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The Creative Process In The Individual
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The Denouement Of The Creative Process
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THEN comes the question, What should logically be the dénouement of the progression we have been considering? Let us briefly
recapitulate the steps of the series. Universal Spirit by Self-contemplation evolves Universal Substance. From this it produces
cosmic creation as the expression of itself as functioning in Space and Time.
Then from this initial movement it proceeds to more highly specialized modes of Self-contemplation in a continually ascending
scale, for the simple reason that self-contemplation admits of no limits and therefore each stage of self-recognition cannot
he other than the starting-point for a still more advanced mode of self-contemplation, and so on ad infinitum.
Thus there is a continuous progress toward more and more highly specialized forms of life, implying greater liberty and wider
scope for enjoyment as the capacity of the individual life corresponds to a higher degree of the contemplation of Spirit;
and in this way evolution proceeds till it reaches a level where it becomes impossible to go any further except by the exercise
of conscious selection and initiative on the part of the individual, while at the same time conforming to the universal principles
of which evolution is the expression.
Now ask yourself in what way individual selection and initiative would be likely to act as expressing the Originating Spirit
itself? Given the knowledge on the part of the individual that he is able by his power of initiative and selection to draw
directly upon the All-originating Spirit of Life, what motive could he have for not doing so?
Therefore, granted such a perfect recognition, we should find the individual holding precisely the same place in regard to
his own individual world that the All-originating Spirit does to the cosmos; subject only to the same Law of Love, Beauty,
etc., which we found to be necessarily inherent in the Creative Spirit — a similarity which would entirely prevent the individual
from exercising his otherwise limitless powers in any sort of antagonism to the Spirit of the Great Whole.
At the same time the individual would be quite aware that he was not the Universal Spirit in propria persona, but that he was affording expression to it through his individuality. Now Expression is impossible except through Form,
and therefore form of some sort is a necessity of individuality. It is just here, then, that we find the importance of that
principle of Harmony with Environment of which I spoke earlier, the principle in accordance with which a person who had obtained
complete control of matter, if he wished to transport himself to some other planet, would appear there in perfect conformity
with all the laws of matter that obtained in that world; though, of course, not subject to any limitation of the Life Principle
in himself.
He would exhibit the laws of matter as rendered perfect by the Law of Originating Life. But if any one now living on this
earth were thus perfectly to realize the Law of Life he would be in precisely the same position here as our imaginary visitor
to another planet — in other words the dénouement of the Law of Life is not the putting off of the body, but its inclusion
as part of the conscious life of the Spirit.
This does not imply any difference in the molecular structure of the body from that of other men, for by the principle of
Harmony of which I have just spoken, it would be formed in strict accordance with the laws of matter on the particular planet;
though it would not be subject to the limitations resulting from the average man s non-recognition of the power of the Spirit.
The man who had thus fully entered into the Fifth Kingdom would recognize that, in its relation to the denser modes of matter
his body was of a similar dense mode. That would be its relation to external environment as seen by others. But since the
man now knew himself as not belonging to these denser modes of manifestation, but as an individualization of Primary Spirit,
he would see that relatively to himself all matter was Primary Substance, and that from this point of view any condensations
of that substance into atoms, molecules, tissues, and the like counted for nothing — for him the body would be simply Primary
Substance entirely responsive to his will. Yet his reverence for the Law of Harmony would prevent any disposition to play
psychic pranks with it, and he would use his power over the body only to meet actual requirements.
In this way, then, we are led to the conclusion that eternal life in an immortal physical body is the logical denouement of
our evolution; and if we reflect that, by the conditions of the case, the owners of such bodies could at will either transport
themselves to other worlds or put off the physical body altogether and remain in the purely subjective life while still retaining
the power to re-clothe themselves in flesh whenever they chose, we shall see that this denouement of evolution answers all
possible questions as to the increase of the race, the final destruction of the planet, and the like.
This, then, is the ultimate which we should keep in view; but the fact remains that, though there may be hidden ones who have
thus attained, the bulk of mankind have not, and that the common lot of humanity is to go through the change which we call
death. In broad philosophical terms death may be described as the withdrawal of the life into the subjective consciousness
to the total exclusion of the objective consciousness.
Then by the general law of the relation between subjective and objective mind, the subjective mind severed from its corresponding
objective mentality has no means of acquiring fresh impressions on its own account, and therefore can only ring the changes
on those impressions which it has brought with it from its past life.
But these may be of very various sorts, ranging from the lowest to the highest, from those most opposed to that ultimate destiny
of man which we have just been considering, to those which recognize his possibilities in a very large measure, needing little
more to bring about the full fruition of perfected life.
But however various may be their experiences, all who have passed through death must have this in common that they have lost
their physical instrument of objective perception and so have their mode of consciousness determined entirely by the dominant
mode of suggestion which they have brought over with them from the objective side of life.’
Of course if the objective mentality were also brought over this would give the individual the same power of initiative and
selection that he possesses while in the body, and, as we shall see later on, there are exceptional persons with whom this
is the case; but for the great majority the physical brain is a necessity for the working of the objective mentality, and
so when they are deprived of this instrument their life becomes purely subjective and is a sort of dream-life, only with a
vast difference between two classes of dreamers — those who dream as they must and those who dream as they will.
The former are those who have enslaved themselves in various ways to their lower mentality — some by bringing with them the
memory of crimes unpardoned, some by bringing with them the idea of a merely animal life, others less degraded, but still
in bondage to limited thought, bringing with them only the suggestion of a frivolous worldly life — in this way, by the natural
operation of the Law of Suggestion, these different classes, either through remorse, or unsatisfied desires, or sheer incapacity
to grasp higher principles, all remain earth-bound, suffering in exact correspondence with the nature of the suggestion they
have brought along with them.
The unchangeable Law is that the suggestion becomes the life; and this is equally true of suggestions of a happier sort. Those
who have brought over with them the great truth that conditions are the creations of thought, and who have accustomed themselves
while in objective life to dwell on good and beautiful ideas, are still able, by reason of being imbued with this suggestion,
to mold the conditions of their consciousness in the subjective world in accordance with the sort of ideas which have become
a second nature to them.
Within the limits of these ideas the dominant suggestion to these entities is that of a Law which confers Liberty, so by using
this Law of the constructive power of thought they can determine the conditions of their own consciousness; and thus instead
of being compelled to suffer the nightmare dreams of the other class, they can mold their dream according to their will.
We cannot conceive of such a life as theirs in the unseen as otherwise than happy, nevertheless its range is limited by the
range of the conceptions they have brought with them. These may be exceedingly beautiful and thoroughly true and logical as
far as they go; but they do not go the whole way, otherwise these spirits would not be in the category which we are considering
but would belong to that still higher class who fully realize the ultimate possibilities which the Law of the Expression of
Spirit provides.
The otherwise happy subjective life of these more enlightened souls has this radical defect that they have failed to bring
over with them that power of original selection and initiative without which further progress is impossible. I wish the student
to grasp this point very clearly, for it is of the utmost importance. Of course the basis of our further evolution is conformity
to the harmonious nature of the Originating Spirit; but upon this foundation we each have to build up the superstructure of
our own individuality, and every step of advance depends on our personal development of power to take that step.
This is what is meant by taking an initiative. It is making a New Departure, not merely recombining the old things into fresh
groupings still subject to the old laws, but introducing an entirely new element which will bring its own New Law along with
it.
Now if this is the true meaning of “initiative” then that is just the power which these otherwise happy souls do not possess.
For by the very conditions of the case they are living only in their subjective consciousness, and consequently are living
by the law of subjective mind; and one of the chief characteristics of subjective mind is its incapacity to reason inductively,
and therefore its inability to make the selection and take the initiative necessary to inaugurate a New Departure.
The well established facts of mental law show conclusively that subjective mind argues only deductively. It argues quite correctly
from any given premises, but it cannot take the initiative in selecting the premises — that is the province of inductive reasoning
which is essentially the function of the objective mind. But by the law of Auto-suggestion this discarnate individual has
brought over his premises with him, which premises are the sum-total of his inductions made during objective life, the conception
of things which he held at the time he passed over, for this constituted his idea of Truth.
Now he cannot add to these inductions, for he has parted with his instrument for inductive reasoning, and therefore his deductive
reasoning in the purely subjective state which he has now entered is necessarily limited to the consequences which may be
deducted from the premises which he has brought along with him.
In the case of the highly-developed individualities we are now considering the premises thus brought over are of a very far-reaching
and beautiful character, and consequently the range of their subjective life is correspondingly wide and beautiful; but, nevertheless,
it is subject to the radical defect that it is debarred from further progress for the simple reason that the individual has
not brought over with him the mental faculty which can impress his subjective entity with the requisite forward movement for
making a new departure into a New Order.
And moreover, the higher the subjective development with which the individual passed over the more likely he will be to realize
this defect. If during earth-life he had gained sufficient knowledge of these things he will carry with him the knowledge
that his discarnate existence is purely subjective; and therefore he will realize that, however he may be able to order the
pictures of his dream, yet it is still but a dream, and in common with all other dreams lacks the basis of solidity from which
to take really creative action.
He knows also that the condition of other discarnate individualities is similar to his own, and that consequently each one
must necessarily live in a world apart — a world of his own creation, because none of them possess the objective mentality
by which to direct their subjective currents so as to make them penetrate into the sphere of another subjective entity, which
is the modus operandi of telepathy.
Thus he is conscious of his own inability to hold intercourse with other personalities; for though he may for his own pleasure
create the semblance of them in his dream-life, yet he knows that these are creations of his own mind, and that while he appears
to be conversing with a friend amid the most lovely surroundings the friend himself may be having experiences of a very different
description.
I am, of course, speaking now of persons who have passed over in a very high state of development and with a very considerable,
though still imperfect, knowledge of the Law of their own being. Probably the majority take their dream-life for an external
reality; and, in any case, all who have passed over without carrying their objective mentality along with them must be shut
up in their individual subjective spheres and cease to function as centers of creative power so long as they do not emerge
from that state.
But the highly advanced individuals of whom I am now speaking have passed over with a true knowledge of the Law of the relation
between subjective and objective mind and have therefore brought with them a subjective knowledge of this truth; and therefore,
however otherwise in a certain sense happy, they must still be conscious of a fundamental limitation which prevents their
further advance.
And this consciousness can produce only one result, an ever-growing longing for the removal of this limitation — and this
represents the intense desire of the Spirit, as individualized in these souls, to attain to the conditions under which it
can freely exercise its creative power. Sub-consciously this is the desire of all souls, for it is that continual pressing
forward of the Spirit for manifestation out of which the whole Creative Process arises; and so it is that the great cry perpetually
ascends to God from all as yet undelivered souls, whether in or out of the body, for the deliverance which they knowingly
or unknowingly desire.
All this comes out of the well-ascertained facts of the law of relation between subjective and objective mind. Then comes
the question, Is there no way of getting out of this law?
The answer is that we can never get away from universal principles — but we can specialize them. We may take it as an axiom
that any law which appears to limit us contains in itself the principle by which that limitation can be overcome, just as
in the case of the flotation of iron. In this axiom, then, we shall find the clue which will bring us out of the labyrinth.
The same law which places various degrees of limitation upon the souls that have passed into the invisible can be so applied
as to set them free. We have seen that everything turns on the obligation of our subjective part to act within the limits
of the suggestion which has been most deeply impressed upon it. Then why not impress upon it the suggestion that in passing
over to the other side it has brought its objective mentality along with it?
If such a suggestion were effectively impressed upon our subjective mind, then by the fundamental law of our nature our subjective
mind would act in strict accordance with this suggestion, with the result that the objective mind would no longer be separated
from it, and that we should carry with us into the unseen our whole mentality, both subjective and objective, and so be able
to exercise our inductive powers of selection and initiative as well there as here.
Why not? The answer is that we cannot accept any suggestion unless we believe it to be true, and to believe it to be true
we must feel that we have a solid foundation for our belief. If, then, we can find a sufficient foundation for adequately
impressing this suggestion upon ourselves, then the principles of mental law assure us that we shall carry our objective faculty
of initiative and selection into the unseen.
Therefore our quest is to find this Foundation. Then, since we cannot accept as true what we believe to be contrary to the
ultimate law of the universe, if we are to find such a foundation at all it must be within that Law; and it is for this reason
that I have laid so much stress upon the Normal Standard of Human Individuality. When we are convinced that this ideal completeness
is quite normal, and is a spiritual fact, not dependent upon the body, but able to control the body, then we have got the
solid basis on which to carry our objective personality along with us into the unseen, and the well-established laws of our
mental constitution justify the belief that we can do so.
From these considerations it is obvious that those who thus pass over in possession of their complete mentality must be in
a very different position from those who pass into a condition of merely subjective life, for they have brought their powers
of selection and initiative with them, and can therefore employ their experiences in the unseen as a starting-point for still
further development. So, then, the question arises, What lines will this further development be likely to follow?
We are now considering the case of persons who have reached a very high degree of development; who have succeeded in so completely
uniting the subjective and objective portions of their spiritual being into a perfect whole that they can never again be severed;
and who are therefore able to function with their whole consciousness on the spiritual plane.
Such persons will doubtless be well aware that they have attained this degree of development by the Law of the Creative Process
working in terms of their own individuality, and so they would naturally always refer to the original Cosmic Creation as the
demonstration of the principle which they have to specialize for their own further evolution.
Then they would find that the principle involved is that of the manifestation of Spirit in Form; and they would further see
that this manifestation is not an illusion but a reality, for the simple reason that both mind and matter are equally projections
from the Great Originating Spirit. Both alike are thoughts of the Divine Mind, and it is impossible to conceive any greater
reality than the Divine Thought, or to get at any more substantial source of reality than that.
Even if we were to picture the Divine Mind as laughing at its productions as being mere illusions relatively to itself (which
I certainly do not), still the relation between the individual mind and material existence would be a reality for the individual,
on the simple mathematical ground that like signs multiplied together invariably produce a positive result, even though the
signs themselves be negative; so that, for us, at every stage of our existence substance must always be as much a reality
as mind.
Therefore the manifestation of Spirit in Form is the eternal principle of the Creative Process whether in the evolution of
a world-system or in that of an individual.
But when we realize that by the nature of the Creative Process substance must be an eternal verity we must not suppose that
this is true also of particular forms or of particular modes of matter. Substance is a necessity for the expression of Spirit,
but it does not follow that Spirit is tied down to any particular mode of expression. If you fold a piece of paper into the
form of a dart it will fly through the air by the law of the form which you have given it.
Again, if you take the same bit of paper and fold it into the shape of a boat it will float on water by the law of the new
form that you have given it. The thing formed will act in accordance with the form given it, and the same paper can be folded
into different forms; but if there were no paper you could put it into any shape at all. The dart and the boat are both real
so long as you retain the paper in either of those shapes; but this does not alter the fact that you can change the shapes,
though your power to do so depends on the existence of the paper.
This is a rough analogy of the relation between ultimate substance and particular forms, and shows us that neither substance
nor shape is an illusion; both are essential to the manifestation of Spirit, only by the nature of the Creative Process the
Spirit has power to determine what shape substance shall take at any particular time.
Accordingly we find the great Law that, as Spirit is the Alpha of the Creative Process, so solid material Form is its Omega;
in other words the Creative Series is incomplete until solid material form is reached. Anything short of this is a condition
of incompleteness, and therefore the enlightened souls who have passed over in possession of both sides of their mentality
will realize that their condition, however beatific, is still one of incompleteness; and that what is wanted for completion
is expression through a material body.
This, then, is the direction in which such souls would use their powers of initiative and selection as being the true line
of evolution—in a word they would realize that the principle of Creative Progression, when it reaches the level of fully developed
mental man, necessarily implies the Resurrection of the Body, and that anything short of this would be retrogression and not
progress.
At the same time persons who had passed ever with this knowledge would never suppose that Resurrection meant merely the resuscitation
of the old body under the old conditions; for they would see that the same inherent law which makes expression in concrete
substance the ultimate of the creative series also makes this ultimate form depend on the originating movement of the spirit
which produces it, and therefore that, although some concrete form is essential for complete manifestation, and is a substantial
reality so long as it is maintained, yet the maintaining of the particular form is entirely dependent on the action of the
spirit of which the form is the external clothing.
This resurrection body would therefore be no mere illusory spirit-shape, yet it would not be subject to the limitations of
matter as we now know it: it would be physical matter still, but entirely subject to the will of the indwelling spirit, which
would not regard the denser atomic relations of the body but only its absolute and essential nature as Primary Substance.
I want the student to grasp the idea that the same thing may be very different when looked at, so to say, from opposite ends
of the stick. What is solid molecular matter when viewed from the outside is plastic primary substance when viewed from the
inside. The relations of this new body to any stimulus proceeding from outside would be those of the external laws of Nature;
but its relation to the spiritual ego working from within would be that of a plastic substance to be molded at will.
The employment of such power would, however, at all times be based upon the reverent worship of the All-creating Spirit; and
it would therefore never be exercised otherwise than in accordance with the harmonious progress of the Creative Process. Proceeding
on these lines the spirit in the individual would stand in precisely the same relation to his body that the All-originating
Spirit does to the cosmos.
This, then, is the sort of body which the instructed would contemplate as that in which he was to attain resurrection. He
would regard it, not as an illusion, but as a great reality; while at the same time he would not need to trouble himself about
its particular form, for he would know that it would be the perfect expression of his own conception of himself. He would
know this because it is in accordance with the fundamental principle that external creation has its root in the Self-contemplation
of Spirit.
Those passing over with this knowledge would obviously be in a very different position from those who passed over with only
a subjective consciousness. They would bring with them powers of selection and initiative by which they could continue to
impress fresh and expanding conceptions upon their subjective mind, and so cause it to carry on its work as the seed-ground
of the whole individuality, instead of being shut up in itself as a mere circulus for the repetition of previously received
ideas; and so in their recognition of the principle of physical resurrection they would have a clear and definite line of
auto-suggestion.
And because this suggestion is derived from the undeniable facts of the whole cosmic creation, it is one which both subjective
and objective mind can accept as an established fact, and so the suggestion becomes effective. This suggestion, then, becomes
the self-contemplation of the individual spirit; and because it is in strict conformity with the generic principle of the
Original Creative Activity, of which the individual mind is itself a product, this becomes also the Self-contemplation of
the Originating Spirit as seeing itself reflected in the individual spirit; so that, by the basic law of the Creative Process,
this suggestion is bound sooner or later to work out into its corresponding fact, namely, the production of a material body
free from the power of death and from all those limitations which we now associate with our physical organism.
This, then, is the hope of those who pass over in recognition of the great truth. But how about those who have passed over
without that recognition? We have seen that their purely subjective condition precludes them from taking any initiative on
their own account, for that requires the presence of objective mind.
Their subjective mind, however, still retains its essential nature; that is, it is still susceptible to suggestion, and still
possesses its inherent creativeness in working out any suggestion that is sufficiently deeply implanted in it. Here, then,
opens up a vast field of activity for that other class who have passed over in possession of both sides of their mentality.
By means of their powers of initiative and selection they can on the principle of telepathy cause their own subjective mind
to penetrate the subjective spheres of those who do not possess those powers, and they can thus endeavor to impress upon them
the great truth of the physical ultimate of the Creative Process — the truth that any series which stops short of that ultimate
is incomplete, and, if insisted upon as being ultimate, must become self-destructive because in opposition to the inherent
working of the Universal Creative Spirit.
Then, as the perception of the true nature of the Creative Process dawned upon any subjective entity, it would by reason of
accepting this suggestion begin to develop an objective mentality, and so would gradually attain to the same status as those
who had passed over in full possession of all their mental powers.
But the more the objective mentality became developed in these discarnate personalities the more the need of a corresponding
physical instrument would assert itself, both from their intellectual perception of the original cosmic process, and also
from the inherent energy of the Spirit as centered in the ultimate ego of the individual. Not to seek material manifestation
would be the contrary of all we have traced out regarding the nature of the Creative Process; and hence the law of tendency
resulting from the conscious union of subjective and objective mind in the individual must necessarily be toward the production
of a physical form.
Only we must recollect, as I have already pointed out, that this concentration of these minds would be upon a principle and
not upon a particular bodily shape. The particular form they would be content to leave to the inherent self-expressiveness
of the Universal Spirit working through the particular ego, with the result that their expectation would be fixed upon a general
principle of physical Resurrection which would provide a form suited to be the material instrument of the highest ideal of
man as a spiritual and mental being.
Then, since the subjective mind is the automatic builder of the body, the result of the individual’s acceptance of the Resurrection
principle must be that this mental conception will eventually work out as a corresponding fact. Whether on this planet or
on some other, matters not, for, as we have already seen, the physical body evolved by a soul that is conscious of its unity
with the Universal Spirit is bound to be in conformity with the physical laws of any planet, though from the standpoint of
the conscious ego not limited by them.
In this way we may conceive that those who have passed over in possession of both sides of their spiritual nature would find
a glorious field of usefulness in the unseen in helping to emancipate those who had passed over in possession of their subjective
side only. But from our present analysis it will be seen that this can only be effected on the basis of a. recognition of
the principle of the Resurrection of the Body. Apart from the recognition of this principle the only possible conception which
the discarnate individual could form of himself would be that of a purely subjective being; and this carries with it all the
limitations of a subjective life unbalanced by an objective one; and so long as the principle of physical resurrection is
denied, so long the life must continue to be merely subjective and consequently unprogressive.
This view, it may be remarked, is not necessarily incompatible with the conception of reincarnation, on which theory the final
resurrection or transmutation of the body would terminate the series of successive lives and deaths, thus bringing the individual
out of the circle of generation, which is the circle of Karma. I may, perhaps, have the opportunity of considering this subject
on some future occasion.
But it may be asked why those who have realized this great principle sufficiently to carry their objective mentality into
the unseen state are liable to the change which we call death. The answer is that though they have realized the general principle
they have not yet divested themselves of certain conceptions by which they limit it, and consequently by the law of subjective
mind they carry those limitations into the working of the Resurrection principle itself.
They are limited by the race-belief that physical death is under all conditions a necessary law of Nature, or by the theological
belief that death is the will of God; so then the question is whether these beliefs are well founded. Of course appeal is
made to universal experience, but it does not follow that the universal experience of the past is hound to be the universal
experience of the future — the universal experience of the past was that no man had ever flown across the English Channel,
yet now it has been done.
What we have to do, therefore, is not to bother about past experience, but to examine the inherent nature of the Law of Life
and see whether it does not contain possibilities of further development. And the first step in this direction is to see whether
what we have hitherto considered limitations of the law are really integral parts of the law itself. The very statement of
this question shows the correct answer; for how can a force acting in one direction be an integral part of a force acting
in the opposite direction? How can the force which pulls a thing down be an integral part of the force which builds it up?
To suppose, therefore, that the limitations of the law are an integral portion of the law itself is a reductio ad absurdum.
For these reasons the argument from the past experience of the race counts for nothing; and when we examine the theological
argument we shall find that it is only the old argument from past experience in another dress. It is alleged that death is
the will of God. How do we know that it is the will of God? Because the facts prove it so, is the ultimate answer of all religious
systems with one exception; so here we are back again at the old race-experience as the criterion of truth.
Therefore the theological argument is nothing but the materialistic argument disguised. It is in our more or less conscious
acceptance of the materialistic argument, under any of its many disguises, that the limitation of life is to be found — not
in the Law of Life itself; and if we are to bring into manifestation the infinite possibilities latent in that Law it can
only be by looking steadily into the principle of the Law and resolutely denying everything that opposes it. The Principle
of Life must of necessity be Affirmative, and affirmative throughout, without any negative anywhere — if we once realize this
we shall be able to unmask the enemy and silence his guns.
Now to do this is precisely the one object of the Bible; and it does it in a thoroughly logical manner, always leading on
to the ultimate result by successive links of cause and effect. People will tell you that the Bible is their authority for
saying that Death is the will of God; but these are people who read it carelessly; and ultimately the only reason they can
give you for their manner of interpreting the Bible is that the facts prove their interpretation to be correct; so that in
the last resort you will always find you have got back to the old materialistic argument from past race-experience, which
logically proves nothing. These are good well-meaning people with a limited idea which they read into the Bible, and so limit
its promises by making physical death an essential preliminary to Resurrection.
They grasp, of course, the great central idea that Perfected Man possesses a joyous immortal Life permeating spirit, soul
and body; but they relegate it to some dim and distant future, entirely disconnected from the present law of our being, not
seeing that if we are to have eternal life it must necessarily be involved in some principle which is eternal, and therefore
existing, at any rate latently, at the present moment. Hence, though their fundamental principle is true, they are all the
time mentally limiting it, with the result that they themselves create the conditions they impose upon it, and consequently
the principle will work (as principles always do) in accordance with the conditions provided for its action.
Unless, therefore, this limiting belief is entirely eradicated, the individual, though realizing the fundamental principle
of Life, is bound to pass out of physical existence; but on the other hand, since he does take the recognition of this fundamental
principle with him, it is bound to bear fruit sooner or later in a joyous Resurrection, while the intermediate state can only
be a peaceful anticipation of that supreme event. This is the answer to the question why those who have realized the great
principle sufficiently to carry their objective mentality into the unseen world are still liable to physical death; and in
the last analysis it will be found to resolve itself into the remains of race-belief based upon past experience.
These are they who pass over in sure and certain hope of a glorious Resurrection — sure and certain because founded upon the
very Being of God Himself, that inherent Life of the All-creating Divine Spirit which is the perpetual interaction of the
Eternal Love and Beauty. They have grasped the Life-giving Truth, only they have postponed its operation, because they have
the fixed idea that its present fruition is an absolute impossibility.
But if we ask the reason for this idea it always comes back to the old materialistic argument from the experience of past
conditions, while the whole nature of advance is in the opening up of new conditions. And in this advance the Bible is the
pioneer book. Its whole purport is to tell us most emphatically that death is not the will of God.
In the story of Eden God is represented as warning man of the poisonous nature of the forbidden fruit, which is incompatible
with the idea of death as an essential feature of man’s nature. Then from the point where man has taken the poison all the
rest of the Bible is devoted to telling us how to get rid of it. Christ, it tells us. was manifested to bring Life and Immortality
to light — to abolish death — to destroy the works of the devil, that is the death-dealing power, for “he that hath the power
of death is the devil.” It is impossible to reconcile this life-giving conception of the Bible with the idea that death at
any stage or in any degree is the desire of God. Let us, therefore, start with the recognition that this negative force, whether
in its minor degrees as disease or in its culmination as death, is that which it is the will of God to abolish.
This also is logical; for if God be the Universal Spirit of Life finding manifestation in individual lives, how can the desire
of this Spirit be to act in opposition to its own manifestation? Therefore Scripture and common-sense alike assure us that
the will of God toward us is Life and not death.
We may therefore start on our quest for Life with the happy certainty that God is on our side. But people will meet us with
the objection that though God wills Life to us, He does not will it just yet, but only in some dim far-off future. How do
we know this? Certainly not from the Bible. In the Bible Jesus speaks of two classes of persons who believe on Him as the
Manifestation or Individualisation of the Spirit of Life.
He speaks of those who, having passed through death, still believe on Him, and says that these shall live — a future event.
And at the same time He speaks of those who are living and believe on Him, and says that they shall never die — thus contemplating
the entire elimination of the contingency of death (John xi. 25).
Again St. Paul expresses his wish not to be unclothed but to be clothed upon, which he certainly would not have done had he
considered the latter alternative a nonsensical fancy. And in another place he expressly states that we shall not all die,
but that some shall be transmuted into the Resurrection body without passing through physical death. And if we turn to the
Old Testament we find two instances in which this is said to have actually occurred, those of Enoch and Elijah.
And we may note in passing that the Bible draws our attention to certain facts about these two personages which are important
as striking at the root of the notion that austerities of some sort are necessary for the great attainment. Of Enoch we are
expressly told that he was the father of a large family, and of Elijah that he was a man of like nature with ourselves — thus
showing us what is wanted is not a shutting of ourselves off from ordinary human life but such a clear realization of the
Universal Principle, of which our personal life is the more or less conscious manifestation, that our commonest actions will
be hallowed by the Divine Presence; and so the grand dénouement will be only the natural result of our daily habit of walking
with God.
From the standpoint of the Bible, therefore, the attainment of physical regeneration without passing through death is not
an impossibility, nor is it necessarily relegated to some far off future. Whatever anyone else may say to the contrary, the
Bible contemplates such a dénouement of human evolution as a present possibility.
Then if we argue from the philosophical standpoint we arrive at precisely the same result. Past experience proves nothing,
and we must therefore make a fresh start by going back to the Original Creative action of the Spirit of Life itself. Then,
if we take this as our starting point, remembering that at the stage of this original movement there can be no intervention
by a second power, because there is none, why should we mentally impose any restriction upon the action of the Creative Power?
Certainly not by its own Law of Tendency, for that must always be toward fuller self-expression; and since this can only take
place through the individual, the desire of the Spirit must always be toward the increasing of the individual life. Nor yet
from anything in the created substance, for that would either be to suppose the Spirit creating something in limitation of
its own Self-expression, or else to suppose that the limiting substance was created by some other power working against the
Spirit; and as this would mean a Duality of powers we should not have reached the Originating Power at all, and so we might
put Spirit and Substance equally out of court as both being merely modes of secondary causation.
But if we see that the Universal Substance must be created by emanation from the Universal Spirit, then we see that no limitation
of Spirit by substance is possible. We may therefore feel assured that no limitation proceeds either from the will of the
Spirit or from the nature of Substance.
Where, then, does limitation come from? Limiting conditions are created by the same power which creates everything else, namely,
the Self-contemplation of Spirit. This is why it is so important to realize that the individual mind forms a center from which
the self-contemplating action of Spirit is specialized in terms of the individual’s own mode of thinking, and therefore so
long as the individual contemplates negative conditions as being of the essence of his own personality, he is in effect employing
the Creative Power of the Self-contemplation of Spirit invertedly, destructively instead of constructively. The Law of the
Self-contemplation of Spirit as the Creative Power is as true in the microcosm as in the macrocosm, and so the individual’s
contemplation of himself as subject to the law of sin and death keeps him subject to that law, while the opposite self-contemplation,
the contemplation of himself as rejoicing in the Life of the Spirit, the Perfect Law of Liberty, must necessarily produce
the opposite results.
Why, then, should not regeneration be accomplished here and now? I can see no reason against it, either Scriptural or philosophical,
except our own difficulty in getting rid of the race-traditions which are so deeply embedded in our subjective minds. To get
rid of these we require a firm basis on which to receive the opposite suggestion. We need to be convinced that our ideal of
a regenerated self is in accord with the Normal Standard of Humanity and is within the scope of the laws of the universe.
Now to make clear to us the infinitude of the truly Normal Standard of Humanity is the whole purpose of the Bible; and the
Manifestation of this Standard is set before us in the Central Personality of the Scriptures who is at once the Son of God
and the Son of Man — the Great Exception, if you will, to man as we know him now, but the Exception which proves the Rule.
In proportion as we begin to realize this we begin to introduce into our own life the action of that Personal Factor on which
all further development depends; and when our recognition is complete we shall find that we also are children of God.
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