From The Key to Theosophy, chapter 9:
ENQUIRER. But "M. A. Oxon" (pen-name of William Stainton Moses) is a
Spiritualist?
THEOSOPHIST. Quite so, and the only true Spiritualist
I know of, though we may still disagree with him on many a minor question.
Apart from this, no Spiritualist comes nearer to the occult truths than he
does.
From Spirit Teachings by William Stainton Moses, sections 2 & 3, 1883:
Capital Punishment is bad for the departed soul
Nothing is more dangerous than for souls to be rudely
severed from their bodily habitation, and to be launched into spirit-life, with
angry passions stirred, and revengeful feelings dominant. It is bad that any
should be dismissed from earth-life suddenly, and before the bond is naturally
severed. It is for this reason that all destruction of bodily flesh is foolish
and rude: rude, as betokening a barbarous ignorance of the conditions of life
and progress hereafter; foolish, as releasing an undeveloped angry spirit from
its trammels, and enduing it with extended capacity for mischief. You are blind
and ignorant in your dealings with those who have offended against your laws
and the regulations, moral and restrictive, by which you govern intercourse amongst
yourselves.
Grouping criminals together is harmful
You find a low and debased intelligence offending against morality,
or against constituted law. Straightway you take the readiest means of
aggravating his capacity for mischief. Instead of separating such one from evil
influence, removing him from association with sin, and isolating him under the
educating influence of true purity and spirituality, where the more refined
intelligences may gradually operate and counteract the baleful power of evil
and evil manifestations, you place him in the midst of evil associations, in
company with offenders like himself, where the very atmosphere is heavy with
evil, where the hordes of the undeveloped and unprogressed spirits most do
congregate, and where, both from human associates and spirit influence, the
whole tendency is evil.
Jails often make criminals worse
Vain and short-sighted and ignorant folly! Into your
dens of criminals we cannot enter. The missionary spirits pause and find their
mission vain. The good angels weep to find an associated band of evil--human
and spiritual--massed against them by man's ignorance and folly. What wonder
that you have gathered from such experience the conviction that a tendency to
open crime is seldom cured, seeing that you yourselves are the plainest
accomplices of the spirits who gloat over the fall of the offender. How many an
erring soul--erring through ignorance, as frequently as through choice -- has
come forth from your jails hardened and attended by evil guides you know not,
and can never know! But were you to pursue an enlightened plan with your
offenders, you would find a perceptible gain, and confer blessing incalculable
on the misguided and vicious.
More effort should be spent on educational rehabilition
You should teach your criminals; you should punish
them, as they will be punished here, by showing them how they hurt themselves
by their sin, and how they retard their future progress. You should place them
where advanced and earnest spirits among you may lead them to unlearn their
sin, and to drink in wisdom: where the Bands of the Blessed may aid their
efforts, and the spirits of the higher spheres may shed on them their benign
and elevating influence.
Vindictive punishment only breeds rage and hate
But you horde together your dangerous spirits. You
shut them up, and confine them as those who are beyond hope. You punish them
vindictively, cruelly, foolishly: and the man who has been the victim of your
ignorant treatment pursues his course foolish, suicidal sin, until in the end
you add to the list of your foolish deeds this last and worst of all, that you
cut him off, debased, degraded, sensual, ignorant, mad with rage and hate,
thirsting for vengeance on his fellows: you remove from him the great bar on
his passions, and send him into spirit-life to work out without hindrance the
devilish suggestions of his inflamed passions.
Blind! Blind! You know not what you do. You are your
own worst enemies, the truest friends of those who fight against God, and us,
and you.
Modern incarceral system is blind and ignorant
Ignorant no less than blind! For you spend vast
trouble to aid your foes. You cut from a spirit its bodily life. You punish
vengefully the erring. You falsely arrogate to yourselves the right law divine
to shed human blood. You err, and know not that the spirits you so hurt shall
in their turn avenge themselves upon you.
Compassionate punishment is better than harsh punishment
You have yet to learn the earliest
principles of that Divine tenderness and pity which labours ever through us to
rescue the debased spirit, to raise it from the depths of sin and passion, and
to elevate it to purity and progress in goodness. You know naught of God when
you do such deeds. You have framed for yourselves a God whose acts accord with
your own instincts. You have fabled that He sits on high, careless of His
creatures, and jealous only of His own power and honour. You have fabricated a
monster who delights to harm, and kill, and torture: a God who rejoices in
inflicting punishment bitter, unending, unmitigable. You have imagined such a
God, and have put into His mouth words which He never knew, and laws which His
loving heart would disown.
God--our God Good, Loving, Tender, Pitiful--delighting
in punishing with cruel hand His ignorantly-erring sons! Base fable! Base and
foolish fancy, produced of man's cruel heart, of man's rude and undeveloped
mind. There is no such God! There is none. He has no place with us: none, save
in man's degraded mind.
Great Father! Reveal Thyself to these blind wanderers,
and teach them of Thyself. Tell them that they dream bad dreams of Thee, that
they know Thee not, nor can know till they unlearn their ignorant conceptions
of Thy Nature and Thy Love.
Yes, friend, your jails and your legalised murder, the
whole tenor of your dealings with criminals, are based on error and ignorance. (2)
Remorse and sorrow
Punishment is ever the immediate consequence of sin;
it is of its essence, not arbitrarily meted out, but the inevitable result of
the violation of law. The consequences of such transgression cannot be
altogether averted, though they may be palliated by remorse, the effect of
which is to breed a loathing for sin and a desire for good. This is the first
step, the retracing of false steps, the undoing of error, and by consequence
the creation in the spirit of another longing. The spiritual atmosphere is
changed, and into it good angels enter readily and aid the striving soul. It is
isolated from evil agencies. Remorse and sorrow are fostered. The spirit
becomes gentle and tender, amenable to influences of good. The hard, cold,
repellent tone is gone, and the soul progresses. So the results of former sin
are purged away, and the length and bitterness of punishment alleviated. This
is true for all time. It was on this principle that
we told you of the folly which dictates your dealings with the transgressors of
your laws. Were we to deal with the offenders so, there would be no
restoration, and the spheres of the depraved would be crowded with lost and
ruined souls. But God is wiser, and we are His ministers. (3)
Esoteric aspects of mental illness
For
instance, you legislate for the masses, but you deal only with the offender.
Your legislation must be punitive, but it should be remedial too. Those whom
you think insane you shut up fast lest they should injure others. A few years
ago, and you tortured them, and filled your madhouses with many whose only
crime it was to differ from the foolish notions of their fellows, or to be--as
many were, and are, whom you have thought mad--recipients of undeveloped spirit
influence. This you will one day know to your sorrow--that to leave the beaten
track is not always evidence of a wandering mind; and to be the vehicle of
spirit-teaching is not proof of a mind unhinged. From many the power of
proclaiming their mission has been taken away, and it has been falsely said
that we have filled the asylums, and driven our mediums to madness, because
blind ignorant men have chosen to attribute insanity to all who have ventured
to proclaim their connection with us and our teaching. They have decided,
forsooth, that to be in communion with the world of spirit is evidence of
madness; therefore, all who claim to be are mad, and consequently must be shut
up within the madhouse. And because by lying statements they have succeeded in
affixing the stigma, and in incarcerating the medium, they further charge on us
the sin they have invented of driving our mediums to madness. (3)
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