Of Anna Kingsford's writings, Blavatsky stated: 'The first and most important was The Perfect Way, or the Finding of
Christ, which gives the esoteric meaning of Christianity. It sweeps away
many of the difficulties that thoughtful readers of the Bible must
contend with in their endeavours to either understand or accept
literally the story of Jesus Christ as it is presented in the Gospels.' She
brings to an interestingly eclectic mix of Christian mysticism, Greek
Hermetism, Christian Alchemy and Kaballah a wider appreciation of
comparative religion, especially Hindu and Buddhist notions of karma and
reincarnation along with modern theosophical notions of spiritual
evolution. Although firmly rooted in a traditional Christian mysticism,
she embraces more open notions of perennialism and evolution.
THIS brings us to
speak of what the Atonement is, and of the sense in
which we are to understand it, in its fourfold interpretation. First,
let us remind the reader, the Cross
and the Crucified are symbols which
come down to us from prehistoric ages, and are to be found depicted on the
ruined monuments, temples, and sarcophagi of all nations, – Coptic, Ethiopian, Hindu, Mexican, Tartar.
In the rites of all these peoples, and especially in the ceremonials of initiation field in the Lodges of their Mysteries, the Cross had a prominent place. It
was traced on the forehead of the neophyte with water or oil, as now in Catholic Baptism and Confirmation;
it was broidered on the sacred vestments, and carried in the hand of the
officiating hierophant, as may be seen in all the Egyptian religious tablets. And this symbolism has been adopted by
and incorporated into the Christian theosophy, not, however, through a
tradition merely imitative, but because the Crucifixion is an essential element in the career of the
Christ. For, as says the Master, expounding the secret of Messiahship, “Ought not the Christ to
suffer these things, and so to enter into his glory?” Yes, for this Cross of Christ – the spiritual Phoebus,
– is made by the sun’s equinoctial
passage across the line of the Ecliptic, – a passage which points on
the one hand to the descent into Hades;
and on the other to the ascent into
the kingdom of Zeus the Father. It is the Tree of Life; the Mystery of
the Dual Nature, male and female; the Symbol of Humanity perfected, and of the Apotheosis of Suffering. It is traced by “our Lord the Sun” on
the plane of the heavens; it is represented by the magnetic and diamagnetic
forces of the earth; it is seen in the ice-crystal and in the snow-flake;
the human form itself is modeled upon its pattern; and all nature bears
throughout her manifold spheres the impress of this sign, at once the prophecy and the instrument of her
redemption.
21. Fourfold in meaning, having four
points, and making four angles, dividing the circle into four equal parts,
the cross portrays the perfect union,
balance, equality, and at-one-ment on all four planes, and in all four worlds – phenomenal, intellectual, psychic, and
celestial – of the Man and the Woman, the Spirit and the Bride. It is
supremely, transcendently, and excellently, the symbol of the Divine Marriage; that is, the Sign of the Son of Man IN HEAVEN. For
the Divine Marriage is consummated only when the Regenerate Man enters the
Kingdom of the Celestial, which is within. When the Without is as the
Within, and the Twain are as One in Christ Jesus.
22. Being thus the key
of all the worlds, from the outer to the inner, the Cross presents, as it were,
four wards or significations; and according to these, the mystery of the
Crucifixion bears relation: First, to the natural and actual sense, and
typifies the Crucifixion of the Man of
God by the world. Secondly, to the intellectual and philosophical
sense; and typifies the Crucifixion in man of the
lower nature. Thirdly,
to the personal and sacrificial sense, and symbolizes the Passion and Oblation of the Redeemer. Fourthly, to the
celestial and creative sense, and represents the Oblation of God for the Universe.
I
23. First in order,
from without inwards, the Crucifixion of
the Man of God implies that persistent attitude of scorn, distrust,
and menace with which the Ideal and Substantial is always met by the worldly
and superficial, and to the malignant expression of which ill-will the
Idealist is always exposed. We have noted that Isaias, rebuking the
materialists for their impure and cruel rites, addresses them as “rulers
of Sodom and people of Gomorrah.” So likewise, the Seer of the Apocalypse
speaks of the two divine Witnesses as slain “in the streets of the great
city, which is called spiritually Sodom and Egypt, where also the Lord was
crucified.” This city, then, is the world, the materializing, the idolatrous,
the blind, the sensual, the unreal; the house of bondage, out of which the
sons of God are called. And the world being all these, is cruel as hell,
and will always crucify the Christ and the Christ-Idea. For the world,
which walks in a vain shadow, can have no part in the kingdom of heaven;
the man who seeks the Within and the Beyond is to it a dotard, a fool, an
impostor, a blasphemer, or a madman, and according to the sense of its
verdict, it ridicules, maligns, despoils, punishes, or sequesters him. And thus
every great and merciful deed, every noble life, every grand and holy
name, is stamped with the hall-mark of the Cross. Scorn and contumely and
the cries of an angry crowd surround that altar on which the Son of God
makes oblation of himself; and cross after cross strews the long Via Dolorosa of the narrow path that
leadeth unto Life. For indeed the world is blind, and every
redemption must be purchased by blood.
II
24. Yes, by blood and
tears and suffering, and that not of the body only; for the Son of God, to attain that Sonship, must have first
crucified in himself the old Adam of the earth. This is the second meaning
of the Cross; it sets forth that interior
process of pain which precedes regeneration; that combat with and victory over the tempter, through which all the Christs alike have passed; the throes of travail which usher in
the New-Born. And the crucified, regenerate Man, having made
At-on-ment throughout his own fourfold nature, and with the Father through
Christ, bears about in himself the
“marks” of the Lord, – the five wounds of the five senses overcome, the
“stigmata” of the saints. This crucifixion
is the death of the body; the rending of the veil of the flesh; the uniting of the human will with the
Divine Will; or, as it is sometimes called, the Reconciliation – which is but another word for the At-one-ment.
It is the consummation of the prayer, “Let Thy Will be done on earth as it
is in Heaven;” let Thy will, O Father, be accomplished throughout the
terrene and astral, even as it is in the inmost adytum, that in all
the microcosmic system no other will be found than the Divine.
25. This, also, is the
secret of transmutation, – the changing of the water into wine, of Matter into Spirit, of man into God. For this blood of Christ and of the Covenant –
this wine within the holy Chalice, of
which all must drink who nevermore would thirst – is the Divine Life, the
vital, immortal principle, having neither beginning nor end, the perfect,
pure, and incorruptible Spirit, cleansing and making white the vesture
of the soul as no earthly purge can whiten; the gift of God through
Christ, and the heritage of the elect.
To live the Divine Life is to be partaker in the blood of Christ and to
drink of Christ’s cup. It is to know the love of Christ which “passeth
understanding,” the love which is Life, or God, and whose
characteristic symbol is the blood-red ray of the solar prism. By this mystical blood we are saved, –
this blood, which is no other than the secret of the Christs, whereby man
is transmuted from the material to the spiritual plane, the secret of
inward purification by means of Love. For this “blood,” which, throughout the
sacred writings is spoken of as the essential principle of the “Life,” is the spiritual Blood of the spiritual Life,
– Life in its highest, intensest, and most excellent sense, – not the mere
physical life understood by materialists, – but the very substantial Being, the inward Deity in man. And it is by
means of this Blood of Christ only – that is by means of Divine Love only –
that we can “come to the Father,” and inherit the kingdom of heaven. For,
when it is said that “the blood of Christ
cleanseth from all sin,” it is signified that sin is impossible to him
who is perfect in Love.
III
26. But the Christ is
not only the type of the sinless Man,
the hierarch of the mysteries; he is
also the Redeemer. Now,
therefore, we come to speak of the Vicarious and Redemptive office of the Divine Man, of his Passion, Sacrifice, and Oblation for
others. There is a true and there is a false rendening of this Mystery of
Redemption which is the central mystery of the Divine Life, the gold of
the target, the heart of Jesus, the bond of all grace, the very core and
focus and crown of Love. This third
aspect of the Cross is in itself two-fold, because Wisdom and Love, though
one in essence are twain in application, since Love cannot give without
receiving, nor receive without giving. We have, therefore, in this double
mystery both the oblation and lifting-up of the Christ in Man, and the Passion
and Sacrifice for others of the Man in whom Christ is manifest. For even as Christ is one in us are we one with Christ, because as
Christ loves and gives himself for us, we also, who are in Christ, give
ourselves for others.
27. But the notion
that man requires, and can be redeemed only by a personal Saviour in the
flesh, extraneous to himself, is an idolatrous travesty of the truth. For
that whereby a man is “saved” is his own re-birth and At-one-ment in a
sense transcending the phenomenal. And this process is altogether
interior to the man, and incapable of being performed from without or by
another; a process requiring to be enacted anew in each individual, and
impossible of fulfillment by proxy in the person of another. True, the new spiritual Man thus born of
Water and the Spirit, or of the Pure
Heart and the Divine Life; the Man making
oblation on the cross, overcoming Death and ascending to Heaven is named
Christ-Jesus, the Only Begotten, the Virgin-born, coming forth from God to
seek and to save the lost; but this is no other than the description
of the man himself after transmutation into the Divine Image. It is the picture of the regenerate man,
made “alive in Christ,” and “like unto him.” For the Christos or Anointed, the Chrestos or Best, are but titles
signifying Man Perfect; and the name of Jesus, at which every knee must bow, is the ancient and ever Divine Name of all the Sons of God – Iesous or Yesha, he who shall save, and
Issa the Illuminated, or Initiate of
Isis. For this name Isis,
originally Ish-Ish, was Egyptian for
Light-Light; that is, light
doubled, the known and the knowing made one, and reflecting each other. It is
the expression of the apostolic utterance, “Face to face, knowing as we are known, transformed into the image of His
glory.” Similarly our
affirmatives is and yes; for in both Issue
and lesous “all the promises of God are Yes,” because God is the
supreme Affirmative and Positive of the universe, enlightening every soul with
truth and life and power. God is the Sun of the soul, whereof the physical
sun is the hieroglyph, as the physical man is of the true eternal
spiritual Man.
28. The light is
positive, absolute, the sign of Being and of the everlasting “Yes;” and “the
children of the Light” are they who have the gnosis and
eternal Life thereby. But the negation of God is “Nay,” the Night, the Destroyer and the devil. The name
therefore of Antichrist is Denial, or Unbelief, the spirit
of Materialism and of Death.
And the children of darkness are they who have quenched in themselves
the divine Love, and “know not whither they go, because darkness hath
blinded their eyes.” Hence the Serpent of the Dust is spoken of as “the
Father of Lies,” that is, of negation; for the word “lie” means nothing else than
“denial.” “No denial is of the truth,” says St. John, “for this is Antichrist,
even he that denieth. Every spirit which annulleth Jesus (or the divine
Yes) is not of God. By this we know the spirit of Truth, and the spirit of
Error.”
(Anna Kingsford, The Perfect Way, Lecture 4, Part III, 20)
Part Two
(Anna Kingsford, The Perfect Way, Lecture 4, Part III, 20)
Part Two
Excuse me you freak I am a not believer and I am spiritual, I was born that way , I did not need to take part in some blood drinking ritual espoused by devious men , yet you refer to me as being materialistic and of darkness. Where did you get that information . I will be coming right back at you to tell you what you are
ReplyDeleteWhat spiritual root are you taking seems rather catholic to me.
ReplyDeleteA crock of shit you have written , evidently you get your information from the gospel . I will start there with materialism shall I . Oh and your bible is no truth let me know if you would like me to teach you about it you deluded moron .
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry that the text seems to have offended you lizh - it was written in 1882. It doesn't strictly rely on the Bible, but rather it has an eclectic, comparative approach from pre-christian and hermetic sources in order to try to posit essential, universal notions behind the Biblical texts, which is mainly considered symbolically.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this information! I've always been curious as to the symbolic meaning behind the different aspects of the Christian tradition.
ReplyDeleteThank you!! This information resonates in my spirit!!!
ReplyDelete