1
In the Mithraic cult of the Middle East, the sun was
united with the Earth, fertilizing it. We call Mithraism a religion of sun
worship, but the hidden God behind it was the real object of worship. Yet the
final end of all the solar activity - fertilization - was not forgotten. Spirt
and Matter became one, daily life of the human being became his spiritual life.
Then only did the results of this fertilization - the living crops - appear. Zen
sahaja, natural samadhi - this is what they mean.
2
The sacred places where Druidic priests worshipped
were chosen according to knowledge - geographic, astronomic, religious,
ritualistic, symbolic, and magnetic.
3
It is something in history to ponder over that in
the Alban hills, a few kilometres from Rome, there was once a Temple of Orpheus
where, 3000 years ago, the Orphic mysteries were celebrated, where Orphic
religion prevailed with its tenets of rebirth, fleshless diet, the quest, and
inner reality. It is arguable whether the two other religions which followed it
in that area have brought a better message.
4
The dualism of the Persian religions -
Zoroastrianism and its kindred Mithraism - is ethical but the dualism of Indian
religions is metaphysical. These are two quite different definitions. But in the
case of the Christian Manichaeans, whose doctrine Saint Augustine followed for a
time and later renounced as a heresy, there is a strange mixture of the ethical
along with the metaphysical.
5
Granting the fact that an incarnation has been given
a special mission by God which will affect millions of souls and that he must
therefore be charged with special divine power, I am unable to see in what way
he can be superior to other prophets who have come into close communion with
God. It would seem that he would still come within the category of Muhammed's
well-known statement, "I am only a man like you." Yet the status which the Bahai
faith seems to assign to Baha'u'llah is nothing less than the divinity in the
flesh. How can it be possible for even Baha'u'llah to have communed with the
uncomprehensible, inconceivable Godhead directly if, as he says, that Godhead is
beyond all human conception? Surely no man, however saintly he may be, can
escape this limitation?
6
The criticism of the differences in my books from
some of the teachings of Baha'u'llah and Bahaism are partly due to
misunderstanding and partly to actual divergence. The latter arises, I believe,
from the fact that in these days the Bahai faith stresses organization and
institutionalism, whereas in the early days it was like primitive Christianity
and primitive Islam, free from these later accretions. Although history shows
that every religion has followed this course, I still consider the essence of
religion to be mystical and not institutional.
7
To the extent that the Bahai faith has dropped the
mystical side for the organizational, to that extent it has suffered inwardly
however much it has expanded outwardly. In this it follows the history of most
religions, which grow and spread their influence in the world at the cost of the
purity and spirituality which should lie at their core.
8
Buddha, this godless yet godlike man, rejected most
of the Gods in the Hindu pantheon, threw aside the sacrifices, rituals, prayers,
and priestcraft current in his time. Buddha is worthy of every admiration
because he showed men of rational temperament, men who find it difficult to
believe in a God according to the common notion and who are not devotional by
nature, how to attain the same spiritual heights as those do who believe and who
are religious. He made room in heaven for the rationalist, the free-thinker, and
the doubter of all things. Again, those whose familiarity with the Buddha is
limited to his statues, with their characteristic attitude of contemplation,
often form the wrong notion that he spent his life in inactivity and meditation.
On the contrary, he lived strenuously, like Saint Paul, teaching and travelling
incessantly, limiting his meditation to not more than an hour or two every day.
If Buddha formulated the tragedy of existence, he did not permit his resultant
pessimism to paralyse him into mere apathy.
9
That Buddha, like Jesus, wanted to reach the
populace, there can be no doubt, except in the minds of the prejudiced. First,
he went to extraordinary, most unusual lengths to repeat his teachings from
different aspects, so as to make his meaning clearer. Second, he recommended his
monks to use the ordinary dialects of simple people whenever they preached
Doctrines which were both complex and subtle in themselves and needed
simplification anyway.
10
If Buddha did not, like most of the other Indian
teachers, affirm the existence of God, he did not deny it. But the reason for
this position can be found in his environment, in the Indian scene - too much
superstition masquerading as religion, too little respect for reason and fact.
11
The Buddhist can readily get rid of the charge of
atheism by referring to the doctrine of Buddha concerning "Amitabha" - "the
infinite light of revelation...the unbounded light, the source of wisdom and of
virtue, of Buddhahood." It corresponds to the Christians' "Logos," the Word,
"the true Light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world."
12
It is amusing irony that the very rites and
ceremonies which the Brahmin priests tell the masses will advance their
spiritual progress were denounced by Buddha because they hinder spiritual
progress!
13
It is not the prophet, not the seer, but the men
who come later who found churches, establish organizations, and turn religion
into a vested interest. Thus when Buddha was dying his attendant disciple,
Ananda, was alarmed, according to the ancient records, and said: "The Master
will not pass into Nirvana before he has arranged something about the Order?"
The Buddha replied: "It would be one who would say, 'I will lead the Order' or
'The Order looks up to me' who would arrange something about it. But I did not
think so. Why then should I make any arrangements about the Order?"
14
Although Zen was founded as a Buddhist sect, the
Zen attitude toward humanity is far from the Buddha's, with his tender
compassion. When I discussed the menace of another global war with a
distinguished Japanese Zen leader, he coldly remarked that if it removed most of
mankind it would be a good riddance of a nasty race! He felt no distress at the
suffering involved. He seemed to look down at it as if the war were a little
quarrel among little insects like destructive termites.
15
It is true that the Buddhist way is one of
self-discipline and the Christian way one of discipleship, but this is so in
appearance only and not in the highest schools of both ways, which are naturally
esoteric; the latter approach each other much more closely. The Mahayana school,
for instance, has many parallels with the Christian and has as much right to be
regarded as authoritatively Buddhist as has the Southern School of Buddhism.
16
If you want to learn what Christianity originally
was, you must put together the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, collecting them from
the Protestant, the Roman Catholic, the Greek Orthodox, the Manichaean, and the
Coptic Churches. Then you must add further pieces from the Alexandrian, the
Russian, and the Syrian traditions.
17
The close relation between new faiths and old ones
can still be readily traced in Asia, where the vestiges of the latter continue
to flourish by the side of the former among aboriginal tribes. It can be traced,
too, in African Egypt and Ethiopia, in lands even more accessible to the Western
student of theological archaeology, by anyone who cares to venture into the
Coptic churches and to examine the Coptic tradition. He will find it in many of
the externals and theoretic dogmas of the simple primitive cult of Coptic
Christianity, a cult whose propitiations of burning incense, unimpressive mass,
cymballed music, and priestly blessings are replete with characteristics that
were familiar enough to the Pharoahs. Christianity, which arose in a region
midway between the Orient and the Occident, significantly moved westward first
and then spread across Egypt, where it silenced the superannuated sanctuaries
more quickly than in any other land. In fact, although the worship of Jesus was
so quickly triumphant in this colony of Rome, it did not officially supplant the
worship of Isis or Jupiter until the reign of Constantine two and a half
centuries later.
18
The fact that Jesus was born in the Near East and
not the Far East gave the religion that bears his name a geographical advantage
and a historical familiarity which help to explain why Buddhism and Hinduism
spread in all other directions except Westward. And the fact that the
European-American mind is much more outward bent and much more attached to the
personality than the tropical-Asiatic mind explains why Christianity had much
more affinity with and appeal to the first mind.
19
Christ spoke to the Roman world, and to some of
those parts of the Near East which were then included in the Roman Empire.
Buddha spoke to Asia. Saint Paul and Timothy felt themselves "forbidden of the
Holy Ghost to preach the Word in Asia." In short, Christianity is for the West
since its civilization grew out of the Roman one.
20
The spectacle of so many sects, hostile to one
another, teaching dogmas that Jesus never taught, raised probing questions in
the minds of many Orientals who spoke to me about the matter.
21
The Oriental ideas about the spiritual goal and
methods of spiritual practice as they appear in most Buddhist and many Hindu
sects are not likely to appeal to Occidental seekers. For they seek the
dissolution of human personality, either through merging into an inconceivable
Unity or through disappearance into an indescribable Nirvana. As a rolling wave
dissolves in the sea, as a wisp of smoke vanishes in the air, so does the
separated human life enter its ultimate state. Few Westerners are prepared to
renounce their own identity, to sacrifice their inborn attachment to personality
for the sake of such a vague goal - one moreover which seems too much like utter
annihilation to be worth even lifting a finger for! To most Westerners it is
unpleasant and terrifying to look forward to such an end. For who gains by this
goal? The man himself certainly does not. The absolute Unity remains what it was
before; so it does not gain either. If we enquire why the goal is acceptable to
the East but objectionable to the West, the answer will be partly found in the
latter's religious history.
By seeking to perpetuate for all eternity the same human personality in the spirit world, too many orthodox church interpreters of Christ's teaching have misinterpreted it. For Christ taught in several clear sentences the giving up of self, the denial of personality. These theologians reduced this preachment to the practice of charity and unselfishness but kept the ego as something precious, whereas Jesus asked not only for these moral virtues, but for the immeasurably more important metaphysical-mystical virtue of rooting out the ego itself. The moral improvement of character is thus substituted for the metaphysical destruction of ego.
22
A more sympathetic study of the other Oriental
religions, especially the Indian ones, would help Christians to understand
better, and interpret more correctly, their own religion.
23
Those who support the sending of missionaries to
foreign countries do so in the belief that they are honouring Jesus' words, "to
publish the gospel to all parts of the world." But the world in his time and
speech is not the world of our own. This is shown clearly by Saint Luke's
allusion to it: "In those days there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus that
all the world should be taxed." Here "world" stands for the empire of the
Romans. It does not include the Chinese, for instance.
24
Those who are not yet ready for any other than a
Christian path would not be helped by Hindu and Buddhist literature.
25
The gospel story is not a transcript from the
Indian story of Krishna, as some of the critics suggest. A few of the
similarities are certainly there but the explanation is a mystical one.
26
The British soldier and sailor all unwittingly
prepared the way for the British dissemination of Bibles throughout the world.
The British Empire has been one of the carriers of the Christian scriptures.
27
Those who know little about the origin, history,
and development of religious opinions would receive a shock, or rather a series
of shocks, if they were to inquire into the development of the principal Western
faith and if they were able to lay hands on the necessary material. But let them
be warned that they will not find such material in official sources. There was
once a very voluminous literature which contained the true Christian teaching,
but it was completely exterminated by the official church as soon as the
latter's triumph over these so-called heresies was established. How ironical it
is that reincarnation, the very doctrine which is today regarded as a heresy -
that is, a perversion of true doctrine - was originally regarded as an authentic
one!
28
A Christianity once existed which has long been
condemned and forgotten but which is as much nearer the true teaching of Jesus
as it is nearer him in time. We refer to the school of the Gnostics. Their
defeat and disappearance does not lessen their truth. The Gnostic Christians of
the third century accepted the pre-existence and earthly rebirths of man. With
this doctrine there came naturally the law of recompense, which warns men to
heed more carefully what they think and do, for the results will return equally
and justly in time.
29
Gnosticism was banned as heresy by the Church
Councils, its books destroyed, its teachers persecuted. The truth in it was
banned indiscriminately along with the untruth. The differing sects in it were
treated all alike. That during Rome's luxurious and decadent periods some sects
said we should give to the spirit what is of the spirit and to the flesh what is
of the flesh, and practised immorality, is true. But it is also true that other
sects presented the struggle by good forces against the evil ones in most
dramatic and forceful terms. Its recognition of the meaning, place, and
importance of "Light" seen in meditation was a prominent and valuable feature of
Gnosticism.
30
Those Christians who were closest to Jesus' time
did not set up two categories - those in the world and those living
withdrawn from it outwardly, with the second as superior. It was monks who later
made this division.
31
In the third-century pagan world, hate and envy
prevailed. The propertied classes were hated by the poor, the working classes
hated the middle class, while the army was hated by all classes. Christianity
preached love to neighbours, philanthropy towards strangers, as the Emperor
Julian, though hostile, reluctantly admitted. It would bring these mutually
antagonistic classes together, as the Emperor Constantine saw. Pagan religions
and philosophies revealed this, too, but failed to practise it, had become cold.
This is one of the reasons, apart from the alleged visionary experience of a
cross in the sky, which persuaded Constantine to adopt Christianity as the
official religion of the Roman Empire.
32
The early Christians who spoke of being "in
Christ" were men whose intense faith, devotion, and sacrifice had lifted them
into the Overself consciousness.
33
The most intellectual early Christians were those
who abode in Alexandria, for it was the greatest Mediterranean centre of
philosophical learning before Christianity appeared in it.
34
Chrysostom was born about 347 a.d., Tertullian
about 150 a.d. The latter was the first of the Church's Latin Fathers, well
educated, a brilliant scholar, with numerous friends among the learned, and a
wide knowledge of the tenets teachings and customs of his time.
35
The Christian thought of Clement and Dionysius is
close to the higher philosophic thought of the Indian Rishee-sages. And this is
not surprising when we remember that they got their ideas in Alexandria, which
was then having regular commerce with India.
36
Was not the most important council of all the
Council of Nicaea, which finally settled Christian doctrines for a thousand
years, but which foolishly dropped the tenet of metempsychosis as heresy after
it had survived the first five centuries of anno domino; was not
this great gathering composed of men who mostly could neither write nor read,
who were stern extreme ascetics, fanatical in character and behaviour, narrow,
intolerant?(P)
37
When the Romans ruled there were few means of
communication, and even these were slow and difficult. Nor were there newspapers
and printed books. The message of Jesus spread along Roman highways but even so
took a few hundred years to find its hearers.
38
In symbolism of the Trinity, God signifies the
World-Mind, Christ the Overself, and the Holy Ghost the Kundalini.
39
"I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance;
but he that cometh after me is mightier than I, whose shoes I am not worthy to
bear: he shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire." - Matthew 3:11.
Water has been universally used in sacred literature as a symbol of the emotional nature of man. The fluidic character of both is the reason for the use of this symbol. What John called "baptism by water" means therefore such a cleansing of the dominance of his animal passions, desires, and appetites. Consider further that it is the tendency of water always to flow downwards in obedience to the law of gravity, and then note the striking contrast of the tendency of fire, whose sparks always soar upwards. "Baptism by fire" therefore refers to a process on an entirely higher level, not to a merely negative purification but to a positive illumination. Light is one of the effects of fire. The work of John the Baptist was concerned with clearing the way for Jesus, the light-bringer, a preparation that was not only outward and annunciatory but also inward and purificatory. John collected "followers" for Jesus; they were the masses who sought physical help and emotional comfort in their troubles and sicknesses. But Jesus, when he came in person, not only gathered all these followers but also collected "disciples"; they were those who had no necessity to seek such help and comfort, but were attracted by the Spirit itself as it shone through Jesus. They were the few who received the baptism of fire and by the Holy Ghost. Many people became followers but few became disciples.
There is, further, a difference between the baptism by the Holy Ghost and the baptism by fire. The baptism by the Holy Ghost arouses and awakens the potentialities of the dynamic Life-force, raising its voltage far above the ordinary. This process is usually accompanied by thrills, ecstasies, or mystical raptures. It represents the first awakening on the spiritual level as it filters through the partially cleansed emotional nature. Baptism by fire represents the next and highest stage after this event, when, the thrill of the new birth has subsided and when, in a calmer and steadier condition, the intelligence itself becomes illumined in addition to the feelings, thus balancing them.
40
In Love (for the highest) in Wisdom (of intuition
and Intelligence) and Power (the creative energy of the Overself) we find the
inner meaning of the Holy Trinity.
41
Christianity's most solemn ritual - the
celebration of the Holy Eucharist - which symbolized membership by a common
meal, was partly taken from the pagan Mysteries. This is the part that was
brought in during a later century.
42
The public confession of sin, "sharing," as one
cult calls it, is unnecessary and leads in the end to exhibitionism. The Roman
Church, in the wisdom of many centuries, rightly has made the confessional a
private affair, heard only by the priest, and even then the penitent only
half-sees him through the gauze curtain in the booth.
43
It is a misunderstanding of the benefit of
confession or sharing, which has value only if done with or before a superior
person. With others it is futile or harmful.
44
Ought he not enter the confessional booth to
denounce not only his sins but also his stupidities? Is it not a duty of human
beings to display intelligence?
45
That the cross was a mystical symbol used in the
ancient Mysteries was known to Plato. In the Republic he wrote: "The just
man, having suffered all manner of evils, will be crucified."
46
Jesus did not construct any religious system or
creed, Church or doctrine. Others did that when he was no longer there to say
Yes or No. Christianity was therefore their creation, not his.
47
A reincarnated Jesus appearing in our century
would not be able to recognize his original message in the orthodox sects of our
time.
48
These three doctrines - now turned by the Church
for its own motives into three dogmatic superstitions - were, and are, sacred
truths before being corrupted. They are the Crucifixion, the Atonement, and the
Trinity. Trinitarianism in its present form was never taught by Jesus. It came
into Christian doctrine centuries after he lived.
49
Nowhere does Jesus in the publicly available
sayings included in the New Testament order the formation of a clergy or preach
the need of a church or lay down a ritual. Instead he gave clear precise
instruction on how to pray: "Enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy
door, pray to thy Father which is in secret." But Paul thought differently and
founded what is now misnamed Christianity.
50
The Inspired Prophets did not themselves
personally organize religion. What they did was to give inspiration to those
individuals who could respond to it. It was their followers, men acting on
external methods, men with limited capacity, who organized and eventually
exploited institutions. Indeed these followers had no alternative but to use
such methods, not possessing themselves the inner depth of the prophets. The
truth is that nobody has ever really organized religion, for it is a private and
personal affair between each individual and his God. It is men who have
organized themselves for purposes derived from their religious feelings - which
is not the same as organizing religion itself. All such organizations are
man-made throughout, as is also the authority they claim. There is no record in
the New Testament speeches of Jesus that he himself appointed apostles.
Consequently we must believe that they appointed themselves after he was no
longer present among them. The basic claim of certain Churches to be a
continuation of this apostolate has no ground to support it in Jesus' own
statements. It is because of this claim that the Catholic Church does not
theoretically recognize the right to freedom of worship on the part of other
religious organizations, although in actual practice it gradually found it
expedient to grant that right on practical grounds. "My kingdom is not of this
world," declared Jesus. We may easily identify to which world these institutions
belong, which were later organized in his name, by noting the official status
which they secure in "this world." This explains the historic opposition
occurring at times between the true spirit of Jesus and the worldly behaviour of
his Church. It is regrettable that most people confuse an institution with the
man upon whose name it may be built. There is no indication that Jesus ever
wanted an organized church, but there is every indication that it was his
followers who wanted it and who made it. Unfortunately, the masses do not
understand this but are easily deceived into thinking that they are in touch
with Jesus through his Church when in reality they are not so at all. To find
Jesus they must go deep into their own hearts. There is no other way.
51
Search all the words of Jesus and you will not
find the word "religion" uttered once in reference to what he was teaching. It
was a way of positive living, although men have turned it into a mere social
convention. 52 The truth about Jesus and about his teaching is hard to find
today. For it is buried under a man-built mountain of deliberate falsification
and superstitious accretion.
53
Jesus is honoured in every Christian Church by
name, by chanted hymn, and by carven figure. Why does it not also honour his
tremendous teaching that the kingdom of heaven is within man himself, not within
the church?
54
The great Galilean was put by God among very
little men. What he told them was beyond their comprehension, so they
emotionalized it, sentimentalized it, organized it, and produced an
all-too-human and undivine thing.
55
The severe impact of Jesus' phrases, stripped of
embellishment and free from rhetoric as they are, shows up the lengthy
lucubrations of official religionists for what they are.
56
Nowhere in the parables, nowhere in the spoken
words of Jesus is there any teaching showing that he wanted an ecclesiastical
hierarchy established or that he instituted a system of sacraments.
57
The so-called Holy Inquisition was quite unholy
and more akin to those who persecuted the early Christians than to Christianity
itself.
58
When men become enslaved by their religious
symbols to the extent that they are willing to murder other men for them, or
even to imprison them, when this slavery blinds their better sight and renders
them fanatically intolerant of all other views, Nature deems it time to liberate
both - the first from their sin, the others from their suffering. When
ecclesiastics become intolerant and forget the first virtue of all religion -
which is goodwill towards other men - and when they begin to persecute good men
who are unable to agree with them, they not only put others in danger but also
themselves. Jesus is one authority for this statement, for he warned all mankind
that they would reap the circumstances sown by their conduct. Another authority
is the ever-open bloodstained book of history. A good deal of true Christianity
burnt itself out in the medieval fires which its more ardent advocates lit for
each other and for those unfortunate infidels who knew nothing more of Christ
than his name.
59
When the earth was regarded as flat, it seemed
plausible to believe that God was a super-Person somewhere out in the heights of
space, separate from His universe and beyond its limits. The philosophers of
Alexandria never accepted this view and were later persecuted by those who did -
ignorant religious fanatics.
60
The figure of Jesus has been molded into fictions
by credulous, imaginative, or professionally interested priests - fictions that
were acceptable to the marvel-loving taste of posterity. But no marvel could be
greater than what he taught - the entry into the kingdom of heaven, which is
nothing else than a conscious return to the true nature of man. Thousands of
theologians have scrutinized his personality and estimated the worth of his
teachings, but most of them have deluded themselves because only those who have
come within the orbit of a living sage can possibly understand him or his words,
in their truest significance. Jesus made an impact on the spiritual life of the
West, but that impact has never been properly evaluated because it cannot be
perceived in the light of Church organization but somewhere else - in the hearts
of men. Although he did not properly belong to our own planet, he gave us the
emphatic assurance that we too might win his realization and attainment; we too
might uncover our true selves and enter the Light. Professors come and write
their academic footnotes to his work, but he must be viewed for what he was -
not the organizer of a Church but the planter of living, unseen seeds that
fertilized in their own special way in the nature of Western man. He owed and
demanded allegiance to no particular sect or school, and he paid fealty to no
earthly master. He stood out only under the auroral light of divinity which
shone down upon his life. He descended like an angel to dwell in the tabernacle
of flesh at a time when religious life was but a guttering candle.
61
Jesus emanated love, Jesus brought truth, and
Jesus incarnated forgiveness.
62
Whether Jesus was merely human or really divine is
a question which may worry others but which does not trouble me. He had
something to communicate and did so. He had affirmation to make, a gospel to
give which supported so many people for so many centuries. That men have
demeaned his message, exploited his person, and twisted his words is regrettable
but, men being what they are, expectable. It is good that he came, for clearly
they needed him.
63
Whether we put Christ's telling Truths into hard
syllogisms and heavy intellectual dogmas which enter the mind or simple but
noble phrases which are felt in the heart, we must accept them.
64
Most Christian churches and sects have claimed a
spiritual monopoly. The main foundation for this claim is the sixteenth verse of
the third chapter of John where the Evangelist says that Jesus is "the only
begotten son of God." But nowhere in the New Testament does Jesus himself make
the same assertion. On the contrary, he went out of his way to tell men, "The
works that I do shall ye do also," thus refusing to put himself in a unique
separate and unattainable species, which would make it impossible for other men
to imitate his example or hope to attain his understanding.
65
The belief that Jesus was specially created, as no
one before or since has been, is unacceptable. The belief that Jesus was one
among the other great souls invested with special power is both acceptable and
reasonable.
66
"Why callest thou me good?" asked Jesus. "There is
none good but one; that is God." If these words mean anything, they mean that he
is still a human being, however close and harmonious is his relationship with
God, and that he is not to be deified.
67
When Jesus declared that he was the Way, he spoke
as the infinite Christ-self in every man, not as the finite person Jesus. He
meant that whoever sought God, the Father, had to come through this higher self,
could not find him by any other channel. This only was the Way.
68
The Sermon on the Mount is truly representative of
Jesus' teaching. It holds first place in the literature of the world; it
contains the essence of practical Christianity expressed as finely as is humanly
possible.
69
Jesus' Sermon on the Mount is not merely a pretty
speech. It is a discipline. Therefore, it is only for his disciples. The masses
who seek benefits or follow convention, not being ready for the effort, cannot
be called disciples.
70
When Jesus told his adult hearers that they had to
become children before they could enter the kingdom, he made what must have
sounded an astonishing assertion to them. What did he mean? How are we to
interpret and apply his words? There are two ideas worth noting here. First, a
child enjoys living. Second, a child thinks, feels, and acts spontaneously. Both
these factors are combined in its direct awareness of life, untrammelled by
hesitations or obstructions imposed from without and unfiltered by colourings or
opinions imposed from within.
71
I had heard from different sources - Hindu,
Buddhist, Nestorian and Indian Christian - of this legend which is current in
the Western Himalaya region and in Chinese Turkestan, that Jesus came as a young
man to India and spent several years there before returning to Palestine.
72
We hear much of Jesus' being the friend of sinners
and outcasts. But the fact was that he was also the friend of good people and
society's supporters. It is true to say that his mission was chiefly to the
populace, the common people, but that did not mean that he was hostile to those
classes whose grammar and diction were superior and whose possessions and status
were higher.
73
It is hardly credible, to those who understand,
that Jesus ascended quite literally and physically "to heaven." This assertion
can be credible only to those who ignore Jesus' own statement that "the Kingdom
of heaven is within you," those who look to the sky for its abode.
For the same reasons, Jesus' second coming is also not to be taken literally,
visibly, and physically, but inwardly as an experience in the heart.
74
Christ's supposed despairing exclamation on the
cross, and also his last uttered words, "My God, why hast thou forsaken me?"
have been wrongly translated, according to the Nestorian Christians, one of the
oldest sects, whose Bible in the Aramaic language in which Jesus spoke gives the
phrase as: "My God; For this was I kept," meaning, "This is my destiny."
75
It is one more of life's singular paradoxes that
such a man as Jesus, who incarnated essential goodness, who would not wish to
inflict the slightest hurt on any creature, who came here among men to be
appreciated, even revered, so that they might draw the return back-flow of
spiritual life-current to revive a materialistic world, met so much
insensitivity. So many saw nothing superior in him but denigrated him, attacked
him, vilified him, and sought his death.
76
It is utterly impossible to find in the first
drawings, carvings, or pictures of Christ any reference to his suffering on the
Cross.
77
The orthodox view of the Bible is untenable,
according to philosophic tradition. It is really a collection of books written
in different centuries by men on different levels of inspiration. It mixes
half-history with myth, and legend with allegory and poetry. The tribal memories
of the Hebrews are put on the same level - which is a mistake - as the inspired
revelations of their seers and the Mystery teachings they learned in Egypt and
Chaldea. The orthodox view of Jesus is equally dispelled by philosophic insight.
The man Jehoshua, who was the real figure behind the legendary one, lived a
hundred years before the supposed date. Although much of the teaching associated
with his name in the New Testament is actually his own, not much of the life
there given is actually historical. The narrative in its pages is partly an
allegory depicting a disciple's mystical journey ending in the crucifixion of
his ego and partly an excerpt from Jehoshua's biography. There was no violent
death, no physical crucifixion in this biography.
78
We need not torture our reason to accept these
parts of the New Testament which seem incredible. If we give some of them an
allegorical meaning, as being taken from the mythology of a mystery cult, and
reject the others as the results of deliberate tampering with the text, as
obvious interpolations, we shall be able to justify all the more our faith in
the credible parts. For with them is interwoven the genuine historical narrative
of the real life of the man Jesus. The result is a mixed composition, where the
Annunciation and Crucifixion are not to be taken literally, but Jesus' preaching
and his disciples' apostolate are. The biographic Jesus must be separated from
the symbolic Christ, for the one is an earthly figure and the other a mystical
concept.
79
Consider how vain, how puffed-up these mortals be
when they declare that nothing less than the One Infinite Power - the Absolute
Itself - deliberately incarnated as man to help them. Surely if it had such
intent it would act more in accord with its own laws of progressive development
and send here another mortal but a more advanced one. Such a man could be found
on a more advanced planet. And this is what happened. Jesus came here from a
higher planet. There was no need for God to intervene directly.
80
Benedict de Spinoza's mathematical mind led him to
put into apt mathematical symbol this same criticism: "The doctrine that God
took upon Himself human nature I have expressly said I do not understand. In
fact, to speak the truth, it seems to me no less absurd than would a statement
that a circle had taken upon itself the nature of a square."
81
There are a number of alleged portraits of Jesus,
some passed down traditionally and others made in our own time by psychic means.
They are not in agreement with each other. But this contradiction is resolved
when we understand that each is the fruit of the artist's own idea. They are
imaginative conceptions.
82
Jesus was not an ordained minister, yet his
preachments have outlived many centuries. He was only a layman, yet he brought
more reverential feeling for the higher power to more people than thousands of
clergymen combined.
83
Jesus said: "Except you eat the body of the Son of
Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you." In the Aramaic idiomatic and
colloquial language the phrase means: "endure suffering and work hard." Also,
"Eloï, Eloï, lämä säbächthänï," could not possibly mean, in the case of a man so
advanced as Jesus was, "My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken me?" In the
Aramaic common speech it becomes clear, for there it means, "My God, my God, for
this (destiny) I was preserved."
84
There has been much miscomprehension of Jesus'
proclamation that the kingdom of God was immanent. It did not refer to a future
event but to a present fact; it was not prophetic but Vedantic. The kingdom is
"at hand" always; immediacy is its correct attribute.
85
Not once in all his recorded sayings did Jesus
ever refer to, or use the word, Hell.
86
Jesus is the Greek transcription of the Hebrew
name Jehoshua. Christus is Latin, Khristos in the Greek, which is a title
meaning "anointed," as Buddha, meaning "enlightened," is a title, and Gautama
the name.
87
During the course of my studies I have been shown
three portraits of Jesus which seemed to be immeasurably more authentic than the
oversentimentalized, utterly unrealistic ones which the Western world
self-deceptively takes so seriously. Yet all three were sufficiently different
from each other for each to present a different aspect of his personality. The
first was a drawing quickly made by Jacques Romans, a clairvoyant friend who
died when he was nearly 100 years old. I do not know what became of this
portrait. The second was an oil painting by another clairvoyant, Boyin Ra, which
his widow showed me in their Swiss home. The third is a fresco in the Assembly
Hall where Canons meet in Chapter of Monastery of St. Mark, Florence, by the
Dominican monk and visionary Fra Angelico. In the drawing, the aspect shown was
that of a man in absorbed communion with his Father. In the canvas it was a man
confronting the world fully possessed by the strength of the Spirit. In the
fresco it is the Christ of the Crucifixion, extraordinarily sad - for the human
race. Thus the first typified Prayer in depth, the second, divine Power, and the
third, mysterious melancholy, Pity. Yet they were of a real man, not a
fanciful one.
88
In ancient Rome as in modern Europe, in Attica as
in America there were, and are, humanists who reject religion as such but
concede its usefulness in restraining the baser expressions of human character.
If they cannot denigrate Jesus, they deride his spiritual message. They may
accept him as a good man, as an ethical teacher, but not his revelation that God
is and that man may commune with Him.
89
Jesus went to the length of denouncing as
hypocrites those who were outwardly faithful in performing religious practices,
but who were secretly sinning in thought.
90
Christ's mission was addressed to the common man
with limited intellectual attainments. I have said so in my book A Search in
Secret Egypt. That is why he did not publicly teach the metaphysical truths.
91
James, the brother of Jesus and an Apostle, was a
vegetarian. But the theologians and historians ignore this fact which was
testified to by the Judeo-Christian Hegesippus, who lived in the century
following and had contact with the Palestinian circles of the Apostolic time.
Moreover Hegesippus asserts that James had been brought up in this way since
childhood. Does this imply that the family circle was vegetarian?(P)
92
The first need for Christian theology is to
separate the teaching of Jesus from that of the unfortunately canonized Paul,
who never even met him and who began to organize a Church, spread a doctrine,
and formulate an asceticism of his own. This gained power and prevailed far too
long, being the chief contribution to keeping people from the true Christianity.
93
If Paul had not busied himself with turning Jesus'
inspiring message "The Kingdom of Heaven is within you!" - meaning it is within
you NOW - into an ascetic message of long-drawn war against the carnal
body; if he had listened better and learned more from that flash which lighted
his road to Damascus, instead of returning to the bias and prejudice of his
innate nature, he might have given history a higher, less Judaic, version of
Christianity.
94
Some of the statements of Saint Paul are on a
religious level and are very questionable; others, on a mystical level, are
representative of his own but not of general experience; while still others, on
the philosophical level, as in his remark to the Greeks about the Unknown God,
are quite confused. But he was used to spread Christianity despite this, because
of his fervent missionary temperament; and so his preachments were mainly
effective and serviceable to the cause, even though they led in the end to a
vast organization which was never mentioned, desired, or suggested even once by
Jesus.
95
It must be said, and said quite plainly, that the
Western and Near Eastern worlds would have had a better history, and
Christianity would have had a stronger foundation, because truer, if Saint Paul
had never been converted but had remained a Jew. For the vision on the road to
Damascus, although a genuine one, was totally misinterpreted. It was a command
(to stop persecuting Christians) of a solely personal nature; but he went much
farther and not only began the construction of a new world-religion but shifted
its emphasis from where Jesus had put it (the kingdom of heaven within men) to
Jesus himself, from faith in the Christ-consciousness to faith in a crucified
corpse.(P)
96
The apostle Bartholomew preached in India - this
is stated by the Early Church Father Jerome, and by Eusebius in his
Ecclesiastical History. Others add that he also taught in Persia and
Egypt.
97
Quote from Saint Paul: "In Him we live and move
and have our being." In Mind we have God, man, and the universe. All are of
Mind, pure Being, pure Consciousness, so in Mind we humans live, move, and have
our being. Is not this a mentalistic statement equivalent to the religious
statement of Saint Paul? The fact that the saint arrives at it through his own
personal experience and that the mentalist arrives at it either through his own
deep reflection or personal revelatory experience does not alter the identity of
the basic idea.
98
Pantaenus, who went as a missionary to India in
the very early Christian times, was not an ordinary missionary: he was a
Gnostic, a Christian mystic.
99
When pure religion descends upon the earth and
makes its way among men, two things will happen. It will dissolve the false
belief of the populace that they already possess it, and it will receive the
opposition of religious institutions with pretensions to represent it. It was
Saint Paul who started Christianity on the road which turned it into
Churchianity. But he derived his Christian knowledge at second hand. He knew
less about the work which Jesus sought to do on this earth than about the work
which he himself sought to do. He is the true founder of the Christian Church,
its first great propagator, but he is not the truest interpreter of Jesus'
message. It is the Church's personal self-interest, however unconsciously
present, which has made the apostle Paul the most praised Christian teacher and
the most frequently mentioned one in all the sermons and writing of the clergy.
Never having met Jesus, he should not be blamed for never having fully
understood Jesus' teaching. The grave consequences of this misunderstanding
appeared later in the form of obstacles which interposed themselves between
Jesus and his true work, and which succeeded in diverting and distorting it.
They were organization, dogma, hierarchy, and literalness. Where Jesus tried to
create Christian individuals, Saint Paul tried to create Christian groups. This
opened the door to hypocrisy, externalism, materialism, ritualism, priestcraft,
persecution, and deterioration. The realizable kingdom of heaven within man had
to give way to an unrealizable kingdom of God on earth. The way back to true
religion must therefore lie through making a fresh start with new ideas and a
fresh approach through individual self-development.
100
Without Paul, Christianity could never have had
any future in Europe and would have remained and died in obscurity. Paul brought
it to Greece and Rome and put it into formulations that reached the non-Asiatic
mind.
101
That Saint Peter was the proper successor of
Christ, with all that this assertion entails for church and bishop, is at least
debatable.
102
Saint Paul had passed through the initiatory
revelation given by the Greek Mystery schools, and the results show in his
writings.
103
The Catholic Church is nearer to philosophy than
most Protestant sects. Its mystical meditations, ascetical disciplines,
metaphysical activity, and secret doctrine are some points of contact, despite
its ritualism and antimentalistic theology.
104
Reverend C.O. Rhodes: "Protestantism makes no
provision for the contemplatives and loses much as a result."
105
The contrast between the Catholic and Protestant
missionary in Asia is striking. The latter has divided his allegiance, part to
wife and family, part to mission. The former is free and fully devoted. The
Protestant carries the double burden - family welfare and mission welfare.
106
What is your attitude towards the Pope? This is
a question I am sometimes asked. My answer is: I have much respect for him as an
individual. I believe he is a man who lives in prayerful fellowship with
spiritual forces. I might even be willing to accept the claim that, historically
and legally, he is the successor of Saint Peter, but I have not studied this
point. Unfortunately, I am unable to respect His Holiness as an institution, for
I am unable to accept the claim that he is the Vicar of Christ on earth.
Christ's true church is not built with hands and his representative is to be
found by each man in his own heart alone. [We are uncertain to which pope this
para refers. - Ed.]
107
I am equally unable to accept the Roman Catholic
doctrine that true saints have existed only within the Roman church and that all
others are impostors, lunatics, or self-deceived.
108
Although I personally do not belong to this or
any religious organization, I sympathize with Quaker ideals, respect the Quaker
ethos, and admire the Quaker individual. But although the Quaker form of worship
is quite lofty from the religious standpoint, it is not lofty enough from the
mystical one. Its silent meditation is good, but its congregational meditation
cannot attain the profound depth possible in private and solitary meditation.
Moreover, its expression in uttered speech of what "the holy spirit moves us to
say," although helpful from a religious standpoint, is a hindrance from the
mystical one. For it disturbs the individual concentration.
A community which has always been told by its rules that the corporate form of worship is the primary and necessary one cannot leap suddenly into the blinding glare of full truth. It has to travel first from the quarter-truth to the half-truth, and so on. The Quaker method of group meditation is such an advance. It represents a loftier view of the meaning of worship because it shifts the emphasis from outward sacrament to inward holiness, from swallowed creed to quiet "waiting on the Lord." But from the true mystical standpoint, this group form is only a concession to traditional human habit and gregarious human weakness. Nevertheless, if anyone feels that membership of a religious body is essential to him, then I would recommend him to join the Society of Friends, or Quakers, as they are more popularly called. Not that I am satisfied with all their doctrines and methods, but that I consider there is more honesty and more safety amongst them, less exploitation and less insincerity than amongst any other religious denomination I know. That there is no paid class of professional clergy in the Society of Friends is undoubtedly one of the factors which contribute to this purity.
109
When Pope John announced his project for a
convocation, it was a history-making piece of news. His prophetic vision showed
him the need for his Church to rethink, renew, reactivate, and reinspire inside
itself, not only its own body but also outside in its relations with the other
Churches. The Vatican Councils which followed the Ecumenical movement are signs
of the times.
110
The Eastern Orthodox Church allows the lower
ranks of priest to marry, but not the higher ones. This is because the fathers
considered celibacy a prerequisite to enlightenment. "Acquire chastity,"
enjoined Saint Ephraim, the Syrian, "that the Holy Spirit may come to dwell in
thee." (The latter's writings are much read in the Mount Athos monasteries,
which helps to explain why women are forbidden to visit them.)
111
What the Methodist finds at his church through
group singing is not quite the same as what the Quaker finds at his
Meeting-house through group silence. The one method is purely emotional, the
other is passively intuitional. Both Methodist and Quaker are uplifted but there
is a difference in the quality of the result.
112
Luther carried out the work for which he
incarnated - the purifying of a once great religion from the selfishness and
sinfulness and commercialism which had made it a hindrance that spoiled its
helpfulness.
113
If men like Cardinal Newman, T.S. Eliot, G.K.
Chesterton, and Graham Greene turned away from Protestantism to Catholicism
despite their brilliant minds, it was not in quest of the truth but to escape
from truth. They were poets at heart and in the Holy Church found
satisfaction for their feelings. The beauty of its ritual, the mystery of its
dogma, and the music of its chants appealed where intellect resigned itself to
incapacity.
114
Whereas the Greek Orthodox Church gives its
liturgy the primary importance, the Protestant Churches give it to the Bible.
115
The younger Luther learned much from German
mystics, but the mature Luther rejected them. What he eagerly absorbed at one
time he completely discarded at another time. What was truth earlier, he called
"vain fantasy" later.
116
The Calvinist's stubborn ascription of salvation
wholly to grace is as extreme and one-sided as the yogi's ascription of it to
self-labour. It is not less extreme than the Calvinist view of fate, with its
iron hardness.
117
Jesus said that the kingdom of heaven is within
us: he did not say that the Church is within us.
118
Christianity in its beginnings was a mystical
religion. Its only hope of recovery from the ailments which afflict it now is to
return to the road it has deserted.
119
They need not look beyond Christ and
Christianity for these verities but they must learn to understand Christ and
interpret his message on a deeper level than the professional hierarchies have
been able to do.
120
The only way in which the individual can find
Jesus today is to seek for him within his own heart by the means of constant
prayer and study, together with the faithful carrying out of his teachings in
all daily life.
121
The initiated early Christians understood well
enough that the Christ was no other than their own higher self, the Overself.
This was true then; it is true now. The Christ-Babe must come to birth in a
man's own heart before he can become a real Christian. The true Christian, as
distinct from the merely nominal one, feels this force which enters his heart,
but it is something very different from, and much superior to, mere emotion.
122
The woman of deep Christian piety who has
striven to follow this path knows well that in the Christ-Self within her heart
she has her greatest treasure. Its Presence is the God she is to worship. She
will have learned in the past the mysterious value of tears - tears of spiritual
yearning, as well as tears of worldly grief.
123
The Church that Jesus actually founded was not
an ecclesiastical organization, complete with its credos, liturgies, rituals,
robed prelates, and imposing buildings of its own, but a deeper awareness of
being and a better outlook on life. It was therefore an unseen Church, laical
rather than clerical.
124
The message of Jesus, which was so largely a
call to repentant deeds and changed thoughts, is needed today by us all much
more than it was needed by the Jews of his time.
125
The noble life of Jesus inspires sensitive men
as few lives have done. The benign sayings of Jesus afford them matter for
heartfelt ethical reflection during the peace of eventide. The terrible
sufferings of Jesus have taught his weaker kindred how to bear their own
personal misfortunes with strength, courage, and dignity. The true followers of
Jesus have spent great sums and given much food, clothing, shelter, and
education through varied praiseworthy charitable enterprises.
126
There are several matters which are not dealt
with by the personal teaching of Jesus. Is it not proper therefore to regard
them within the general spirit of his teaching? And where there is only a single
uncertain mention of such a matter, is it not safer again to interpret it within
the light of that same internal spirit rather than within the letter of mere
external logic? If we do this, we will find it impossible to give to the word
"church" the meaning which the materialistic mind historically gives to it. The
true Christian church was an invisible one.
127
When religionists realize that Jesus' simple and
eloquent sayings are more important to them than Jesus' unhistorical and less
significant doings, and when they begin to look into the inward mystical
experience which found expression in those sayings, they and their cause will
gain much, while the dissensions and schisms, the rivalry and dispute among
their churches will grow less.
128
Is it not heresy to the orthodox to proclaim
that potentially every man can know, and unite with, the Christ-consciousness,
and thus in effect is the Christ-self?
129
If the teachings of Jesus, for example, were
correctly interpreted, if the teachings of the churches which use his name were
freed from the ignorant accretions and veiled materialisms which he never
taught, the Western people would then be so effectively helped by their religion
that it would undergo an intellectual rebirth.
130
If the Roman Catholic faith teaches that
Salvation is the highest and most desirable aim in human life, the Hindu faith
teaches that freedom from rebirth is such an aim.
131
Religion teaches mythology as historical fact.
The Hindu holy book Vishnu Purana tells of a king who massacred the male
children in his country in a vain search for the divine Krishna, whose fortunes,
it was predicted, would menace his own. The Jewish scriptural tale of the infant
Moses and the Egyptian scriptural tale of the infant Osiris escaping from
exactly the same danger are significant. We have here versions, different in
time and altered by time, of one and the same event, whose original is lost in
the prehistory of Central Asia. Or, alternatively, we have an equally ancient
myth whose inner meaning needs to be fathomed.
132
The Hindu religion does not have congregational
worship. Its temples are for the individual devotee. Its priests serve him
alone, not a group of devotees.
133
Coconut is a sacred fruit, used in many or most
Hindu religious ceremonies. It represents the human head, hence bloodless
sacrifice. It is believed to be the only fruit without seed.
134
The study of comparative religion shows that
Hinduism's "Divine Mother" is simply the Creative Energy of the universe. The
name and form are merely symbolic, but have been taught to the simple masses of
a pre-scientific age, being better within their grasp.
135
Sheikh Al-Alawi: "The acts of worship were
prescribed for the sake of establishing remembrance of God." Here a Sufi teacher
puts in a short pithy sentence the chief service of most religions.
136
Non-Islamic people react with horror and
contempt when they learn from history that those who rejected the Islamic
religion when proffered to them by invading armies were then given an ultimatum:
"Die by the sword or become a slave for life!" But the background to these
incidents needs to be seen. The Arabia of Muhammed's time was inhabited by
semi-savage tribes: Islam was originally an attempt to lift them forcibly to a
higher, more civilized life, and a higher view of religion. That Muhammed's
followers later tried to impose Islam on more developed peoples, especially
Christian and Hindu people, was wrong.
137
During the minutes of prayer, Muhammedans the
world over turn concentrically in the direction of Mecca. The physical unity
which they thus achieve is a fit emblem of the spiritual unity which all men
will one day achieve - for all must eventually turn toward the Overself.
138
Christian Europeans who came into contact with
the Saracens and learned some Sufi truths and practices started the Rosicrucian
movement. The rose was a Sufi metaphor for the mystic exercise (meditation in
some form). The Cross was added by these Europeans.
139
Jain meditation is for self-contemplation or for
purifying ideas and emotions or for loving and reverencing an ideal still beyond
us, an ideal embodied in some historical sage but which is realized for the time
being through mental union within oneself.
140
Christ came as an obscure prophet, teacher,
avatar (call him what you wish) and did not attain sufficient fame to be written
about in any of the contemporary Roman imperial histories. Yet this obscure
man's teachings became known throughout the world. And yet he was repulsed by
the Jews, who in turn were repulsed by the people with whom they lived. Why did
the Jews turn away from him? Was it not because of their failure to recognize
the stronger light which he had brought them? And was his failure not due to
their excessive nostalgia in looking back to the times when they were a free
nation? Was it not due to their excessive fidelity to their ancient religion, to
their lack of flexibility?
141
The synagogue at Nazareth which expelled Jesus
and the synagogue at Amsterdam which expelled Spinoza - are these not symbols of
the failure of official religion to raise itself above its own selfishness and
take up its true mission? Are they not reminders of its inner bankruptcy?
142
The Jews, whose original prophet-seers must have
comprehended the meaning of pure Spirit, who were forbidden to make any graven
images for themselves, have made several in the form of the spirit-suffocating
letter of their Torah, their Talmud, their Old Testament, their traditions and
customs. All this, intended to uplift and purify, not only failed to do so but
prevented them from recognizing Jesus for what he was.
143
An unpublished paper on the history and solution
of the Jewish problem by P.B. gives the spiritual meaning of the mission to
humanity of the Jewish people, their opportunities and failures in the past, why
they were persecuted, and the great opportunity which will come to them to close
their whole tragic history and enter a new, happy phase - if they will follow
the advice given to them. Had they accepted Jesus two thousand years ago as a
prophet from their own line, they would have saved themselves much misery. Now
it is a mockery that Jesus is not followed even by so-called Christian nations.
It is too late (and no longer timely) for the Jews to accept Jesus. Where, then,
are they to look? The problem is stated and a solution attempted in this paper.
This is the only one that would be successful as well as the only solution that
is divinely commanded. [To date, this paper has not been located. - Ed.]
144
Both Buddha and Solomon were not stupefied by
their royal luxury: each noted the sad side of life. "The heart of the wise is
in the house of mourning; but the heart of fools is in the house of mirth,"
bemoaned the Israelite.
145
It is interesting to note that the philosophic
ideas of the French eighteenth-century Enlightenment writers got their basic
thought from Spinoza's critiques of the Hebrew Bible, despite their personal
dislike of the Jews themselves. Voltaire was decidedly anti-Semitic.
146
YHWH, in Exodus 3, was the name given, to Moses,
by that Presence which spoke to him out of the bush, and its derivation followed
- the Hebrew root for being! That it became the narrowed concept of a
tribal anthropomorphic god - Jahweh - is the inevitable historical consequence;
that is what the tribe could take and be satisfied with.
147
Once I wandered into the prewar Ghetto of Venice
- a small and uninviting quarter where the Jews were formerly made to live by
law, and where a few still resided because they were too poor to live in a
better place. I thought of this dark race, its long and painful history, and the
words of Charles Lamb rose in my memory: "The Jew is a piece of stubborn
antiquity compared to which Stonehenge was in its nonage." I saw the Wandering
Jew shambling through the centuries. I pondered on his meaning. And these were
my thoughts:
They could not altogether escape their strange destiny, which took them out of their native land and forced them to wander though half the world. It was their own stubborn conservatism which brought them among strange peoples, still clutching tightly to their own worn-out creed and not as missionaries of Jesus' loftier development of it. Thus instead of bringing light as they might have done, had they responded to the sacred call, they brought merely physical goods, for their cosmopolitanism found its full scope in creating and financing the import and export trade of many countries.
In a curiously distorted and obviously inferior manner, the Jews have played a historic role which is an indirect reflection of the higher role they could have played as the first wholly Christian nation. They carried earthly goods to the different nations when they might have carried unearthly ideas.
The legendary story of the Wandering Jew has a profound esoteric significance. Even the Jewish claim of being a chosen race also possesses a similar significance, albeit it is one which the Jews themselves have failed to grasp. If they are no longer a chosen race, it is for them to reflect why this is so.
The more cultured among the early Christians understood that the Overself - whom they called Christ - was the real object of their worship, the ultimate goal of their mystical endeavour, and that the man Jesus was but its Voice - like those other voices with which the Word periodically breaks its silence for the guidance of bewildered mankind.