cymbal."[33]
So also it was asserted that man should learn to leave the gross
body: "Let a man with firmness separate it [the soul] from his own
body, as a grass-stalk from its sheath."[34] And it was written!
"In the golden highest sheath dwells the stainless, changeless
Brahman; It is the radiant white Light of lights, known to the
knowers of the Self."[35] "When the seer sees the golden-coloured
Creator, the Lord, the Spirit, whose womb is Brahman, then, having
thrown away merit and demerit, stainless, the wise one reaches the
highest union."[36]
Nor were the Hebrews without their secret knowledge and their
Schools of Initiation. The company of prophets at Naioth presided
over by Samuel[37] formed such a School, and the oral teaching was
handed down by them. Similar Schools existed at Bethel and
Jericho,[38] and in Cruden's Concordance[39] there is the following
interesting note: "The Schools or Colleges of the prophets are the
first [schools] of which we have any account in Scripture; where
the children of the prophets, that is, their disciples, lived in
the exercises of a retired and austere life, in study and
meditation, and reading of the law of God.... These Schools, or
Societies, of the prophets were succeeded by the Synagogues." The
Kabbala, which contains the semi-public teaching, is, as it now
stands, a modern compilation, part of it being the work of Rabbi
Moses de Leon, who died A.D. 1305. It consists of five books,
Bahir, Zohar, Sepher Sephiroth, Sepher Yetzirah, and Asch
Metzareth, and is asserted to have been transmitted orally from
very ancient times—as antiquity is reckoned historically. Dr. Wynn
Westcott says that "Hebrew tradition assigns the oldest parts of
the Zohar to a date antecedent to the building of the second
Temple;" and Rabbi Simeon ben Jochai is said to have written down
some of it in the first century A.D. The Sepher Yetzirah is spoken
of by Saadjah Gaon, who died A.D. 940, as "very ancient."[40] Some
portions of the ancient oral teaching have been incorporated in the
Kabbala as it now stands, but the true archaic wisdom of the
Hebrews remains in the guardianship of a few of the true sons of
Israel.
Brief as is this outline, it is sufficient to show the existence of
a hidden side in the religions of the world outside Christianity,
and we may now examine the question whether Christianity was an
exception to this universal rule.
Chapter II. THE HIDDEN SIDE OF CHRISTIANITY.
(a) The Testimony of the
Scriptures.
Having seen that the religions of the past claimed with one voice
to have a hidden side, to be custodians of "Mysteries," and that
this claim was endorsed by the seeking of initiation by the
greatest men, we must now ascertain whether Christianity stands
outside this circle of religions, and alone is without a Gnosis,
offering to the world only a simple faith and not a profound
knowledge. Were it so, it would indeed be a sad and lamentable
fact, proving Christianity to be intended for a class only, and not
for all types of human beings. But that it is not so, we shall be
able to prove beyond the possibility of rational doubt.
And that proof is the thing which Christendom at this time most
sorely needs, for the very flower of Christendom is perishing for
lack of knowledge. If the esoteric teaching can be re-established
and win patient and earnest students, it will not be long before
the occult is also restored. Disciples of the Lesser Mysteries will
become candidates for the Greater, and with the regaining of
knowledge will come again the authority of teaching. And truly the
need is great. For, looking at the world around us, we find that
religion in the West is suffering from the very difficulty that
theoretically we should expect to find. Christianity, having lost
its mystic and esoteric teaching, is losing its hold on a large
number of the more highly educated, and the partial revival during
the past few years is co-incident with the re-introduction of some
mystic teaching. It is patent to every student of the closing forty
years of the last century, that crowds of thoughtful and moral
people have slipped away from the churches, because the teachings
they received there outraged their intelligence and shocked their
moral sense. It is idle to pretend that the wide-spread agnosticism
of this period had its root either in lack of morality or in
deliberate crookedness of mind. Everyone who carefully studies the
phenomena presented will admit that men of strong intellect have
been driven out of Christianity by the crudity of the religious
ideas set before them, the contradictions in the authoritative
teachings, the views as to God, man, and the universe that no
trained intelligence could possibly admit. Nor can it be said that
any kind of moral degradation lay at the root of the revolt against
the dogmas of the Church. The rebels were not too bad for their
religion; on the contrary, it was the religion that was too bad for
them. The rebellion against popular Christianity was due to the
awakening and the growth of conscience; it was the conscience that
revolted, as well as the intelligence, against teachings
dishonouring to God and man alike, that represented God as a
tyrant, and man as essentially evil, gaining salvation by slavish
submission.