I
THE BIRTH OF THE INTELLECT AND THE MISSION OF CHRISTIANITY
It is only of recent times that the truths of occultism have been the
subject of public lectures. Formerly, these truths were only revealed
in secret societies, to those who had passed through certain degrees
of initiation and had sworn to obey the laws of the Order through the
whole of their life. Today, man is entering upon a very critical
period. Occult truths are beginning to be disclosed to the public. In
a matter of twenty years or so, a certain number of them will already
be common knowledge. Why is this? The reason is that humanity is
entering upon a new phase which it is the object of this lecture to
explain.
In the Middle Ages, occult truths were known in the Rosicrucian
Movement. But whenever they leaked out, they were either misunderstood
or distorted. In the eighteenth century they entered upon a phase of
much dilletantism and charlatanry and at the beginning of the
nineteenth century they were put entirely in the background by the
physical sciences. It is only in our day that they are beginning to
re-emerge and in the coming centuries they will play an important part
in the development of mankind. In order to understand this, we must
glance at the centuries preceding the advent of Christianity and
follow the progress that has been made.
It does not require any very profound knowledge to realise the
difference between a man of pre-Christian times and a man of today.
Although his scientific knowledge was far less, man of olden times had
deeper feelings and intuitions. He lived more in the world beyond —
which he also perceived — than in the world of sense. There were
some who entered into direct and actual communication with the astral
and spiritual world. In the Middle Ages, when earthly existence was by
no means comfortable, man still lived with his head in the heavens.
True, the mediaeval cities were somewhat primitive, but they were a
far truer representation of man's inner world than the cities of
today. Not only the cathedrals but the houses and porches with their
symbols reminded men of their faith, their inner feelings, their
aspirations, and the home of their soul. Today, we have knowledge of
many, many things and the relations among human beings have multiplied
ad infinitum. But we live in cities that are like deafening factories
in awful Babels, with nothing to remind us of our inner world. Our
communion with this inner world is not through contemplation but
through books. We have passed from intuition into intellectualism.
To find the origin of the stream of intellectualism we must go back
further than the Middle Ages. The epoch of the birth of human
intellect, the period when this transformation took place, lies about
a thousand years before the Christian era. It is the epoch of Thales,
Pythagoras,
Buddha. Then for the first time arose philosophy and
science, that is to say truth presented to the reason in the form of
logic. Before this age, truth presented itself in the form of
religion, of revelation received by the teachers and accepted by the
masses. In our times, truth passes into the individual intelligence
and would fain be proved by argument, would like to have its own wings
clipped.
What has happened in the inner nature of man to justify this
transition of his consciousness from one plane to another, from the
plane of intuition to that of logic? Here we touch upon one of the
fundamental laws of history — a law no longer recognised by contemporary
thought. It is this: Humanity evolves in a way which enables the
different elements and principles of man's being to unfold and
develop in successive stages.
What are these principles?
To begin with, man has a physical body in common with the
mineral kingdom. The whole mineral world is found again in the
chemistry of the body. He has an etheric body, which is,
properly speaking, the vital principle within him. He has this etheric
body in common with the plants. This principle engenders the process
of nutrition and the forces of growth and re-production. Man has also
an astral body in which feelings and sentiments, the power of
enjoyment and of suffering are enkindled. He has the astral body in
common with the animals.
Finally, there is a principle in man which cannot be spoken of as a
body. It is his innermost essence, distinguishing him from all other
entities, mineral, plant and animal. It is the self, the soul,
the divine spark. The Hindus spoke of it as Manas; The
Rosicrucians as the ‘Inexpressible.’ A body, in
effect, is only part and parcel of another body, but the self, the
‘I’ of man exists in and by itself alone — “I am
I.” This principle is addressed by others as ‘thou,’ or
‘you;’ it cannot be confused with anything else in the
universe. By virtue of this inexpressible, incommunicable self, man
rises above all created things of the Earth, above the animals, indeed
above all creation. And only through this principle can he commune
with the Infinite Self, with God. That is why, at certain definite
times, the officiating hierophant in the ancient Hebrew sanctuaries
said to the High Priest: Shem-Ham-Phores, which means: What is his
name (the name of God)? He-Vo-He, or — in one word — Jev or
Joph, meaning God, Nature, Man; or again, the inexpressible
‘I’ of man which is both human and divine.
These principles of man's being were laid down in remote ages of his
vast evolutionary cycle — but they only unfold slowly, one by
one.
The special mission of the period which began about a thousand years
before the Christian era has been to develop the human Ego in the
intellectual sense. But above the intellectual plane there is the
plane of Spirit. It is the world of Spirit to which man will attain in
the centuries to come, and to which he will be wending his way from
now onwards. The germs of this future development have been cast into
the world by the Christ and by true Christianity.
Before speaking of this world of Spirit, we must understand one of the
forces by means of which humanity en masse passed from the
astral to the intellectual plane. It was by virtue of a new kind of
marriage. In olden times, marriages were made in the bosom of the
same tribe or of the same clan — which was only an extension of the
family. Sometimes, indeed, brothers and sisters married. Later on, men
sought their wives outside the clan, the tribe, the civic community.
The beloved became the stranger, the unknown. Love — which in days of
yore had been merely a natural and social function — became personal
desire, and marriage a matter of free choice. This is indicated in
certain Greek myths like that of the rape of Helen and again in the
Scandinavian and Germanic myths of Sigurd and Gudrun. Love becomes an
adventure, woman a conquest from afar.
This change from patriarchial marriage to free marriage corresponds to
the new development of man's intellectual faculties, of the Ego. There
is a temporary eclipse of the astral faculties of vision and the power
of reading directly in the astral and spiritual world — faculties
which are included in ordinary speech under the name of
inspiration.
Let us now turn to Christianity. The brotherhood of man and the cult
of the One God are certainly features of it but they only represent
the external, social aspect, not the inner, spiritual reality. The
new, mysterious and transcendental element in Christianity is that it
creates divine Love, the power which transforms man from within, the
leaven by which the whole world is raised. Christ came to say:
”If you leave not mother, wife and your own body, you cannot be
my disciple”
That does not imply the cessation of natural links. Love extends
beyond the bounds of family to all human beings and is changed into
vivifying, creative, transmuting power.
This Love was the fundamental principle of Rosicrucian thought but it
was never understood by the outer world. It is destined to change the
very essence of all religion, of all cults, of all science.
The progress of humanity is from unconscious spirituality
(pre-Christian), through intellectualism (the present age), to
conscious spirituality, where the astral and intellectual
faculties unite once more and become dynamic through the power of the
Spirit of Love, divine and human. In this sense, Theology will tend to
become Theosophy.
What, in effect, is Theology? A knowledge of God imposed from without
under the form of dogma, as a kind of supernatural logic. And what is
Theosophy? A knowledge of God which blossoms like a flower in the
depths of the individual soul. God, having vanished from the world, is
reborn in the depths of the human heart.
In the Rosicrucian sense, Christianity is at once the highest
development of individual freedom and universal religion. There is a
community of free souls. The tyranny of dogma is replaced by the
radiance of divine Wisdom, embracing intelligence, love and action.
The science which arises from this cannot be measured by its power of
abstract reasoning but by its power to bring souls to flower and
fruition. That is the difference between ‘Logia’ and
‘Sophia,’ between science and divine Wisdom, between
Theology and Theosophy.
In this sense, Christ is the centre of the esoteric evolution of the
West. Certain modern Theologians — above all in Germany —
have tried to represent Christ as a simple, naive human being. This is
a terrible error. The most sublime consciousness, the most profound
Wisdom live in Him, as well as the most divine Love. Without such
consciousness, how could He be a supreme manifestation in the life of
our whole planetary evolution? What gave Him this power to rise so
high above His own time? Whence came transcendental qualities?
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