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by Anna Bonus Kingsford & Edward Maitland
THIS IS PART 2 of the 
The 
The Finding of Christ
By
Anna Bonus Kingsford
& Edward
Maitland
The
Secret Doctrine by H P Blavatsky
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Part 2 of 2
THIS
IS PART 2 of the 
 
      THE 
        AbstractPreface
       Lecture the FirstFirstIntroductory
       Lecture the SecondSecondThe Soul; and
the substance of existence
       Lecture the ThirdThirdThe various orders
of Spirits; and to discern them
       Lecture the FourthFourthThe Atonement 
       Lecture the FifthFifthThe nature and
constitution of the ego 
       Lecture the SixthSixthThe Fall (1) 
       Lecture the SeventhSeventhThe Fall (2) 
       Lecture the EightEightThe Redemption 
       Lecture the NinthNinth God as the Lord;
or, the Divine Image
      APPENDICES 
      Concerning the interpretation of
scripture
      Concerning the hereafter
      On prophesying; and prophecy
      Concerning the nature of Sin
      Concerning the "Great Work" and
the share of Christ Jesus therein
      The time of the End
      The Higher Alchemy
      Concerning Revelation 
      Concerning the Poet
      Concerning the One Life 
      Concerning the Mysteries
      Hymn to the Planet God
      Fragments of the "Golden Book of
Venus" 
            Part -1-Hymn of Aphrodite
            Part -2- A discourse of communion
of souls, and of the uses of love 
            between creature and creature.
      Hymn to Hermes
      The Secret of Satan 
      Plates (in preparation ) 
      Figure - 1 - The Cherubim of Exekiel and
the Apocalypse
      Figure - 2 - The tabernacle in the
wilderness
      Figure - 3 - Section of the Great Pyramid
of Gizeh
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UK. CF24-1DL
LECTURE THE EIGHTH.
THE
REDEMPTION.
PART
I
1.
THAT, then, which, mystically, is called the Fall of Man, does not mean, as 
commonly
supposed, the lapse, through a specific act, of particular individuals 
from
a state of original perfection; nor, as sometimes supposed, a change from a 
fluidic
to a material condition. It means such an inversion of the due relations 
between
the soul and the body of a personality already both spiritual and 
material,
as involves a transference of the central will of the system 
concerned,
from the soul – which is its proper seat – to the body, and the 
consequent
subjection of the soul to the body, and liability of the individual 
to
sin, disease, and all other evils which result from the limitations of 
Matter.
2.
That, therefore, which, mystically, is called the Redemption, and which is 
the
converse of the Fall, does not mean, as commonly supposed, the remission, or 
transference
from the guilty to the innocent, of the penalties incurred through 
the
Fall. No penalty incurred by man ever is or can be remitted by God, since 
the
Divine Justice is just. Nor, for the same reason, can it be borne by 
another,
since a substitution of the innocent for the guilty would in itself be 
a
violation of justice. Wherefore the doctrine of Vicarious Redemption, as 
ordinarily
accepted, represents a total misconception of the truth, and one 
derogatory
to the Divine Character. The Redemption means such removal of the 
will
of the individual system concerned, from the body, and reinstatement of it 
in
the soul, as thenceforth to secure to the soul full control over the body, 
and
to exempt the individual from further liability to transgression. He who is 
redeemed
cannot sin, that is, mortally.
3.
It is according to the Divine order of Nature that the soul should control 
the
body. For, as a manifested entity, man is a dual being, consisting of soul 
and
body; and of these, in point both of duration and function, and therefore in 
all
respects of value, the precedence belongs to the soul. For the soul is the 
real,
permanent Individual, the Self, the everlasting, substantial Idea, of 
which
the body is but the temporary residence and phenomenal expression. The 
soul,
nevertheless, has, properly speaking, no will of her own, since she is 
feminine
and negative. And she is therefore, by her nature, bound to obey the 
will
of some other than herself. This other can be only the Spirit or the Body; 
–
the Within and the Above, which is Divine, and is God; or the Without and the 
Below,
which, taken by itself and reduced to its last expression, is the 
“devil”.
It is, therefore, to the Spirit and soul as one, that obedience is due. 
Hence,
in making the body the seat of the will, the man revolts, not merely 
against
the soul, but against God; and the soul, by participation, does the 
same.
Of such revolt the consequence is disease and misery of both soul and 
body,
with the liability, ultimately, to extinction of the soul as well as of 
the
body. For the soul which persistently rejects the Divine Will in favor of 
the
bodily will, sins mortally, and, becoming mortal, at length dies. For her 
life
is withdrawn and her constituents are scattered to the elements; so that, 
without
any actual loss either of the Life or of the Substance of the universal 
existence,
the individuality constituted by her perishes. The “man” is no more.
4.
The result, on the other hand, of the soul’s steadfast aspiration towards 
God,
– the Spirit, that is, within her – and of her consequent action upon the 
body,
is that this also becomes permeated and suffused by the Spirit as, at 
last,
to have no will of its own, but to be in all things one with the soul and 
Spirit,
and to constitute with these one perfectly harmonious system, of which 
every
element is under full control of the central Will. It is this unification, 
occurring
within the individual, which constitutes the Atonement. And in him in 
whom
it occurs in its fullest extent, Nature realizes the ideal to attain which 
she
first came forth from God. For in the man thus redeemed, purified, and 
perfected
in the image of God, and having in himself the power of life eternal, 
she
herself is vindicated and glorified, and the Divine Wisdom is justified of 
her
children. The process, however, is one which each individual must accomplish 
in
and for himself. For, being an interior process, consisting in 
self-purification,
it cannot be performed from without. That whereby perfection 
is
attained is experience, which implies suffering. For this reason the man who 
is
reborn in us of “Water and the Spirit,” – our own regenerate Self, the Christ 
Jesus
and Son of Man, who in saving us is called the Captain of our salvation, – 
is
said to be made perfect through suffering. This suffering must be borne by 
each
man for himself. To deprive any one of it by putting the consequences of 
his
acts upon another, so far from aiding that one, would be to deprive him of 
his
means of redemption.
5.
There are two senses in which the term Fall is used, each of them having 
relation
to an indispensable epoch in the process of the universe. The one is 
the
fall of Spirit, the other of the Soul. The first occurs in the universal, 
and
concerns the Macrocosm. The second occurs in the individual, and concerns 
the
Microcosm. The first and general descent of Spirit into Matter consists in 
that
original projection of the Divine Substance from pure Being into the 
condition
of Existence, whereby Spirit becomes Matter, and Creation occurs. The 
doctrine
which regards the universe as the Thought of God, is a true doctrine. 
But
the universe is not therefore unsubstantial. God is real Being, and that 
which
God thinks is also God. Wherefore in consisting of the thought of the 
Divine
Mind, the Universe consists of the Substance of that Mind, the Substance, 
that
is, of God. God’s Ideas, like God, are real beings, Divine Personages, that 
is,
Gods. Put forth by, and, in a sense divided from, God, in order to 
accomplish
God’s purposes, these become messengers of God, that is, Angels. And, 
of
them, those to whom is assigned a condition below that of God, – a condition 
no
longer of Spirit, – are called “Fallen Angels.” Wherefore the “Fall of the 
Angels”,
denotes simply the original and cosmic descent of Spirit into the 
condition
of Matter, – the precipitation, that is, of the Divine Substance from 
a
state of pure Being, into the various elements and modes which are comprised 
in
and which constitute Existence or Creation. Creation is thus, not, as 
ordinarily
supposed, a making out of that which is not, but a manifestation or 
putting
forth, – by the conversion of essence into things – of that which 
already
is, but which subsists unmanifest. It is true, that prior to such 
manifestation,
there is no thing. But this is not because there is nothing; but 
because
before things can exist, the ideas of them must subsist. For a thing is 
the
result of an idea, and except as such cannot exist. Thus, Matter, as the 
intensification,
or densification, of Idea, is a mode of the Divine 
consciousness,
put forth through an exercise of the Divine Will; and being so, 
it
is capable, through an exercise of the Divine Love, of reverting to its 
original,
unmanifest condition of Spirit. The recall of the universe to this 
condition
constitutes the final Redemption or “Restitution of all things.” And 
it
is brought about by the operation of the Divine Spirit within the whole.
6.
The Redemption from the other of the two Falls specified, is due to the 
operation
of the divine element within the individual. And it is of this alone 
that
we propose to treat on this occasion. As already stated, this Fall does not 
consist
in the original investment of the soul with a material body. Such 
investment
– or incarnation – is an integral and indispensable element in the 
process
of the individualization of soul-substance, and of its education into 
humanity.
And until perfected, or nearly so, the body is necessary to the soul 
in
turn as nursery, school, house of correction, and chamber of ordeal. It is 
true
that redemption involves deliverance from the need of the body. But 
redemption
itself is from the power of the body; and it is from its fall under 
the
power of the body that the soul requires redemption. For it is this fall 
which,
by involving the alienation of the individual from God, renders necessary 
a
reconciliation or at-one-ment. And inasmuch as this can be effected only 
through
the total renunciation of the exterior or bodily will, and the 
unreserved
acceptance in its place of the interior or divine will, this 
at-one-ment
constitutes the essential element of that Redemption which forms the 
subject
of the present discourse.
7.
Although Redemption, as a whole, is one, the process is manifold, and 
consists
in a series of acts, spiritual and mental. Of this series, the part 
wherein
the individual finally surrenders his own exterior will, with all its 
exclusively
material desires and affections, is designated the Passion. And the 
particular
act whereby this surrender is consummated and demonstrated is called 
the
Crucifixion. This crucifixion means a complete, unreserving surrender, – to 
the
death, if need be, – without opposition, even in desire, on the part of the 
natural
man. Without these steps is no atonement. The man cannot become one with 
the
Spirit within him, until by his “Passion” and “Crucifixion,” he has utterly 
vanquished
the “Old Adam” of his former self. Through the atonement made by 
means
of this self-sacrifice he becomes as one without sin, being no more liable 
to
sin; and is qualified to enter, as his own high-priest, into the holy of 
holies
of his own innermost. For thus he has become of those who, being pure in 
heart
alone can face God.
8.
The “Passion” and “Crucifixion” have their immediate sequel in the Death and 
Burial
of the Self thus renounced. And these are followed by the Resurrection 
and
Ascension of the true immortal Man and new spiritual Adam, who by his 
Resurrection
proves himself to be – like the Christ – “virgin-born,” – in that 
he
is the offspring, not of the soul and her traffic with Matter and Sense, but 
of
the soul become “immaculate,” and of her spouse, the Spirit. The Ascension 
with
which the Drama terminates, is that of the whole Man, now regenerate, to 
his
own celestial kingdom within himself, where – made one with the Spirit – he 
takes
his seat for ever “at the right hand of the Father.”
9.
Although the Resurrection of the man regenerate has a twofold relation, in 
that
it sometimes affects the body, the resurrection is not of the body in any 
sense
ordinarily supposed, nor is the body in any way the object of the process. 
The
Man, it is true, has risen from the dead. But it is from the condition of 
deadness
in regard to things spiritual, and from among those who, being in that 
condition,
are said to be “dead in trespasses and sins.” In these two respects, 
namely,
as regards his own past self and the world generally, he has “risen from 
the
dead”; and “death,” of this kind, “has no more dominion over him.” And even 
if
he has redeemed also his body and made of it a risen body, this by no means 
implies
the resuscitation of an actual corpse. In this sense there has been for 
him
no death, and in this sense there is for him no resurrection. It was through 
misapprehension
of the true doctrine, and the consequent expectation of the 
resurrection
of the dead body, that the practice – originally symbolical and 
special
– of embalming the corpse as a mummy, became common, and that interment 
was
substituted for the classic and far more wholesome practice of cremation. In 
both
cases, the object was the delusive one of facilitating a resuscitation at 
once
impossible and undesirable, seeing that if reincarnation be needful, a soul 
can
always obtain for itself a new body.
10.
That which constitutes the Great Work, is, not the resuscitation of the dead 
body,
but the redemption of Spirit from Matter. Until man commits what, 
mystically,
is called idolatry, he has no need of such redemption. So long as he 
prefers
the inner to the outer, and consequently polarizes towards God, the will 
of
his soul is as the Divine Will, and she has, in virtue thereof, power over 
his
body, as God has over the universe. Committing idolatry, by reason of 
perverse
will to the outer, – looking back, and down, that is, and preferring 
the
form to the substance, the appearance to the reality, the phenomenon to the 
idea,
the “city of the Plain” to the “mount of the Lord,” – she loses this 
power,
and becomes, as already said, a “pillar of Salt,” fixed and material. 
Thus
does Man become “naked,” for he has brought his soul to degradation and 
shame
and profaned the temple of the Spirit. He has eaten of the “Forbidden 
Fruit”
of Sense; “
regain
it.
PART
II
11.
IN order to obtain an adequate conception of the vastness of the interval 
between
the condition of man “fallen” and man “redeemed,” it will be necessary 
to
speak yet more particularly of the Man perfected and having power. Thus 
contrasted
the heights and depths of humanity will appear in their true extent. 
It
is but a sketch, comparatively slight, which can here be given of what they 
must
endure, who, for love of God, desire God, and who, by love of God, finally 
attain
to and become God; and who, becoming God without ceasing to be man, 
become
God-Man, – God manifest in the flesh, – at once God and 
to
this end is one and the same for all, whenever, wherever, and by whomsoever 
followed.
For perfection is one, and all seekers after it must follow the same 
road.
The reward and the means towards it, are also one. For “the Gift of God is 
eternal
Life.” And it is by means of God, – the Divine Spirit working within 
him,
to build him up in the Divine Image, – he, meanwhile co-operating with the 
Spirit,
– that man achieves Divinity. In the familiar, but rarely understood 
terms,
“Philosopher’s Stone,” “Elixir of Life,” “universal Medicine,” “Holy 
Grail,”
and the like, is implied this supreme object of all quest. For these are 
but
terms to denote pure Spirit, and its essential correlative, a Will 
absolutely
firm and inaccessible alike to weakness from within and assault from 
without.
Without measure of this Spirit is no understanding – and therefore no 
interpretation
– of the Sacred Mysteries of existence. Spiritual themselves, 
they
can be comprehended only by those who have, nay, rather, who are Spirit; 
for
God is Spirit, and they who worship God must worship in the Spirit.
12.
The attainment in himself of a pure and Divine Spirit, is, therefore the 
first
object and last achievement of him who seeks to realize the loftiest ideal 
of
which humanity is capable. He who does this, is not an “Adept” merely. The 
“Adept”
covets power in order to save himself only; and knowledge is him thing 
apart
from love. Love saves others as well as oneself. And it is love that 
distinguishes
the Christ; – a truth implied, among other ways, in the name and 
character
assigned in mystic legends, to the favourite disciple of the Christs. 
To
identical
in meaning, and denoting the feminine and tender moiety of the Divine 
Nature.
He therefore, and he alone who possesses this spirit in quality and 
quantity
without measure, has, and is, “Christ.” He is God’s anointed, suffused 
and
brimming with the Spirit, and having in virtue thereof the power of the 
“Dissolvent”
and of “Transmutation,” in respect of the whole man. Herein lay the 
grand
secret of that philosophy which made “Hermes” to be accounted the “trainer 
of
the Christs.” Known as the Kabalistic philosophy, it was a philosophy – or 
rather
a science – based upon the recognition in Nature of an universal 
Substance,
which man can find and “effect,” and in virtue of which he contains 
within
himself the seed of his own regeneration, a seed of which – duly cultured 
–
the fruit is God, because the seed itself also is God. Wherefore the “Hermetic 
science”
is the science of God.
13.
“Christ,” then, is, primarily, not a person, but a process, a doctrine, a 
system
of life and thought, by the observance of which man becomes purified from 
Matter,
and transmuted into Spirit. And he is a Christ who, in virtue of his 
observance
of this process to its utmost extent while yet in the body, 
constitutes
a full manifestation of the qualities of Spirit. Thus manifested, he 
is
said to “destroy the works of the devil,” for he destroys that which gives 
pre-eminence
to Matter, and so re-establishes the 
God.
14.
This, the interior part of the process of the Christ is the essential part. 
Whether
first or last, the spiritual being must be perfected. Without this 
interior
perfection, nothing that is done in the body, or exterior man only is 
of
any avail, save, in so far as it may minister to the essential end. The body 
is
but an instrument, existing for the use and sake of the soul and not for 
itself.
And it is for the soul, and not for itself, that it must be perfected. 
Being
but an instrument, the body cannot be an end. That which makes the body an 
end,
ends with the body and the end of the body is corruption. Whatever is given 
to
the body is taken from the Spirit. From this it will be seen what is the true 
value
of Asceticism. Divested of its rational and spiritual motive, self-denial 
is
worthless. Rather is it worse than worthless; it is materialistic and 
idolatrous;
and, being in this aspect a churlish refusal of God’s good gifts it 
impugns
the bounteousness of the Divine nature. The aim of all endeavor should 
be
to bring the body into subjection to, and harmony with, the spirit, by 
refining
and subliming it, and so heightening its powers as to make it sensitive 
and
responsive to all the motions of the Spirit. This it can be only when, 
deriving
its sustenance from substances the purest and most highly solarized, 
such
as the vegetable kingdom alone affords, it suffers all its molecules to 
become
polarized in one and the same direction, and this the direction of the 
central
Will of the system, the “Lord God of Hosts” of the Microcosmic Man – 
Whose
mystic name is Adonai.
15.
The reason of this becomes obvious when it is understood that the Christs 
are,
above all things, Media. But this not as ordinarily supposed, even by many 
who
are devoted students of spiritual science. For, so far from suffering his 
own
vivifying spirit to step aside in order that another may enter, the Christ 
is
one who so develops, purifies, and in every way perfects his spirit, as to 
assimilate
and make it one with the universal Spirit, the God of the Macrocosm, 
so
that the God without and the God within may freely combine and mingle, making 
the
universal the individual, the individual the universal. Thus inspired and 
filled
with God, the soul kindles into flame; and God, identified with the man, 
speaks
through him, making the man utter himself in the name of God.
16.
It is in his office and character as Christ, and not in his own human 
individuality,
that the Man Regenerate proclaims himself “the way, the truth, 
and
the life,” “the door,” and the like. For, in being, as has been said, the 
connecting
link between the creature and God, the Christ truly represents the 
door
or gate through which all ascending souls must pass to union with the 
Divine;
and save through which “no man cometh unto the Father.” It is not, 
therefore,
in virtue of an extraneous, obsessing spirit that the Christ can be 
termed
a “Medium,” but in virtue of the spirit itself of the man, become Divine 
by
means of that inward purification by the life or “blood” of God, which is the 
secret
of the Christs, and “doubled” by union with the parent Spirit of all, – 
the
“Father” of all spirits. This Spirit it is Whom the typical Regenerate Man 
of
the Gospels is represented as calling the “Father.” It is the Unmanifest God, 
of
Whom the Christ is the full manifestation.
17.
Hence he disavows for himself the authorship of his utterances, and says, 
“The
words which I speak unto you I speak not of myself. The Father which 
dwelleth
in me, He doeth the works.” The Christ is, thus, a clear glass through 
which
the divine glory shines. As it is written of Jesus, “And we beheld his 
glory,
the glory as of the Only Begotten of the Father, full of grace and 
truth.”
Now, this “Only Begotten” is not mortal man at all, but He Who from all 
eternity
has been in the bosom of the Father, namely, the Word or Logos, the 
Speaker,
the Maker, the Manifestor, He Whose mystic name, as already said, is 
Adonai,
and of whom Christ is the counterpart.
18.
To attain to the perfection of the Christ, – to polarize, that is, the 
Divine
Spirit without measure, and to become a “Man of Power” and a Medium for 
the
Highest, – though open potentially to all, – is, actually and in the 
present,
open, if to any, but to few. And these are, necessarily, they only who, 
having
passed through many transmigrations and advanced far on their way towards 
maturity,
have sedulously turned their lives to the best account by means of the 
steadfast
development of all the higher faculties and qualities of man; and who, 
while
not declining the experiences of the body, have made the spirit, and not 
the
body, their object and aim. Aspiring to the redemption in himself of each 
plane
of man’s fourfold nature, the candidate for Christhood submits himself to 
discipline
and training the most severe, at one physical, intellectual, moral, 
and
spiritual, and rejects as valueless or pernicious whatever would fail to 
minister
to his one end, deeming no task too onerous, no sacrifice too painful, 
so
that he be spiritually advanced thereby. And how varied soever the means, 
there
is one rule to which he remains constant throughout, the rule, namely, of 
love.
The Christ he seeks is the pathway to God; and to fail, in the least 
degree
in respect of love, would be to put himself back in his journey. The 
sacrifices,
therefore, in the incense of which his soul ascends, are those of 
his
own lower nature to his own higher, and of himself for others. And life 
itself,
it seems to him, would be too dearly bought, if purchased at the expense 
of
another, however little or mean, – unless, indeed, of a kind irremediably 
noxious,
whose extinction would benefit the world. For, – be it remembered, – 
though
always Saviour, the Christ is sometimes also Purifier, as were all his 
types,
the Heroes, – or Men Regenerate, – of classic story. Enacting, thus, when 
necessary
the executioner’s part, he slays for no self-gratification, but “in 
the
name of the Lord.”
19.
They who have trod this path of old have been many, and their deeds have 
formed
the theme of mystical legends innumerable. Epitomizing these, we find 
that
the chief qualifications are as follows: – In order to gain “Power and the 
Resurrection,”
a man must, first of all, be a Hierarch. This is to say, he must 
have
attained the magical age of thirty-three years, having been, in the mystic 
sense
of the terms, immaculately conceived, and born of a king’s daughter; 
baptized
with water and with fire; tempted in the wilderness, crucified and 
buried,
having borne five wounds on the cross. He must, moreover, have answered 
the
riddle of the Sphinx. To attain the requisite age, he must have accomplished 
the
Twelve Labors symbolized in those of Heracles, and in the signs of the 
Zodiac;
passed within the Twelve Gates of Holy City of his own regenerate 
nature;
overcome the five Senses; and obtained dominion over the Four Elements. 
Achieving
all that is implied in these terms, “his warfare is accomplished,” he 
is
free of Matter, and will never again have a phenomenal body.
20.
He who shall attain to this perfection must be one who is without fear and 
without
desire, save towards God; who has courage to be absolutely poor and 
absolutely
chaste; to whom it is all one whether he have money or whether he 
have
none, whether he have house and lands or whether he be homeless, whether he 
have
worldly reputation or whether he be an outcast. Thus is he voluntarily 
poor,
and of the spirit of those of whom it is said that they inherit the 
kingdom
of heaven. It is not necessary that he has nothing; it is necessary only 
that
he care for nothing. Against attacks and influences of whatever kind, and 
coming
from whatever quarter without his own soul’s kingdom, he must impregnably 
steel
himself. If misfortune be his, he must make it his fortune; if poverty, he 
must
make it his riches; if loss, his gain; if sickness, his health; if pain, 
his
pleasure. Evil report must be to him good report; and he must be able to 
rejoice
when all men speak ill of him. Even death itself he must account as 
life.
Only when he has attained this equilibrium is he “Free.” Meanwhile he 
makes
Abstinence, Prayer, Meditation, Watchfulness and Self-restraint to be the 
decades
of his Rosary. And knowing that nothing is gained without toil, or won 
without
suffering, he acts ever on the principle that to labor is to pray, to 
ask
is to receive, to knock is to have the door open, and so strives 
accordingly.
21.
To gain power over Death, there must be self-denial and governance. Such is 
the
“
accounts
the Resurrection worth the Passion, the Kingdom worth the Obedience, 
the
Power worth the Suffering. And he, and he only, does not hesitate, whose 
time
has come.
22.
The last of the “Twelve Labors of Heracles “ is the conquest of the 
three-headed
dog, Cerberus. For by this is denoted the final victory over the 
body
with its three (true) senses. When this is accomplished, the process of 
ordeal
is no longer necessary. The Initiate is under a vow. The Hierarch is 
free.
He has undergone all his ordeals, and has freed his will. For the object 
of
the Trial and the Vow is Polarization. When the Fixed is Volatilized, the 
Magian
is Free. Before this, he is “subject.”
23.
The man who seeks to be a Hierarch must not dwell in cities. He may begin 
his
initiation in a city, but he cannot complete it there. For he must not 
breathe
dead and burnt air, – air, that is, the vitality of which is quenched. 
He
must be a wanderer, a dweller in the plain and the garden and the mountains. 
He
must commune with the starry heavens, and maintain direct contact with the 
great
electric currents of living air and with the unpaved grass and earth of 
the
planet, going barefoot and oft bathing his feet. It is in unfrequented 
places,
in lands such as are mystically called the “East,” where the 
abominations
of “
earth
and heaven is strong, that the man who seeks Power, and who would achieve 
the
“Great Work,” must accomplish his initiation.
PART
III
24.
IN assigning to the Gospels their proper meaning, it is necessary to 
remember
that, as mystical Scriptures, they deal primarily, not with material 
things
or persons, but with spiritual significations. Like the “books of Moses,” 
therefore,
and others which, in being mystical, are, in the strictest sense, 
prophetical,
the Gospels are addressed, not to the outer sense and reason, but 
to
the soul. And, being thus, their object is not to give an historical account 
of
the physical life of any man whatever, but to exhibit the spiritual 
possibilities
of humanity at large, as illustrated in a particular and typical 
example.
The design is, thus, that which is dictated by the nature itself of 
Religion.
For Religion is not in its nature historical and dependent upon 
actual,
sensible, events, but consists in processes, such as Faith and 
Redemption,
which, being interior to all men, subsist irrespectively of what any 
particular
man has at any time suffered or done. That alone which is of 
importance,
is what God has revealed. And therefore it is that the narratives 
concerning
Jesus are rather parables founded on a collection of histories, than 
any
one actual history, and have a spiritual import capable of universal 
application.
And it is with this spiritual import, and not with physical facts, 
that
the Gospels are concerned.
25.
Such were the principles which, long before the Christian era, and under 
divine
control, had led the Mystics of Egypt, 
Osiris,
Mithras, and Buddha as names or persons representative of the Man 
Regenerate
and constituting a full manifestation of the qualities of Spirit. And 
it
was for the same purpose and under the same impulsion that the Mystics of the 
West,
who had their headquarters at 
type
whereby to exhibit the history of all souls which attain to perfection; 
employing
physical occurrences as symbols, and relating them as parables, to 
interpret
which literally would be to falsify their intended import. Their 
method
was, thus, to universalize that which was particular, and to spiritualize 
that
which was material; and, writing, as they did, with full knowledge of 
previous
mystical descriptions of the Man Regenerate, his interior history and 
his
relations to the world, – notable among which descriptions was the 
fifty-third
chapter of the miscellaneous, fragmentary, prophetic utterances 
collected
together under the typical name of Isaiah, – they would have had no 
difficulty
in presenting a character consistent with the general anticipation of 
those
who were cognizant of the meaning of the term “Christ,” even without an 
actual
example.
26.
The failure to interpret the mystical Scriptures by the mystical rule, was 
due
to the loss, by the Church, of the mystical faculty, or inner, spiritual 
Vision,
through which they were written. Passing under a domination exclusively 
sacerdotal
and traditional, and losing thereby the intuition of things 
spiritual,
the Church fell an easy prey to that which is the besetting sin of 
priesthoods,
– Idolatry; and in place of the simple, true, reasonable Gospel, to 
illustrate
which the history of Jesus had been expressly designed, fabricated 
the
stupendous and irrational superstition which has usurped his name. Converted 
by
the exaltation of the Letter and the symbol in place of the Spirit and the 
signification,
into an idolatry every whit as gross as any that preceded it, 
Christianity
has failed to redeem the world. Christianity has failed, that is, 
not
because it was false, but because it has been falsified. And the 
falsification,
generally, has consisted in removing the character described 
under
the name Jesus, from its true function as the portrait of that of which 
every
man has in him the potentiality, and referring it exclusively to an 
imaginary
order of being between whom and man could be no possible relation, 
even
were such a being himself possible. Instead of recognizing the Gospels as a 
written
hieroglyph, setting forth, under terms derived from natural objects and 
persons,
processes which are purely spiritual and impersonal, the Churches have 
–
one and all – fallen into that lowest mode of fetish worship which consists in 
the
adoration of a mere symbol, entirely irrespective of its true import. To the 
complaint
that will inevitably be made against this exposition of the real 
nature
of the Gospel history, – that it has “taken away the Lord,” – the reply 
is
no less satisfactory than obvious. For he has been taken away only from the 
place
wherein so long the Church has kept him, that is, – the sepulchre. There, 
indeed,
it is, with the dead, – bound about with cerements, a figure altogether 
of
the past, – that Christians have laid their Christ. But at length the “stone” 
of
Superstition has been lifted and rolled away by the hand of the Angel of 
Knowledge,
and the grave it concealed is discovered to be empty. No longer need 
the
soul seek her living Master among the dead. Christ is risen, – risen into 
the
heaven of a living Ideal, whence he can again descend into the hearts of all 
who
desire him, none the less real and puissant, because a spiritual and not 
merely
an historic personage; none the less mighty to save because, instead of 
being
a single Man Regenerate, he is every Man Regenerate, ten thousand times 
ten
thousand, – the “Son of Man” himself.
27.
The true design and method of the Gospels, together with the process of 
their
degradation, become clear in proportion as the nature of their real 
subject
– the Man Regenerate – is understood. In dealing with this we are met at 
the
outset by an example of perversion, one of the most conspicuous and 
disastrous
in the whole history of religion. This is the perversion of the 
doctrine
of the “Incarnation.” Of this doctrine the original basis was a 
prophecy
– or declaration of universal import founded in the nature of existence 
–
of the means whereby, both as race and as individual, man is redeemed. Born 
originally
of Matter and subject to the limitations of Matter, Man, according to 
this
prophecy, is redeemed, and made superior to those limitations, by being 
reborn
of Spirit, a process by which he is converted from a phenomenal into a 
substantial
being, one in nature with original Deity, and having, therefore, in 
himself
the power of life eternal. Of this perfected man the foster-father is 
always
that which, spiritually, is called 
derivation,
the Intellect, or reason of the merely earthly mind – the mystic 
name
of which is always “Joseph.” On his first appearance in the drama of the 
soul,
as set forth in the Bible, this Joseph is represented as a youth already 
sufficiently
developed, in his affectional nature, to return good for evil and 
to
succor his kindred; in his intellectual nature, to fill with credit posts of 
responsibility
and to secure the confidence of his sovereign; and in his moral 
nature,
to resist the seductions of the world. He is, thus, a type of the 
philosophical
element, both in itself and in its relations with the State; and a 
representative
of the rising Hebrew Mysteries. In the Gospels he reappears – 
like
represented
as the adoptive father only of the Man Regenerate, because this last 
is
really the product, not of the mind, but of the soul; not of “
“
“begotten”
through her, not by any physical process, but by Divine spiritual 
operation.
Nevertheless he has the benefit of the wisdom and knowledge of his 
“foster-father,”
for he is instructed in the sacred Mysteries of Egypt, which 
are,
indeed, one with those of 
denoting
the precedence, in point of time, of the development of the intellect 
over
that of the intuition. In representing Joseph as the foster-father only, 
and
not the real father, the parable implies that man, when regenerate, is so 
exclusively
under the influence of his soul, or Mother, as to have but a slender 
connection
with his external part, using it only for shelter and nourishment, 
and
such other purposes as may minister to the soul’s welfare.
28.
He who would redeem and save others, must first be himself redeemed and 
saved.
The Man Regenerate, therefore, first saves himself, by becoming 
regenerate.
He receives, accordingly, a name expressive of this function. For, 
of
Jesus one of the significations is Liberator. This name is given, not on the 
birth
of the man physical, nor to the man physical, – of whose birth and name 
the
Gospels take no note, – but to the man spiritual, on his initiation, or new 
birth
from the material to the spiritual plane. And it is the name, not of a 
person,
but of an Order, the Order of all those who – being regenerate and 
attaining
perfection – find, and are called, “Christ Jesus.” (As see Eph. iii. 
15.)
29.
Of the miracles worked by the Regenerate Man, some are on the physical, some 
on
the spiritual plane; for, being himself regenerate in all, he is master of 
the
spirits of all the elements. But while the terms in which the Miracles are 
described
are uniformly derived from the physical plane, the true value and 
significance
of these Miracles are spiritual. That, for example, known as the 
Raising
of Lazarus, is altogether a parable, being constructed on lines rigidly 
astronomical,
and having an application purely spiritual. To a like category 
belongs
also the miracle of the feeding of the five thousand. For the “loaves” 
given
to the multitude represent the general doctrine of the lesser Mysteries, 
whose
“grain” is of the Earth, the 
“fishes”
– given after the loaves – denote the greater Mysteries, those of 
Aphrodite,
– fishes symbolizing the element of the sea-born Queen of Love, and 
her
dominion, the inner kingdom of the soul. It may be noted in this relation 
that
the Gospels represent their typical Man as at first speaking explicitly to 
the
people, but afterwards, warned by experience, addressing them in parables 
only.
Of the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension, also, notwithstanding 
that
these have a physical correspondence, the signification intended to he 
enforced,
and which alone is valuable, is spiritual. Wherefore the Gospel 
narrative,
though told as of an actual particular person, is a mystical history 
only
of any person, and implies the spiritual possibilities of all persons. And, 
being
thus, it represents, designedly, that which is general rather than that 
which
is particular, and makes no pretence to an accuracy which is merely 
historical,
the object being not to relate facts, but to illustrate doctrines.
30.
There is, moreover, a yet further explanation of the indifference to 
identity
of detail by which everywhere this narrative is characterized. Being 
four
in number, and disposed in order corresponding to that of the four 
divisions
of man’s nature, the Gospels have for standpoint, and bear relation 
to,
different regions of existence. Thus, the Gospel of Matthew, which 
represents
the lower and physical plane, appeals more particularly on behalf of 
the
character ascribed to Jesus of Nazareth as fulfilling the promises of the 
Messiah
of the Old Testament, and is pervaded by one principle, the fulfillment 
in
him at once of the Law and of the prophecies. The Gospel of Mark is adapted 
to
the plane next above this, namely, the rational; its appeal on behalf of the 
divinity
of the mission of Jesus, being founded on the nature of his doctrine 
and
works. The Gospel of Luke represents the further ascent to the plane of the 
soul
and the intuition. Hence it occupies itself chiefly with accounts of the 
spiritual
parentage of the Man Regenerate, – setting forth under a parabolic 
narrative
his genesis from the operation of God in a pure soul. To the same end, 
this
Gospel gives prominence to the familiar conversations, rather than to the 
formal
teaching of its Subject, since it is in these that the affectional nature 
of
a man is best manifested. In the Fourth Gospel the scene changes to a sphere 
transcending
all the others, being in the highest degree interior, mystic, 
spiritual.
This Gospel, therefore, corresponds to the Nucleolus, or Divine 
Spirit,
of the microcosmic entity, and exhibits the Regenerate Man as having 
surmounted
all the elements exterior and inferior of his system, and won his way 
to
the inmost recess of his own celestial kingdom, where, arrived at his centre 
and
source, he and his Father are One; and he knows positively that God is Love, 
since
it is by Love that he himself has found and become God. Such being the 
controlling
idea of this Gospel, its composition is appropriately assigned to 
that
“Beloved Disciple” whose very name denotes the feminine and love principle 
of
existence. And to “John,” surnamed “the Divine” in respect of the character 
thus
ascribed to his ministry, is unanimously assigned the emblem of the Eagle, 
as
representing the highest element in the human kingdom. With regard to the 
distribution
of the other three symbols, it is obvious – when once the intention 
of
each division of the Christian evangel is understood – that Matthew, who 
corresponds
to the earth or body, is rightly represented by the Ox; Mark, the 
minister
of the astral or fire, by the Lion; and Luke, whose pen is chiefly 
occupied
with the relation of Christ to the Soul, by and Angel with the face of 
a
man to denote the sea-god Poseidon, the “father of Souls.” The Gospels are 
thus
dedicated, each to one of the elemental spirits, Demeter, Hephaistos, 
Poseidon,
and Pallas. Owing, however, to the loss by the Church of the doctrine 
which
determines this distribution, much confusion and difference of opinion 
exist
among ecclesiastical authorities with regard to the correct assignment of 
the
elemental emblems. All the Fathers are agreed in giving the Eagle to the 
Fourth
Golpeller, and but little doubt exists respecting the claim of Mark to 
the
Lion; but the Ox and Angel have been generally misplaced in order.
PART
IV
31.
IN every part of the world of antiquity exist memorials of the Sacred 
Mysteries
and tokens of the ceremonials which accompanied initiation into them. 
The
scene of these ceremonials was generally a subterranean labyrinth, natural 
or
artificial, the object being to symbolize the several acts in the Drama of 
Regeneration
as occurring in the interior and secret recesses of man’s being. 
The
Catacombs of Rome, used for similar purposes by the early Christians, were 
suggestive
of the same idea, though this was not the immediate motive for the 
selection
of such a retreat to be the home of the infant Church. And explorers 
of
the passages under the Great Temple of Edfou relate how, after traversing 
with
extreme difficulty a tunnel thirty inches high and forty-two inches wide, 
they
emerge into a large hall adorned with a profusion of sacred paintings and 
hieroglyphs.
Similar excavations have been found at Hermione in 
the
Mysteries, were variously celebrated in pyramids, pagodas, and labyrinths 
which
were furnished with vaulted rooms, extensive wings, open and spacious 
galleries,
and numerous secret caverns, passages, and vistas, terminating in 
mysterious
adyta. And in describing a catacomb in 
Moluk,
Belzoni mentions an alabaster chest deposited therein, which, though 
surmised
by him to have been intended as a sarcophagus, resembled rather the 
coffers
used in the religious celebration for which such labyrinths were 
designed.
Similar constructions, of vast antiquity, abound in 
bear
in their hieroglyphical remains indications of having been meant for 
similar
purposes. The story of the Labyrinth at 
until
finally subdued by Theseus, devoured those who entered therein, is a 
parable
of the Mysteries and the dangerous nature of the ordeals to be 
encountered
by candidates for initiation.
32.
But of all existing memorials of these institutions, the most wonderful is 
that
known as the Great Pyramid of Gizeh, the formative idea of purpose of which 
has
for ages baffled inquirers. This artificial mountain of stone is, however, 
no
other than a religious symbol setting forth in its every detail from base to 
apex
the method of that which constitutes the title and subject of these 
lectures,
namely the 
denotes
the ascent of the soul, as a flame ever aspiring from the material plane 
to
union with the Divine, and attaining this union through Christ, who, as “the 
Headstone
of the corner,” is symbolized by the topmost point of the pyramid, and 
in
whom, as the culmination, completion, and perfection of the whole creation, 
the
earthly is “taken up” into the heavenly, or existence into pure Being. The 
successive
layers of stone form a series of steps from the base to the summit, 
and
represent the various stages of the soul’s upward progress in its ascent of 
the
“hill of the Lord;” – an idea expressed by Peter when he writes, – “Be ye 
also
as living stones built up a spiritual house, acceptable to God by Christ 
Jesus.
As it is said, Behold I lay in Sion a chief cornerstone, elect and 
precious.”
Similarly, Paul says, – “Christ Jesus himself is the chief 
cornerstone,
in whom all the building being fitly framed together, groweth up 
into
an holy temple in the Lord. In whom ye also are built together, into an 
habitation
of God in the Spirit.” Thus is the whole intention of Creation, from 
its
lowest to his highest plane, recognized as finding its fulfillment and 
realization
in the headstone which is at once the Christos and the Chrestos, the 
“Anointed
“ and the “Best,” being Anointed because the Best, and the Best 
because
the Anointed. In being, moreover, four-sided like the Heavenly city of 
the
Apocalypse, and culminating in respect of each side in an angle, the Pyramid 
denotes
the fourfold nature at once of the Macrocosm and the Microcosm, and the 
final
assumption of each 
At-one-ment
of Christ. [ The statement of Manetho and Herodotus, that this 
pyramid
was built by the Egyptians under compulsion of a foreign and hated 
people
who obtained temporary dominion over them, may be regarded as due to a 
literal
acceptation of some mystical legend intended to imply that it was built 
by
physical
element, that is, of the country, in obedience to the spiritual 
element,
and as a monument in illustration of the power of the soul over the 
body,
and of Spirit working in Matter.] 
33.
Interiorly, the Pyramid is designed to illustrate, both in character and in 
duration,
the various stages of the soul’s history, from her first immergence in 
Matter
to her final triumphant release and return to Spirit. In this view was 
constructed
the complicated system of shafts, passages, and chambers recently 
described
and drawn after researches involving extraordinary toil, skill, and 
care,
by Professor Piazzi Smyth. Of the two shafts, one, whereby the light from 
without
enters the edifice, points directly to the Pole star at its lower 
culmination
2,500 BC, the date given as that of the erection of the Pyramid. By 
this
is indicated the idea of the soul as a ray proceeding from God as the 
Pole-star
and source of all things, whose Seven Spirits – like the seven stars 
of
the constellation called by us the Great Bear, but by the Mystics of old, 
more
significantly, the Sheepfold – keep watch and ward over the universe, yet 
ever
indicate the Supreme. Of this shaft the opposite extremity terminates in a 
pit
lying below the centre of the Pyramid. Constituting the only portion of the 
whole
structure which is unpaved, this pit represents the bottomless abyss of 
negation,
and, consequently, final destruction. Descending thither, the ray 
would
become extinguished; and such is the fate of the soul which, entering into 
Matter,
persists in a downward course. The pyramid, however, is designed 
expressly
to represent the way of salvation; and it accordingly provides a 
passage
turning out of that just described, and leading upwards towards the 
centre
of the edifice, just beyond which centre lies the principal apartment, 
which
is called the “King’s Chamber.” This is reached by a series of passages, 
steep,
narrow intricate, and in some parts so contracted in dimensions as to 
compel
the explorer to traverse them on his hands and knees. Such peculiarities 
of
construction, involving an exercise of great ingenuity, skill, and labor 
could
not, it is obvious, have been introduced into a structure intended, as 
some
have suggested, as a granary or as a tomb. The “King’s Chamber,” which 
terminates
the series, is a large vaulted apartment having six roofs or 
ceilings,
composed in all of seven stones, placed one above another, the two 
topmost
stones forming an angle. In the centre of this chamber is a coffer, 
hollowed
out of a single stone, and representing in its proportions and 
dimensions
the idea thus expressed in the Epistle to the Ephesians: – “When we 
all
meet in the unity of faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a 
perfect
man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ.” In a 
coffer
such as this, the candidate who had successfully encountered all the 
ordeals
symbolized in the passages of the pyramid, was, at his final initiation, 
laid
as a corpse in a sarcophagus. And the Initiator, who presided on the 
occasion,
was a woman – a priestess – who was called the “Mother,” and who acted 
as
the sponsor representative of Isis, the universal soul and intuition of 
Humanity.
By this funeral ceremony was denoted the death of the candidate to 
things
merely material and sensible, and his attainment of the grade of a Man 
Regenerate.
It has its continuance and correspondence in the rite whereby, in 
the
Catholic Church, candidates for reception into the “religious” life make 
final
profession of the vows which sever them from the world. This burial 
concluded,
as still in the Catholic Church, by the “rising from the dead” of the 
candidate,
who, having quitted the tomb, was invested with the insignia of his 
new
condition, and received the “new “ or “religious” name, bestowed by the 
Sponsor.
This name in the Egyptian and allied Mysteries, was Issa, the son, by 
initiation,
of Isis, and therein child of the Soul, and “Seed of the Woman”. 
Thus
was symbolized the gift of eternal life through Christ, the second or new 
birth
of the Man Regenerate, attained only by gradual and painful processes of 
ascent,
extending over many lives, and requiring for their accomplishment desire 
so
fervent, perseverance so great, and courage so indomitable, as not only to 
deter
many of the candidates at the outset but to turn some, even when far 
advanced.
It is manifestly from the details of this ceremonial, with which, as 
an
“Initiate,” the Jesus of the Gospels was familiar, that was derived his 
allusion
to the “Second Birth,” and the idea expressed in the warning: “Strait 
is
the gate and narrow is the way that leadeth unto Life, and few there be that 
find
it.” 
34.
Such was the mode whereby was accomplished initiation into those greater 
Mysteries
of which the culminating stage was termed the Ascension. The lesser 
Mysteries,
the “acts” of which were designated the Baptism or Betrothal, the 
Temptation
or Trial, and the Passion, are symbolized in the great pyramid by the 
apartment
called the Queen’s Chamber. This is situated considerably below the 
King’s
Chamber and in the northern section of the building; and is reached by a 
level
passage, at the commencement of which is a precipitous chasm, having for 
bottom
the pit already described, and betokening the fate of those who fail to 
become
regenerate, and consequently the danger escaped by those who have 
attained
initiation into things spiritual. The Queen’s chamber serves also as 
the
“Banqueting Hall,” wherein, after his accomplishment of the three acts 
named,
the candidate celebrates the “Solemnization.” He is then qualified to 
proceed
to the greater Mysteries of which the final scene is the “King’s 
Chamber.”
This, as already said, is placed at the extreme summit of the 
passages,
and beyond the centre of the Pyramid; and its purpose is to symbolize 
that
kingdom of heaven which the Initiate attains by what is called the Divine 
Marriage,
an act which separates him altogether from his life of the past. The 
six
superposed beams which compose the ceiling of this chamber denote the “six 
crowns”
of the Man Regenerate, that is, the six acts or stages of initiation, of 
which
three appertain to the lesser and three to the greater Mysteries. These 
“crowns,”
therefore, are Baptism, Temptation, Passion, Burial, Resurrection, and 
Ascension.
Of all these the ultimate object is that full and complete Redemption 
which,
by its realization of the soul’s supreme felicity, is termed the 
“Marriage
of the Son of God.” And in the second shaft passing upwards through 
the
pyramid, from the topmost point of the last gallery, and pointing in one 
direction
to the coffer in the King’s Chamber, and in the other direction to the 
Pole-star
at it greatest altitude, may be seen symbolized the return to God of 
the
soul, perfected and triumphant, on her final release from Matter. So that by 
the
two pole-star-pointing shafts are typified respectively the forces 
centrifugal
and centripetal, the Will and the Love, from the operation of which 
proceed
Creation and Redemption. (Fig. 3.)
35.
Between the “Resurrection” and “Ascension” of the Man Regenerate, is an 
interval
which – in accordance with the mystical system of making all dates 
which
relate to the soul’s history coincide with the corresponding solar periods 
–
is termed “Forty Days.” The actual length of the period, however, is dependent 
upon
individual circumstance. The New Testament contains nothing in compatible 
with
the suggestion that Jesus may have lived on the earth for many years after 
his
“Resurrection,” and was therefore still in the body when seen of Paul. For 
that
which occurs at the expiration of this cycle is not a quittance of the 
earth
in the physical sense ordinarily supposed, but the complete withdrawal of 
the
man into his own interior and celestial region. The Spirit attains the 
Sabbath
of perfection only by attaining Rest or Quiescence; and to this Sabbath 
–
or Nirvana – the Man Regenerate necessarily attains, sooner or later, after 
his
“Crucifixion” and “Resurrection;” and the attainment of it constitutes his 
“Ascension.”
There are then no longer two wills. The man has “ascended to his 
Father,”
and he and God are One. Henceforth he is Lord of his own microcosmic 
universe,
having the “kingdom, the power, and the glory” thereof. And all things 
in
“heaven” and on “earth” are subject to him. “He hath put all things under his 
feet,
that God may be all in all.”
36.
But although the true signification of the Gospel narrative of the Ascension 
is
spiritual only, the process of Redemption is not without its physical 
results;
for every faculty is enhanced thereby to the degree ordinarily deemed 
“miraculous,”
rendering the Subject clairvoyant and clairaudient, enabling him 
to
impart health and recall life by the touch or by the will, to project himself 
in
visible form through material obstructions, and to withdraw himself from 
sight
at will. And not only is disease eliminated from and rendered impossible 
to
his system, but his organism becomes so highly refined and vitalized that 
wounds,
however severe, heal by first intention and even instantaneously. So 
that,
if only for this reason, it is quite impossible that the Gospels should 
have
intended to represent their typical regenerate man as dying, in a physical 
sense,
of the injuries described by them as received on the cross.
37.
By the Crucifixion of the Man Regenerate is denoted no physical or brief 
exterior
act, but the culmination of a prolonged Passion, and its termination in 
the
complete surrender of the soul. And this arrival of the “last hour” of the 
earthly
man, or old Adam, is symbolized by the action of tasting the very dregs 
and
lees of the cup of suffering, – the soul’s experience, that is, of the 
limitations
of existence. Accordingly it is written: – “Jesus, knowing that all 
things
were accomplished, said, I thirst. And they put a sponge full of vinegar 
upon
a reed, and gave him to drink. Jesus, then, when he had tasted the vinegar, 
said,
It is consummated. And bowing his head, he gave up the ghost.” By this 
exclamation
is announced the emptying of that cup of spiritual bitterness which 
may
not pass from the Christ until the dregs even be consumed. This selfsame cup 
it
is, of which the symbol, fixed on the summit of a reed, was borne in the hand 
of
an attendant priestess at the ceremony of final initiation as practiced in 
the
Mysteries.
38.
By this cup is represented the chalice of Existence or Incarnation, wherein 
is
contained that Substantial Water, or Soul, which by the “marriage” of the 
will
of the man with the Will of God, becomes the Wine of the holy Sacrament, or 
Communion
with God. The Reed which supports this Cup is the universal rod or 
Staff
which so constantly recurs in Hermetic Scriptures, and is at once the rod 
of
Moses, the wand of the Magician, the sceptre of the King, the reed of the 
Angel,
the rod of Joseph that flowers, and the caduceus of Hermes himself. For 
it
is the symbol of Force, the Line, or Jod, by which is typified alike the 
creative
act of projection into Matter and individualization thereby and the 
energy
of the will – inflexible and undivided – through which the return to 
Spirit
is accomplished and salvation achieved. Of these cup-surmounted reeds the 
bearers,
in the Greek Mysteries, were called Canephorae, or reed bearers. And 
the
corresponding celebration in the Gospels is appropriately described as 
occurring
at Cana of Galilee, where, as may be gathered from Josephus, was a 
cave
of initiation. The nature of the occasion depicted in Fig. 9 is further 
denoted
by the symbol carried in the right hand, both of the priestess and of 
the
candidate. This is the Crux ansata, or handled cross, called the Cross of 
Osiris,
and already referred to as an indispensable emblem in all religious 
ceremonials,
in that, combining the cross with the circle, it denotes 
Renunciation
as the means whereby Eternal Life, the object of initiation, is 
attained.
This symbol it was which, transferred to Christian hands, became the 
model
of the Papal Keys of the kingdom of heaven; while, mounted on four steps, 
or
traversed by four bars, it indicated also the fourfold nature of the 
existence
to be comprehended by those who would attain to perfection. The 
character
of this perfection is, moreover, symbolized in the cross, in that, 
being
formed of two transverse beams, it portrays the at-one-ment between the 
divine
and human wills. The “new-born” is represented as overshadowed by a dove 
–
emblem of the Holy Spirit – as is the Man Regenerate of the Gospels at his 
baptism
of initiation. The two figures on either side of the candidate are, 
respectively,
the male representative of Thoth or Hermes, wearing the ram’s 
horns
– emblematic of Intelligence; and the female representative of Isis, the 
initiating
priestess, bearing the Rosary of the Five wounds or Decades already 
mentioned.
By the presence of these two, as representatives of the Intellect and 
the
Intuition, is denoted the absolute necessity to the individual of perfecting 
himself
alike in both regions – the masculine and feminine – of his nature, so 
that
by tile coequal unfoldment of head and heart he may attain to the stature 
of
the whole humanity. It is the man thus complete and become, spiritually, man 
and
woman in one, that, primarily is typified by the Greeks under the dual form 
of
Hermaphroditus, the joint child, as his name denotes, of Intelligence and 
Love.
39.
As the last substance tasted by the Regenerate Man of the Gospels before his 
death
on the cross, is the “vinegar” of the exhausted Chalice of the Passion, so 
the
first food partaken by him after his resurrection is “fish,” to which some 
add
“an honeycomb”. By these is symbolized the commencement of the new life 
inaugurated
by the greater Mysteries. For the fish, as already stated, is the 
symbol
of Water, and therein of the Soul, its Greek name being the monogram of 
the
Christ and the tessera of redemption. And the honey, uniting sweetness of 
taste
with the color of gold, and contained in the six-sided cell on “cup” of 
the
comb, typifying the six acts of the Mysteries, – is the familiar emblem of 
the
Land of Promise “beyond Jordan,” to which only the Man Risen can attain. 
For,
as the River of Egypt denotes the Body, and the Euphrates the Spirit, – the 
redeemed
man being promised the dominion of the whole region contained within 
these
(Genesis xv, 18.) – so the Hiddekel, the Ganges, and the Jordan, in the 
mystical
systems of their respective countries, denote the Soul, and constitute 
the
boundary between “the wilderness” of the Material, and the “Garden” of the 
Spirit.
40.
It is in Jordan, therefore, that the Man Regenerate of the Gospels 
celebrates
the first scene of that supreme act, his spiritual marriage – the 
Betrothal
or initiatory purification by baptism. On this occasion the Divine 
Spirit
announces to him his Sonship; and thenceforth he knows himself divine. 
The
second scene is the Solemnization, which is celebrated on the “third day,” 
at
the Cana of Galilee already mentioned, in the “banqueting hall” of the 
Mysteries.
The whole narrative is constructed on astronomical lines, and in its 
exterior
sense denotes the ripening of the grape and arrival of the vintage 
season
in the month which follows the “assumption” of the constellation Virgo. 
For
then the Sun, or emblem of the Man Regenerate, transmutes the watery element 
into
wine. And this process, though prompted, as it were, by the genius of 
August,
cannot be accomplished save by the genius of September; hence the 
remonstrance
represented as addressed by Jesus to his “Mother.” The time of 
vintage
was “not yet come.” The mysteries represented on this occasion are those 
of
Bacchus whose mystic name is Iacchos. And it is the more interior mysteries 
of
Iacchos which really are implied in the parable. For the “beginning of 
miracles”
for the Man Regenerate is always the transmutation of the “Water” of 
his
own Soul into the “Wine” of the Divine Spirit. And the impelling influence 
under
which the change is effected, is always the “woman” in the man, his own 
pure
intuition, who is the “virgin Mother of God” within himself.
41.
The third and final scene of the “Marriage” belongs to the greater 
Mysteries.
The “Crucifixion” is the last stage of the lesser Mysteries, and 
closes
initiation into them. Immediately on “giving up the ghost,” – or 
renouncing
altogether the lower life, – the Christ “enters into his kingdom;” 
and
“the veil of the Temple is rent from the top to the bottom.” For this veil 
is
that which divides the Covered Place from the Holy of Holies; and by its 
rending
is denoted the passage of the individual within the kingdom of God, or 
of
the soul, – typified by the King’s Chamber. The first three acts – the 
Baptism
or Betrothal, the Temptation or Trial, and the Passion or Renunciation – 
belong
to the Mysteries of the Rational Humanity as distinguished from those of 
the
Spiritual Humanity. The last three acts – the Burial, the Resurrection, and 
the
Ascension – belong to the greater Mysteries of the Soul and Spirit, the 
Spirit
being the central Lord, King, and Adonai of the system, and the “Spouse” 
of
the Bride or Soul. These Mysteries, therefore, belong to the “kingdom of 
God,”
and are performed in the “King’s Chamber,” that is to say, within the veil 
and
in the holy of Holies. The hour of the “Death” which follows the 
“Crucifixion”
witnesses the passage of this veil; and the exclamation 
“Consummatum
est” – uttered at this “ninth hour” of “the twelve in which man may 
work”
in the process of regeneration – signifies that at length the Kingdom is 
entered,
the King’s Chamber attained, the conflict of the Soul crowned with 
victory.
The seventh and concluding act of the whole process follows the 
accomplishment
of the three stages of the greater Mysteries of the King or 
Spirit,
and is called the “Consummation of the Marriage of the Son of God.” In 
this
act the “King” and “Queen,” “Spirit and Bride,” and are indissolubly 
united;
the Man becomes pure Spirit; and the Human is finally taken up into the 
Divine.
PART
V
42.
IT was no part of the design of the Gospels to represent either the course 
of
a man perfect from the first, or the whole course from the first of the man 
made
perfect. Had they been designed to represent the former, they had contained 
no
account of a Crucifixion. For, of the man perfect, no crucifixion, in the 
Mystical
sense, is possible, since he has no lower self or perverse will, or any 
weakness,
to be overcome or renounced, the anima divina in him having become all 
in
all. That, therefore, which the Gospels exhibit, is a process consisting of 
the
several degrees of regeneration, on the attainment of the last of which only 
does
the man become “perfect.” But of these successive degrees not all are 
indicated.
For the Gospels deal, not with one whose nature is, at first wholly 
unregenerate,
but with one who is already, in virtue of the use made of his 
previous
earth-lives, so far advanced as to be within reach, in a single further 
incarnation,
of full regeneration.
43.
For, owing to the complex and manifold nature of existence, every sphere or 
plane
of man’s being requires for itself a redemptive process; and, for each, 
this
process consists of three degrees. Of these the first three relate to the 
Body,
the second three to the Mind, the third three to the Heart, and the fourth 
three
to the Spirit. There are thus, in all, twelve Degrees or “Houses” of the 
Perfect
Man or Microcosm, as there are Twelve Zodiacal Signs or Mansions of the 
Sun
in his course through the heavens of the Macrocosm. And the Gospels set 
forth
mainly the six of the Heart and Spirit. The crown both of the twelve 
degrees
and of the six acts, – that which constitutes alike the “Sabbath” of the 
Hebrews,
the “Nirvana” of the Buddhists, and the “Transmutation” of the 
Alchemists,
– is the “Divine Marriage.” Of this, accordingly, types and parables 
recur
continually in all Hermetic Scriptures. The last book of the Bible, the 
Apocalypse
of John, fitly closes with a descriptive allegory of it. In this 
allegory
the “Bride” herself is described as Salem, the Peace, or Rest, of God, 
a
“city lying four-square,” having Twelve Foundations, and Four Aspects, all 
equal
to each other, and upon every Aspect Three Gates. This heavenly Salem is, 
thus,
the perfected Microcosm in whom is seen the At-one-ment of all the four 
planes,
the physical, the intellectual, the moral, and the spiritual; the 
“Gates”
of each side, or plane, symbolizing the three degrees of Regeneration 
appertaining
to each. And these twelve gates are described as being each of a 
single
pearl, because, like pearls, the excellences denoted by them are 
attainable
only through skill and courage, and devotion even to the death, and 
require
of those who would attain them the divestment of every earthly 
encumbrance.
44.
The idea of this heavenly Salem is expressed also in the Tabernacle of 
Moses.
For this, too, was fourfold. The Outer Court, which was open, denoted the 
Body
or Man physical and visible; the covered Tent, or Holy place, denoted the 
Man
intellectual and invisible; and the Holy of Holies within the veil, denoted 
the
Heart or Soul, itself the shrine of the Spirit of the man and of the divine 
Glory,
which, in their turn, were typified by the Ark and Shekinah. And in each 
of
the four Depositaries were three utensils illustrative of the regenerative 
degrees
belonging to each. (Fig. 2) The Marriage Supper, then, can he celebrated 
in
the Kingdom of the Father only, when all the “Twelve Apostles,” or elements 
corresponding
to the twelve degrees, have been brought into perfect harmony and 
at-one-ment,
and no defective element any longer exists among them. In the 
central
place at this divine feast is the Thirteenth Personage, the Master or 
Adonai
of the system, the founder and president of the banquet. He it is who in 
later
times found a representative in the pure and heaven-born Arthur – Ar-Thor 
–
the “Bright Lord” of the Round Table. For, as already stated, the number of 
the
Microcosm is thirteen, the thirteenth being the occupant of the interior and 
fourth
place, which, thus, he personifies, constituting the fourth and 
completing
element, the Nucleolus of the whole cell or “Round Table.” “And of 
this
Fourth the form is as the Son of God.” Thus the number thirteen, which on 
the
earthly plane, and before the “Crucifixion,” is, through the treachery of 
“Judas,”
the symbol of imperfection and ill fortune, becomes, in the “Kingdom of 
the
Father,” the symbol of perfection. As the number of the lunar months, it is 
the
symbol also of the Woman, and denotes the Soul and her reflection of God, – 
the
solar number twelve being that of the Spirit. The two numbers in combination 
form
the perfect year of that dual humanity which alone is made in the image of 
God,
the true “Christian year,” wherein the two, – the inner and the outer, 
Spirit
and Matter, – are as one. Thirteen then represents that full union of man 
with
God wherein Christ becomes Christ.
45.
In representing the Regenerate Man as descended through his parents from the 
house
of David and the tribe of Levi, the Gospels imply that man, when 
regenerate
is always possessed of the intuition of the true prophet, and the 
purity
of the true priest, for whom “David” and “Levi” are the mystical 
synonyms.
Thus the spiritual blood of prophet, priest, and king mingles in the 
veins
of the Messiah and Christ, whose lineage is the spiritual lineage of every 
man
regenerate, and attainable by all men.
46.
For, as cannot be too clearly and forcibly stated, between the man who 
becomes
a Christ, and other men, there is no difference whatever of kind. The 
difference
is alone of condition and degree, and consists in difference of 
unfoldment
of the spiritual nature possessed by all in virtue of their common 
derivation.
“All things,” as has repeatedly been said, “are made of the divine 
Substance.”
And Humanity represents a stream which, taking its rise in the 
outermost
and lowest mode of differentiation of that Substance, flows inwards 
and
upwards to the highest, which is God. And the point at which it reaches the 
celestial,
and empties itself into Deity, is “Christ.” Any doctrine other than 
this
– any doctrine which makes the Christ of a different and non-human nature – 
is
anti-Christian and subhuman. And, of such doctrine the direct effect is to 
cut
off man altogether from access to God and God from access to man.
47.
Such a doctrine is that which representing the Messiah as an incarnated God 
or
Angel who, by the voluntary sacrifice of himself saves mankind from the 
penalty
due for their sins, has distorted and obscured the true doctrine of 
atonement
and redemption into something alike derogatory to God and pernicious 
to
man.
That
from which man requires to be redeemed is not the penalty of sin, but the 
liability
to sin. It is the sin, and not the suffering which is his bane. The 
suffering
is but the remedial agent. And from the liability to sin, and 
consequently
to suffering, he can be redeemed only by being lifted into a 
condition
in which sin is impossible to him. And no angel or third person, but 
only
the man himself, co-operating with the God within him, can accomplish this. 
Man
is, himself, the laboratory wherein God, as Spirit, works to save him, by 
re-creating
him in God’s image. But – as always happens under a control 
exclusively
sacerdotal religion has been presented as a way of escape, not from 
sin,
but from punishment. With redemption degraded to this unworthy and 
mischievous
end, the world has, as was inevitable, gone on sinning, more and 
more,
and, by the ever-increasing grossness of its life and thought, sinking 
itself
deeper and deeper into Matter, violating persistently on every plane of 
existence,
the divine law of existence, until it has lost the very idea of 
Humanity,
and – wholly unregenerate in Body, Mind, Heart, and Spirit – has 
reached
the lowest depth of degradation compatible with existence. Thus, of 
modern
society – as of Israel when reduced, through its own wickedness and folly 
to
the like evil plight – it may he said that from the sole of the foot even 
unto
the head, there is no soundness in it; but, wounds, and bruises, and 
putrefying
sores.” And even though “the whole head is sick, and the whole heart 
faint”
at the view of its own hopeless theory of existence, it seeks to “revolt 
more
and more” by becoming increasingly pronounced in its denial of Being as a 
divine
Reality, and so does its utmost to “bring upon itself swift destruction.” 
Such,
to eyes in any degree regenerate, is the spectacle presented by the world 
in
this “Year of Grace,” 1881.
48.
As it was no part of tile design of the Gospels to represent the whole 
course,
of the Man Regenerate, so neither was it a part of that design to 
provide,
in respect of religious life and doctrine, a system whole and complete 
independently
of any which had preceded it. Having a special relation to the 
Heart
and Spirit of the Man, and thereby to the nucleus of the cell and the Holy 
of
Holies of the Tabernacle, Christianity, in its original conception, relegated 
the
regeneration of the Mind and Body – the covered House and open Court of the 
Tabernacle,
or exterior dualism of the Microcosm – to systems already existent 
and
widely known and practiced. These systems were two in number, or rather, 
were
as two modes or expressions of the one system, the establishment of which 
constituted
the “Message” which preceded Christianity by the cyclical period of 
six
hundred years. This was the Message of which the “Angels” were represented 
in
the Buddha Gautama and Pythagoras. Of these two nearly contemporary prophets 
and
redeemers, the system was, both in doctrine and in practice, essentially one 
and
the same. And their relation to the system of Jesus, as its necessary 
pioneers
and forerunners, finds recognition in the Gospel under the allegory of 
the
Transfiguration. For the forms beheld in this – of Moses and Elias – are the 
Hebrew
correspondences of Buddha and Pythagoras. And they are described as 
beheld
by the three Apostles in whom respectively are typified the functions 
severally
fulfilled by Pythagoras, Buddha, and Jesus; namely, Works, 
Understanding,
and Love, or Body, Mind, and Heart. And by their association on 
the
Mount is denoted the junction of all three elements, and the completion of 
the
whole system comprising them, in Jesus as the representative of the Heart or 
Innermost,
and as in a special sense the “beloved Son of God.”
49.
Christianity, then, was introduced into the world with a special relation to 
the
great religions of the East, and under the same divine control. And so far 
from
being intended as a rival and supplanter of Buddhism, it was the direct and 
necessary
sequel to that system; and the two are but parts of one continuous, 
harmonious
whole, whereof the later division is but the indispensable supplement 
and
complement of the earlier. Buddha and Jesus are, therefore, necessary the 
one
to the other; and in the whole system thus completed, Buddha is the Mind, 
and
Jesus is the Heart; Buddha is the general, Jesus is the particular; Buddha 
is
the brother of the universe, Jesus is the brother of men; Buddha is 
Philosophy,
Jesus is Religion; Buddha is the Circumference, Jesus is the Within; 
Buddha
is the System, Jesus is the Point of Radiation; Buddha is the 
Manifestation,
Jesus is the Spirit; in a word, Buddha is the “Man,” Jesus is the 
“Woman.”
But for Buddha, Jesus could not have been, nor would he have sufficed 
the
whole man; for the man must have the Mind illuminated before the Affections 
can
be kindled. Nor would Buddha have been complete without Jesus. Buddha 
completed
the regeneration of the Mind; and by his doctrine and practice men are 
prepared
for the grace which comes by Jesus. Wherefore no man can be, properly, 
Christian,
who is not also, and first, Buddhist. Thus the two religions 
constitute,
respectively, the exterior and interior of the same Gospel, the 
foundation
being in Buddhism – the term including Pythagoreanism, – and the 
illumination
in Christianity. And as without Christianity Buddhism is 
incomplete,
so without Buddhism Christianity is unintelligible. The Regenerate 
Man
of the Gospels stands upon the foundation represented by Buddha, the earlier 
stages,
that is, of the same process of regeneration, so that without these he 
would
be impossible. Hence the significance also of the Baptist’s part.
50.
The term Buddha, moreover, signifies the Word. And the Buddha and the Christ 
represent,
though on different planes, the same divine Logos or Reason, and are 
joint
expressions of the “Message” which, in preceding cycles had been preached 
by
“Zoroaster” – the Sun-star – as well as by Moses, and typified in Mithras, 
Osiris,
and Krishna. Of all these the doctrine was one and the same, for it was 
the
doctrine of the Man Regenerate even the “Gospel of Christ.” It was, thus, 
the
treasure, – beyond all other priceless – of which Israel, fleeing, “spoiled 
the
Egyptians;” of which, that is, the soul, escaping the power of the body, 
retains
the possession, having gained it through the experience of the body. 
That
Buddha, great as was his “Renunciation,” underwent no such extremity of 
ordeal
as that ascribed to his counterpart of the Gospels, is due to the 
difference
of the parts enacted, and the stages attained by them. Suffering is 
not
of the mind, but of the heart. And whereas, of their joint system, Buddha 
represents
the intellect, and Jesus represents the affections; – in Jesus, as 
its
highest typical expression of the love-element, Humanity fulfils the 
injunction.
“My son, give me thine heart.” [ This relation between the two 
systems,
and the necessity of each to the other, have found recognition among 
the
Buddhists themselves. Of this, one instance which may be cited, is that of a 
Cingalese
chief who had sent his son to a Christian school; and who, on finding 
his
consistency called in question by a Christian, replied that the two 
religious
were to each other as the canoe of his country, and the contrivance, – 
called
an outrigger, – by means of which, when afloat, it is kept upright. “I 
add
on”, he said, “your religion to my own, for I consider Christianity a very 
good
outrigger to the Buddhism.” – Tennant’s Ceylon. ]
51.
Since of the spiritual union in the one faith of Buddha and Christ, will be 
born
the world’s coming redemption, the relations between the two peoples 
through
whom, on the physical plane, this union must be effected, becomes a 
subject
of special interest and importance. Viewed from this aspect the 
connection
subsisting between England and India rises from the sphere political 
to
the sphere spiritual. As typical peoples of the West and of the East, of the 
races
light and dark, these two, as representative Man and Woman of Humanity, 
will
in due time constitute one Man, made in the image of God, regenerate and 
having
power. And so shall the “lightning from the East”, after “illuminating 
the
West”, be reflected back, purified and enhanced, “a light to lighten all 
nations
and to be the glory of the spiritual Israel”. Thus, them, in Christ 
Jesus
the holy systems of the past find their maturity and perfectionment. For 
by
Christ is made possible the gift of the Divine Spirit, – the “Paraclete” – 
who
could not come by Pythagoras nor by Buddha, because these represent the 
outer
elements of the Microcosm; and the nucleolus, or Spirit, can be manifest 
only
in the inner element, or Nucleus, of which Jesus is the representative. And 
thus,
as said in Genesis xv. 16, “in the fourth generation,” shall the spiritual 
seed
of Abraham, or Brahma, – for they are one and the same word and denote one 
and
the same doctrine, – “return” to the promised land of their inheritance; 
and,
as said by Jesus, “many shall come from the East and West, and shall sit 
down
with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven.”
52.
For, as the “three, Noah, Daniel, and Job” were, for the Hebrews, types of 
Righteousness,
so the three, “Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob “were types of Truth, 
ancestors
of the spiritual Israel, and representatives of the several sacred 
mysteries
of whose “kingdom” the Man Regenerate is always, and the world 
regenerate
will be ultimately, by adoption and grace, the inheritor. The 
mysteries
specially denoted by “Abraham” are, as just indicated, those of India. 
They
are the mysteries of the Spirit, or Innermost, and are sacred to the 
Supreme
Being, Brahma, who represents Deity under process of self-manifestation 
and,
therefore, in activity. In this process, the Original Being, Brahm becomes 
Brahma;
God becomes the Lord, the Manifestor. And it is in recognition of this 
change,
that Abram becomes Abraham. The history of this personage, his flight, – 
always
an invariable element in such histories, as witness that of Bacchus, of 
Israel,
of the Holy Family, of Mohammed, and others, – his adventures and 
wanderings,
is the history of the migration of the mysteries of India, by way of 
Chaldaea,
to that divinely selected centre and pivot of all true religions Egypt 
–
a term denoting the body, which itself is the divinely-appointed residence of 
the
soul during its term of probation. [ In accordance with Hindu usage, which 
makes
the masculine the passive, and the feminine the active principle of 
existence,
the mysteries are represented by the wives of the divine persons. 
Thus,
of Brahma the active principle is his wife Saraswati; after whom the wife 
of
Abraham, who is also his active principle, is called Sara, “the Lady,” 
meaning
of heaven. The story of the long courtship and two wives of Jacob, is a 
parable
of initiation into the mysteries, lesser and greater. And the finding of 
the
wife of Isaac at a well – like the finding of Moses in a river by the king’s 
daughter
– indicates the woman, or soul, as the agent of intuition, and thereby 
of
initiation and redemption. The “Haran” and “Ur,” from which Abram comes, 
denote
the place of spiritual light; and the pedigrees imply, not persons, but 
spiritual
states. ]
The
next great order of mysteries refers to the soul, and is sacred to Isis, the 
goddess
of the intuition, and “Mother” of the Christ. These mysteries were, for 
the
Israelites, represented by Isaac, a name occultly connected with Isis and 
Jesus,
as also with that of an important personage in the pedigree of this last, 
namely
Jesse, the “father of David,” and a “keeper of sheep.” The third and 
remaining
great order of the mysteries – that which refers to the body, and 
which
early migrated to Greece is sacred to Bacchus, whose mystic name Iacchos 
is
identical with Jacob. Comprising the three great divisions of existence, and 
by
implication the fourth division also, these three combined orders of 
mysteries
formed, in the original conception of Christianity a system of 
doctrine
and life at once complete, harmonious, and sufficient for all needs and 
aspirations
of humanity, both here and hereafter. And to this effect were the 
terms
ascribed to Jesus in his reply to the inquiries made of him touching the 
resurrection
of the dead. For, passing over the actual question, and coming at 
once
to its mystic sense, he made a reply which referred, at least primarily, 
not
to the individuals themselves who had been named, but to the systems implied 
in
their names; and declaring those systems to be as full of vitality, and as 
essential
to salvation, as when first divinely communicated to Moses in the 
words:
“I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob,” he 
added
that “God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.” Wherefore, 
according
to this and the concurrent prophecy quoted above, these mysteries 
which
are at once Hindu, Chaldaean, Persian, Egyptian, Hebrew, Greek, and 
Christian
– will, restored to their original purity, constitute the controlling 
doctrine
of the ages to come.
53.
In this forecast of the now imminent future is to be found the clue to the 
world’s
politics. The “kings of the East,” or Magi, may, in one sense, indeed, 
be
they who – being in the West – hold political sovereignty over the provinces 
of
Hindustan. But in the profounder sense they are those everywhere – whether in 
the
East or in the West – who possess the “magical” knowledge or keys of the 
kingdom
of the Spirit. For these are always Magians. Of one of the chief 
depositaries
of this knowledge – the Bible – England has long been the foremost 
guardian
and champion. For three centuries and a half– at once the mystic “time, 
times,
and half a time,” and the “year of years” of the solar hero Enoch – has 
England
lovingly and faithfully, albeit ignorantly, cherished the Letter which 
now,
by the finding of the Interpretation, is – like its prototype – 
“translated”
to the plane of the Spirit. Becoming thus a partaker of the divine 
Gnosis,
England will be fitted for the yet loftier sovereignty to which she is 
destined.
For then, through the union of East and West in the same doctrine, the 
waters
of “the great river Euphrates” – symbol of the Spirit – will, as said of 
old
of the Red Sea, be “dried up,” so that between the two hemispheres there 
will
no longer be any barrier of creed, but a way divinely prepared and 
safeguarded,
whereby the “kings of the East” may freely pass on their mission of 
enlightenment
to all the world. All, therefore, that tends to bind England to 
the
Orient is of Christ, and all that tends to sever them is of Antichrist. They 
who
seek to wed Buddha to Jesus are of the celestial and upper; and they who 
interpose
to forbid the banns are of the astral and nether. Between the two 
hemispheres
stand the domain and faith of Islam, not to divide, but, as 
umbilical
cord, to unite them. And nought is there in Islamism to hinder its 
fulfillment
of this high function, and keep it from being a partaker of the 
blessings
to result therefrom. For, not only is it the one really monotheistic 
and
non-idolatrous religion now existing; but its symbolic Star and Crescent are 
essentially
one with the Cross of Christ, in that they also typify the elements 
masculine
and feminine of the divine existence, and the relation of the soul to 
God.
So that lslamism has but to accomplish that other stage of its natural 
evolution,
which will enable it to claim an equal place in the brotherhood of 
the
Elect. This is the practical recognition in “Allah” of Mother as well as 
Father,
by the exaltation of the woman to her rightful station on all planes of 
man’s
manifold nature. This accomplished, Esau and Ishmael will be joined 
together
with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in Christ.
54.
In this recognition of the divine idea of humanity, and its ultimate 
results,
will consist what are called the “Second Advent and millennial reign of 
Christ.”
Of that advent – although described as resembling the coming of a thief 
in
the night – the approach will not be unheeded. For even in the darkest of 
spiritual
nights, there are always on the alert some who, as faithful shepherds, 
keep
constant watch over the flocks of their own pure hearts, and who, “living 
the
life, know of the doctrine.” And these, “dwelling by the well of clear 
vision,”
and “discerning the signs of the times,” perceive already the mustering 
of
the heavenly hosts, and the bright streamers of dawning of the 
long-wished-for
better Day. [ See Appendices, Nos. V, VI. and VII. ]
 
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LECTURE THE NINTH.
GOD
AS LORD; OR, THE DIVINE IMAGE.
PART
I
1.
ALL sacred books, of whatever people, concur in adopting, in respect of the 
Deity,
two apparently opposite and antagonistic modes of expression. According 
to
one of these modes, the Divine being is external, universal, diffused, 
unformulated,
indefinable, and altogether inaccessible and beyond perception. 
According
to the other, the Divine Being is near, particular, definite, 
formulated,
personified, discernible, and readily accessible. Thus, on the one 
hand
it is said that God is the high and holy One that inhabiteth eternity, and 
is
past finding out; that no man hath seen God at any time, neither heard God’s 
voice,
or can see God and live. And, on the other hand, it is declared that God 
has
been heard and beheld face to face, and is nigh to all who call upon God, 
being
within their hearts; and that the knowledge of God is not only the one 
knowledge
worth having, but that it is open to all who seek for it; and the pure 
in
heart are promised, as their supreme reward, that they shall “see God.”
2.
Numerous instances, moreover, are recorded of the actual sensible vision of 
God.
Of the Hebrew prophets, Isaiah says that he saw the Lord “high and lifted 
up;”
Ezekiel, that he beheld the “glory of the God of Israel” as a figure of 
fire;
Daniel, that he beheld God as a human form, enthroned in flame; and John 
records
in the Apocalypse a similar vision. The writers of the book of Exodus 
show
their cognizance of such experiences by ascribing the vision not only to 
Moses,
but to the whole of the elders and leaders of 
seventy-four
persons. And of these many are represented as competent to receive 
it
in virtue of their own unaided faculties. For, by the statement that “upon 
the
nobles Moses laid not his hands,” it is implied that their own spiritual 
condition
was such that they needed no aid from the magnetism of the great 
hierarch
their chief. The sight of the “God of Israel” on this occasion is 
described
as like that of “a devouring fire.”
3.
Among similar experiences related in other Scriptures is that in the Bhagavad 
Gita,
wherein the “Lord Krishna” exhibits to the gaze of Arjun his “supreme and 
heavenly
form,” “shining on all sides with light immeasurable like the sun a 
thousand
fold,” and “containing is his breast all the Gods, or Powers, masculine 
and
feminine, of the Universe.”
4.
Yet, notwithstanding the difference of the two natures thus described, the 
Scriptures
regard both as appertaining to one and the same Divine Being; and, 
combining
the names characteristic of both, declare that the Lord is God, and 
God
is the Lord, and appoint the compound term Lord-God as the proper 
designation
of Deity.
5.
Besides the title Lord, many various names are applied to Deity as subsisting 
under
this mode. In the Jewish and Christian Scriptures, these names are 
Jehovah,
El Shaddai, the Logos, the Ancient of Days, Alpha and Omega, Son of 
God,
the Only Begotten, Adonai. The Hindus have Brahma, and also Ardha-Nari, – 
identical
with Adonai. The Persians, Ormuzd; the Egyptians, Ra, or the Sun; the 
Greeks,
the Demiourgos; the Kabbala has Adam Kadmon; and some later mystics 
employ
the term “Grand Man.”
6.
Of these last the most notable, Emmanuel Swedenborg, asserts the vision to be 
a
fact in respect of the angels, – whom he claims as his informants, – saying 
that
the Lord is God manifested in the universe, as a man, and is thus beheld, 
interiorly,
by the angels. (Divine Love and Wisdom, 97, etc., etc.)
7.
Swedenborg, however, identifies the Lord who is thus discerned with the 
historical
Jesus, maintaining the latter to be very Deity, Jehovah in person, 
who
assumed a fleshly body, and manifested Himself as a man, in order to save 
men
from hell, and commanded His disciples to call Him Lord. (True Christian 
Religion,
370; D. L. and W., 282, etc., etc.) Swedenborg, herein falls into the 
common
error of confounding “our Lord” with “the Lord,” the Christ in the man 
with
Adonai in the heavens of whom the former is the counterpart; – an error due 
to
his failure to recognize the distinction between the manifest and unmanifest, 
and
between the microcosmic and macrocosmic deity. [ In his presentation of the 
Incarnation,
Swedenborg is at variance, not only with the Gnosis but with 
himself.
For in it he sets aside the canon of interpretation formulated by 
himself,
his recovery and general application of which – together with the 
doctrine
of correspondence – constitute his chief merit. Thus, to cite his own 
words:
– “In the internal sense there is no respect to any person, or anything 
determined
to a person. But there are three things which disappear from the 
sense
of the letter of the Word, when the internal sense is unfolded; that which 
is
of time, that which is of space, and that which is of person.” “The Word is 
written
by mere correspondence, and hence all its contents, to the most minute, 
signify
things heavenly and spiritual” (Arcana Cœlestia, 5253 and 1401). He also 
repeatedly
declares that the literal sense of the Word is rarely the truth, but 
only
the appearance of the truth, and that to take the literal sense for the 
true
one is to destroy the truth itself, since everything in it relates to the 
heavenly
and spiritual, and becomes falsified when transferred to a lower plane 
by
being taken literally (see e g. T. C. R. 254, 258.) According both to this 
rule
and the Gnosis, that which is implied by the term Incarnation is an event 
purely
spiritual in its nature, potential in all men and of perpetual 
occurrence,
inasmuch as it takes place in every regenerate man, being at once 
the
cause and effect of his regeneration.
The
authority twice cited by Swedenborg (T.C.R., 102 and 827) in support of his 
doctrine,
– namely, an apparition professing to be the spirit of the Mother of 
Jesus,
– is one which a duly instructed oculist would, at the least, have 
hesitated
to regard as aught but a projection of his own magnetic aura, and as 
merely
a mechanical reflect, therefore, of his own thought. Swedenborg had 
learned
little or nothing from books, was ignorant of any system other the 
Christian,
and also of the origin and meaning of the Christian symbology, and 
trusted
for his information entirely to his own faculty; and this, extraordinary 
as
it was, was allied to a temperament too cold and unsympathetic to generate 
the
enthusiasm by which alone the topmost heights of perception and inmost core 
of
the consciousness can be attained. Nevertheless, despite his limitations, 
Swedenborg
was beyond question the foremost herald and initiator of the new era 
opening
in the spiritual life of Christendom, and no student of religion can 
dispense
with a knowledge of him. Only, he must be read with much discrimination 
and
patience.]
8.
In “the Lord,” the Formless assumes a form, the Nameless a name, the Infinite 
the
definite, and these human. But, although “the Lord is God, manifested as a 
man,”
in and to the souls of those to whom the vision is vouchsafed, it is not 
as
man in the exclusive sense of the term, and masculine only, but as man both 
masculine
and feminine, at once man and woman, as is Humanity itself. The Lord 
is
God manifested in substance; and is dual in form because Deity, though one in 
essence,
and statistically is twofold in operation, or dynamically. And the 
vision
of Deity under a definite form, dual and human, – or androgynous, thought 
not
as ordinarily apprehended, – has been universal and persistent from the 
beginning;
and this, not as a conception merely mental and “subjective,” but as 
perception
objective to an interior faculty, in that it is actually beheld. 
Hence
it is, that in terms employed to denote Deity, both sexes are expressed or 
implied;
and where one sex only is designated, it is not because the other is 
wanting,
but because it is latent. And hence it is also, that, in order to be 
made
in the image of God; the individual must comprise within himself the 
qualities
masculine and feminine of existence, and be, spiritually, both man and 
woman.
Man is perfect only when the whole humanity is manifested in him; and 
this
occurs only when the whole Spirit of Humanity – that is God – is manifested 
through
him. Thus manifesting Himself, God, as the book of Genesis says, 
“creates
man in His own Image, Male and Female.”
9.
Such is the doctrine of all Hermetic Scriptures. And when it is said, – as of 
the
Kabbala, – that these Scriptures were delivered by God first of all to Adam 
in
in
them is that which man always discerns when he succeeds in attaining to that 
inner
and celestial region of his nature where he is taught directly of his own 
Divine
Spirit, and knows even as he is known. The attainment of this divine 
knowledge
constitutes existence a paradise. And it is symbolized by the ascent 
of
a mountain, variously designated Nyssa, Sinai, Sion, Olivet. Peculiar to no 
particular
period or place, the power to receive this knowledge is dependent 
entirely
upon condition. And the condition is that of the understanding. Man 
attains
to the image of God in proportion as he comprehends the nature of God. 
Such
knowledge constitutes, of itself, transmutation. For man is that which he 
knows.
And he knows only that which he is. Wherefore the recognition, first of 
God
as the Lord, and next of the Lord as the divine Humanity, constitutes at 
once
the means of salvation and salvation itself. This is the truth which makes 
free,
– the supreme mystery, called by Paul the “mystery of godliness.” And it 
is
by their relegation of this mystery to the category of the incomprehensible, 
that
the priesthoods have barred to man the way of redemption. They have 
directed
him, indeed, to a Macrocosmic God subsisting exteriorly to man, and 
having
a nature altogether different from man’s, and to a heaven remote and 
inaccessible.
But they have suppressed altogether the Microcosmic God and the 
kingdom
within, and have blotted the Lord and his true image out of all 
recognition.
Now the main distinction between the uninitiate and the initiate, 
between
the man who does not know and the man who does know, lies in this: – For 
the
one, God, if subsisting at all, is wholly without. For the other, God is 
both
within and without; and the God within is all that the God without is.
10.
It cannot be too emphatically stated, that the definition which sets forth 
Mystery
as something inconsistent with or contradictory of sense and reason, is 
a
wrong definition, and one in the highest degree pernicious. In its true 
signification,
Mystery means only that which appertains to a region of which the 
external
sense and reason are unable to take cognizance. It is, thus, the 
doctrine
of Spirit and of the experiences connected therewith. And inasmuch as 
the
spiritual is the within and source of the phenomenal, so far from the 
doctrine
of Spirit contradicting and stultifying the experiences and conclusions 
of
the external faculties, it corrects and interprets them; – precisely as does 
reason
correct and interpret the sensible impression of the earth’s immobility, 
and
of the diurnal revolution of the skies. That, therefore, which the 
degradation
of the term Mystery to mean something incomprehensible, really 
represents,
is the loss by the priesthoods of the faculty of comprehension. 
Declining,
through “idolatry,” from the standard once attained by them, and 
losing
the power either to discern or to interpret Substance, the Churches 
abandoned
the true definition of Mystery which referred it to things 
transcending
the outer sense and reason, and adopted a definition implying 
something
contradictory of all sense and reason. Thenceforth, so far from 
fulfilling
their proper function of supplying man with the wholesome “bread” of 
a
perfect system of thought, they gave him instead the indigestible “stones” of 
dogmas
altogether unthinkable; and for the “fish,” – or interior mysteries of 
the
soul, – the “serpents,” or illusory reflects, of the astral. Reduced by this 
act
to a choice between the suicide of an absolute surrender of the reason, and 
open
revolt, the world adopted the lesser of the two evils. And this both 
rightly
and of necessity. For man neither ought if he could, nor can if he 
would,
suppress his reason. And now the Churches, having lost cognition of 
Spirit,
and suppressed the faculty whereby alone it could be attained, are 
absolutely
without a system of Thought wherewith to oppose the progress of that 
fatal
system of No-thought which is fast engulfing the world. And so profound is 
the
despair which reigns even in the highest ranks of Ecclesiasticism, as 
recently,
from one of its most distinguished members, to elicit the confession 
that
he saw no hope for Religion save in a new Revelation.[ Related of Cardinal 
Newman,
on his investiture at 
PART
II
11.
IT is necessary to devote a brief space to an exposition of the ancient and 
true
doctrine in respect of the place and value of the Understanding in things 
religious.
Four so we shall both further minister to the rehabilitation of this 
supreme
faculty, and exhibit the extent to which sacerdotalism has departed from 
the
right course. Mention has already been made of Hermes as the “trainer of the 
Christs.”
The phrase is of a kind with those more familiar phrases which 
describe
Christ as the “Son of David” and as the “Seed of the Woman;” and, in 
short,
with all statements respecting the genealogy of the Christ, including the 
declaration
that the Rock on which the 
Understanding.
For of all such statements the meaning is, that the doctrine 
represented
by the term Christ – so far from being a Mystery, in the sacerdotal 
sense
– is a truth necessary and self-evident, and requiring for its discernment 
as
such, only the full and free exercise of Thought. Now this term Thought is no 
other
than name of the Egyptian equivalent of Hermes, the God Thaut, frequently 
written
Thoth; these being for the Greeks and Egyptians respectively the 
personification
of the Divine Intelligence. It has already been stated that in 
the
Celestial all properties and qualities are Persons, the fact being that it 
is
always in the guise of a person that the Divine Spirit of a man holds 
intercourse
with him, the mode adopted on the occasion corresponding to the 
function
to be exercised. Thoth and Hermes are, then, names expressive of the 
personality
assumed by the supreme Nous of the Microcosm when operating 
especially
as the Intelligence or Understanding. In different nations, while the 
function
is the same, the name and form vary according to the genius of the 
people.
Thus, to a Hebrew the same Spirit becomes manifest as Raphael. In the 
Bhagavad-Gita
the Supreme Being, speaking as the Lord (
he
himself is the Spirit of Understanding. As the parent Spirit – the Nous, or 
divine
Mind – is God, so the product Thought, or the “Word,” as a Son of God, is 
also
God. Nor does the Divine procession cease at the first generation. For, 
whereas
of such Divine Word the Christ is the manifestation “in ultimates,” the 
Christ
also is Son of God, and therefore God.
12.
But not the less, however, is “Christ” the “Son of David,” though not by 
physical
descent – his line had long been extinct – but in a spiritual sense. 
Like
the patriarchs – who were therefore said to live in concubinage – David was 
not
“married to the Spirit,” but held only occasional communion with it, 
receiving
but a measure of illumination. “Christ” implies full regeneration and 
illumination.
The attainment of this state is the ultimate aim of the science 
called
Hermetic and Alchemic, the earliest formulation of which is ascribed to 
the
god Thoth, – the Egyptian equivalent for the Divine Thought. Tracking the 
Christ-idea
to this source, we have a yet further – though still but a secondary 
–
signification for the saying, “Out of 
13.
One of the most general symbols of the Understanding, and of its importance 
in
the work of regeneration, has always been the Ram. Hence the frequent 
portrayal
of the representative of Hermes and Thoth with a ram’s head. For by 
this
was denoted the power of the faculty of which the head is the seat, the act 
of
butting with the horns typifying the employment of the intellect whether for 
attack
or defence. The command to cover the holy place of the Tabernacle with a 
ram’s
fleece implied that only to the understanding were the mysteries of the 
Spirit
accessible. The mighty walls of the “
falling
at the sound of rams’ horns, after being “encompassed” during the 
typical
period of seven days. The narrative of the previous entry – that of the 
“spies”
– into this stronghold through the agency of a woman, is similarly 
designed
to exalt the understanding, the direct reference being to the intuition 
as
essential to the understanding, and therefore to the resolution of doubt. The 
ascription
to this woman of the vocation of the Magdalen, accords with the 
mystical
usage of regarding the soul as impure during the term – necessary for 
her
education – of her association with Matter. This finished, she becomes 
“virgin.”
One of the chief glories of Hermes – his conquest of the hundred-eyed 
Argus
– denotes the victory of the understanding over fate. For Argus represents 
the
power of the stars over the unenfranchised soul. Wherefore Hera, the queen 
of
the astral spheres and persecutrix of the soul thus subject, is said to have 
placed
the eyes of Argus in the train of her vehicular bird, the peacock.
14.
The story of the slaying of Goliath is a parable of like import. For Goliath 
is
the formulation of the system represented by the “Philistines,” – that system 
of
doubt and denial which finds its inevitable outcome in Materialism. The 
killing
of Goliath signifies, thus, the discomfiture of Materialism by the 
understanding.
And David, moreover, is represented – on arraying himself for the 
conflict
– as declining the “king’s weapons,” or arms of the exterior reason, 
and
choosing “a smooth stone out of a brook;” this being the “philosopher’s 
stone”
of a pure spirit, a firm will, and a clear perception, such as is 
attained
only through the secret operation of the soul, of which the brook is 
the
emblem. Such a stone, also, is that which, “cut out without hands,” smites 
in
pieces, as already explained, the giant image of Nebuchadnezzar. The reward 
of
David’s achievement – the possession of the king’s daughter, the usual 
termination
of such heroic adventure – denotes the attainment by the conqueror 
of
the highest gifts and graces; – the daughter of Saul, or the outer Reason, 
being
the inner Reason, or psychic faculty, developed from the “Man” and 
constituting
the “Woman” in the man. Hence by David’s subsequent history in 
relation
to Michal, is implied a spiritual retrogression on the soul’s part.
15.
Similar reasons dictated the selection of a dog as specially sacred to 
Hermes,
and his representation as the dog-headed Anubis; the intelligence and 
faithfulness
of this animal making it an apt type of the understanding as the 
peculiar
friend of man. Raphael – the Hebrew equivalent of Hermes, and like him 
called
the “physician of souls” – is also represented as accompanied by a dog 
when
travelling with Tobias. And the name of the special associate of Joshua, – 
a
name identical with Jesus, – the final leader of the chosen people into the 
promised
land of their spiritual perfection, – namely, Caleb, signifies a dog, 
and
implies the necessity of intelligence to the successful quest of salvation. 
For
the like reason were “rams,” and the “fat of rams,” used as symbolic terms 
to
denote the offering most acceptable to God. It was intended by them to teach 
that
man ought to dedicate to the service of God all the powers of his mind 
raised
to their highest perfection, and by no means to ignore or suppress them.
16.
The like high rank is accorded to understanding in all Hermetic Scriptures. 
For,
– as in Isaiah xi. 2, – it is always placed second among the seven Elohim 
of
God, the first place being assigned to Wisdom, which is accounted as one with 
Love.
The same order is observed in the disposition of the solar system. For 
Mercury
is Hermes, and his planet is next to the Sun. The ascription, in the 
mythologies,
of a thievish disposition to this divinity, and the legends which 
represent
him as the patron of thieves and adventurers, and stealing in turn 
from
all the Gods, are modes of indicating the facility with which the 
understanding
annexes everything and makes it its own. For Hermes denotes that 
faculty
of the divine part in man which seeks and obtains meanings out of every 
department
of existence, intruding into the province of every “God,” and 
appropriating
some portion of the goods of each. Thus the understanding has a 
finger
upon all things, and converts them to its own use, whether it be the 
“arrows”
of Apollo, the “girdle” of Aphrodite, the “oxen” of Admetus, the 
“trident”
of Poseidon, or the “tongs” of Hephaistos. Not only is Hermes – as 
already
said – the rock on which the true church is built; he is also the 
divinity
under whose immediate control all divine revelations are made, and all 
divine
achievements performed. His are the rod of knowledge wherewith all things 
are
measured, the wings of courage, the sword of the unconquerable will, and the 
cap
of concealment or discretion. He is in turn the Star of East, conducting the 
Magi;
the Cloud from whose mist the holy Voice speaks; by day the pillar of 
Vapour,
by night the shining Flame, leading the elect soul on her perilous path 
through
the noisome wilderness of the world, as she flies from the 
Flesh,
and guiding her in safety to the promised heaven. He, too, it is who is 
the
shield of saints in the fiery furnace of persecution or affliction, and 
whose
“form is like the Son of God.” And by him the candidate for spiritual 
knowledge
attains full initiation. For he is also the Communicator, and without 
him
is no salvation. For, although that which saves is faith, that is not faith 
which
is without understanding. Happily for the so-called “simple,” this 
understanding
is not necessarily of the outer man; it suffices for salvation 
that
the inner man has it. (See Apps. XII. 6 and XIV.)
17.
“Hermes, as the messenger of God,” says the Neoplatonist Proclus, “reveals 
to
us His paternal will, and – developing in us the intuition – imparts to us 
knowledge.
The knowledge which descends into the soul from above excels any that 
can
be attained by the mere exercise of the intellect. Intuition is the 
operation
of the soul. The knowledge received through it from above, descending 
into
the soul, fills it with the perception of the interior causes of things. 
The
Gods announce it by their presence, and by illumination, and enable us to 
discern
the universal order.” Commenting on these words of a philosopher 
regarded
by his contemporaries with a veneration approaching to adoration, for 
his
wisdom and miraculous powers, a recent leader of the prevailing school 
exclaims,
“Thus is Proclus consistent in absurdity!” [ G.H. Lewes, Biog. Hist. 
Phil.]
Whereas, had the critic been aware of the truth concerning the reality, 
personality,
and accessibility of the world celestial, so far from denouncing 
Proclus
as “absurd,” he would have supremely envied him, and eagerly sought the 
secret
and method of the Neoplatonists. “To know more,” says the writer in 
question,
“we must be more.” But when the Mystic – who, in virtue of his supreme 
sense
of the dignity and gravity of man’s nature, affirms nothing lightly or 
rashly
– offers his solemn assurance that we are more, and prescribes a simple 
rule,
amply verified by himself, whereby to ascertain the fact, he turns away in 
disdain,
and proceeds in his own manner to make himself infinitely less, by 
becoming
a ringleader of that terrible 
scruple,
in the outraged name of Science, to indulge its passion for knowledge 
to
the utter disregard of humanity and morality, by the infliction of tortures 
the
most atrocious and protracted, upon creatures harmless and helpless. Little 
wonder
is it that between Mystic and Materialist should gulf so impassable, feud 
so
irreconcilable, intervene; seeing that while the one seeks by the sacrifice 
of
his own lower nature to his higher, and of himself for others, to prove man 
potential
God, the other – turning vivisector – makes him actual fiend. [ This 
paragraph
was written with a view to its publication in the lifetime of Mr. 
Lewes.
Unhappily, the necessity for it has not ceased with his life. Hence its 
appearance
now. Both in the schools and in the laboratory his writings and 
influence
survive him. The work cited is an University textbook; and a 
scholarship
has been instituted in his name for the promotion of vivisectional 
research.]
18.
To resume our exposition of the “mystery of godliness,” or doctrine of God 
as
the Lord, and of the duality of the Divine image. According to the Zohar – 
the
principal of the Kabbala – the Divine Word by which all things are created 
is
the celestial archetypal Humanity, which subsisting eternally in the Divine 
Mind
– makes the universe in His own image. God, as absolute Being, having no 
form
or name, cannot and may not be represented under any image or appellation. 
Bent
upon self-manifestation, or creation, the Divine Mind conceives the Ideal 
Humanity
as a vehicle in which to descend from Being into Existence. This is the 
Merkaba,
or Car, already referred to; and that which it denotes is Human Nature 
in
its perfection, at once twofold in operation, fourfold in constitution, and 
sixfold
in manifestation, and as a cube – Kaabeh – “standing four-square to all 
the
winds of heaven.” In virtue of its two-foldness this “vehicle” expresses the 
corresponding
opposites, Will and Love, Justice and Mercy, Energy and Space, 
Life
and Substance, Positive and Negative, in a word, Male and Female, both of 
which
subsist in the Divine Nature in absolute plenitude and perfect 
equilibrium.
Expressed in the Divine Idea – Adam Kadmon – the qualities 
masculine
and feminine of existence are, in their union and co-operation, the 
life
and salvation of the world; and in their division and antagonism, its death 
and
destruction. One in the Absolute, but two in the Relative, this ideal – but 
not
therefore the less real – Humanity resumes both in itself, and is king and 
queen
of the universe, and as such is projected through every sphere of creation 
to
the material and phenomenal, causing the outer, lower, and sensible world 
everywhere
to be made in the image of the inner, upper and spiritual: so that 
all
that subsists in the latter belongs to us here below and is in our image; 
and
the two regions together make one uniform existence which is a vast Man, 
being,
like the individual man, in constitution fourfold and in operation dual.
19.
This doctrine of Correspondence finds expression through Paul, first when he 
declares
that “the invisible things of God from the creation of the world are 
clearly
seen, being understood by the things which are made;” and again, when – 
applying
it in its dual relation to the sexes of humanity – he says “Neither is 
the
man without the woman, nor the woman without the man in the Lord.” The 
purity
of its doctrine in this respect constitutes a proof of the divinity of 
the
Kabbala. For it shows that this famous compendium belongs to a period prior 
to
that destruction by the priesthoods of the equilibrium of the sexes which 
constituted
in one sense the “Fall”. Calling the woman the house and wall of the 
man,
without whose bounding and redeeming influence he would inevitably be 
dissipated
and lost in the abyss, the Kabbala describes her as constituting the 
centripetal
and aspirational element in humanity, having a natural affinity for 
the
pure and noble, to which, with herself, she always seeks to raise man, and 
being
therefore his guide and initiator in things spiritual. Thus recognizing in 
the
sexes of humanity respectively, the manifestation of the qualities masculine 
and
feminine of the divine Nature, Its power and Its love, the Kabbala duly 
inculcates
the worship of that true Lord God of Hosts, the knowledge of whom 
constitutes
its possessors the “Israel of God.” “Not everyone who says Lord, 
Lord,
is of this heavenly kingdom; but they only who do the will of the Father 
Who
is in heaven,” and Who accordingly honor duly His “two Witnesses” on earth – 
the
man and the woman – on every plane of man’s fourfold nature. It is by reason 
of
Christ’s duality that humanity beholds in him its representative. And it is 
only
in those who seek in this to be like him, that Christ can by any means be 
born.
20.
Close as was the agreement between Paul and the Kabbala in respect – among 
other
doctrines – of the dual nature of Deity, the agreement stopped short of 
the
due issue of that doctrine. And it is mainly through Paul that the influence 
we
have described as at once astral, rabbinical, and sacerdotal, found entrance 
into
the Church. For, judged by the received text, Paul, when it came to a 
matter
of practical teaching, exchanged the spirit of the Kabbala for that of 
the
Talmud, and transmitted – aggravated and reinforced – to Christianity, the 
traditional
contempt of his race for woman. The Talmud appoints to every pious 
Jew,
as a daily prayer, these words: – “Blessed art thou, O Lord, that thou hast 
not
made me a Gentile, an idiot, or a woman;” and, while enjoining the 
instruction
of his sons in the Law, prohibits that of the daughters, on the 
ground
that women are accursed. This reprobation of one whole moiety of the 
divine
nature, instead of finding condemnation from Paul as erroneous, was 
adopted
by him as the basis of his instructions concerning the position of women 
in
a Christian society. For, after rightly defining the doctrine of the equality 
of
the sexes “in the Lord,” we find him writing to the Corinthians in the 
following
strain: “But I would have you know that the head of every man is 
Christ,
and the head of the woman is the man. For a man indeed ought not to have 
his
head veiled, for as much as he is the image and glory of God: but the woman 
is
the glory of the man. For the man is not of the woman; but the woman of the 
man:
for neither was the man created for the woman, but the woman for the man; 
for
this cause ought the woman to have a sign of authority on her head, because 
of
the angels.” “Let a woman learn in quietness with all subjection. But I 
permit
not a woman to teach, nor to have dominion over a man, but to be in 
quietness.”
“Let the woman keep silence in the churches; for it is not permitted 
unto
them to speak, but let them be in subjection, as saith the Law. It is 
shameful
for a woman to speak in the Church.” “For Adam was first formed, then 
Eve;
and Adam was not beguiled; but the woman being beguiled, fell into 
transgression.”
To the same purport writes Peter, who, as he certainly did not 
derive
the doctrine from his Master, had doubtless been overborne in respect of 
it
by Paul.* [ In 1 Pet. iii. 6, it is said that “Sara obeyed Abraham, calling 
him
lord;” whereas, according to Genesis, Abraham rather obeyed Sarai, calling 
her
lady; for the change made by him in her name – from Sarai to Sara – implies 
an
accession of dignity. Thereby, from being “my lady” she became “the lady”, 
and
representative of the feminine element in Divinity. The Deity is represented 
moreover
as impressing on Abraham this injunction: – “In all that Sara hath said 
unto
thee, hearken unto her voice.” The fault of Adam lay not – as might be 
inferred
from the passage as it stands in Genesis – in “hearkening to the voice 
of
his wife,” but in doing so when she was under beguilement “of the devil” – a 
qualification
for the suppression of which the motive is obvious.] Thus 
enforced,
the doctrine of the subjection of the woman became accepted as an 
integral
part of the Christian system, constituting in it an element of 
inevitable
self-destruction.
21.
The utterance last cited from Paul gives the clue to the source and motive 
of
his doctrine concerning woman. It is a perversion due to the influences 
already
specified, of the parable of the Fall. When speaking in the Spirit, Paul 
declares
the man and the woman alike to be “in the Lord.” Subsiding from this 
level,
– and speaking – as, according to his own admission, he was not unwont to 
speak
– “foolishly,” or of his own lower reason, he contradicts this statement, 
and
affirms that the man alone is made in the image of God, – the divine Idea of 
Humanity
comprising the male element only, – and implies that the woman is but a 
mere
afterthought, contrived to meet an unexpected emergency, and made, 
therefore,
in the image, not of God, but of the man. Thus substituting the 
Letter
for the Spirit, and wholly losing sight of the latter, Paul degrades the 
mystic
Scripture from its proper plane and universal signification, to a level 
historical
merely and local. By making Adam and Eve no longer types of the 
substantial
humanity in its two essential modes, the outer and inner 
personality,
but an actual material couple, the first physical progenitors of 
the
race, he accepts in all its gross, impossible crudity the fable of the apple 
and
the snake, and declares that, because the first woman was beguiled, 
therefore
her daughters – not her sons – must through all time to come bear the 
penalty
of silence and servitude!
22.
That which Paul would have taught, had his vision been uniformly lightened, 
is
the truth that, so far from the woman being an inferior part of humanity, it 
is
not until she is, on all its planes, exalted, crowned, and glorified, that 
humanity,
whether in the individual or in the race, can attain to Christhood, 
seeing
that she, and not the “man,” is the bruiser of the serpent’s head, the 
last
to be manifested, and therefore the first in dignity. For this reason it is 
that
only by the restoration of the woman, on all planes of her manifestation, 
can
the equilibrium of man’s nature, destroyed at the “Fall,” be re-established. 
As
it is, the direct effect of the teaching of Paul in this, and in certain 
allied
respects, – notably the doctrine of atonement by vicarious bloodshed, – 
has
been to perpetuate the false balance introduced by the Fall, and therein to 
confirm
the Curse, to remove which is the supreme mission of the Christ as the 
“seed
of the woman.” On this subject Jesus himself had spoken very explicitly, 
though
only in writings labeled “Apocryphal” are the utterances recorded. Of 
these,
one, given by Clement, declares plainly that the 
only
“when Two shall be One, and the Man as the Woman.” In the other, – recorded 
in
the Egyptian gospel, – Jesus speaking mystically, says, “The kingdom of 
Heaven
shall come when you women shall have renounced the dress of your sex;” 
meaning,
when the representatives of the soul, namely women, no longer submit to 
ordinances
which cause or imply inferiority on the part either of themselves or 
of
that which they represent; but, with the soul are restored to their proper 
place.
But, apart from any specific utterances, the whole character and teaching 
of
Jesus are at variance with the doctrine and usage which have prevailed. For 
that
character and teaching were in complete accordance with the course already 
from
the beginning marked out in the planisphere of the Zodiac wherein the 
rising
of the constellation Virgo is followed by Libra, the Balance, – emblem of 
the
Divine Justice, – in token of the establishment of the Kingdom of 
Righteousness
which should follow upon the rehabilitation of the “Woman.” Paul, 
on
the contrary, – in his astral and non-lucid moments, – enforces the curse 
which
Jesus would have put away; appeals to the Law which at other times he 
repudiates
and denounces; and forges its chains anew by thrusting them around 
the
necks of those who – he himself says – should be “no more under the Law, but 
under
Grace.” [ According to the Apocryphal Epistles, and to ecclesiastical 
tradition,
Paul, nevertheless, directed his own female associate – Theckla – to 
preach
in public, and suffered her even to wear male attire. Paul, however, 
following
the Levitical Code (Lev.xxi.13), draws a distinction between married 
women
and virgins, saying he had no commandment about the latter.] 
23.
Thus does Paul, to whose writings chiefly the various doctrinal systems of 
Christianity
owe their origin, divide the Churches, and diminish the Reason, by 
falling
back on convention and tradition. Now the Reason is not the “intellect,” 
–
this, as we have insisted, represents but a moiety of the mind. The Reason is 
the
whole humanity, which comprises the intuition as well as the intellect, and 
is
in God’s Image, male and female. This supreme Reason it is which finds its 
full
expression in the Logos or Lord. Wherefore, in denying her true place to 
the
woman in his scheme of society, Paul denies to the Lord his due 
manifestation
on earth, and exalts for worship some image other than the divine. 
It
is because they recognize in the Reason the heir of all things, that the 
devil
and his agents always make it their first concern to cast it out and slay 
it.
“This is the Heir,” – the Reason, the Logos, the Lord, – “come let us kill 
him,
and the inheritance shall be ours,” – say those ministers of Unreason, the 
materialistic
orthodoxies of Church and World. And no sooner is the Reason 
suppressed
and cast out, than madness, folly, and evil of every kind step in 
and,
taking possession, bear rule, making the last state, – be it of community 
or
of individual, – worse than the first. For then in place of Christ and the 
divine
image, is antichrist and the “man of sin;” and the rule is that of 
falsehood,
superstition, and all manner of unclean spirits, having neither 
knowledge,
nor power, nor wisdom, nor aught that in any respect corresponds to 
God.
Of the mutilation and defacement of the Divine Reason by the Church, under 
the
impulsion of Paul, the present state of both Church and World is the 
inevitable
sequel.
24.
Besides Paul, there are two others associated with the doctrine of the 
Logos,
of names so notable as to necessitate a reference to them. These are 
Plato,
and Philo called Judæus. They also recognized the Lord as the Logos and 
Divine
Reason of things. But they failed to recognize the Dualism of the Divine 
nature
therein, and by their failure ministered to the confirmation, rather than 
to
the reversal, of the Fall and the Curse. Between Philo and Paul the points of 
resemblance
are many striking, foremost among being the depreciation of woman, 
and
the advocacy of vicarious blood shedding as a means of propitiating Deity. 
Philo,
who in these respects in a thorough sacerdotalist, claims to have been 
initiated
into spiritual mysteries directly by the spirit of Moses. This, it 
will
be now understood, is a distinct and positive proof, were any wanting, of 
the
astral character of much at least of Philo’s inspiration. He, too, like many 
in
our day, was beguiled by a spirit of the astral, which, personating the great 
prophet
so long dead, insisted, in the name of Moses, on the sacerdotal 
degradations
of the teaching of Moses. Like Paul, – though never attaining his 
elevation,
– Philo oscillated continually between the Talmud and the Kabbala, 
the
astral and the celestial, mixing error and truth accordingly, and ignored 
altogether
the contrary presentation given of the divine Sophia in the inspired 
“Book
of Wisdom,” – a book of which some have nevertheless ascribed the 
authorship
to Philo himself!
25.
Plato, and no less Aristotle, discerned in a perfect humanity the end and 
aim
of creation, and in the universe a prelude to and preparation for the 
perfect
man. Recognizing, however, the masculine element only of existence, 
Aristotle
regarded every production of Nature other than a male of the human 
species,
as a failure in the attempt to produce a man; and the woman as 
something
maimed and imperfect, to be accounted for only on the hypothesis that 
Nature,
though artist, is but blind. Similarly Plato – despite the intuition 
whereby
he was enabled to recognize Intellect and Emotion as the two wings 
indispensable
for man’s ascent to his proper altitude – was wholly insensible to 
the
correspondence by virtue of which the latter finds in woman its highest 
expression.
For the strain in which he treated of her was so bitter and 
contemptuous,
as largely to minister to the making of his country – instead of 
the
–
a veritable rival of the “cities of the Plain.” In his view, only they who 
have
previously disgraced themselves as men, become reincarnated as animals and 
women.
The Logos of Plato is, clearly, no prototype of the Logos of that 
Christianity
which based on the duality of the Divine Being, and requires of the 
Christ
that he represent the whole humanity.
26.
The Fathers of the Church – stepfathers, rather, were they to the true 
Christianity
– for the most part vied with each other in their depreciation of 
woman;
and, denouncing her with every vile epithet, held it a degradation for a 
saint
to touch even his own aged mother with the hand in order to sustain her 
feeble
steps. And the Church, falling under a domination exclusively sacerdotal, 
while
doctrinally it exalted womanhood to a level beside, though not to its 
place
in, the Godhead, practically substituted priestly exclusiveness for 
Christian
comprehension. For it declared woman unworthy, through inherent 
impurity,
even to set foot within the sanctuaries of its temples; suffered her 
to
exercise her functions of wife and mother only under the spell of a triple 
exorcism;
and denied her, when dead, burial in its more sacred precincts, even 
though
she were an abbess of undoubted sanctity.
27.
The Reformation altered, but did not better, the condition of woman. 
Socially,
it rescued her from the priest to make her the chattel of the husband; 
and,
doctrinally, it expunged her altogether. Calvinism is, on all planes, a 
repudiation
of the woman in favor of the man; inasmuch as it recognizes only 
will
and force, and rejects love and goodness, as essential qualities of Being, 
whether
Divine or human. And Protestantism at large, both Unitarian and 
Trinitarian,
finds in its definition of the Substance of existence, place only 
for
the masculine element. Even the great bard of Nonconformism, John Milton, – 
though
finding woman so indispensable to him as to have thrice wedded, – 
disfigured
his verse and belied his inspiration as poet, by his bitter and 
incessant
depreciation of her without whom poetry itself would have no 
existence.
For poetry is the function of genius, and genius, which is the 
product
of sympathy, is not of the man, but of the woman in the man. And she 
herself
– as her typical name Venus implies – is the “Sweet Song of God.” [ Such 
also
is the signification of Anael, the Hebrew name of the “Angel” of her 
planet.
Venus is said by some to be originally Phe-nus, having for root
Φημι. 
For
an example of the nature of the true mysteries of this divinity, see 
Appendices,
No. XIII.] In the same spirit the chief Instrument of the 
Reformation,
Martin Luther, declared of the two sacred books which especially 
point
to the woman as the agent of man’s final redemption – the books of Esther 
and
Revelation – that “so far as he esteemed them, it would be no loss if they 
were
thrown into the river.”
28.
The influence in question is not confined to the sphere of Christianity. It 
dictated
the form assumed by Islamism. Originating in impulses derived from the 
celestial,
this religion fell beneath the sway of the astral so soon as its 
founder,
making a rich marriage, lived luxuriously and occupied himself with 
worldly
matters. Sacerdotalism failed, it is true, to find in Islamism its 
ordinary
mode of expression. But the principle of the doctrine of vicarious 
sacrifice
in propitiation of the Deity, showed itself in the recognition of 
bloodshed
as means of proselytism. And women were relegated to a position 
altogether
inferior, being regarded as differing from men not merely in degree, 
but
in kind. For they were denied the possession of a soul; and their place in 
the
Hereafter was supplied by astral equivalents under the scarcely disguised 
name
of Houris. The Koran itself is little else than an imitation of the Old 
Testament,
conceived under astral suggestion. A yet more unmitigated form of 
what
may be called Astralism is the religion known as Mormonism; the sacred 
books
of which are, throughout, but astral travesties of Scripture; its doctrine 
of
“spiritual wives,” and of the position of woman generally, being similarly 
derived.
It thus constitutes an instance in point, of the unceasing endeavor of 
the
spirits of the subhuman to established a kingdom of their own, instead of 
that
of the Lord and the Divine Idea of Humanity.
PART
III
29.
IT will be well, before proceeding to our conclusion, to take note of the 
objections
with which it is usually sought to discredit – under the name of 
Mysticism
– the system in course of exposition. These objections are comprised 
under
two heads, of which the terms, respectively, are Plagiarism and 
Enthusiasm.
By the former it is meant that the professors of Mysticism, instead 
of
being the actual recipients of the experiences they record of themselves, 
borrow
them from some common – but equally delusive – source. And by the latter 
it
is implied that, at the best, the experiences, and the doctrines based upon 
them,
are due to morbid conditions of mind. This, in plain language, means that 
the
opponents of Mysticism – unable either to emulate or to confute it – try to 
get
rid of it by charging its professors with dishonesty or insanity. And so far 
from
this line of treatment being exceptional or rare, it is persistent and 
constant
throughout the whole range of the literature characteristic of the age, 
and
this in every class from the lowest to the highest, and in every branch of 
intellectual
activity. Instead of being submitted to examination even the most 
superficial,
the entire system comprised under the term Mysticism – its 
witnesses,
its facts, and its doctrines – has in that literature been rejected 
offhand,
and without inquiry, by the simple process of abrupt process 
contradiction,
and the ascription, in no measured degree, to its representatives 
and
exponents, of pretence, imposture, charlatanism, quackery, hallucination, 
and
madness – an ascription preposterous in the extreme in view of the status, 
moral
and intellectual, of the persons aspersed. For of these the character and 
eminence
have been such as, of themselves, to entitle their statements to 
attention
the most respectful; and the Order to which, one and all, they have 
belonged,
comprises the world’s finest intellects, profoundest scholars, 
maturest
judgments, noblest dispositions, ripest characters, and greatest 
benefactors;
and, in short, as has already been said, all those sages, saints, 
seers,
prophets, and Christs, through redeeming influence humanity has been 
raised
out of the bottomless pit of its own lower nature, and preserved from the 
abyss
of utter negation. Of these, and of numberless others, the testimony to 
the
reality of mystical experiences, and the truth of mystical doctrine, has 
been
concurrent, continuous, positive, and maintained at the cost of liberty, 
reputation,
property, family ties, social position, and every earthly good, even 
to
life itself, and this over a period extending from before the beginning of 
history
until now. So that it may with absolute confidence be maintained, that 
if
the declarations of Mystics are to be set aside, as insufficient to establish 
their
claims, all human testimony whatever is worthless as a criterion of fact, 
and
all human intelligence as criterion of truth.
30.
The charge of Plagiarism is soon disposed of. It is true that the 
correspondence
upon which the charge is founded subsists. But it is also true 
that
this correspondence is only that which necessarily subsists between the 
accounts
given of identical phenomena by different witnesses. The world’s 
Mystics
have been as a band of earnest explorers who, one after another, and 
often
in complete ignorance of the results attained by their predecessors, have 
ascended
the same giant mountain-range, and, returning, have brought back to the 
dwellers
in the valleys below – too feeble or indifferent to make the ascent for 
themselves
– the same report of its character and products, and of the tracts 
discerned
from its various aspects and altitudes, showing thereby a perfect 
coherence
of faculty and testimony. Such is the agreement which has been made 
the
pretext for a charge of plagiarism against Mystics, simply because the 
region
visited and reported on by them is a spiritual and not a spiritual and 
not
a material one, and Materialists will not have it that any other than a 
material
subsists. Precisely the agreement which in all other cases is made 
indispensable
as a proof of trustworthiness, is, in this case, interpreted as a 
token
of collusion.
31.
To come to the somewhat more plausible charge of Enthusiasm. It is alleged 
that
the Mystics have conceived their system, not in that calm, philosophical 
frame
of mind which alone favorable to the discovery of truth, but in a spirit 
of
excitement and enthusiasm of which the inevitable product is hallucination. 
Now,
this allegation is not only contrary to fact, it is intrinsically absurd, 
whether
as applied to the phenomena or to the philosophy of Mysticism. For one 
who,
through the unfoldment of his spiritual faculties, is enabled to enjoy open 
conditions
with the spiritual world, the suggestion that his consequent 
experiences
are the result of hallucination, constitutes an act of presumption 
every
whit as gross as would be the like suggestion concerning the material 
world
if made by a blind man to one possessed of eyesight. For, as already 
observed,
such is the nature of the experiences in question, that if they are to 
be
disregarded as insufficient to demonstrate the reality of the spiritual 
world,
no ground remains whereon to believe in that of the material world, no 
ground
remains whereon to believe in that of the material world. It is true that 
the
Materialist cannot – as a rule – be made a partaker of the evidences in 
question.
But neither can the blind man have ocular proof of the existence of 
the
material world. For him there is no sun in the sky if he refuse to credit 
those
who alone possess the faculty wherewith to behold it, and persist in 
regarding
himself as a representative man.
32.
The case for the Mystic’s intellectual results is equally strong. Such are 
the
coherency and completeness of the mystical system of thought, that by all 
schools
whatever of thinkers it has ever, with one consent, been pronounced to 
be
inexpugnable, and that alone which would, if provable, constitute an 
explanation,
altogether satisfactory, of the phenomena of existence. In this 
system,
where apprehended in its proper integrity, Reason has in vain sought to 
detect
a flaw; and they who have rejected it, have done so solely through their 
own
inability to obtain that sensible evidence of the reality of the spiritual 
world,
the power to receive and interpret which, constitutes the Mystic.
33.
Nevertheless, of the fact of the Mystic’s enthusiasm there is no question. 
But
enthusiasm is neither his instrument of observation nor that of inference. 
And
he is not more fairly chargeable with conceiving his system by exercise of 
an
imagination stimulated by enthusiasm, than is the believer in a world 
exclusively
material. For, like the latter, he has sensible evidence of the 
facts
whereon he builds; and he observes all possible deliberation and 
circumspection
in his deductions therefrom. The only difference between them in 
this
relation, is that the senses principally appealed to by his facts, are 
those,
not of the man physical, but of the man spiritual, or soul, which, as 
consisting
of substance, is necessarily alone competent for the appreciation of 
the
phenomena of substance. Constituted as is man, while in the body, of both 
Matter
and Spirit, he is a complete being – and therefore fully man – only when 
he
has developed the faculties requisite for the discernment of both elements of 
his
nature.
34.
In the promotion of this development enthusiasm is a prime factor. By means 
of
it the man is elevated to that region, interior and superior, where alone 
serenity
prevails and perception is unobstructed, where are the beginnings of 
the
clues of all objects of his search, and where his faculties are at their 
best,
inasmuch as it is their native place, and they are there exempt from the 
limitations
of the material organism. Attaining thus to his full altitude he no 
longer
has need to reason and compare. For he sees and knows, and his mind is 
content.
For him, in the divine order of his spiritual system, “the woman is 
carried
to the throne of God.” The Zeus and Hera of his own celestial kingdom 
are
wedded. The Adam, perfected, has found an infallible Eve. Existence is a 
garden
of delights, whereof the fruits are the “golden apples” of knowledge and 
goodness.
For the intellect and intuition, – divine man and woman of his 
perfected
humanity, – are at one in the blissful home of his parent Spirit, the 
Within
or fourth dimension of space, whence all things have their procession, 
and
where alone, therefore, they can be comprehended. As well refuse credit to 
the
researches of the Meteorologist on account of the upward impulses of the 
vehicle
in which he gains the loftier strata of air, or of the superior purity 
of
the medium in which he operates, as to those of the Mystic on account of the 
enthusiasm
by means of which his ascent is accomplished. For enthusiasm is 
simply
his impelling force, without which he could never have quitted the outer, 
nether
and apparent, and gained the inner, upper and real. Wherefore, even when 
the
abstraction from the outer world attains the intensity of Ecstasy, there is 
nought
in the condition to invalidate the perceptions, sensible or mental, of 
the
seer. But simply are his faculties heightened and perfected through the 
exclusion
of all limiting or disturbing influences, and the consequent release 
of
the consciousness from material trammel and bias. There is, as already said, 
no
really “invisible world.” That which ecstasy does, is to open the vision to a 
world
imperceptible to the exterior senses, – that world of substance which, 
lying
behind phenomenon, necessarily requires for its cognition faculties which 
are
not of the phenomenal but of the substantial man. Says one eminent Manualist 
concerning
the Neoplatonic Mystics: – “Their teaching was a desperate 
overleaping
and destruction of all philosophy.” [ Schwegler, Manual of 
Philosophy.]
Says another: “In the desperate spring made at Alexandria, reason 
was
given up for ecstasy.” [ G.H. Lewes, Biog. Hist. Phil. ] Whereas the truth 
is,
that the only sense in which reason can be said to be given up by the 
Mystic,
is that in which, not reason, but reasoning is given up, when, after 
exhausting
conjecture blindfold, a man opens his eyes and sees, and so requires 
no
further ratiocination. For ecstasy does but verify by actual vision the 
highest
results of reason; though it may, and frequently does, thus operate in 
advance
of the stage in his reasoning reached at the time by the seer. And so 
far,
moreover, from superseding the necessity for the exercise of reason, it is 
impossible,
without previous mental culture, duly to appreciate the results of 
ecstatic,
more than of ordinary vision. For all understanding is of the mind; 
and
neither the vision of things terrestrial nor that of things celestial can 
dispense
with the exercise of this. Of course, with the advent of knowledge the 
necessity
for reasoning ceases, and in this sense it is true that the Mystic 
“destroys
philosophy by merging it in religion.” But in this sense only. For, in 
his
hands, philosophy simply, and under compulsion of reason, acknowledges 
religion
as its legitimate and inevitable terminus, when not, through a 
limitation
of reason, arbitrarily withheld therefrom. And, in a world proceeding 
from
God, no reason would be sound, no philosophy complete, of which the 
conclusion,
– as well as the beginning, – was not religion. So far, also, from 
such
religious philosophy involving, as constantly charged against it, the 
abnegation
of self-consciousness; it involves and implies the due 
self-completion
of the consciousness by the recognition of its true source and 
nature.
Thus, so far from “losing,” the Mystic finds, himself thereby; for he 
finds
God, the true and only Self of all. And if there be any who, recognizing 
in
these pages aught of goodness, truth, or beauty transcending the ordinary, 
inquire
the source thereof, the reply is, that the source is no other than that 
just
described, namely, the Spirit operating under conditions which a 
materialistic
science, bent on the suppression of man’s spiritual nature and the 
eradication
of man’s religious instinct, designates “morbid,” and certifies as 
qualifying
the subject for seclusion on the ground of insanity. [ In The 
Nineteenth
Century for 1879, Dr. Maudsley declares his readiness to have 
certified
the lunacy of various of the most eminent saints, seers, and prophets. 
And
the medical profession generally, – following the lead of France, – treats 
the
claim to be in open conditions with the spiritual world as proof positive of 
insanity.
Said a member of this profession on a recent occasion, in support of 
such
action on the part of his brethren: – “If we admit Spirits, we must admit 
Spiritualism,
and what then be comes of the teachings of Materialism?” Thus, in 
an
age which vaunts itself an age pre-eminently of free thought and experimental 
philosophy,
are the expression of thought and confession of experience made the 
highest
degree perilous when they conflict with the tenets of the prevailing 
school.
] 
35.
We will endeavor by a brief examination of the standpoints of the two 
parties
respectively, to exhibit the genesis and nature of the Mystic’s 
enthusiasm.
The Materialist – who regards Matter as the sole constituent of 
existence,
and himself as derived from that which for its defect in respect of 
consciousness,
he deems mean and contemptible – has for the supposed source and 
substance
of his being, neither respect nor affection. No more than any one else 
can
he love or honor the merely chemical or mechanical. Hence, like those who, 
springing
from a low origin, have gained for themselves distinction, the last 
thing
he covets is a return to that from which he came. How it arises that, 
being
wholly of Matter, he has in him any impulse or faculty whereby to 
transcend
even in desire his original level: whence come the qualities and 
properties,
moral and intellectual, subsisting in humanity, but of which the 
most
exhaustive analysis of Matter reveals no trace; whence the tendency of 
evolution
in the direction of beauty, use, and goodness; whence evolution 
itself;
– these are problems which are insoluble on his hypothesis, and which – 
since
he rejects the solution proffered by the Mystic – must for ever remain 
unsolved
by him.
36.
The Mystic, on the other hand, discerning through the intuition the 
spiritual
nature of the substance of existence, recognizes himself, not as 
superior
to that from which he has sprung, but as a limitation and 
individualization
of that which itself is unlimited and universal, even the 
absolutely
pure and perfect Spirit which is no other than God. Knowing himself 
to
be thence derived and sustained, and only temporarily, and for a purpose 
conceived
in infinite love and executed in infinite wisdom, subjected to 
inferior
conditions, he yearns towards the whole of which he is a part, as a 
child
towards its necessary parent, and strives, by divesting himself of the 
withholding
influences of Matter, to rise into nearer resemblance to and contact 
with
his divine Original.
37.
The Materialist, on the contrary, regarding Matter all, and its limitations 
as
inherent in Being, sees in the endeavor to transcend those limitations but a 
suicidal
attempt to escape from all Being. He strives, therefore, to attach 
himself
yet more closely to Matter, little as he esteems it, and is content when 
he
has succeeded in making from among things merely material, such selection as 
best
ministers to his bodily satisfaction. And he cannot comprehend one of sound 
mind
seeking more.
38.
But such mistake of the phenomenal for the substantial, of the apparent for 
the
real, cannot be made by one who to the sensations of the body adds the 
perceptions
and recollections of the soul. Such an one knows by a divine and 
infallible
instinct, which every succeeding experience serves but to confirm, 
that
a perfection and satisfaction far transcending aught that Materialist can 
imagine
or Matter realize, are in very truth possible to humanity. And therefore 
the
enthusiasm which inspires him is the enthusiasm, not of an earthly humanity, 
immature,
rudimentary, and scarcely even suggestive of its own potentialities; 
not
of a humanity which is exterior, transient, of form only and appearance; but 
of
a humanity mature, developed, permanent, and capable of realizing its own 
best
promise and highest aspirations; a humanity interior substantial, and of 
the
Spirit; a humanity, though human, divine, in that it is worthy of its 
progenitor
God, and at its best is God. The Materialist knows not perfection, 
nor
reality, nor Spirit, nor God; and, knowing none of these, he knows not 
enthusiasm.
Now, not to know enthusiasm, is not to know love. And he who knows 
not
love, is not yet man. For he has yet to develop in him that which alone 
completes
and makes the man, namely, the woman. Herein, then, is the full 
solution
of the mystery of the Mystic’s enthusiasm, and of the Materialist’s 
inability
to comprehend it. The one is already man, and, knowing what Being is, 
loves.
The other is not yet man, and, incapable of love, has all to learn.
39.
Not always did Materialists contemn enthusiasm and repudiate its products. 
Of
one, at least, history tells who with enthusiasm sang of enthusiasm as the 
energizing
force of genius. It was no other than such a flight as that of the 
rapt
Mystic in his ecstasy, which Lucretius ascribed to the inspired Epicurus, 
when
he celebrated his vivida vis animi; for it was in virtue of his enthusiasm 
for
a perfection transcending the animal, that Epicurus was enabled to overcome 
the
limitations of the bodily sense, to “surpass the flaming walls of the world” 
material,
to “traverse in spirit the whole immensity” of existence, and 
returning
– “to bring back to men the knowledge of possible and impossible.” It 
has
been reserved for the present age to produce the Materialist of a humanity 
so
stunted and meagre that he knows not the meaning or value of enthusiasm, and 
in
his ignorance makes of it a scoff.
PART
IV
40.
ACCEPTING without limitation or reserve the dictum – already cited – that 
“nothing
imperceptible is real;” the Mystic applies it in respect of the most 
recondite
of all subjects of thought, namely, Deity, and both modes – the mental 
and
the sensible – of perception. In doing this, he claims the justification of 
his
own personal experience. For not only can he think God, he can also see God; 
the
mind with which he does the first being a mind purified from obscuration by 
Matter;
and the eyes with which he does the last being those of a more or less 
regenerate
self. Of the seers of all ages the supreme beatific experience – that 
which
has constituted for them the crowning confirmation of their doctrine 
concerning
not only the being but the nature of Deity – has been the vision of 
God
as the Lord. For those to whom this vision has been vouchsafed, hope the 
most
sanguine is swallowed up in realization the most complete; belief the most 
implicit
is merged in sight the most vivid; and knowledge the most absolute is 
attained,
that the “kingdom of heaven is” in very truth “within,” and that the 
king
thereof is – where alone a king should be – in the midst of his kingdom.
41.
And yet more than this. By the vision of God as the Lord, the seer knows 
also
that of this celestial kingdom within, the King is also the Queen; that, in 
respect
of form no less than of substance, man is created in God’s “own image, 
male
and female;” and that in ascending to and becoming “one with the Father,” 
man
ascends to and becomes one with the Mother. For in the form beheld in the 
vision
of Adonai, both HE and SHE are manifested. Who, then, is Adonai? This is 
a
question the reply to which involves the Mystery of the Trinity.
42.
Manifestation – it has already been explained – is by generation. Now 
generation
is not of one but of twain. And inasmuch as that which is generated 
partakes
the nature of the generators, it also is dual. That, then, which in the 
current
presentation of the doctrine of the Trinity is termed the Father and 
First
Person in the Godhead, is really the Father-Mother. And that which is 
theologically
said to be begotten of them and called the Second Person and Son, 
is
also dual, being not “Son” merely, but prototype of both sexes, and called in 
token
thereof Io, Jehovah, El Shaddai, Adonai – names each of which implies 
duality.
43.
Having for Father the Spirit which is Life, and for Mother the Great Deep 
which
is Substance, Adonai possesses the potency of both, and wields the dual 
powers
of all things. And from the Godhead thus constituted proceeds, through 
Adonai,
the uncreated creative Spirit, the informer and fashioner of all things. 
This
Spirit it is Who, theologically, is called the Holy Ghost, and the Third 
Person,
the aspect of God as the Mother having been ignored or suppressed by a 
priesthood
desirous of preserving a purely masculine conception of the Godhead. 
By
the above presentation both the Churches, Eastern and Western, are right in 
what
they affirm respecting the procession of the Holy Ghost, and wrong in what 
they
deny.
44.
This, the necessary method of the divine evolution and procession, for both 
Macrocosm
and Microcosm, is duly set forth in the very commencement of the book 
of
Genesis; being expressed in the words: – “And the Spirit of God moved upon 
the
face of the Waters: and God SAID, Let there be Light, and there was Light.” 
For,
whenever and wherever creation – or manifestation by generation – occurs, 
God
the Father co-operates with God the Mother – as Force, moving in Substance – 
and
produces the Utterance, Word, Logos, or Adonai, – at once God and the 
Expression
of God. And of this Logos the Holy Spirit, in turn, is the Expression 
or
creative medium. For, as Adonai is the Word or Expression whereby is 
manifested
God, so the Holy Spirit, or primal Light, – Itself Sevenfold, – is 
the
Radiance whereby is revealed and manifested the Lord. Now the manifestation 
of
the Lord – which also is the manifestation of God – occurs through the 
working
in Substance of the Elohim or Seven Spirits of God – enumerated in our 
second
discourse – from Whose number first of all the number seven derives its 
sanctity.
They are the Powers under Whose immediate superintendence Creation, 
whether
of great or small, occurs. And of them is the whole of the Divine 
Substance
pervaded, – the Substance of all that is.
“These
are the Divine Fires which burn before the Presence of God: which proceed 
from
the Spirit, and are One with the Spirit.
“God
is divided, yet not diminished: God is All, and God is One.
“For
the Spirit of God is a Flame of Fire which the Word of God divideth into 
many;
yet the Original Flame is not decreased, nor the Power thereof, nor the 
Brightness
thereof, lessened.
“Thou
mayest light many lamps from the flame of one; yet thou dost in nothing 
diminish
that first flame.
“Now
the Spirit of God is expressed by the Word of God, which is Adonai.”
45.
This then is the order of the Divine Procession. First the Unity, or 
“Darkness”
of the “Invisible Light.” Second, the Duality, the Spirit and Deep, 
or
Energy and Space. Thirdly, the Trinity, the Father, the Mother, and Their 
joint
expression or “Word.” Last, the Plurality, the Sevenfold Light and Elohim 
of
God. Such is the “generation” of the Heavens or celestial region, both in the 
universal
and in the individual. And within the experience of each, individual 
lies
the possibility of the verification thereof. For in due time, to each who 
seeks
for it, “the Holy Spirit teaches all things, and brings all things to 
remembrance.”
46.
The Logos, or Adonai, is then God’s Idea of God’s Self, the Formulated, 
Personified
Thought of the Divine Mind. And whereas God makes nothing save 
through
this Idea, it is said of Adonai, – 
“By
Him all things are made, and without Him is not anything made which is made.
“He
is the true Light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world.
“He
is the world, and the world is made by Him, and the world knoweth Him not.
“But
as many as receive Him, to them he giveth power to become Sons of God, even 
to
them that believe on His Name.
“He
is in the Beginning with God, and He is God. He is the Manifestor by Whom 
all
things are discovered
“And
without Him is not anything made which is visible.
“God
the Nameless doth not reveal God: but Adonai revealeth God from the 
Beginning.
“Adonai
dissolveth and resumeth: in His two hands are the dual powers of all 
things;
“Having
the potency of both in Himself; and being Himself invisible, for He is 
the
Cause, and not the Effect.
“He
is the Manifestor; and not that which is manifest.
“That
which is manifest is the Divine Substance.
“Every
Monad thereof hath the potency of twain; as God is Twain in One.
“And
every Monad which is manifest, is manifest by the evolution of its Trinity.
“For
thus only can it bear record of itself, and become cognizable as an 
Entity.”
[ As man, made in the “image” of Adonai, is the expression of God, so 
is
the expression or countenance of man the express image of God’s nature, and 
bears
in its features the impress of the celestial, showing him to be thence 
derived.
Thus, in the human face, by the straight, central, protruding, and 
vertical
line of the organ of respiration, is denoted Individuality, the divine 
Ego,
the I AM, of the man. Though single exteriorly, and constituting one organ, 
in
token of the Divine Unity, within it is dual, having a double function, and 
two
nostrils in which resides the power of the Breath or Spirit, and which 
represent
the Divine Duality. This duality finds its especial symbolization in 
the
two spheres of the eyes, which – placed on a level with the summit of the 
nose
– denote respectively Intelligence and Love, or Father and Mother, as the 
supreme
elements of Being. Though exteriorly two, interiorly they are one, as 
vision
is one. And of the harmonious co-operation of the two personalities 
represented
by them, proceeds, as child, a third personality, which is their 
joint
expression or “Word.” Of this the Mouth is at once the organ and symbol, 
being
in itself dual, – when closed a line, when open a circle; and also 
twofold,
being compounded of line and circle in the tongue and lips. And as the 
place
of issue of the creative breath, it is below the other features, since 
creation,
in coming from the Highest, is in its direction necessarily downwards. 
Thus,
in the countenance of the “Image of God,” is expressed the nature of God, 
–
even the Holy Trinity. For “these three are one,” being essential modes of the 
same
Being. ]
PART
V
47.
WE come to that which, both in its nature and in its import, is the most 
stupendous
fact of mystical experience, and the crowning experience of seers in 
all
ages from the remotest antiquity to the present day. This is the Vision of 
Adonai,
a vision which proves that not only subjectively but objectively, not 
only
mentally and theoretically, but sensibly and actually, God, as the Lord, is 
present
and cognizable in each individual, ever operating to build him up in the 
Divine
Image, and succeeding so far – and only so far – as the individual, by 
making
the Divine Will his own will, consents to co-operate with God.
48.
In respect of this vision, it matters not whether the seer have previous 
experience
or knowledge on the subject; for the result is altogether 
irrespective
of anticipation. It is possible to him when – having purified his 
system,
mental and physical, from all deteriorative and obstructive elements – 
he
thinks inwardly, desires intensely, and imagines centrally, resolved that 
nothing
shall bar his ascent to his own highest and entrance to his own 
innermost.
Doing this, and abstracting himself from the outer world of the 
phenomenal,
he enters first the astral, where, more or less clearly, according 
to
the measure of his percipience, he discerns successively the various spheres 
of
its fourfold zone together with their denizens. In the process he seems to 
himself,
while still individual, to have lost the limitations of the finite, and 
to
have become expanded into the universal. For, while traversing the several 
successive
concentric spheres of his own being, and mounting, as by the steps of 
a
ladder, from one to another, he is as palpably traversing also those not of 
the
solar system only, but of the whole universe of being; and that which 
ultimately
he reaches, is, manifestly, the centre of each, the initial point of 
radiation
of himself and of all things.
49.
Meanwhile, under the impulsion of the mighty enthusiasm engendered in him of 
the
Spirit, the component consciousnesses of his system become more and more 
completely
polarized towards their Divine centre, and the animating, Divine 
Spirit
of the man, from being diffused, latent, and formless, becomes 
concentrated,
manifest, and definite. For, bent on the highest, the astral does 
not
long detain him; and soon he passes the Cherubim – the guardians from 
without
of the celestial – and enters within the veil of the holy of holies. 
Here
he finds himself amid a company innumerable of beings each manifestly 
divine;
for they are the angels and archangels, principalities and powers, and 
all
the hierarchy of the “Heavens.” Pressing on through these towards the 
centre,
he next finds himself in presence of a light so intolerable in its 
lustre
as well nigh to beat him back from further quest. And of those who reach 
thus
far, many adventure no farther, but, appalled, retire, well content, 
nevertheless,
to have been privileged to approach, and actually to behold, the 
“Great
White Throne” of the Almighty.
50.
Enshrined in this light is a Form radiant and glorious beyond all power of 
expression.
For it is “made of the substance of Light;” and the form is that of 
the
“Only Begotten,” the Logos, the Idea, the Manifestor of God, the Personal 
Reason
of all existence the Lord God of Hosts, the Lord Adonai. From the right 
hand
upraised in attitude indicative of will and command, proceeds, as a stream 
of
living force, the Holy Life and Substance whereby and whereof creation 
consists.
With the left hand, depressed and open as in attitude of recall, the 
stream
is indrawn, and Creation is sustained and redeemed. Thus projecting and 
recalling,
expanding and contracting, Adonai fulfils the functions expressed in 
the
mystical formula Solve et Coagula. And as in this, so also in constitution 
and
form, Adonai is dual, comprising the two modes of humanity, and appearing to 
the
beholder alternately masculine and feminine according as the function 
exercised
is of man or the woman, and is centrifugal or centripetal. And as, 
continuing
to gaze, the beholder acquires clearer vision, he discovers that, of 
the
images thus combined, while one is manifested the more fully exteriorly, the 
other
appertains rather to the interior, and shines in a measure through its 
fellow,
itself remaining meanwhile in close contiguity to the heart and spirit. 
And
whereas of these forms the inner is the feminine, the beholder learns that 
of
the two modes of humanity, womanhood is the nearer to God.
51.
Such is the “vision of Adonai.” And by whatever name denoted, no other 
source,
centre, sustenance, or true Self can mortal or immortal find, than God 
as
the Lord Who is thus beheld; and no other can he who has once beheld it, – 
however
dimly or afar off, – desire. For, finding Adonai, the soul is content; 
the
summit and centre of Being is reached; all ideals of Truth, Goodness, 
Beauty,
and Power are realized; there is no Beyond to which to aspire. For All 
is
in Adonai; since in Adonai dwells the infinite sea of Power and Wisdom which 
is
God. And all of God which can be revealed, all that the soul can grasp be her 
powers
expanded as they may, is revealed in Adonai.
52.
Of the term Adonai, as already stated, the Hindu equivalent, “Ardha-Nari,” 
is
represented as androgynous in form. But the personality denoted is that of 
Brahm,
or pure being, become Brahma, the Lord. And of the Hindu “Trimurti,” the 
right
hand, which typifies the creative energy, is Vishnu; the left, which 
represents
the power of dissolution and return, is Siva, Adonai Himself being 
Brahma.
The conditions on which this vision is vouchsafed are thus set forth for 
the
benefit of his “beloved disciple,” Arjun, by the “holy one,” Krishna: – 
“Thou
hast beheld this My wondrous form, so difficult of apprehension, which 
even
angels may in vain desire to see. But I am not to be seen as thou hast seen 
me,
by means of mortifications, of sacrifices, of gifts, of alms. I am to be 
seen
and truly known, and to be obtained by means of that worship which is 
offered
to Me alone. He whose works are done for Me alone, who serves Me only, 
who
cares nought for consequences, and who dwelleth among men without hatred, – 
he
alone cometh unto Me.”
PART
VI
53.
THIS discourse and series of discourses will fitly close with an exposition 
of
the relations subsisting between the Adonai, the Christ, and the man.
As
Adonai the Lord is the manifestation of God in Substance, so Christ is the 
manifestation
of the Lord in Humanity. The former occurs by Generation; the 
latter
by Regeneration. The former is from within, outwards; the latter is from 
below,
upwards. Man, ascending by evolution from the material and lowermost 
stratum
of existence, finds his highest development in the Christ. This is the 
point
where the human stream, as it flows upwards into God, culminates. Reaching 
this
point by regeneration, man is at once Son of Man and of God, and is 
perfect,
receiving in consequence the baptism of the Logos or Word, Adonai. 
Being
now “virgin” in respect of matter, and quickened by the “one life,” that 
of
the Spirit, man becomes like unto God, in that he has the “Gift of God,” or 
Eternal
Life through the power of self-perpetuation. The Logos is celestial: the 
man,
terrestrial. Christ is their point of junction, without whom they could not 
touch
each other. Attaining to this point by means of that inward purification 
which
is the secret and method of the Christs, the man receives his suffusion 
by,
or “anointing” of, the Spirit, and forthwith has, and is, “Christ.” 
Christhood
is attained by the reception into man’s own spirit of the Logos. This 
accomplished,
the two natures, the Divine and the human, combine; the two 
streams,
the ascending and the descending, meet; and the man knows and 
understands
God. And this is said to occur through Christ, because for every man 
it
occurs according to the same method, Christ being for all alike the only way. 
Having
received the Logos, Who is Son of God, the man becomes also Son of God, 
as
well as Son of Man, – this latter title being his in virtue of his 
representing
a regeneration or new birth out of humanity. And the Son of God in 
him
reveals to him the “Father,” a term which includes the “Mother.” Knowing 
these,
he knows the Life and Substance whereof he is constituted, – knows, 
therefore,
his own nature and potentialities. Thus made “one with the Father,” 
through
the Son, the man “in Christ” can say truly, “I and the Father are one.” 
This
is the import of the confession of Stephen. “Behold,” he cried in his 
ecstasy,
“I see the heavens open, and the Son of Man standing on the right hand 
of
God.” For at that supreme moment the Spirit revealed to him, in visible 
image,
the union through Christ of the Human and the Divine. Attaining to this 
union,
man becomes “Christ Jesus;” “he dwells in God, and God in him;” he is 
“one
with God and God with him.” It is at this point – Christ – that God and the 
man
finally lay hold of each other and are drawn together. Thenceforth they 
flow,
as two rivers united, in one stream. The man is finally made in the image 
of
God; and God, as the Lord, is eternally manifested in him, making him an 
individualized
portion of Divinity itself. Being thereby rendered incapable of 
relapse
into material conditions, he is called a “fixed God,” – a state which, 
as
says Hermes in the Divine Pymander, “is the most perfect glory of the soul.”
54.
Recognizing thus divine truth as an eternal verity in perpetual process of 
realization
by the individual soul, and words Now and Within as the keys to all 
sacred
mysteries, the Elect translate the symbols of their faith into terms of 
the
present, and recite accordingly their Credo in this wise: – 
“I
believe in one God, the Father and Mother Almighty; of Whose Substance are 
the
generations of Heaven and of Earth; and in Christ-Jesus the son of God, our 
Lord;
who is conceived of the Holy Ghost; born of the Virgin Mary; suffereth 
under
the rulers of this world, is crucified, dead, and buried; who descendeth 
into
Hell; who riseth again from the dead; who ascendeth into Heaven, and 
sitteth
at the right hand of God; by whose law the quick and the dead are 
judged.
I believe in the Seven Spirits of God; the Kingdom of Heaven; the 
communion
of the Elect; the passing-through of Souls; the redemption of the 
Body;
the Life everlasting; and the Amen.”
 
 
APPENDICES.
_____________________
APPENDIX
No. 1
CONCERNING
THE INTERPRETATION OF SCRIPTURE.
(A
FRAGMENT.)
PART
I
“IF,
therefore, they be Mystic Books, they ought also to have a Mystic 
Consideration.
But the fault of most Writers lieth in this, – that they 
distinguish
not between the Books of Moses the Prophet, and those Books which 
are
of an historical Nature. And this is the more surprising because not a few 
of
such Critics have rightly discerned the esoteric Character, if not indeed the 
true
Interpretation, of the Story of Eden; yet have they not applied to the 
Remainder
of the Allegory the same Method which they found to fit the Beginning; 
but
so soon as they are over the earlier Stanzas of the Poem, they would have 
the
Rest of it to be of another Nature.
“It
is, then, pretty well established and accepted of most Authors, that the 
Legend
of Adam and Eve and of the Miraculous Tree and the Fruit which was the 
Occasion
of Death, is, like the Story of Eros and Psyche, and so many others of 
all
Religions, a Parable with a hidden, that is, with a Mystic Meaning. But so 
also
is the Legend which follows concerning the Sons of these Mystical Parents, 
the
story of Cain and Abel his Brother, the Story of the Flood, of the Ark, of 
the
saving of the clean and unclean Beasts, of the Rainbow, of the twelve Sons 
of
Jacob, and, not stopping there, of the whole Relation concerning the Flight 
out
of Egypt. For it is not to be supposed that the two Sacrifices offered to 
God
by the Sons of Adam, were real Sacrifices, any more than it is to be 
supposed
that the Apple which caused the Doom of Mankind, was a real Apple. It 
ought
to be known, indeed, for the right Understanding of the Mystical Books, 
that
in their esoteric Sense they deal, not with material Things, but with 
spiritual
Realities; and that as Adam is not a Man, nor Eve a Woman, nor the 
Tree
a Plant in its true Signification, so also are not the Beasts named in the 
same
Books real Beasts, but that the Mystic Intention of them is implied. When, 
therefore,
it is written that Abel took of the Firstlings of his Flock to offer 
unto
the Lord, it is signified that he offered that which a Lamb implies, and 
which
is the holiest and highest of spiritual Gifts. Nor is Abel himself a real 
Person
but the Type and spiritual Presentation of the Race of the Prophets; of 
whom,
also, Moses was a Member, together with the Patriarchs. Were the Prophets, 
then,
Shedders of Blood? God forbid; they dealt not with Things material, but 
with
spiritual Significations. Their Lambs without Spot, their white Doves, 
their
Goats, their Rams, and other sacred Creatures, are so many signs and 
symbols
of the various Graces and Gifts which a Mystic people should offer to 
Heaven.
Without such Sacrifices is no Remission of Sin. But when the Mystic 
Sense
was lost, then Carnage followed, the Prophets ceased out of the Land, and 
the
Priests bore rule over the People. Then, when again the Voice of the 
Prophets
arose, they were constrained to speak plainly, and declared in a Tongue 
foreign
to their Method, that the Sacrifices of God are not Flesh of Bulls or 
the
Blood of Goats, but holy Vows and Sacred Thanksgiving, their Mystical 
Counterparts.
As God is a Spirit, so also are His Sacrifices Spiritual. What 
Folly,
what Ignorance, to offer material Flesh and Drink to pure Power and 
essential
Being! Surely in vain have the Prophets spoken, and in vain have the 
Christs
been manifested!
“Why
will you have Adam to be Spirit and Eve Matter, since the Mystic Books deal 
only
with spiritual Entities? The Tempter himself even is not Matter, but that 
which
gives Matter the Precedence. Adam is, rather, intellectual Force: he is of 
Earth.
Eve is the moral Conscience: she is the Mother of the Living. Intellect, 
then,
is the male, and Intuition the female Principle. And the Sons of 
Intuition,
herself fallen, shall at last recover Truth and redeem all Things. By 
her
Fault, indeed, is the moral Conscience of Humanity made subject to the 
intellectual
Force, and thereby all Manner of Evil and Confusion abounds, since 
her
Desire is unto him, and he rules over her until now. But the End foretold by 
the
Seer is not far off. Then shall the Woman be exalted, clothed with the Sun, 
and
carried to the Throne of God. And her Sons shall make War with the Dragon, 
and
have Victory over him. Intuition, therefore, pure and a Virgin, shall be the 
Mother
and Redemptress of her fallen Sons, whom she bore under Bondage to her 
Husband
the intellectual Force.”
PART
II
“MOSES,
therefore, knowing the Mysteries of the Religion of Egypt, and having 
learned
of its Occultists the Value and Signification of all sacred Birds and 
Beasts,
delivered like Mysteries to his own People. But certain of the sacred 
Animals
of Egypt he retained not in Honor, for Motives which were equally of 
Mystic
Origin. And he taught his Initiated the Spirit of the heavenly 
Hieroglyphs,
and bade them, when they made Festival before God, to carry with 
them
in Procession, with Music and with Dancing, such of the sacred Animals as 
were,
by their interior Significance, related to the Occasion. Now, of these 
Beasts,
he chiefly selected Males of the first Year, without Spot or Blemish, to 
signify
that it is beyond all Things needful that Man should dedicate to the 
Lord
his Intellect and his Reason, and this from the Beginning and without the 
least
Reserve. And that he was very wise in teaching this, is evident from the 
History
of the World in all Ages, and particularly in these last Days. For what 
is
it that has led Men to renounce the Realities of the Spirit, and to propagate 
false
Theories and corrupt Sciences, denying all Things save the Appearance 
which
can be apprehended by the outer Senses, and making themselves one with the 
Dust
of the Ground? It is their Intellect which, being unsanctified, has led 
them
astray; it is the Force of the Mind in them, which, being corrupt, is the 
Cause
of their own Ruin, and that of their Disciples. As, then, the Intellect is 
apt
to be the great Traitor against Heaven, so also is it the Force by which 
Men,
following their pure Intuition, may also grasp and apprehend the Truth. For 
which
Reason it is written that the Christs are subject to their Mothers. Not 
that
by any means the Intellect is to be dishonored; for it is the Heir of all 
Things,
if only it be truly begotten and be no Bastard.
“And
besides all these Symbols, Moses taught the People to have beyond all 
Things
an Abhorrence of Idolatry. What, then, is Idolatry, and what are the 
False
Gods?
“To
make an Idol, is to materialize spiritual Mysteries. The Priests, then, were 
Idolaters,
who, coming after Moses, and committing to Writing those Things which 
he
by Word of Mouth had delivered unto Israel, replaced the true Things 
signified,
by their material Symbols, and shed innocent Blood on the pure Altars 
of
the Lord.
“They
also are Idolaters, who understand the Things of Sense where the Things of 
the
Spirit are alone implied, and who conceal the true Features of the Gods with 
material
and spurious Presentations. Idolatry is Materialism, the common and 
original
Sin of Men, which replaces Spirit by Appearance, Substance by Illusion, 
and
leads both the moral and intellectual Being into Error, so that they 
substitute
the Nether for the Upper, and the Depth for the Height. It is that 
false
Fruit which attracts the outer Senses, the Bait of the Serpent in the 
Beginning
of the World. Until the Mystic Man and Woman had eaten of this Fruit, 
they
knew only the Things of the Spirit, and found them to suffice. But after 
their
Fall, they began to apprehend Matter also, and gave it the Preference, 
making
themselves Idolaters. And their Sin, and the Taint begotten of that false 
Fruit,
have corrupted the Blood of the whole Race of Men, from which Corruption 
the
Sons of God would have redeemed them.”
APPENDIX
No. 2
CONCERNING
THE HEREAFTER.
WHEN
a man parts at death with his material body, that of him which survives is 
divisible
into three parts, the anima divina, or, as in the Hebrew, Neshamah; 
the
anima bruta, or Ruach, which is the persona of the man; and the shade, or 
Nephesh,
which is the lowest mode of soul-substance. In the great majority of 
persons
the consciousness is gathered up and centered in the anima bruta, or 
Ruach;
in the few wise it is polarized in the anima divina. Now, that part of 
man
which passes through, or transmigrates, – the process whereof is called by 
the
Hebrews Gilgal Neshamoth, – is the anima divina, which is the immediate 
receptacle
of the deific Spirit. And whereas there is in the world nothing save 
the
human, actual or potential, the Neshamah subsists also in animals, though 
only
as a mere spark, their consciousness being therefore rudimentary and 
diffuse.
It is the Neshamah which finally escapes from the world and is redeemed 
into
eternal life. The anima bruta, or earthly mind, is that part of man which 
retains
all earthly and local memories, reminiscent affections, cares and 
personalities
of the world or planetary sphere, and bears his family or 
earth-name.
After death this anima bruta, or Ruach, remains in the “lower Eden,” 
within
sight and call of the magnetic earth-sphere. But the anima divina, the 
Neshamah,
– the name of which is known only to God, – passes upwards and 
continues
its evolutions, bearing with it only a small portion, and that the 
purest,
of the outer soul, or mind. This anima divina is the true Man. It is not 
within
hail of the magnetic atmosphere; and only on the rarest and most solemn 
occasions,
does it return to the planet unclothed. The astral shade, the 
Nephesh,
is dumb; the earthly soul, the anima bruta, or Ruach, speaks and 
remembers;
the divine soul, the Neshamah, which contains the divine Light, 
neither
returns nor communicates, that is, in the ordinary way. That which the 
anima
bruta remembers, is the history of one incarnation only, because it is 
part
of the astral man, and the astral man is renewed at every incarnation of 
the
Neshamah. But very advanced men become reincarnate, not on this planet, but 
on
some other nearer the Sun. The anima bruta has lived but once, and will never 
be
reincarnate. It continues in the “lower Eden,” a personality in relation to 
the
earth, and retaining the memories, both good and bad, of its one past life. 
If
it have done evil, it suffers indeed, but is not condemned; if it have done 
well,
it is happy, but not beatified. It continues in thought its favourite 
pursuits
of earth, and creates for itself houses, gardens, flowers, books, and 
so
forth, out of the astral light. It remains in this condition more or less 
strongly
defined, according to the personality it had acquired, until the anima 
divina,
one of whose temples it was, has accomplished all its Avatars. Then, 
with
all the other earthly souls belonging to that divine soul, it is drawn up 
into
the celestial Eden, or upper heaven, and returns into the essence of the 
Neshamah.
But all of it does not return; only the good memories; the bad sink to 
the
lowest stratum of the astral light, where they disintegrate. For, if the 
divine
soul were permanently, in its perfected state, to retain the memories of 
all
its evil doings, its misfortunes, its earthly griefs, its earthly loves, it 
would
not be perfectly happy. Therefore only those loves and memories return to 
the
Neshamah, which have penetrated the earthly soul sufficiently to reach the 
divine
soul, and to make part of the man. It is said that all Marriages are made 
in
Heaven. This means that all true love-unions are made in the Celestial within 
the
man. The mere affections of the anima bruta are evanescent, and belong only 
to
it. When this, the Ruach, is interrogated, it can speak only of one life, for 
it
has lived but one. Of that one it retains all the memories and all the 
affections.
If these have been strong, it remains near those persons whom 
especially
it loved, and overshadows them. A single Neshamah may have as many of 
these
former selves in the astral light, as a man may have changes of raiment. 
But
when the divine soul is perfected and about to be received into “the Sun,” 
or
Nirvana, she indraws all these past selves, and possesses herself of their 
memories;
but only of the worthy parts of these, and such as will not deprive 
her
of eternal calm. In “the planets,” the soul forgets; in “the Suns,” she 
remembers.
For, in memoria eterna erit Justus. (Ps. A. V. cxii., D. V. cxi. 6.) 
Not
until a man has accomplished his regeneration, and become a Son of God, a 
Christ,
can he have these memories of his past lives. Such memories as a man, on 
the
upward path, can have of his past incarnations, are by reflection only; and 
the
memories are not of events usually, but of principles and truths, and habits 
formerly
acquired. If these memories relate to events, they are vague and 
fitful,
because they are reflections from the overshadowing of his former selves 
in
the astral light. For the former selves, the deserted temples of the anima 
divina,
frequent her sphere and are attracted towards her, especially under 
certain
conditions. From them she learns through the intermediary of the Genius, 
or
Moon, who lights up the camera obscura of the mind, and reflects on its 
tablet
the memories cast by the overshadowing Past. The anima bruta seems to 
itself
to progress, because it has a vague sense that sooner or later it will be 
lifted
to higher spheres. But of the method of this it is ignorant, because it 
can
only know the Celestial by union with it. The Ruach seems to itself to 
progress,
but its learning is acquired by reflected soul-rays coming from the 
terrestrial.
Advanced men on the earth assist and teach the astral soul, and 
hence
its fondness for their spheres. It learns by reflected intellectual 
images,
or Thoughts. The Ruach is right when it says it is immortal. For the 
better
part of it will in the end be absorbed into the Neshamah. But if one 
interrogate
a Ruach of even two or three centuries old, it seldom knows more 
than
it knew in its earth-life, unless, indeed, it gains fresh knowledge from 
its
interrogator. The reason why some communications are astral, and others 
celestial,
is simply that some persons – the greater number – communicate by 
means
of the anima bruta in themselves, and others – the few purified – by means 
of
their anima divina. For, Like attracts Like. The earthly souls of animals are 
rarely
met with; they come into communion with animals rather than with man, 
unless
an affection between a man and an animal have been very strong. If a man 
would
meet and recognize his Beloved in Nirvana, he must make his affection one 
of
the Neshamah, not of the Ruach. There are many degrees of Love. True Love is 
stronger
than a thousand deaths. For though one die a thousand times, a single 
Love
may yet perpetuate itself past every death from birth to birth, growing 
and,
culminating in intensity and might.
Now
all these three, Nephesh, Ruach, and Neshamah, are discrete modes of one and 
the
same universal Being which is at once Life and Substance and is instinct 
with
Consciousness, inasmuch as it is, under whatever mode, Holy Spirit. 
Wherefore
there inheres in them all a Divine potency. Evolution, which is the 
manifestation
of that which is inherent, is the manifestation of this potency. 
The
first formulation of this inherency, above the plane of the material, is the 
Nephesh,
this being the soul by which are impelled the lower and earlier forms 
of
life. It is the “moving” soul that breathes and kindles. The next, – the 
Ruach,
– is the “Wind” that rushes forth to vivify the mind. Higher, because 
more
inward and central, is the Neshamah, which, borne on the bosom of the 
Ruach,
is the immediate receptacle of the Divine Particle, and without which 
this
cannot be individualized and become an indiffusible personality. Both the 
“Wind”
and the “Flame” are Spirit; but the Wind is general, the Flame 
particular;
the Wind fills the House; the Flame designates the Person. The Wind 
is
the Divine Voice resounding in the ear of the Apostle and passing away where 
it
listeth; the Flame is the Divine Tongue uttering itself in the word of the 
Apostle.
Thus, then, in the Soul impersonal are perceived the breath and 
afflatus
of God; but in the Soul personal is formulate the express Utterance of 
God.
Now, both of Nephesh and Ruach that which is gathered up and endures, is 
Neshamah.
APPENDIX
No. 3
CONCERNING
PROPHESYING; AND PROPHECY.
(The
references, apparently personal, in this or any subsequent Appendix, are to 
be
understood generally, – that is, of principles and offices, and not of actual 
individuals.)
PART
I
1-“YOU
ask the method and nature of Inspiration, and the means whereby God 
revealeth
the truth.
2.
Know that there is no enlightenment from without; the secret of things is 
revealed
from within.
3.
From without cometh no Divine Revelation; but the Spirit within beareth 
witness.
4.
To him that hath it is given, and he hath the more abundantly.
5.
None is a prophet save he who knoweth; the Instructor of the people is a man 
of
many lives.
6.
Inborn knowledge and the Perception of things, these are the sources of 
Revelation;
the Soul of the man instructeth him, having already learned by 
experience.
7.
Intuition is Inborn Experience; that which the Soul knoweth of old and of 
former
years.
8.
And Illumination is the Light of Wisdom, whereby a man perceiveth heavenly 
secrets.
9.
Which Light is the Spirit of God within the man, showing unto him the things 
of
God.
10.
Do not think that I tell you anything you know not; all cometh from within; 
the
Spirit that informeth is the Spirit of God in the prophet.
11.
What, then, you ask, is the Medium; and how are to be regarded the 
utterances
of one speaking in trance?
12.
God speaketh through no man in the way you suppose; for the Spirit of the 
Prophet
beholdeth God with open eyes. If he fall into a trance, his eyes are 
open,
and his interior man knoweth what is spoken by him.
13.
But when a man speaketh that which he knoweth not, he is obsessed; an impure 
Spirit,
or one that is bound, hath entered into him.
14.
There are many such, but their words are as the words of men who know not; 
these
are not prophets nor inspired.
15.
God obsesseth no man; God is revealed; and he to whom God is revealed 
speaketh
that which he knoweth.
16.
Christ Jesus understandeth God; he knoweth that of which he beareth witness.
17.
But they who, being Mediums, utter in trance things of which they have no 
knowledge,
and of which their own Spirit is uninformed; these are obsessed with 
a
spirit of divination, a strange spirit, not their own.
18.
Of such beware, for they speak many lies, and are deceivers, working often 
for
gain or for pleasure sake; and they are a grief and a snare to the faithful.
19.
Inspiration may indeed be mediumship, but it is conscious; and the knowledge 
of
the prophet instructeth him.
20.
Even though he speak in an ecstasy, he uttereth nothing that he knoweth not.
21.
Thou who art a prophet hast had many lives; yea, thou hast taught many 
nations,
and hast stood before kings.
22.
And God hath instructed thee in the years that are past; and in the former 
times
of the earth.
23.
By prayer, by fasting, by meditation, by painful seeking, hast thou attained 
that
thou knowest.
24.
There is no knowledge but by labor; there is no intuition but by experience.
25.
I have seen thee on the hills of the East; I have followed thy steps in the 
Wilderness;
I have seen thee adore at sunrise; I have marked thy night watches 
in
the caves of the mountains.
26.
Thou hast attained with patience, O prophet; God hath revealed the truth to 
thee
from within.
PART
II
27.
AND now I show you a Mystery and a new thing, which is part of the Mystery 
of
the Fourth Day of Creation.
28.
The word which shall come to save the world, shall be uttered by a Woman.
29.
A Woman shall conceive, and shall bring forth the tidings of Salvation.
30.
For the reign of Adam is at its last hour, and God shall crown all things by 
the
creation of Eve.
31.
Hitherto the Man hath been alone, and hath had dominion over the earth.
32.
But when the Woman shall be created, God shall give unto her the kingdom; 
and
she shall be first in rule and highest in dignity.
33.
Yea, the last shall be first; and the elder shall serve the younger.
34.
So that women shall no more lament for their womanhood; but men shall rather 
say,
“Oh that we had been born women!”
35.
For the strong shall be put down from their seat; and the meek shall be 
exalted
to their place.
36.
The days of the Covenant of Manifestation are passing away; the Gospel of 
Interpretation
cometh.
37.
There shall nothing new be told; but that which is ancient shall be 
interpreted.
38.
So that Man the Manifestor shall resign his office; and Woman the 
Interpreter
shall give light to the world.
39.
Here is the Fourth Office; she revealeth that which the Lord had manifested.
40.
Here is the Light of the Heavens, and the brightest of the planets of the 
holy
Seven.
41.
She is the Fourth Dimension: the Eyes which enlighten, the Power which 
draweth
inward to God.
42.
And her kingdom cometh, the day of the exaltation of Woman.
43.
And her reign shall be greater than the reign of the Man; for Adam shall be 
put
down from his place; and she shall have dominion forever.
44.
And she who is alone shall bring forth more children to God, than she who 
hath
an husband.
45.
There shall no more be a reproach against women; but against men shall be 
the
reproach.
46.
For the Woman is the crown of Man, and the final manifestation of Humanity.
47.
She is the nearest to the Throne of God, when she shall be revealed.
48.
But the creation of Woman is not yet complete; but it shall be complete in 
the
time which is at hand.
49.
All things are thine, O Mother of God; all things are thine, O Thou who 
risest
from the Sea; and Thou shalt have dominion over all the worlds.
APPENDIX
No. 4
CONCERNING
THE NATURE OF SIN
1.
AS is the Outer so is the Inner; He that worketh is One.
2.
As the small is, so is the great; there is one Law.
3.
Nothing is small and nothing is great in the Divine Economy.
4.
If thou wouldst understand the method of the world’s corruption, and the 
condition
to which Sin hath reduced the work of God,
5.
Meditate upon the aspect of a Corpse; and consider the method of the 
putrefaction
of its tissues and humors.
6.
For the secret of Death is the same, whether of the Outer or of the Inner.
7.
The Body dieth when the Central Will of its system no longer bindeth in 
obedience
the elements of its Substance.
8.
Every Cell is a living Entity, whether of vegetable or of animal potency.
9.
In the healthy body every Cell is polarized in subjection to the Central 
Will,
the Adonai of the physical system.
10.
Health, therefore, is Order, Obedience, and Government.
11.
But wherever Disease is, there is Disunion, Rebellion, and Insubordination.
12.
And the deeper the seat of the confusion, the more dangerous the malady, and 
the
harder to quell it.
13.
That which is superficial may be more easily healed, or, if need be, the 
disorderly
elements may be rooted out, and the body shall be whole and at unity 
again.
14.
But if the disobedient molecules corrupt each other continually, and the 
perversity
spread, and the rebellious tracts multiply their elements; the whole 
body
shall fall into Dissolution, which is Death.
15.
For the Central Will that should dominate all the kingdom of the body, is no 
longer
obeyed; and every element is become its own ruler, and hath a divergent 
will
of its own.
16.
So that the poles of the cells incline in divers directions; and the binding 
power
which is the life of the body, is dissolved and destroyed.
17.
And when Dissolution is complete, then follow Corruption and Putrefaction.
18.
Now, that which is true of the Physical, is true likewise of its prototype.
19.
The whole world is full of Revolt; and every element hath a will divergent 
from
God.
20.
Whereas there ought to be but one Will, attracting and ruling the whole Man.
21.
But there is no longer Brotherhood among you; nor Order, nor Mutual 
Sustenance.
22.
Every Cell is its own Arbiter; and every Member is become a Sect.
23.
Ye are not bound one to another; ye have confounded your offices, and 
abandoned
your functions.
24.
Ye have reversed the direction of your magnetic currents; ye are fallen into 
confusion,
and have given place to the Spirit of Misrule.
25.
Your Wills are many and diverse; and every one of you is an Anarchy.
26.
A house that is divided against itself, falleth.
27.
O wretched Man; who shall deliver you from this body of Death?
APPENDIX
No. 5
CONCERNING
THE “GREAT WORK,” THE REDEMPTION AND THE
SHARE
OF CHRIST JESUS THEREIN.
1.
“FOR this cause is Christ manifest, that he may destroy the works of the 
devil.”
2.
In this text of the holy writings is contained the explanation of the mission 
of
the Christ, and the nature of the Great Work.
3.
Now the devil, or old serpent, the enemy of God, is that which gives 
pre-eminence
to Matter.
4.
He is disorder, confusion, distortion, falsification, error. He is not 
personal,
he is not positive, he is not formulated. Whatever God is, that the 
devil
is not.
5.
God is Light, Truth, Order, Harmony, Reason; and God’s Works are 
Illumination,
Knowledge, Understanding, Love, and Sanity.
6.
Therefore the devil is darkness, falsehood, disorder, discord, ignorance; and 
his
works are confusion, folly, division, hatred, and delirium.
7.
The devil is therefore the negation of God’s Positive. God is I AM; the devil 
is
NOT. He has no individuality and no existence; for he represents the not 
being.
Wherever God’s kingdom is not, the devil reigns.
8.
Now the Great Work is the Redemption of Spirit from Matter; that is, the 
establishment
of the Kingdom of God.
9.
Jesus being asked when the Kingdom of God should come, answered, “When Two 
shall
be as One, and that which is Without as that which is Within.”
10.
In saying this, he expressed the nature of the Great Work. The Two are 
Spirit
and Matter; the Within is the real invisible; the Without is the illusory 
visible.
11.
The Kingdom of God shall come when Spirit and Matter shall be one substance, 
and
the phenomenal shall be absorbed into the real.
12.
His design was therefore to destroy the dominion of Matter, and to dissipate 
the
devil and his works.
13.
And this he intended to accomplish by proclaiming the knowledge of the 
Universal
Dissolvent, and giving to men the keys of the Kingdom of God.
14.
Now, the Kingdom of God is within us; that is, it is interior, invisible, 
mystic,
spiritual.
15.
There is a power by means of which the Outer may be absorbed into the Inner.
16.
There is a power by means of which Matter may be ingested into its original 
substance.
17.
He who possesses this power is Christ, and he has the devil under foot.
18.
For he reduces chaos to order, and indraws the external to the centre.
19.
He has learnt that Matter is illusion, and that Spirit alone is real.
20.
He has found his own Central Point; and all power is given unto him in 
heaven
and on earth.
21.
Now, the central Point is the number Thirteen; it is the number of the 
Marriage
of the Son of God.
22.
And all the members of the microcosm are bidden to the banquet of the 
marriage.
23.
But if there chance to be even one among them which has not on a wedding 
garment;
24.
Such an one is a Traitor; and the microcosm is found divided against itself.
25.
And that it may be wholly regenerate, it is necessary that Judas be cast 
out.
26.
Now the members of the microcosm are Twelve: of the Senses three, of the 
Mind
three, of the Heart three, and of the Conscience three.
27.
For of the Body there are four elements; and the sign of the four is Sense, 
in
the which are three Gates,
28.
The gate of the Eye, the gate of the Ear, and the gate of the Touch.
29.
Renounce vanity, and be poor; renounce praise, and be humble; renounce 
luxury
and be chaste.
30.
Offer unto God a pure oblation; let the fire of the altar search thee, and 
prove
thy fortitude.
31.
Cleanse thy sight, thine hands, and thy feet; carry the censer of thy 
worship
into the courts of the Lord; and let thy vows be unto the Most High.
32.
And for the Magnetic Man there are four elements; and the covering of the 
four
is Mind, in the which are three gates,
33.
The gate of Desire, the gate of Labor, and the gate of Illumination.
34.
Renounce the world, and aspire heavenward; labor not for the meat which 
perishes,
but ask of God thy daily bread; beware of wandering doctrines; and let 
the
Word of the Lord be thy light.
35.
Also of the Soul there are four elements; and the seat of the four is the 
Heart,
whereof likewise there are three gates.
36.
The gate of Obedience, the gate of Prayer, and the gate of Discernment.
37.
Renounce thy own will, and let the Law of God only be within thee; renounce 
doubt;
pray always and faint not; be pure of heart also, and thou shalt see God.
38.
And within the Soul is the Spirit; and the Spirit is One, yet has it 
likewise
three elements.
39.
And these are the gates of the Oracle of God, which is the Ark of the 
Covenant;
40.
The Rod, the Host, and the Law;
41.
The force which solves, and transmutes, and divines; the Bread of Heaven 
which
is the substance of all things and the food of Angels; the Table of the 
Law,
which is the Will of God, written with the Finger of the Lord.
42.
If these three be within thy spirit, then shall the Spirit of God be within 
thee.
43.
And the glory shall be upon the Propitiatory, in the holy place of thy 
prayer.
44.
These are the twelve gates of Regeneration; through which if a man enter he 
shall
have right to the Tree of Life.
45.
For the number of that Tree is Thirteen.
46.
It may happen to a man to have three, to another five, to another seven, to 
another
ten.
47.
But until a man have twelve, he is not master over the last enemy.
48.
Therefore was Jesus betrayed to death by Judas; because he was not yet 
perfected.
49.
But he was perfected through suffering; yea, by the Passion, the Cross, and 
the
Burial.
50.
For he could not wholly die; neither could his body see corruption.
51.
So he revived: for the elements of death were not in his flesh; and his 
molecules
retained the polarity of life eternal.
52.
He therefore was raised and became perfect; having the power of the 
Dissolvent
and of Transmutation.
53.
And God glorified the Son of Man; yea, he ascended into heaven, and sits at 
the
right hand of the Majesty on high.
54.
Thence also the Christ shall come again, in power like unto the power of his 
ascension.
55.
For as yet the devil is undissipated; the Virgin indeed has crushed his 
head;
but still he lies in wait for her heel.
56.
Therefore the Great Work is yet to be accomplished.
57.
When the Leaven shall have leavened the whole lump; when the seed shall have 
become
a tree; when the Net shall have gathered all things into it.
58.
For in the same power and glory he had at his ascension, shall Christ Jesus 
be
manifested from heaven before angels and man.
59.
For when the cycle of the creation is completed, whether of the macrocosm or 
of
the microcosm, the Great Work is accomplished.
60.
Six for the Manifestation, and six for the Interpretation; six for the 
Outgoing,
and six for the Ingathering; six for the Man, and six for the Woman.
61.
Then shall be the Sabbath of the Lord God.
See
plates, Fig. 2.
APPENDIX
No. 6 
THE
TIME OF THE END 
THE
token whereby the approach of the End shall be known, will be the spectacle 
of
“the Abomination of Desolation standing in the holy place.” Now the “holy 
place”
is always, – whether in the universal or the individual, in the Macrocosm 
or
the Microcosm, – the place of God and the Soul. And “the Abomination of 
Desolation”
– or “that which maketh desolate” – is that system of thought which, 
putting
Matter in the chief place, and making it the source, substance, and 
object
of existence, abolishes God out of the universe and the Soul out of man, 
and
thus, depriving existence of its light and life, makes it empty, desolate, 
and
barren, a very “abomination of desolation.”
Jesus,
recalling this prophecy, and citing the words of Daniel’s Angel, also 
foretold
the same event as marking the end of that “adulterous” generation [a 
term
identical with idolatrous as denoting the worship of and illicit 
association
with Matter], and the coming of the kingdom of God; and warned the 
Elect
in mystic phrase, thus to be interpreted: –
“When,
therefore, ye shall see Matter exalted to the holy place of God and the 
Soul,
and made the all and in all of existence,
“Then
let the spiritual Israel betake themselves to the hills where alone 
salvation
is to be found, even the heights and fastnesses of the Divine Life.
“And
let him who has overcome the body, beware lest he return to the love of the 
flesh,
or seek the things of the world.
“Neither
let him who is freed from the body, become again reincarnate.
“And
woe to the soul whose travail is yet unaccomplished, and which has not yet 
become
weaned from the body.
“And
beseech God that these things find you not at a season either of spiritual 
depression
and feebleness, or of spiritual repose and unwatchfulness.
“For
the tribulation shall be without parallel;
“And
such that except those days shall be few in number, escape from the body 
would
be impossible.
“But
for the Elect’s sake they shall be few.
“And
if any shall then declare that here, or there, the Christ has appeared as a 
Person,
believe it not. For there shall arise delusive apparitions and 
manifestations,
together with great signs and marvels, such as might well 
deceive
even the Elect. Remember, I have told you beforehand. Wherefore, if they 
shall
say unto you, Behold he is in the desert, whether of the East or of the 
West,
– join him not. Or, Behold he is in darkened rooms and secret assemblies, 
–
pay no regard.
“For,
like lightning coming out of the East and illuminating the West, so shall 
be
the world’s spiritual awakening to the recognition of the Divine in Humanity.
“But
wheresoever the dead carcass of error remains, around it, like vultures, 
will
gather both deceivers and deceived.
“And
upon them, the profane, there shall be darkness; the Spirit shall be 
quenched
and the Soul extinct; and there shall be no more any light in heaven, 
or
in heavenly science any truth and meaning. And the power of heaven upon men 
shall
be shaken.
“Then
shall appear the new sign, the Man in Heaven, upon the rain-clouds of the 
last
Chrism and Mystery, with power and glory.
“And
his missioners shall gather the Elect with a great voice, from the four 
winds
and from the farthest bounds of heaven.
“Behold
the FIG-TREE, and learn her parable. When the branch thereof shall 
become
tender, and her buds appear, know that the day of God is upon you.”
Wherefore,
then, saith the Lord that the budding of the Fig-Tree shall foretell 
the
end?
Because
the Fig-Tree is the symbol of the Divine Woman, as the Vine of the 
Divine
Man.
The
Fig is the Similitude of the Matrix, containing inward buds, bearing 
blossoms
on its placenta, and bringing forth fruit in darkness. It is the Cup of 
Life,
and its flesh is the feed-ground of new births.
The
stems of the Fig-Tree run with milk; her leaves are as human hands, like the 
leaves
of her brother the Vine.
And
when the Fig-Tree shall bear figs, then shall be the Second Advent, the new 
sign
of the Man bearing Water, and the manifestation of the Virgin-Mother 
crowned.
For
when the Lord would enter the holy city, to celebrate his Last Supper with 
his
disciples, he sent before him the Fisherman Peter to meet the Man of the 
Coming
Sign.
“There
shall meet you a Man bearing a pitcher of Water.”
Because,
as the Lord was first manifest at a wine-feast in the morning, so must 
he
consummate his work at a wine-feast in the evening.
It
is his Pass-Over; for thereafter the Sun must pass into a new Sign.
After
the fish, the Water-Carrier; but the Lamb of God remains always in the 
place
of victory, being slain from the foundation of the world.
For
his place is the place of the Sun’s triumph.
After
the Vine the Fig; for Adam is first formed, then Eve.
And
because our Lady is not yet manifest, our Lord is crucified.
Therefore
came he vainly seeking fruit upon the Fig-Tree, “for the time of figs 
was
not yet.”
And
from that day forth, because of the curse of Eve, no man has eaten fruit of 
the
Fig-Tree.
For
the inward understanding has withered away, there is no discernment any more 
in
men. They have crucified the Lord because of their ignorance, not knowing 
what
they did.
Wherefore,
indeed, said our Lord to our Lady: – “Woman, what is between me and 
thee?
For even my hour is not yet come.”
Because
until the hour of the Man is accomplished and fulfilled, the hour of the 
Woman
must be deferred.
Jesus
is the Vine; Mary is the Fig-Tree. And the vintage must be completed and 
the
wine trodden out, before the harvest of the Figs be gathered.
But
when the hour of our Lord is achieved, hanging on his Cross, he gives our 
Lady
to the faithful.
The
chalice is drained, the lees are wrung out; then says he to his Elect: – 
“behold
thy Mother!”
But
so long as the grapes remain unplucked, the Vine has nought to do with the 
Fig-Tree,
nor Jesus with Mary.
He
is first revealed, for he is the Word; afterwards shall come the hour of its 
Interpretation.
And
in that day every man shall sit under the VINE and the FIG-TREE; the 
Dayspring
shall arise in the Orient, and the FIG-TREE shall bear her fruit. 
(Zach.
iii, 10; Mich. iv, 4; Cant. ii, 13.)
For,
from the beginning, the Fig-leaf covered the shame of Incarnation, because 
the
riddle of existence can be expounded only by him who has the Woman’s secret. 
It
is the riddle of the Sphinx.
Look
for that tree which alone of all Trees bears a fruit blossoming interiorly, 
in
concealment, and thou shalt discover the Fig.
Look
for the sufficient meaning of the manifest universe and of the written 
Word,
and thou shalt find only their mystical sense.
Cover
the nakedness of Matter and of Nature with the Fig-leaf, and thou hast 
hidden
all their shame. For the Fig is the Interpreter.
So
when the hour of Interpretation comes, and the Fig-Tree puts forth her buds, 
know
that the time of the End and the dawning of the new Day are at hand, – 
“even
at the doors.”
  APPENDIX No. 7 
THE
HIGHER ALCHEMY
1.
ALL things in Heaven and in Earth are of God; both the Invisible and the 
Visible.
2.
Such as is the Invisible is the Visible also; for there is no impassable 
bound
between Spirit and Matter.
3.
Matter is spirit made exteriorly cognizable by the force of the Divine Word.
4.
And when God shall resume all things by Love, the Material shall be resolved 
into
the Spiritual; and there shall be a new Heaven and a new Earth.
5.
Not that Matter shall be destroyed; for it came forth from God and is of God, 
indestructible
and eternal.
6.
But it shall be indrawn, and resolved into its true Self.
7.
It shall put off corruption, and remain incorruptible.
8.
It shall put off mortality, and remain immortal.
9.
So that nothing be lost of the Divine Substance.
10.
It was material Entity; it shall be Spiritual Entity.
11.
For there is nothing that can go out from the Presence of God.
12.
This is the doctrine of the Resurrection of the Dead; that is, the 
Transfiguration
of the Body.
13.
For the Body, which is Matter, is but the Manifestation of Spirit; and the 
Word
of God shall transmute it into its inner being.
14.
The Will of God is the Alchemic Crucible; and the Dross which is cast 
therein
is Matter.
15.
And the Dross shall become pure Gold, seven times refined, even perfect 
Spirit.
16.
It shall leave behind it nothing, but shall be transformed into the Divine 
Image.
17.
For it is not a new Substance; but it’s Alchemic polarity is changed, and it 
is
converted.
18.
But except it were Gold in its true Nature, it could not be resumed into the 
aspect
of Gold.
19.
And except Matter were Spirit, it could not revert to Spirit.
20.
To make Gold the Alchemist must have Gold.
21.
But he knows that to be Gold which others take to be Dross.
22.
Cast thyself into the Will of God, and thou shalt become as God.
23.
For thou art God if thy will be the Divine Will.
24.
This is the Great Secret; it is the Mystery of Redemption.
APPENDIX
No. 8 
  CONCERNING REVELATION 
ALL
true and worthy Illuminations are Revelations, or Re-veilings. Mark the 
meaning
of this word. There can be no true or worthy Illumination which destroys 
distances
and exposes the details of things.
Look
at this Landscape. Behold how its Mountains and Forests are suffused with 
soft
and delicate Mist, which half conceals and half discloses their shapes and 
tints.
See how this Mist like a tender veil enwraps the distances, and merges 
the
reaches of the Land with the Clouds of Heaven!
How
beautiful it is, how orderly and wholesome its fitness, and the delicacy of 
its
appeal to the eye and heart! And how false would be that sense which should 
desire
to tear away this clinging veil, to bring far objects near, and to reduce 
everything
to foreground in which details only should be apparent, and all 
outlines
sharply defined!
Distance
and Mist make the beauty of Nature; and no Poet would desire to behold 
her
otherwise than through this lovely and modest veil.
And
as with Exoteric, so with Esoteric Nature. The secrets of every human Soul 
are
sacred and known only to herself. The Ego is inviolable, and its personality 
is
its own right for ever.
Therefore
mathematical rules and algebraic formulas cannot be forced into the 
study
of human lives; nor can human personalities be dealt with as though they 
were
mere ciphers or arithmetical quantities.
The
Soul is too subtle, too instinct with Life and Will for treatment such as 
this.
One
may dissect a corpse; one may analyze and classify chemical constituents; 
but
it is impossible to dissect or analyze any living thing.
The
moment it is so treated it escapes. Life is not subject to dissection.
The
opening of the Shrine will always find it empty: the God is gone.
A
Soul may know her own past, and may see in her own light; but none can see it 
for
her if she see it not.
Herein
is the beauty and sanctity of Personality.
The
Ego is self-centered and not diffused; for the tendency of all Evolution is 
towards
Centralization and Individualism.
And
Life is so various, and so beautifully diverse in its Unity, that no hard 
and
fast mathematical lawmaking can imprison its manifoldness.
All
is order; but the elements of this order harmonize by means of their 
infinite
diversities and gradations.
The
true Mysteries remained always content with Nature’s harmony; they sought 
not
to drag distances into foregrounds; or to dissipate the mountain nebula, in 
whose
bosom the Sun is reflected.
For
these sacred Mists are the media of Light, and the glorifiers of Nature.
Therefore
the Doctrine of the Mysteries is truly Reveilation, – a veiling and a 
re-veiling
of that which it is not possible for eye to behold without violating 
all
the Order and Sanctities of Nature.
For
distance and visual rays, causing the diversities of far and near, of 
perspective
and mergent tints, of horizon and foreground, are part of Natural 
Order
and Sequence; and the Law expressed in their properties cannot be 
violated.
For
no Law is ever broken.
The
hues and aspects of Distance and Mist indeed may vary and dissolve according 
to
the quality and quantity of the Light which falls upon them; but they are 
there
always, and no human eye can annul or annihilate them.
Even
words, even pictures are symbols and veils. Truth itself is unutterable, 
save
by God to God.
 APPENDIX No. 9 
CONCERNING
THE POET   
THOU
mayest the more easily gather somewhat of the character of the heavenly 
Personality
by considering the Quality of that of the highest type of mankind on 
Earth,
– the Poet.
The
Poet hath no Self apart from his larger Self. Other men pass indifferent 
through
Life and the World, because the Selfhood of Earth and Heaven is a thing 
apart
from them, and toucheth them not.
The
Wealth of Beauty in Earth and Sky and Sea lieth outside their being, and 
speaketh
not to their heart.
Their
interests are individual and limited; their Home is by one Hearth; four 
walls
are the boundary of their kingdom, – so small is it!
But
the Personality of the Poet is Divine; and being Divine it hath no limits.
He
is supreme and ubiquitous in consciousness; his heart beats in every Element.
The
Pulses of all the infinite Deep of Heaven vibrate in his own; and responding 
to
their strength and their plenitude, he feels more intensely than other men.
Not
merely he sees and examines these Rocks and Trees, these variable Waters, 
and
these glittering Peaks;
Not
merely he hears this plaintive Wind, these rolling Peals;
But
he is all these; and with them – nay, in them – he rejoices and weeps, and 
shines
and aspires, and sighs and thunders.
And
when he sings, it is not he – the Man – whose Voice is heard; it is the 
Voice
of all the Manifold Nature herself.
In
his Verse the Sunshine laughs; the Mountains give forth their sonorous 
Echoes;
the swift Lightenings flash.
The
great continual cadence of universal Life moves and becomes articulate in 
human
language.
O
Joy profound! O boundless Selfhood! O God-like Personality!
All
the Gold of the Sunset is thine; the Pillars of Chrysolite; and the purple 
Vault
of Immensity!
The
Sea is thine with its solemn Speech; its misty Distance, and its radiant 
Shallows!
The
Daughters of Earth love thee; the Water-nymphs tell thee their secrets; thou 
knowest
the Spirit of all silent things!
Sunbeams
are thy Laughter, and the Raindrops of Heaven thy Tears; in the wrath 
of
the Storm thine Heart is shaken; and thy Prayer goeth up with the Wind unto 
God.
Thou
art multiplied in the Conscience of all living Creatures; thou art young 
with
the Youth of Nature; thou art all-feeling as the Starry Skies;
Like
unto Gods; therefore art thou their Beloved; yea, if thou wilt They shall 
tell
thee all things;
Because
thou only understandest, among all the Sons of Men!
  APPENDIX No. 10 
CONCERNING
THE ONE LIFE
 (1)
THE
Spirit absorbed in Man or in the Planet does not exhaust Deity.
Nor
does the Soul evolved upward through Matter exhaust Substance.
There
remains then ever in the Fourth Dimension – the Principium – above the 
manifest,
unmanifest God and Soul.
The
Perfection of Man and of the Planet is attained when the Soul of the one and 
of
the other is throughout illuminate by Spirit.
But
Spirit is never the same thing as Soul. It is always celestial Energy, and 
Soul
is always Substance.
That
which creates is Spirit (God).
The
immanent consciousnesses (spirits) of all the cells of a man’s entity, cause 
by
their polarization a central unity of consciousness, which is more than the 
sum
total of all their consciousnesses, because it is on a higher round or 
plane.
For
in spiritual science every thing depends upon levels; and the man’s 
evolution
works round spirally, as does the planetary evolution.
In
this relation consider the Worlds of Form and Formless Worlds of Form and 
Formless
Worlds of Hindu theosophy.
Similarly
the soul of the planet is more than the associated essences of the 
souls
upon it; because this soul also is on a higher plane than they.
Similarly,
too, the consciousness of the solar system is more than that of the 
associated
world-consciousnesses.
And
the consciousness of the manifest universe is greater than that of the 
corporate
systems.
But
that of the Unmanifest is higher and greater still: as God the Father is 
greater
than God the Son.
  (2) 
 THE Elemental Kingdoms represent Spirit on its
downward path into Matter.
There
are three of these before the Mineral is reached.
These
are the formless worlds before the worlds of form.
They
are in the Planet, and also in Man.
All
the planets inhabited by manifest forms are themselves manifest.
After
the form-worlds come other formless worlds, caused by the upward arc of 
ascending
Spirit; but these also are in the planet.
They
are also in the man, and are the states of pure thought.
The
Thinker, therefore, who is son of Hermes, is a far beyond the Medium who is 
controlled
and who is not self-conscious, as the formless worlds of the 
ascending
arc are beyond the formless worlds of the elemental, or descending, 
arc.
In
the planet and in the man they only seem contiguous because each round is 
spiral.
But
each round takes the One Life higher in the spiral.
Neither
the planet-soul nor the man-soul goes over exactly the same ground 
again.
But
perverse and disobedient will may reverse the direction of the spiral.
Individuals
in whom the will so acts, are finally abandoned by the planet to the 
outer
sphere.
  (3)
THE
One Life is the point of consciousness. 
The
will is the impulse which moves it.
In
the Celestial the One Life is the Elohim; and the Will is the Father.
The
One Life is manifest by Effulgence (the Son).
So
then the Will begets in Substance the Effulgence, which is the manifestation 
of
the One Life.
In
man and the planet the Effulgence is dim and diffuse until it moves into the 
soul.
Then only Christ is born.
The
One Life is invisible until Christ manifests it.
Christ
in Man has for counterpart Adonai in the Heavens.
So
then the One Life is in the Father-Mother latently, until manifest by the Son 
(Effulgence).
Herein
is the difference reconciled between the Greek and Latin Churches.
The
point of consciousness shineth more and more unto the Perfect Day of 
Brightness
(“Nativity of Christ”).
  (4) 
THE
object of creation is the production of “Ancients” (A. V., “Elders,” Apoc. 
iv.)
They
are the first-fruits of the souls of the planets; or “First Resurrection.”
They
are not themselves creators; but are regenerators of that which is created.
The
Regenerator is the Holy Spirit, through Christ.
Because
Will can create only when it is in the abstract; the derived does not 
create.
The
father creates through Adonai by means of the Holy Spirit.
The
Will of the Perfect Man renovates through the Effulgence of his Own Life.
His
Karma is poured out over the world to save mankind.
He
is the Saviour through his precious life.
There
are twenty-four Ancients, because there are twelve Avatars of the Lord, 
and
every one is dual.
  (5) 
WILL,
when it is derived through existence, begets Karma.
God
has no Karma. God does not exist: God IS.
Karma
is the channel of Initiation. God is not initiated.
The
Perfect Man saves himself and saves others by his Righteousness.
The
two terms of existence are Creation and Redemption.
The
first is God’s work; the second is the work of Christ: – God in Man.
The
reason why the Ancient cannot create is because he is not infinite.
He
is immortal, not eternal; he is derived, not self-sufficient.
His
is the point of Grace: not the point of Projection.
The
thrones of the Ancients are round about the Throne of God and below it.
  APPENDIX No. 11 
  CONCERNING THE MYSTERIES 
IT
is necessary, in relation to the Mysteries, to distinguish between the 
Unmanifest
and the Manifest, and between the Macrocosm and the Microcosm. These 
last,
however, are identical, in that the process of the universal and the 
process
of the individual are one.
Mary
is the Soul, and as such the Matrix of the Divine Principle, – God – made 
Man
by Individualization, through descent into the “Virgin’s Womb.” But the 
Seven
Principles of universal Spirit are concerned in this conception; since it 
is
through their operation in the Soul that she becomes capable of polarizing 
Divinity.
[This
is the secret aspect of the Mosaic week of Creation, each day of which 
week
denotes the operation of one of the Seven creative Elohim or Divine 
Potencies
concerned in the elaboration of the spiritual Microcosm.]
It
is said that the Blessed Virgin Mary is the Daughter, Spouse, and Mother of 
God.
But, inasmuch as Spiritual Energy has two conditions, one of Passivity and 
one
of Activity, – which latter is styled the Holy Spirit, – it is said that 
Mary’s
Spouse is not the Father, but the Holy Ghost, these terms implying 
respectively
the static and the dynamic modes of Deity. For the Father denotes 
the
Motionless, the Force passive and potential, in Whom all things are 
subjectively.
But the Holy Ghost represents Will in action, – Creative Energy, 
Motion
and Generative Function. Of this union of the Divine Will in action, – 
the
Holy Ghost, – with the human soul, the product is Christ, the God-Man, and 
our
Lord. And through Christ, the Divine Spirit, by whom he is begotten flows 
and
operates.
In
the Trinity of the Unmanifest, the Great Deep, or Ocean of Infinitude – 
Sophia
– corresponds to Mary, and has for Spouse the creative Energy of whom is 
begotten
the Manifestor, Adonai, the Lord. This “Mother” is coequal with the 
Father,
being primary and eternal. In Manifestation the “Mother” is derived, 
being
born of Time (Anna,) and has for Father the Planet-God, – for our planet 
Iacchos
(Joachim;) (And also Jacob, as in Ps. xxiv. 6, cxxxii. 2, 5, etc., where 
he
is specially invoked as the God of Might. The name is applied equally to the 
Planet-God
and his elect people.) so that the paternity of the First Person of 
the
Trinity is vicarious only. The Church, therefore, being a Church of the 
Manifest,
deals with Mary (Substance,) under this aspect alone, and hence does 
not
specify her as coequal with the First Principle. In the Unmanifest, being 
underived,
she has no relation to Time.
  APPENDIX No. 12   
HYMN
TO THE PLANET-GOD
  (1) 
FATHER
Iacchos; thou art Lord of the Body, God manifest in the flesh;
2.
Twice-born, baptized with fire, quickened by the Spirit, instructed in secret 
things
beneath the Earth;
3.
Who wearest the horns of the Ram, who ridest upon an Ass, whose symbol is the 
Vine,
and the new Wine thy Blood;
4.
Whose Father is the Lord God of Hosts; whose Mother is the Daughter of the 
King.
5.
Evoi, Iacchos, Lord of Initiation; for by means of the Body is the Soul 
initiated;
6.
By Birth, by Marriage, by Virginity, by Sleep, by Waking, and by Death;
7.
By Fasting and Vigil, by Dreams and Penance, by Joy, and by Weariness of the 
Flesh.
8.
The Body is the Chamber of Ordeal: therein is the Soul of Man tried.
9.
Thine Initiates, O Master, are they who come out of great tribulation; whose 
robes
are washed in the Blood of the Vine.
10.
Give me to drink of the Wine of the Cup, that I may live for evermore;
11.
And to eat of the Bread whose grain cometh up from the Earth, as the Corn in 
the
Ear.
12.
Yea; for the Body in which Man is redeemed, is of the Earth; it is broken 
upon
the cross; cut down by the sickle, crucified between grindstones.
13.
For by the suffering of the Outer, is the inner set free.
14.
Therefore the Body which Thou givest is Meat indeed; and the Word of thy 
Blood
is Drink indeed.
I5.
For Man shall live by the Word of God.
16.
Evoi, Father Iacchos; bind Thy Church to the Vine, and her elect to the 
choice
Vine.
17.
And let them wash their garments in wine; and their vesture in the blood of 
grapes.
  (2)
18.
EVOI, Iacchos, Lord of the Body; and of the House whose Symbol is the Fig;
19.
Whereof the image is the figure of the Matrix, and the leaf as a man’s hand; 
whose
stems bring forth milk.
20.
For the Woman is the Mother of the Living; and the crown and perfection of 
Humanity.
21.
Her Body is the highest step in the ladder of Incarnation.
22.
Which leadeth from Earth to Heaven; upon which the Spirits of God ascend and 
descend.
23.
Thou art not perfected, O Soul, that hast not known Womanhood.
24.
Evoi, Iacchos; for the day cometh wherein thy sons shall eat of the fruit of 
the
Fig; yea, the Vine shall yield new grapes; and the Fig-tree shall be more 
barren.
25.
For the Interpretation of hidden things is at hand; and men shall eat of the 
precious
fruits of God.
26.
They shall eat manna from Heaven; and shall drink of the river of Salem.
27.
The Lord maketh all things new; he taketh away the Letter to establish the 
Spirit.
28.
Then spakest thou with veiled face, in parable and dark saying: for the time 
of
Figs was not yet.
29.
And they who came into the Tree of Life, sought fruit thereon and found it 
not.
30.
And from thenceforth until now, hath no man eaten of the fruit of that Tree.
31.
But now is the Gospel of Interpretation come; and the Kingdom of the Mother 
of
God.
32.
Evoi, Iacchos, Lord of the Body; who art crowned with the Vine and with the 
Fig.
33
For as the Fig containeth many perfect fruits in itself; so the house of Man 
containeth
many spirits.
34.
Within thee, O Man, is the Universe; the Thrones of all the Gods are in thy 
Temple.
35.
I have said unto men, Ye are Gods; ye are all in the Image of the Most High.
36.
No man can know God unless he first understand himself.
37.
God is nothing that Man is not.
38.
What Man is, that God is likewise.
39.
As God is at the heart of the outer world; so also is God at the heart of 
the
world within thee.
40.
When the God within thee shall be wholly united to the God without; then 
shalt
thou be one with the Most High.
41.
Thy Will shall be God’s Will; and the Son shall be as the Father.
42.
Thou art ruler of the world, O Man: thy name is Legion; thou hast many under 
thee.
43.
Thou sayest to this one, Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and the 
cometh;
and to another, Do this, and he doeth it.
44.
What thou knowest is told thee from Within; what thou workest is worked from 
Within.
45.
When thou prayest, thou invokest the God within thee, and from the God 
within
thee thou receivest thy good things.
46.
Thy manifestations are inward; and the spirits which speak unto thee are of 
thine
own kingdom.
47.
And the spirit which is greatest in thy kingdom, the same is thy Master and 
thy
Lord.
48.
Let thy Master be the Christ of God.
49.
And Christ shall be thy Lover and the Savior of thy Body; yea, he shall be 
thy
Lord God, and thou shalt adore him.
50.
But if thou wilt not, then a stronger than thou art shall bind thee, and 
spoil
thine house and thy goods.
51.
An uncleanly temple shalt thou be; the hold of all manner of strife and evil 
beasts.
52.
For a man’s foes are of his own household.
53.
But scourge thou thence the moneychangers and the merchants; lest the House 
of
thy Prayer become unto thee a den of thieves.
  (3)   
54.
EVOI, Father Iacchos: Lord of the Thyrsos and of the Pine-Cone.
55.
As are the involutions of the leaves of the Cone, so is the spiral of 
Generation;
the progress and passing-through of the Soul;
56.
From the lower to the higher; from the coarse to the fine; from the base to 
the
apex;
57.
From the outer to the inner; yea, from the dust of the ground to the Throne 
of
the Most High.
  (4)
58.
EVOI, Io Nysaee: God of the Garden and of the Tree bearing fruit.
59.
The dry land is thine, and all the beauty of earth: the vineyard, the 
garland,
and the valleys of corn;
60.
The forests, the secrets of the springs; the hidden wells and the treasures 
of
the caverns;
61.
The harvest, the dance, and the festival; the snows of winter, and the icy 
winds
of death.
62.
Yea Lord Iacchos; who girdest destruction with promise, and graftest 
comeliness
upon ruin.
63.
As the green Ivy covereth the blasted tree, and the waste places of earth 
where
no grass groweth;
64.
So thy touch giveth life and hope and meaning to decay.
65.
Who so understandeth thy mysteries, O Lord of the Ivy, hath overcome Death 
and
the fear thereof.
  (5)   
66.
EVOI, Father Iacchos, Lord God of Egypt; initiate thy servants in the halls 
of
thy Temple;
67.
Upon whose walls are the forms of every creature of every beast of the 
earth,
and every fowl of the air.
68.
The lynx, and the lion, and the bull; the ibis and the serpent; and the 
scorpion
and every flying thing.
69.
And the columns thereof are human shapes; having the heads of eagles and the 
hoofs
of the ox.
70.
All these are of thy kingdom; they are the chambers of ordeal, and the 
houses
of the initiation of the Soul.
71.
For the Soul passeth from form to form; and the mansions of her pilgrimage 
are
manifold.
72.
Thou callest her from the deep, and from the secret places of the earth; 
from
the dust of the ground, and from the herb of the field.
73.
Thou coverest her nakedness with an apron of Fig-leaves; thou clothest her 
with
the skins of beasts.
74.
Thou art from of old, O Soul of Man; yea, thou art from the everlasting.
75.
Thou puttest off thy bodies as raiment; and as vesture dost thou fold them 
up.
76.
They perish, but thou remainest; the wind rendeth and scattereth them; and 
the
place of them shall no more be known.
77.
For the Wind is the Spirits of God in Man, which bloweth where it listeth, 
and
thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh, nor 
whither
it shall go.
78.
Even so is the Spirit of Man, which cometh from afar off and tarrieth not, 
but
passeth away to a place thou knowest not.
  (6)
79.
EVOI, Iacchos, Lord of the Sphinx; who linkest the lowest to the highest; 
the
loins of the wild beast to the head and breast of the woman.
80.
Thou holdest the Chalice of Divination: all the forms of Nature are 
reflected
therein.
81.
Thou turnest man to destruction; then thou sayest, Come again, ye children 
of
my hand.
82.
Yea, blessed and holy art thou, O Master of Earth: Lord of the Cross and the 
Tree
of Salvation.
83.
Vine of God, whose Blood redeemeth; Bread of Heaven, broken on the Altar of 
Death.
84.
There is Corn in Egypt; go thou down into her, O my soul, with joy.
85.
For in the kingdom of the Body, thou shalt eat the Bread of thine 
Initiation.
86.
But beware lest thou become subject to the Flesh, and a bond-slave in the 
land
of thy sojourn.
87.
Serve not the idols of Egypt; and let not the Senses be thy taskmasters.
88.
For they will bow thy neck to their yoke; they will bitterly oppress the 
Israel
of God.
89.
An evil time shall come upon thee; and the Lord shall smite Egypt with 
plagues
for thy sake.
90.
Thy body shall be broken on the wheel of God; thy flesh see trouble and the 
worm.
91.
Thy house shall be smitten with grievous plagues; blood and pestilence, and 
great
darkness; fire shall devour thy goods and thou shalt be a prey to the 
locust
and creeping thing.
92.
Thy glory shall be brought down to the dust; hail and storm shall smite 
thine
harvest; yea, thy beloved and thy firstborn shall the hand of the Lord 
destroy;
93.
Until the Body let the Soul go free: that she may serve the Lord God.
94.
Arise in the night, O Soul, and fly, lest thou be consumed in Egypt.
95.
The Angel of the Understanding, shall know thee for his Elect, if thou offer 
unto
God a reasonable faith.
96.
Savor thy Reason with Learning, with Labor and Obedience.
97.
Let the Rod of thy Desire be in thy hand; put the Sandals of Hermes on thy 
feet;
and gird thy loins with Strength.
98.
Then shalt thou pass through the Waters of cleansing; which is the First 
Death
in the Body.
99.
The Waters shall be a Wall unto thee on thy right hand and on thy left.
100.
And Hermes the Redeemer shall go before thee: for he is the cloud of 
Darkness
by Day and thy Pillar of Fire by Night.
101.
All the horsemen of Egypt and the chariots thereof; her princes, her 
counselors,
and her mighty men;
102.
These shall pursue thee, O Soul, that fliest; and shall seek to bring thee 
back
into bondage.
103.
Fly for thy life; fear not the Deep; stretch out thy Rod over the Sea; and 
lift
thy Desire unto God.
104.
Thou hast learnt Wisdom in Egypt; thou hast spoiled the Egyptians; thou 
hast
carried away their fine gold and their precious things.
105.
Thou hast enriched thyself in the Body; but the Body shall not hold thee; 
neither
shall the waters of the Deep swallow thee up.
106.
Thou shalt wash thy robes in the Sea of Regeneration; the Blood of 
Atonement
shall redeem thee to God.
107.
This is thy Chrism and Anointing, O Soul; this is the First Death; thou art 
the
Israel of the Lord.
108.
Who hath redeemed thee from thy dominion of the Body; and hath called thee 
from
the grave, and from the house of bondage.
109.
Unto the Way of the Cross, and to the Path in the midst of the Wilderness;
110.
Where are the adder and the serpent, the mirage and the burning sand.
111.
For the feet of the Saint are set in the way of the Desert.
112.
But be thou of good courage, and fail thou not; then shall thy raiment 
endure,
and thy sandals shall not wax old upon thee.
113.
And thy Desire shall heal thy diseases; it shall bring streams for thee out 
of
the stony rock; it shall lead the to Paradise.
114.
Evoi, father Iacchos, Jehovah-Nyssi: Lord of the Garden and of the 
Vineyard;
115.
Initiator and Lawgiver: God of the Cloud and of the Mount.
116.
Evoi, Father Iacchos; out of Egypt hast thou called thy Son.  
APPENDIX
No. 13
 FRAGMENTS FROM THE “GOLDEN BOOK OF VENUS.” 
PART
I 
THE
HYMN OF APHRODITE.
(1)
I
am the Dawn, Daughter of Heaven and the Deep; the sea-mist covers my beauty 
with
a veil of tremulous light. 
2.
I am Aphrodite, the sister of Phoebos, opener of Heaven’s gates, the 
beginning
of Wisdom, the herald of the Perfect Day.
3.
Long had the darkness covered the deep; the Soul of all things slumbered; the 
valleys
were filled with shadows; only the mountains and the stars held commune 
together.
4.
There was no light on the ways of the earth; the rolling world moved outward 
on
her axe; gloom and mystery shrouded the faces of the Gods.
5.
Then from the Deep I arouse, dispeller of Night; the firmament of heaven 
kindled
with the joy beholding me.
6.
The secrets of the waters were revealed; the eyes of Zeus looked down into 
the
heart thereof.
7.
Ruddy as wine were the depths; the raiment of Earth was transfigured; as one 
arising
from the dead she arose, full of favor and grace.
  (2)   
8.
OF God and the Soul is Love born; in the silence of twilight; in the mystery 
of
sleep.
9.
In the Fourth dimension of space; in the womb of the heavenly Principle; in 
the
heart of the man of God; – there is Love enshrined.
10.
Yea, I am before all things; Desire is born of me; I impel the springs of 
Life
inward unto God; by me the earth and heavens are drawn together.
11.
But I am hidden until the time of the Day’s appearing; I lie beneath the 
waters
of the sea, in the deeps of the Soul; the bird of night seeth me not, the 
herds
in the valleys, nor the wild goat in the cleft of the hill.
12.
As the fishes of the sea am I covered; I am secret and veiled from sight as 
the
children of the deep.
13.
That which is occult hath the Fish for a symbol; for the fish is hidden in 
darkness
and silence; he knoweth the secret places of the earth, and the springs 
of
the hollow sea.
14.
Even as Love reacheth to the uttermost; so find I the secrets of all things; 
having
my beginning and my end in the Wisdom of God.
15.
The Spirit of Counsel is begotten in the Soul; even as the fish in the boson 
of
the waters.
16.
From the sanctuary of the Deep Love ariseth; Salvation is of the sea.
  (3) 
17.
I am the Crown of manifold births and deaths; I am the Interpreter of 
mysteries
and the Enlightener of Souls.
18.
In the elements of the Body is Love imprisoned; lying asleep in the caves of 
Iacchos;
in the crib of the oxen of Demeter.
19.
But when the Daystar ariseth over the earth, then is the Epiphany of Love.
20.
Therefore until the labor of the Third Day be fulfilled, the light of Love 
is
unmanifest.
21.
Then shall I unlock the gates of Dawn; and the glory of God shall ascend 
before
the eyes of men.
  (4) 
22.
THE secret of the angel Anael is at the heart of the world; the Song of God 
is
the sound of the stars in their courses.
23.
O Love, thou art the latent heat of the earth; the strength of the wine; the 
joy
of the orchard and the cornfield; thou art the Spirit of song and laughter, 
and
all the desire of Life!
24.
By thee, O Goddess, pure-eyed and golden, the Sun and the Moon are revealed; 
Love
is the Counselor of Heaven.
25.
Cloud and vapor melt before thee; thou unveilest to earth the Rulers of the 
immeasurable
skies.
26.
Thou makest all things luminous; thou discoverest all deeps,
27.
From the womb of the sea to the heights of heaven; from the shadowy Abyss to 
the
Throne of the Lord.
28.
Thy Beloved is as a Ring-dove, wearing the ensign of the Spirit, and knowing 
the
secrets thereof.
29.
Fly, fly, O Dove; the time of Spring cometh; in the far east the Dawn 
ariseth;
she hath a message for thee to bear from earth to heaven!
  PART II
A
DISCOURSE OF THE COMMUNION OF SOULS, AND OF THE
USES
OF LOVE BETWEEN CREATURE AND CREATURE. 
 HEREIN is Love’s Secret, and the Mystery of
the Communion of Saints.
2.
Love redeemeth, Love lifteth up, Love enlighteneth, Love advanceth Souls.
3.
Love dissolveth not, neither forgetteth; for she is of the Soul, and hath 
everlasting
Remembrance.
4.
Thou who lovest, givest of thyself to thy Beloved, and he is dowered withal.
5.
And if any Creature whom thou lovest, suffereth Death and departeth from 
thee,
6.
Fain wouldst thou give of thine Heart’s Blood to have him live always; to 
sweeten
the Changes before him, and to lift him to some happy Place.
7.
Thou droppest Tears on the broken Body of thy Beloved; thy Desire goeth after 
him,
and thou criest unto his Ghost;
8.
“O Dearest, would God that I might be with thee where now thou art; and know 
what
now thou doest!
9.
“Would God that I might still guard and protect thee; that I might defend 
thee
from all Pain and Wrong and Affliction!
10.
“But what Manner of Change is before thee I know not; neither can mine Eyes 
follow
thy Steps.
11.
“Many are the Lives set before thee; and the Years, O Beloved, are long and 
weary
that shall part us!
12.
“Shall I know thee again when I see thee; and will the Spirit of God say to 
thee
in that Day, ‘This is thy Beloved’?
13.
“Oh Soul of my Soul! would God I were one with thee, even though it were in 
Death!
14.
“Thou hast all my Love, my Desire, and my Sorrow; yea, my Life is mingled 
with
thine, and is gone forth with thee!
15.
“Visit me in Dreams; comfort me in the Night-Watches; let my Ghost meet 
thine
in the Land of Shadows and of Sleep.
16.
“Every Night with fervent Longing will I seek thee; Persephone and slumber 
shall
give me back the Past.
17.
“Yea, Death shall not take thee wholly from me; for Part of me is in thee, 
and
where thou goest, Dearest, there my Heart followeth!”
18.
So weepest thou and lamentest, because the Soul thou lovest is taken from 
thy
Sight.
19.
And life seemeth to thee a bitter Thing; yea, thou cursest the Destiny of 
all
living Creatures.
20.
And thou deemest thy Love of no Avail, and thy Tears as idle Drops.
21.
Behold! Love is a Ransom, and the Tears thereof are Prayers.
22.
And if thou have lived purely, thy fervent Desire shall be counted Grace to 
the
Soul of thy Dead.
23.
For the burning and continual Prayer of the Just availeth much.
24.
Yea, thy Love shall enfold the Soul which thou lovest; it shall be unto him 
a
Wedding Garment, and a Vesture of Blessing.
25.
The Baptism of thy Sorrow shall baptize thy Dead; and he shall rise because 
of
it.
26.
Thy Prayers shall lift him up, and thy Tears shall encompass his Steps; thy 
Love
shall be to him a Light shining upon the upward Way.
27.
And the Angels of God shall say unto him, “Oh happy Soul, that art so 
well-beloved;
that art made so strong with all these Tears and Sighs.
28.
“Praise the Father of Spirits therefor; for this great Love shall save thee 
many
Incarnations.
29.
“Thou art advanced thereby; thou art drawn aloft and carried upward by Cords 
of
Grace.”
30.
For in such wise do Souls profit one another, and have communion, and 
receive
and give Blessing; the Departed of the Living, and the Living of the 
Departed.
31.
And so much the more as the Heart within them is clean; and the Way of their 
Intention
innocent in the Sight of God.
32.
Yea, the Saint is a strong Redeemer; the Spirit of God striveth within him.
33.
And God withstandeth not God: for Love and God are One.
34.
As the Love of Christ hath Power with the Elect, so hath Power in its Degree 
the
Love of a Man for his Friend.
35.
Yea, though the Soul beloved be little and mean: a Creature not made in the 
Likeness
of Men.
36.
For in the Eyes of Love there is nothing little nor poor, nor unworthy of 
Prayer.
37.
O little Soul, thou art mighty if a Child of God love thee; yea, poor and 
simple
Soul, thou art possessed of great Riches!
38.
Better is thy Portion than the Portion of Kings whom the Curse of the 
Oppressed
pursueth.
39.
For as Love is strong to redeem and to advance a Soul, so is Hatred strong 
to
torment and to detain.
40.
Blessed is to Soul whom the Just commemorate before God: for whom the poor 
and
the Orphan and the dumb Creature weep.
41.
And thou, O Righteous Man, that with burning Love bewaileth the Death of the 
Innocent,
whom thou canst not save from the Hands of the Unjust;
42.
Thou who wouldst freely give of thine own Blood to redeem thy Brother, and 
to
loosen the Bonds of his Pain;
43.
Know that in the Hour of thy supreme Desire, God accepteth thine Oblation.
44.
And thy Love shall not return unto thee empty; according to the Greatness of 
her
Degree, she shall accomplish thy Will.
45.
And thy Sorrow and Tears and the Travail of thy Spirit, shall be Grace and 
Blessing
to the Soul thou wouldst redeem.
46.
Count not as lost thy Suffering on behalf of other Souls; for every Cry is a 
Prayer,
and all Prayer is Power.
47.
That thou willest to do is done; thine Intention is united to the Will of 
Divine
Love.
48.
Nothing is lost of that which thou layest out for God and for thy Brother.
49.
And it is Love alone who redeemeth; and Love hath nothing of her own.
  APPENDIX No. 14 
  HYMN TO HERMES (A FRAGMENT) 
 AS a moving light between heaven and earth; as
a white cloud assuming many 
shapes;
2.
He descends and rises, he guides and illumines, he transmutes himself from 
small
to great, from bright to shadowy, from the opaque image to the diaphanous 
mist.
3.
Star of the East conducting the Magi; cloud from whose midst the holy voice 
speaketh;
by day a pillar of vapor, by night a shining flame;
4.
I behold thee, Hermes, Son of God, slayer of Argus, Archangel, who bearest 
the
rod of knowledge by which all things in heaven or on earth are measured.
5.
Double serpents entwine it, because as serpents they must be wise who desire 
God.
6.
And upon thy feet are living wings, bearing thee fearless through space and 
over
the abyss of darkness; because they must be without dread to dare the void 
and
the deep who desire to attain and to achieve.
7.
Upon thy side thou wearest a sword of a single stone, two-edged, whose temper 
resisteth
all things.
8.
For they who would slay or save must be armed with a strong and perfect will, 
defying
and penetrating with no uncertain force.
9.
This is Herpë, the sword which destroyeth demons; by whose aid the hero 
overcometh,
and the savior is able to deliver.
10.
Except thou bind it upon thy thigh thou shalt be overborne, and blades of 
mortal
making shall prevail against thee.
11.
Nor is this all thine equipment, Son of God; the covering of darkness is 
upon
thine head, and none is able to strike thee.
12.
This is the magic hat, brought from Hades, the region of silence, where they 
are
who speak not.
13.
He who bears the worlds on his shoulders shall give it to thee, lest the 
world
fall on thee and thou be ground into powder.
14.
Keep a bridle upon thy lips, and cover thy head in the day of battle.
15.
These are the four excellent things, the Rod, the Wings, the Sword, and the 
Hat.
16.
Knowledge, which thou must gain with labor; the spirit of holy boldness, 
which
cometh by faith in God; a mighty will, and a complete discretion.
    APPENDIX No. 15 
THE
SECRET OF SATAN 
  (1) 
 AND on the seventh day there went forth from
the presence of God a mighty angel 
full
of wrath and consuming, and God gave unto him the dominion of the outermost 
sphere.
2.
Eternity brought forth Time; the Boundless gave birth to Limit; Being 
descended
into Generation.
3.
As lightning I beheld Satan fall from heaven, splendid in strength and fury.
4.
Among the Gods is none like unto him, into whose hand are committed the 
kingdoms,
the power and the glory of the worlds;
5.
Thrones and empires, the dynasties of kings, the fall of nations, the birth 
of
churches, the triumphs of Time.
6.
They arise and pass, they were and are not; the sea and the dust and the 
immense
mystery of space devour them.
7.
The tramp of armies, the voices of joy and of pain, the cry of the new-born 
babe,
the shout of the warrior mortally smitten;
8.
Marriage, divorce, division, violent deaths, martyrdoms, tyrannous 
ignorances,
the impotence of passionate protest, and the mad longing for 
oblivion;
9.
The eyes of the tiger in the jungle, the fang of the snake, the fetor of 
slaughterhouses,
the wail of innocent beasts in pain;
10.
The innumerable incarnations of Spirit, the strife towards Manhood, the 
ceaseless
pulse and current of Desire; –
11.
These are his who beareth all the Gods on his shoulders; who establisheth 
the
pillars of Necessity and Fate.
12.
Many names hath God given him, names of mystery, secret and terrible.
13.
God called him Satan the Adversary, because Matter opposeth Spirit, and Time 
accuseth
even the saints of the Lord.
14.
And the Destroyer, for his arm breaketh and grindeth to pieces; wherefore 
the
fear and the dread of him are upon all flesh.
15.
And the Avenger, for he is the anger of God; his breath shall burn up all 
the
souls of the wicked.
16.
And the Sifter, for he straineth all things through his sieve, dividing the 
husk
from the grain; discovering the thought of the heart; proving and purifying 
the
spirit of man.
17.
And the Deceiver, for he maketh the False appear true and concealeth the 
Real
under the mask of Illusion.
18.
And the Tempter for he setteth snares before the feet of the elect; he 
beguileth
with vain shows, and seduceth with enchantments.
19.
Blessed are they who withstand his subtlety; they shall be called the sons 
of
God, and shall enter in at the beautiful gates.
20.
For Satan is the doorkeeper of the Temple of the King; he standeth in 
Solomon’s
porch; he holdeth the Keys of the Sanctuary;
21.
That no man may enter therein save the anointed, having the arcanum of 
Hermes.
22.
For Satan is the Spirit of the Fear of the Lord, which is the beginning of 
wisdom.
(Ps. A.V. cxi., D.V. cx. 10; Is. xi. 2, 3. The first and “eldest of the 
gods”
in the order of microcosmic evolution, Saturn (Satan) is the seventh and 
last
in the order of macrocosmic emanation, being the circumference of the 
kingdom
of which Phoebus (wisdom) is the centre.)
23.
He is the devourer of the unwise and the evil: they shall all be meat and 
drink
to him.
24.
Whatsoever he devoureth, that shall never more return into being.
25.
Fear him, for after he hath killed, he hath power to cast into hell.
26.
But he is the servant of the sons of God, and of the children of light.
27.
They shall go before him, and he shall follow the steps of the wise.
28.
Stand in awe of him and sin not; speak his name with trembling; and beseech 
God
daily to deliver thee.
29.
For Satan is the magistrate of the Justice of God; he beareth the balance 
and
the sword,
30.
To execute judgment and vengeance upon all who come short of the 
commandments
of God; to weigh their works, to measure their desire, and to 
number
their days.
31.
For to him are committed Weight and Measure and Number.
32.
And all things must pass under the rod and through the balance, and be 
fathomed
by the sounding-lead.
33.
Therefore Satan is the Minister of God, Lord of the seven mansions of Hades, 
the
Angel of the manifest worlds.
34.
And God hath put a girdle about his loins, and the name of the girdle is 
Death.
35.
Threefold are its coils, for threefold is the power of Death, dissolving the 
body,
the ghost, and the soul.
36.
And that girdle is black within, but where Phoebus strikes it is silver.
37.
None of the Gods is girt save Satan, for upon him only is the shame of 
generation.
38.
He hath lost his virginal estate; uncovering heavenly secrets, he hath 
entered
into bondage.
39.
He encompasseth with bonds and limits all things which are made; he putteth 
chains
round about the worlds, and determineth their orbits.
40.
By him are Creation and Appearance; by him Birth and Transformation; the day 
of
Begetting and the night of Death.
41.
The glory of Satan is the shadow of the Lord; the throne of Satan is the 
footstool
of Adonai.
42.
Twain are the armies of God; in heaven the hosts of Michael; in the abyss 
the
legions of Satan.
43.
These are the Unmanifest and the Manifest; the free and the bound; the 
virginal
and the fallen.
44.
And both are the ministers of the Father, fulfilling the Word divine.
45.
The legions of Satan are the Creative Emanations, having the shapes of 
dragons,
of Titans, and of elemental gods;
46.
Forsaking the Intelligible World, seeking manifestation, renouncing their 
first
estate;
47.
Which were cast out into chaos, neither was their place found any more in 
heaven.
  (2) 
48.
EVIL is the result of limitation, and Satan is the Lord of Limit.
49.
He is the Father of Lies, because Matter is the cause of Illusion.
50.
To understand the secret of the Kingdom of God, and to read the riddle of 
Maya,
this is to have Satan under foot.
51.
He only can put Satan under foot who is released by Thought from the bonds 
of
Desire.
52.
Nature is the allegory of Spirit; all that appeareth to the sense is deceit; 
to
know the Truth, this alone shall make men free.
53.
For the kingdom of Satan is the house of Matter; yea his mansion is the 
sepulchre
of Golgotha, wherein on the seventh day the Lord lay sleeping, keeping 
the
Sabbath of the Unmanifest.
54.
For the day of Satan is the night of Spirit; the manifestation of the worlds 
of
Form is the rest of the worlds informulate.
55.
Holy and venerable is the Sabbath of God; blessed and sanctified is the name 
of
the Angel of Hades;
56.
Whom the Anointed shall overcome, rising again from the dead on the first 
day
of the week.
57.
For the place of Satan is the bourne of divine impulsion; there is the 
arrest
of the outgoing force; Luza, the station of pause and slumber;
58.
Where Jacob lay down and dreamed, beholding the ladder which reached from 
earth
to heaven.
59.
For Jacob is the planetary Angel Iacchos, the Lord of the Body;
60.
Who hath left his Father’s House, and is gone out into a far country.
61.
Yet is Luza none other than Bethel; the kingdom of Satan is become the 
kingdom
of God and of His Christ.
62.
For there the Anointed awakeneth, arising from sleep, and goeth his way 
rejoicing;
63.
Having seen the vision of God, and beheld the secret of Satan;
64.
Even as the Lord arose from the dead and brake the seal of the Sepulchre;
65.
Which is the portal of heaven, Luza, the house of separation, the place of 
stony
sleep;
66.
Where is born the centripetal force, drawing the soul upward and inward to 
God;
67.
Recalling Existence into Being, resuming the kingdoms of Matter in Spirit;
68.
Until Satan return unto his first estate, and enter again into the heavenly 
obedience;
69.
Having fulfilled the Will of the Father, and accomplished his holy ministry;
70.
Which was ordained of God before the worlds, for the splendor of the 
Manifest,
and for the generation of Christ our Lord;
71.
Who shall judge the quick and the dead, putting all things under his feet; 
whose
are the dominion, the power, the glory, and the Amen.
  
 
 
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Cardiff Theosophical Society in Wales
Cardiff, Wales, UK. CF24 – 1DL
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by Anna Bonus Kingsford & Edward Maitland