The word "believe"is opposed to the word "know." Belief is based upon assumptions, or incomplete
proofs, where trust is the primary foundation for the belief, not facts. To know relies upon facts, which are based
upon a scientific investigation into the subject under question.
In the verses above no proof has been offered by Jesus, he merely asks us to believe that what he shows
after appearing out of thin air is proof. If Jesus can appear out of thin air, all he has proven is that he can even appear
as an elephant, or anything else he wishes. Jesus knew that himself, as he was an occult scientist, which is why he left
the hint "believe."
We will look next at the hint that Max, the reborn apostle Paul, left for the reader
to use to help them investigate the Bible. I have included more than just the hint "believe" so that the reader might consider
that Max is actually trying to tell more truths, without spilling the beans. Max even leaves the hint that should
we understand what is implied here that: The roses may bloom on our cross. Having the roses bloom on our cross is
what each aspiring occult student hopes to accomplish.
The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception
or
Mystic Christianity
An Elementary Treatise Upon
Man's Past Evolution, Present Constitution
and Future Development
By
Max Heindel
CHAPTER IV
REBIRTH AND THE LAW OF CONSEQUENCE
Only three theories worthy of note have ever been brought forward to solve the riddle of Life and Death.
In the previous chapter we have, to some extent, explained one of these three theories--that of Rebirth,
together with it companion law, the law of Consequence. It may not be out of place to compare the theory of Rebirth with the
other two theories advanced, with a view to ascertaining their relative foundation in nature. To the occultist there can be
no question. He does not say that he "believes" in it any more than we need to say that we "believe" as to the blooming of
the rose or the flowing of the river, or the operation of any of the visible workings of the material world, which are continually
going on before our eyes. We do not say of these things that we "believe;" we say that we "know," because we see them. So
the occult scientist can say "I know" in regard to Rebirth, the law of Consequence and their corollaries. He sees the Ego
and can trace its path after it has passed out of the dense body at death until it has reappeared on earth through a new birth.
Therefore to him no "belief" is necessary. For the satisfaction of others, however, it may be well to examine these three
theories of life and death in order to arrive at an intelligent conclusion.
Any great law of nature must necessarily be in harmony with all her other laws. Therefore it may be very
helpful to the inquirer to examine these theories in their relation to what are admitted by all parties to be "known laws
of nature," as observed in that part of our universe with which we are more familiar. To this end we will first state the
three theories:
(1) The Materialistic Theory holds that life is a journey from the womb to the tomb; that mind is the
result of certain correlations of matter; than man is the highest intelligence in the Cosmos; and, that his intelligence perishes
when the body disintegrates at death.
(2) The Theory of Theology asserts that at each birth a newly-created soul enters
the arena of life fresh from the hand of God, passing from an invisible state through the gate of birth into visible existence;
that at the end of one short span of life in the material world it passes out through the gate of death into the invisible
beyond, whence it returns no more; that its happiness or misery there is determined for all eternity by its actions during
the infinitesimal period intervening between birth and death.
(3) The Theory of Rebirth teaches that each soul is an integral
part of God, enfolding all divine possibilities as the seed enfolds the plant; that by means of repeated existences in an
earthly body of gradually improving quality, the latent possibilities are slowly developed into dynamic powers; that none
are lost by this process, but that all mankind will ultimately attain the goal of perfection and reunion with God.
The
first of these theories is monistic. It seeks to explain all facts of existence as processes within the material world. The
two other theories agree in being dualistic, that is, they ascribe some of the facts and phases of existence to a superphysical,
invisible state, but they differ widely on other points.
Bringing the materialistic theory into comparison with the known laws of the universe, we find that the
continuity of force is as well established as the continuity of matter and both are beyond the need of elucidation. We also
know that matter and force are inseparable in the Physical World. This is contrary to the materialistic theory, which holds
that mind perishes at death. When nothing can be destroyed, mind must be included. Moreover we know that mind is superior
to matter, for it molds the face, so that it becomes a reflection or mirror of the mind. We have discovered that the particles
of our bodies are constantly changing; that at least once in seven years there is a change in every atom of matter composing
them. If the materialistic theory were true, the consciousness ought also to undergo an entire change, with no memory of that
which preceded, so that at no time could man remember any event more than seven years. We know that is not the case. We remember
the events of our childhood. Many of the most trivial incidents though forgotten in ordinary consciousness, have been distinctly
recalled in a swift vision of the whole life by drowning persons, who have related the experience after resuscitation. Similar
experiences in states of trance are also common. Materialism is unable to account for these phases of sub- and superconsciousness.
It ignores them. At the present stage of scientific investigation, where leading scientists have established beyond a doubt
the existence of these phenomena, the policy of ignoring them is a serious defect in a theory claiming to solve the greatest
problem of life--Life itself.
We may therefore safely pass from the materialistic theory as being inadequate
to solve the mystery of life and death and turn to a consideration of the next theory.
One of the greatest objections to the orthodox theological doctrine, as it is expounded, is its entire
and confessed inadequacy. Of the myriads of souls which have been created and have inhabited this Globe since the beginning
of existence, even if that beginning dates back no further than six thousand years, the insignificant number of only "one
hundred and forty and four thousand" are to be saved! The rest are to be tortured forever and ever! The devil gets the best
of it all the time. One cannot help saying with Buddha, "If God permits such misery to exist He cannot be good, and if He
is powerless to prevent it, He cannot be God."
Nothing in nature is analogous to such a method of creation in order that destruction may follow. It is
represented that God desires ALL should be saved and is averse to the destruction of any, having for their salvation "given
His only Son," and yet this "glorious plan of salvation" fails to save!
If a trans-Atlantic liner with two thousand souls on board sent a wireless message that she was sinking
just off Sandy Hook, would it be regarded as a "glorious plan of salvation" if a fast motor-boat capable of rescuing only
two or three people, were sent to her aid? Certainly not! It would more likely be denounced as a "plan of destruction" if
adequate means were not provided for the saving of at least majority of those in danger.
But the theologians' plan of salvation is vastly worse than this, because two or three of two thousand
is an immensely greater proportion than the orthodox theological plan of saving only 144,000 out of all the myriads of souls
created. We may safely reject this theory also, as being untrue, because unreasonable. If God were all-wise He would have
evolved a more efficacious plan. So He has, and the above is only the theory of the theologian. The teaching of the Bible
is very different, as will appear later.
We turn now to consider the doctrine of Rebirth, which postulates a slow process of development, carried
on with unwavering persistence through repeated embodiments in forms of increasing efficiency whereby all are, in time, brought
to a height of spiritual splendor at present inconceivable to us. There is nothing unreasonable nor difficult to accept in
such a theory. As we look about us we find everywhere in nature this striving for perfection in a slow, persistent manner.
We find no sudden process of creation or destruction, such as the theologian postulates, but we do find "Evolution."
Evolution is "the history of the progression of the Spirit in Time." Everywhere, as we see about us
the varied phenomena in the universe, we realize that the path of evolution is a spiral. Each loop of the spiral is a cycle.
Each cycle merges into the next, as the loops of the spiral are continuous, each cycle being the improved product of those
preceding it and the creator of those more developed states which succeed it.
A straight line is but the extension of a point. It occupies but one dimension in space. The theory of the
materialist and that of the theologian would be analogous to this line. The materialist makes the line of life start at birth,
and to be consistent, the death hour must terminate it. The theologian commences his line with the creation of the soul just
previous to birth. After death the soul lives on, it fate irretrievably determined by the deeds of a few short years. There
is no coming back to correct mistakes. The line runs straight on, implying a modicum of experience and no elevation for the
soul after death.
Natural progression does not follow a straight line such as these two theories imply; nor even a circular
path, for that would imply a never-ending round of the same experiences and the use of only two dimensions in space. All things
move in progressive cycles and in order to take full advantages of all the opportunities for advancement offered by our three-dimensional
universe, it is necessary that the evolving life should take the three-dimensional path--the spiral--which goes ever onward
and upward.
Whether we look at the modest little plant in our garden, or go to the redwood district of California and
examine one of the giant Sequoias with its thirty-foot diameter, it is always the same--every branch, twig or leaf will be
found growing in either a single or a double spiral, or in opposite pairs, each balancing either, analogous to ebb and flow,
day and night, life and death and other alternating activities in nature.
Examine the vaulted arch of the sky and observe the fiery nebulae or the path of the Solar-Systems--everywhere
the spiral meets the eye. In the spring the Earth discards its white blanket and emerges from its period of rest its winter
sleep. All activities are exerted to bring forth new life everywhere. Time passes. The corn and the grape are ripened and
harvested. Again the busy summer fades into the silence and inactivity of the winter. Again the snowy coverlet enwraps the
Earth. But her sleep is not forever; she will wake again to the song of the new spring, which will mark for her a little further
progress along the pathway of time.
So with the Sun. He rises in the morning of each day, but each morning he is further along on his journey
through the year.
Everywhere the spiral--Onward, Upward, Forever!
Is it possible that this law, so universal in all
other realms, should be inoperative in the life of man? Shall the earth wake each year from its winter sleep; shall the tree
and the flower live again and man die? It cannot be! The same law that wakes the life in the plant to new growth will wake
the human being to new experience, to further progress toward the goal of perfection. Therefore the theory of Rebirth, which
teaches repeated embodiment in gradually improving vehicles, is in perfect accord with evolution and the phenomena of nature,
which the other two theories are not.
Regarding life from an ethical viewpoint, we find that the law of Rebirth coupled with the companion law
of Consequence, is the only theory that will satisfy a sense of justice, in harmony with the facts of life as we see them
about us.
It is not easy for the logical mind to understand how a "just and loving" God can require the same virtues
from the milliards whom He has been "pleased to place in differing circumstances" according to no apparent rule nor system,
but willy-nilly, according to His own capricious mood. One lives in luxury; the other on "kicks and crusts." One has a moral
education and an atmosphere of high ideals; the other is placed in squalid surroundings and taught to lie and steal and that
the more he does of both, the more of a success he is. It is just to require the same of both? Is it right to reward one for
living a good life when he was placed in an environment that made it extremely difficult for him to go astray, or to punish
the other, who was handicapped to such an extent that he never had an idea of what constitutes true morality. Surely not!
Is it not more logical to think that we may have misinterpreted the Bible than to impute to God such a monstrous plan and
method of procedure?
It is useless to say that we must not inquire into the mysteries of God; that they are past our finding
out. The inequalities of life can be satisfactorily explained by the twin laws of Rebirth and Consequence and made to harmonize
with the conception of a just and loving God, as taught by Christ Himself.
Moreover, by means of these twin laws a way to emancipation from present undesirable position or environment
is shown, together with the means of attaining to any degree of development, no matter how imperfect we may be now.
What we are, what we have, all our good qualities are the result of our own actions in the past. What we
lack in physical, moral, or mental excellence may yet be ours in the future.
Exactly as we cannot do otherwise than take up our lives each morning where we laid them down the preceding
night, so by our work in previous lives have we made the conditions under which we now live and labor, and are at present
creating the conditions of our future lives. Instead of bemoaning the lack of this or that faculty which we covet, we must
set to work to acquire it.
If one child plays beautifully on a musical instrument, with hardly an effort at learning, while another,
despite persistent effort, is a poor player in comparison, it merely shows that one expended the effort in a previous life
and is easily regaining a former proficiency, while the efforts of the other have been started only in the present life, and
in consequence we see the uphill work. But, if the latter persist, he may, even in the present life, become superior to the
former unless the former constantly improves.
That we do not remember the effort made in acquiring a faculty by hard work is immaterial, it does not alter
the fact that the faculty remains with us.
Genius is the hall-mark of the advanced soul, which by hard work in many previous lives has developed itself
in some way beyond the normal achievements of the race. It reveals a glimpse of the degree of attainment which will be the
common possession of the coming Race. It cannot be accounted for by heredity, which applies only in part to the dense body
and not to qualities of the soul. If genius could be accounted for by heredity, why is there not a long line of mechanical
ancestry previous to Thomas Edison, each more capable than his predecessor? Why does not genius propagate itself? Why is not
Siegfried the son, greater than Richard Wagner, the father?
In cases where the expression of genius depends upon the possession of specially constructed organs, requiring
ages of development, the Ego naturally is reborn in a family the Egos of which have, for generations, labored to build a similar
organism. That is why twenty-nine musicians of more or less genius were born in the Bach family during a period of two hundred
and fifty years. That genius is an expression of the soul and not of the body is shown by the fact that it did not gradually
improve and reach efflorescence in the person of John Sebastian Bach, but that the proficiency which reached its highest expression
in him towered high above ancestors and descendants alike.
The body is simply an instrument, the work it yields
being dependent upon the Ego which guides it, as the quality of the melody is dependent upon the musician's skill, aided by
the timbre of the instrument. A good musician cannot fully express himself on a poor instrument, and even upon the same instrument,
all musicians do not and cannot play alike. Because an Ego seeks rebirth as the son of a great musician it does not necessarily
follow that he must be a still greater genius, as would be the case if the physical heredity were a fact and genius were not
a soul-quality.
The "Law of Attraction" accounts in quite as satisfactory manner for the facts we ascribe to heredity. We
know that people of like tastes will seek another. If we know that a friend is in a certain city, but are ignorant of his
address, we will naturally be governed by the law of association in our efforts to find him. If he is a musician, he will
most likely be found where musicians are wont to assemble; if he is a student inquiry will be made at public libraries, reading-rooms
and book stores, or if he is a sporting man we would seek him at race tracks, pool-rooms or saloons. It is not probable that
the musician or the student would frequent the latter places and it is safe to say that our search for the sporting man would
not be successful if we sought him in a library or at a classical concert.
Similarly, the Ego ordinarily gravitates to the most congenial associations. It is constrained to do so
by one of the twin forces of the Desire World--the force of Attraction.
The objection may be urged that there are people of entirely opposite tastes, or bitter enemies even,
in the same family, and if the law of Association governed why should they be attracted thereto?
The explanation
of such cases is that during the Ego's earth lives many relations have been established with various people. These relations
were pleasant or otherwise, involving on one hand obligations which were not liquidated at the time; or on the other involving
the infliction of an injury and a feeling of very strong hate between the injured and his enemy. The law of Consequence requires
an exact adjustment of the score. Death does not "pay it all" any more than moving to another city will liquidate a monetary
debt. The time comes when the two enemies will meet again. The old hate has brought them together in the same family, because
it is the purpose of God that all shall love one another; therefore hate must be transformed into love and though, perchance,
they may spend many lives "fighting it out," they will at some time learn the lesson and become friends and mutual benefactors
instead of enemies. In such cases the Interest these people had in one another set in action the force of Attraction, and
that brought them together. Had they simply been mutually Indifferent they could not have become associated. (End Quote)