The Passing-- And Life Afterward
by
Max Heindel
[1865-1919]
THE ROSICRUCIAN FELLOWSHIP MT. ECCLESIA P.O. BOX
713 OCEANSIDE, CALIFORNIA, 92054, USA
One of the glories of the Christian
religion is its promise of eternal life. For those whose inquiring minds
seek beyond a blind faith in this promise, Esoteric Christianity offers
the comfort of logical and satisfying details concerning the Spirit's
activities after the physical body is discarded.
Most people have an instinctive interest
in what happens after death of the physical body, though ideas about it
vary infinitely. Unfortunately, even many professed Christians are quite
fearful about death and look forward to it with dread. This is a great
mistake and a hindrance to the individual, for his fearsome thoughts
affect detrimentally the value to him of what actually does take place.
That there IS a definite, wonderful life
for the Spirit after it is released from its physical body is no longer a
matter of blind faith. There are many people who have become sufficiently
clairvoyant to observe conditions on the other side of the "veil" and thus
to resolve any doubt previously held about this vital manner. As a matter
of fact, humanity in general is slowly developing etheric vision, so that
in the approaching Aquarian Age knowledge concerning conditions in the
land of the living dead will be as available as it is now concerning
foreign countries here on Earth.
Life on earth is only one phase of a
recurring evolutionary cycle which we all undergo, experiencing and
learning in our physical bodies on Earth, then leaving the physical plane
to assimilate the essence of what we have learned, rebuild our bodies,
rest, and return to Earth to repeat the cycle. The work done by man in the
higher worlds is many-sided, and in a sense more far-reaching than his
work on Earth. His life there is not in the least an inactive, dreamy, or
illusory existence. It is a time of the greatest and most important
activity in preparing for the next life, as sleep is an active preparation
for the work of the next day.
Among those who have developed their
clairvoyant faculties in a positive manner, i.e., under control of their
will, and can observe accurately what goes on in the invisible worlds, was
Max Heindel, an Initiate of the Rosicrucian Order, and founder of The
Rosicrucian Fellowship. In his book, THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION, he
describes in some detail what happens at the time of passing and afterward
between Earth lives in the higher worlds. Most of the following is taken
verbatim from this most enlightening volume.
Man, the individualized, indwelling
Spirit, is a complex being. He possesses not only a dense, physical body,
which he uses here in this world to fetch and carry, and which many think
of as the whole man, but also a vital body made of ether, which permeates
the visible body and is the instrument for specializing the energy of the
Sun. In addition, he possesses a desire body, his emotional nature, which
pervades both the dense and vital bodies, and extends about sixteen inches
outside the visible body. Then there is the mind, which is a mirror,
reflecting the outer world and enabling the Spirit or Ego to transmit its
commands as thought and word, and to compel action.
During life on Earth man builds and
sows, until the moment of death arrives. Then the seed-time and the
periods of growth and ripening are past. The harvest time has come, when
the skeleton specter of Death arrives with his scythe and hour-glass. That
is an apt symbol. The skeleton symbolizes the relatively permanent part of
the body. The scythe represents the fact that this permanent part, which
is about to be harvested by the Spirit, is the fruitage of the life now
drawing to a close. The hour-glass in his hand indicates that the hour
does not strike until the full course has been run in harmony with
unvarying laws.
When that moment arrives a separation of
the vehicles takes place. As his life in the Physical World is ended for
the time being, it is not necessary for man to retain the dense body. The
vital body, also belonging to the Physical World, is withdrawn by way of
the head, leaving the dense body inanimate.
The higher vehicles--vital body, desire
body, and mind--are seen (by the clairvoyant) to leave the dense body with
a spiral movement, taking with them the SOUL of one dense atom--not the
atom itself, but the FORCES that played through it. The results of the
experiences passed through in the dense body during the life just ended
have been impressed upon this particular atom. While all the other atoms
of the dense body have been renewed from time to time, this permanent atom
has remained. It has remained stable, not only through one life, but it
has been a part of every dense body ever used by that particular Ego. It
is withdrawn at death only to reawaken at the dawn of another physical
life, to serve again as the nucleus around which is built the new dense
body to be used by the same Ego. It is therefore called the "seed- atom."
During life the seed-atom is situated in the left ventricle of the heart,
near the apex. At death it rises to the brain by way of the pneumogastric
nerve, leaving the dense body, together with the higher vehicles, by way
of the sutures between the parietal and occipital bones (the Sagittal
suture).
When the higher vehicles have left the
dense body they are still connected with it by a slender, glistening,
silvery cord, shaped much like two figure sixes reversed, one upright and
one horizontally placed, the two connected at the extremities of the
hooks.
"Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or
the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the foundation, or
the wheel broken at the cistern. Then shall the dust return to the earth
as it was; and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it." (Eccles.
12:6-7.) (See Diagram below as shown in THE ROSICRUCIAN COSMO-CONCEPTION).
DIAGRAM
NO. 5 1/2: The Silver Cord
One end is fastened to the heart by
means of the seed-atom, and it is the rupture of the seed-atom which
causes the heart to stop. The cord itself is not snapped until the
panorama of the past life, contained in the vital body, has been reviewed.
Care should be taken, however, not to
cremate or embalm the body until at least three days after death, for
while the vital body is with the higher vehicles, and they are still
connected with the dense body by means of the silver cord, any post-mortem
examination or other injury to the dense body will be felt, in a measure,
by the man. Cremation should be particularly avoided in the first three
days after death, because it tends to disintegrate the vital body, which
should be kept intact until the panorama of the past life has been etched
into the desire body.
The silver cord snaps at the point where
the sixes unite, half remaining with the dense body and the other half
with the higher vehicles. From the time the cord snaps the dense body is
quite dead.
When the silver cord is loosened in the
heart, and man has been released from his dense body, a moment of the
highest importance comes to the Ego. It cannot be too seriously impressed
upon the relatives of a dying person that it is a great crime against the
departing Spirit to give expression to loud grief and lamentation, for it
is just then engaged in a matter of supreme importance, and a great deal
of the value of the past life depends upon how much attention the Spirit
can give to this matter. This will be made clearer when we come to the
description of man's life in the Desire World.
It is also a crime against the dying to
administer stimulants which have the effect of forcing the higher vehicles
back into the dense body with a jerk, thus imparting a great shock to the
man. It is no torture to pass out, but it is torture to be dragged back to
endure further suffering. Some who have passed out have told investigators
that they had, in that way, been kept dying for hours and had prayed that
their relatives would cease their mistaken kindness and let them die.
THE LIFE PANORAMA: When the Ego is freed
from the dense body, which was the heaviest clog upon his spiritual power
(like a heavy mitten upon the hand of a musician), his spiritual power
comes back is some measure, and he is able to read the pictures in the
negative pole of the reflecting ether of his vital body, which is the seat
of the subconscious memory.
The whole of his past life passes before
his sight like a panorama, the events being presented IN REVERSE ORDER.
The incidents of the days immediately preceding death come first and so on
back through manhood or womanhood to youth, childhood, and infancy.
Everything is remembered.
The man stands as a spectator before
this panorama of his past life. he sees the pictures as they pass, and
they impress themselves upon his higher vehicles, but he has no feeling
about them at this time. That is reserved until the time when he enters
the Desire World, which is the world of feeling and emotion. At present he
is only in the Etheric Region of the Physical World.
This panorama lasts from a few hours to
several days, depending upon the length of time the man could keep awake,
if necessary. Some people can keep awake, if necessary. Some people can
keep awake only twelve hours, or even less; others can do so, upon
occasion, for a number of days, but as long as the man can remain awake,
this panorama lasts.
This feature of life after death is
similar to that which takes place when one is drowning or falling from a
height. In such cases the vital body also leaves the dense body and the
man sees his life in a flash, because he loses consciousness at once. Of
course the silver cord is not broken, or there could be no resuscitation.
When the endurance of the vital body has
reached its limit, it collapses. During physical life, when the Ego
controls its vehicles, this collapses terminates the waking hours; after
death the collapse of the vital body terminates the panorama and forces
the man to withdraw into the Desire World. The silver cord breaks at the
point where the "sixes" unite (see Diagram 5 1/2), and the same division
is made as during sleep, but with this important difference, that though
the vital body returns to the dense body, it no longer interpenetrates it,
but simply hovers over it. It remains floating over the grave, decaying
synchronously with the dense vehicle. Hence, to the trained clairvoyant, a
graveyard is a nauseating sight, and if only more people could see it as
he does, little argument would be necessary to induce them to change from
the present unsanitary method of cremation, which restores the elements to
their primordial condition without the objectionable features incident to
the process of slow decay.
In leaving the vital body the process is
much the same as when the dense body is discarded. The life forces of one
atom (of the vital body) are taken, to be used as a nucleus for the vital
body of a future embodiment. Thus, upon his entrance into the Desire World
the man has the seed-atoms of the dense and vital bodies, in addition to
the desire body and the mind.
PURGATORY: If the dying man could leave
all his desires behind, the desire body would very quickly fall away from
him, leaving him free to proceed into the heaven world, but that is not
generally the case. Most people, especially if they die in the prime of
life, have many ties and much interest in life on Earth. They have not
altered their desires because they have lost their physical bodies. In
fact, often their desires are augmented by a very intense longing to
return. This acts in such a manner as to bind them to the Desire World in
a very unpleasant way, although unfortunately, they do not realize it. On
the other hand, old and decrepit persons and those who are weakened by
long illness and are tired of life, pass on very quickly.
The matter may be illustrated by the
ease with which the seed falls out of the ripe fruit, no particle of the
flesh clinging to it, while in the unripe fruit the seed clings to the
flesh with the greatest tenacity. Thus it is especially hard for people to
die who are taken out of their bodies by "accident" while at the height of
their physical health and strength, engaged in numerous ways in the
activities of physical life; held by the ties of wife, family, relatives,
friends, pursuits of business and pleasure.
As long as the man entertains the
desires connected with Earth life he must stay in his desire body, and as
the progress of the individual requires that he pass on to higher regions,
the existence in the Desire World must necessarily become purgative,
tending to purify him form his binding desires. How this is done is best
seen by taking some radical instances.
The miser who loved his gold in Earth
life loves it just as dearly after death; but in the first place he cannot
acquire any more, because he has no longer a dense body wherewith to grasp
it and worst of all, he cannot even keep what he hoarded during life. He
will, perhaps, go and sit by his safe and watch the cherished gold or
bonds; but the heirs appear and with, it may be, a stinging jeer as the
"stingy old fool" (whom they do not see, but who both sees and hears
them), will open his safe, and though he may throw himself over his gold
to protect it, they will put their hands through him, neither knowing nor
caring that he is there, and will then proceed to spend his hoard, while
he suffers in sorrow and impotent rage.
He will suffer keenly, his sufferings
all the more terrible on account of being entirely mental, because the
dense body dulls even suffering to some extent. In the Desire World,
however, these sufferings have full sway and the man suffers until he
learns that gold may be a curse. Thus he gradually becomes contented with
his lot and at last is freed from his desire body and is ready to go on.
It possible, of course, to avoid this
problem in the after-life by disposing of material possessions while yet
incarnate on Earth. If we use judgment, when we see that we have lived our
lives to the end of usefulness, we may say: Here are things that I have no
more use for, and I know I am getting towards the end; where can I do the
most good with them, who will enjoy them most, or whom can I help to
establish in business so he can do something for himself?
The same thing is true with regard to
the affections; we should hold ourselves in check so that we do not love
anybody with an inordinate love-- such love as that which makes idols of
others and puts them before everything else. If we thus get ourselves free
from all earthly ties so we are ready to go, then we cannot be kept
earthbound.
The drunkard is another case in point.
He is just as fond of intoxicants after death as before. It is not the
dense body that craves drink. The dense body is made sick by alcohol and
would rather be without it. It vainly protests in different ways, but the
desire body of the drunkard craves the drink and forces the dense body to
take it, that the desire body may have the sensation of pleasure resulting
from the increased vibration. That desire remains after the death of the
dense body, but the drunkard has in his desire body neither mouth to drink
nor stomach to contain physical liquor. He may and does get into saloons,
where he interpolates his body into the bodies of the drinkers to get a
little of their vibrations by induction, but that is too weak to give him
much satisfaction. He may and also does sometimes get inside a whiskey
cask, but that is of no avail either, for there are in the cask no such
fumes as are generated in the digestive organs of a tippler. It has no
effect upon him and he is like a man in an open boat on the ocean, "Water,
water everywhere, but not a drop to drink;" consequently, he suffers
intensely. In time, however, he learns the uselessness of longing for
drink, which he cannot obtain. As with so many of our desires in the Earth
life, all desires in the Desire World die for want of opportunity to
gratify them. When the drunkard has been purged, he is ready, so far as
this habit is concerned, to leave this state of "Purgatory" and ascend
into the heaven world.
Thus we see that it is not an avenging
Deity that makes Purgatory of Hell for us, but our own individual evil
habits and acts. According to the intensity of our desires will be the
time and suffering entailed in their expurgation. In the cases mentioned
it would have been no suffering to the drunkard to lose his worldly
possessions. If he had any, he did not cling to them. Neither would it
have caused the miser any pain to have been deprived of intoxicants. It is
safe to say that he would not have cared if there were not a drop of
liquor in the world. But he did care about his gold, and the drunkard
cared about his drink, so the unerring law gave to each that which was
needed to purge him of his unhallowed desires and evil habits.
This is the law that is symbolized in
the scythe of the reaper, Death; the law that says "whatsoever a man
soweth, that shall he also reap." It is the Law of Cause and Effect, which
rules all things in the three worlds, in every realm of Nature--physical,
moral, and mental. Everywhere it works inexorably, adjusting all things,
restoring the equilibrium wherever even the slightest action has brought
about a disturbance, as all action must. The result may be manifest
immediately or it may be delayed for years or for lives, but sometime,
somewhere, just and equal retribution will be made. The student should
particularly note that its work is absolutely impersonal. There is in the
universe neither reward nor punishment. All is the result of invariable
law. This is the Law of Consequence.
In the Desire World it operates in
purging man of the baser desires and the correction of the weakness and
vices which hinder his progress, by making him suffer in the manner best
adapted to that purpose. If he has made others suffer, or has dealt
unjustly with them, he will be made to suffer in that identical way. Be it
noted, however, that if a person has been subject to vices, or repented
and, as far as possible, made right the wrong done, such repentance,
reform, ands restitution, have purged him of those special vices and evil
acts. The equilibrium has been restored and the lesson learned during that
embodiment, and therefore will not be a cause of suffering after death.
A word must be said here about the
suicide, who tries to get away from life only to find that he is as much
alive as ever. His is the most pitiable plight. He is able to watch those
whom he has, perhaps, disgraced by his act, and worst of all, he has an
unspeakable feeling of being "hollowed out." The part in the ovoid aura
where the dense body used to be is empty, and although the desire body has
taken the form of the discarded dense body, it feels like an empty shell,
because the creative archetype of the body in the Region of Concrete
Thought persists as an empty mold, so to speak, as long as the dense body
should properly have lived. The archetype--the "model" of each Ego's dense
body, around which the body takes shape--is made of mind-stuff and set to
vibrating for a previously determined period of time. When a person meets
a natural death, even in the prime of life, the activity of the archetype
ceases, and the desire body adjusts itself so as to occupy the whole of
the form. In the case of the suicide, however, that awful feeling of
"emptiness" remains until the time comes when, in the natural course of
events, his death would have occurred. The impression of this particularly
unpleasant experience remains with the Ego, and is instrumental in
preventing him from falling prey to the temptation of suicide in future
lives.
In the Desire World life is lived about
three times as rapidly as in the Physical World. A man who has lived to be
fifty years of age in the Physical World would live through the same life
events in the Desire World in about sixteen years. This is, of course,
only a general gauge. There are persons who remain in the Desire World
much longer than their term of physical life. Others again, who have led
lives with few gross desires, pass through in a much shorter period, but
the measure given above is very nearly correct for the average man of the
present day.
It will be remembered that as the man
leaves the dense body at death, his past life passes before him in
pictures; but at that time he has no feeling concerning them.
During his life in the Desire World also
these life pictures roll backward, as before; but now the man has all the
feeling it is possible for him to have as, one by one, the scenes pass
before him. Every incident in his past life is now lived over again. When
he comes to a point where he has injured someone, he himself feels the
pain as the injured person felt it. He lives through all the sorrow and
suffering he has caused to others and learns just how painful is the hurt
and how hard to bear is the sorrow he has caused. In addition there is the
fact already mentioned before that the suffering is much keener because he
has no dense body to dull the pain. Perhaps that is why the speed of life
there is tripled--that the suffering may lose in duration what it gains in
sharpness. Nature's measures are wonderfully just and true.
Nature, which is God in manifestation,
always aims at the conservation of energy, attaining the greatest results
with the least expenditure of force and the least waste of energy. If we
study the effect of change in the Physical World, we shall learn something
of its consequence in the realm above us. A person who is here suffering
acutely for a short time usually feels pain very intensely; whereas those
who suffer for years in succession, though the pain which is inflicted
upon them may be as severe, do not seem to feel the suffering in the same
measure. They have, as it were, grown used thereto, and their frame has in
a certain sense become emaciated and adjusted to pain; hence suffering is
not felt as keenly as by the person in the first case.
It is similar in the purgatorial
existence. When a person has been very hard and harsh in life, when he has
thought nothing of the feelings of others, when he has inflicted severe
pain here, there, and everywhere on whatever occasion offered, we shall
find that his suffering in Purgatory will be very severe, intensified of
course by the fact that the purgatorial experience is shorter than the
life lived upon Earth; but the pain is intensified in proportion. Now,
therefore, it is evident that if his experience were continuous, if the
pain engendered by one act were followed immediately by the next, much of
the effect of the suffering would be lost upon the Spirit because it would
not feel its full intensity. Therefore, the experiences, as it were, come
to him in waves so that there is a period of respite after each period of
suffering in order that the full intensity of the next may be felt.
The motive in this is for a greater
good, for Nature, or God, never seeks to revenge or avenge any wrong, but
only to teach those who permit themselves to do wrong not to repeat the
act by giving the wrong doer exactly pain for pain. The tendency in a
future life is to cause him to respect the feelings of others and so be
merciful to all the world. Thus the very highest intensity in pain is
necessary for the conservation of energy, and to make him good and pure
sooner than would be the case if the pain were continuous and the
suffering correspondingly lessened.
Another characteristic peculiar to this
phase of post-mortem existence is intimately connected with the fact that
distance is almost annihilated in the Desire World. When a man dies, he at
once seems to swell out in his vital body; he appears to himself to grow
into immense proportions. This feeling is due to the fact, not that the
body really grows, but that the perceptive faculties receive so many
impressions from various sources, all seeming to be close at hand. The
same is true of the desire body. The man seems to be present with all the
people with whom on Earth he had relations of a nature which require
correction. If he has injured one man in San Francisco and another in New
York, he will feel as if part of him were in each place. This gives him a
peculiar feeling of being cut to pieces.
The student will now understand the
importance of the panorama of the past life during the purgative existence
where this panorama is realized in definite feelings. If it lasted long
and the man was undisturbed, the full, deep, clear impression etched into
the desire body would make life in the Desire World more vivid and
conscious and the purgation more thorough than if, because of distress at
the loud outbursts of grief on the part of his relatives, at the death bed
and during the three-day period previously mentioned, the man had only a
vague impression of his past life. The Spirit which has etched a deep,
clear record into its desire body will realize the mistakes of the past
life so much more clearly and definitely than if the pictures were blurred
on account of the individual's attention being riveted by the suffering
and grief around him. His feeling concerning the things which cause his
present suffering in the Desire World will be much more definite if they
are drawn from a distinct panoramic impression than if the duration of the
process were short.
This sharp, clear-cut feeling is of
immense value in future lives. It stamps upon the seed-atom of the desire
body an ineffaceable impression of itself. THE EXPERIENCES WILL BE
FORGOTTEN IN SUCCEEDING LIVES, BUT THE FEELING REMAINS. When opportunities
occur to repeat the error in later lives, this feeling will speak to us
clearly and unmistakably. It is the "still, small voice" which warns us,
though we do not know why; but the clearer and more definite the panoramas
of past lives have been, the oftener, and clearer shall we hear this
voice. Thus we see how important it is that we leave the passing Spirit in
absolute quietness after death. By so ding we help it to reap the greatest
possible benefit from the life just ended and to avoid perpetuating the
same mistakes in future lives, while our selfish, hysterical lamentations
may deprive it of much of the value of the life it has just concluded.
The mission of Purgatory is to eradicate
the injurious habits by making their gratification impossible. The
individual suffers exactly as he has made others suffer through his
dishonesty, cruelty, intolerance, or what not. Because of this suffering
he learns to act kindly, honestly, and with forbearance toward others in
the future. Thus, in consequence of this beneficent state, man learns
virtue and right action. When he is reborn he is free from evil habits, at
least every evil act committed is one of free will. The tendencies to
repeat the evil of past lives remains, for we must learn to do right
consciously and of our own will. Upon occasion these tendencies tempt us,
thereby affording us an opportunity of ranging ourselves on the side of
mercy and virtue as against vice and cruelty. But to indicate right action
and to help us resist the snares and wiles of temptation, we have the
feeling resulting from the expurgation of evil habits and the expiation of
wrong acts of past lives. If we heed that feeling and abstain from the
particular evil involved, the temptation will cease. We have freed
ourselves from it for all times. If we yield we shall experience keener
suffering than before until at last we have learned to live by the Golden
Rule, because the way of the transgressor is hard. Even then we have not
reached the ultimate. To do good to others because we want them to do good
to us is essentially selfish. In time we must learn to do good regardless
of how we are treated by others; as Christ Jesus said, we must love even
our enemies.
There is an inestimable benefit in
knowing about the method and object of this purgation, because we are thus
enabled to forestall it by living our Purgatory here and now day by day,
thus advancing much faster than would otherwise be possible. The exercise
of Retrospection is given in the latter part of THE ROSICRUCIAN
COSMO-CONCEPTION, the object of which is purification as an aid to the
development of spiritual sight. It consists of thinking over the happening
of the day after retiring at night. We review each incident of the day, in
reverse order, taking particular note of the day, in reverse order, taking
particular note of the moral aspect, considering whether we acted rightly
or wrongly in each particular case regarding actions, mental attitude, and
habits. By thus judging ourselves day by day, endeavoring to correct
mistakes and wrong actions, we shall materially shorten or perhaps even
eliminate the necessity for Purgatory and be able to pass to the First
Heaven directly after death. If in this manner we consciously overcome our
weaknesses, we also make a very material advance in the school of
evolution. Even if we fail to correct our actions, we derive an immense
benefit from judging ourselves, thereby generating aspirations toward
good, which in time will surely bear fruit in right action.
In reviewing the day's happenings and
blaming ourselves for wrong, we should not forget to approve IMPERSONALLY
of the good we have done and determine to do still better. In this way we
enhance the good by approval as much as we abjure the evil by blame.
Repentance is also a powerful factor in
shortening the purgatorial existence, for Nature never wastes effort in
useless processes. When we realize the wrong of certain habits or acts in
our past life, and determine to eradicate the habit and to redress the
wrong committed, we are expunging the pictures of them from the
sub-conscious memory and they will not be there to judge us after death.
Even though we are not able to make restitution for a wrong, the sincerity
of our regret will suffice. Nature does not aim to "get even," or to take
revenge. Recompense to our victim may be given in other ways.
Much progress ordinarily reserved for
future lives will be made by the man who thus takes time by the forelock,
judging himself and eradicating vice by reforming his character. This
practice is earnestly recommended.
Egos dwelling in the Desire World find
it possible to mold desire-stuff by thought, in any manner desired. For
instance, they can form whatever articles of clothing they might wish.
They usually think of themselves as being dressed in the conventional garb
of the country in which they lived prior to their passing into the Desire
World, and therefore they appear so clothed without any particular effort
of thought. But when they desire to obtain something new or an unusual
article of clothing, naturally they have to use their will power to bring
that thing into existence; and such an article of clothing will last as
long as the person thinks of himself as being clad in that apparel.
This amenability of desire-stuff to the
molding power of thought is also used in other directions. Generally
speaking, when a person leaves the present world in consequence of an
accident, he thinks of himself as being disfigured by that accident in a
certain manner, perhaps minus a leg or arm or with a hole in the head.
This does not inconvenience him at all; he can move about there just as
easily without arms or legs as with them, but it shows the tendency of
thought to shape the desire body. At the beginning of World War I, when
great numbers of soldiers passed over into the Desire World with lesions
of the most horrible nature, the Elder Brothers of the Rosicrucian Order
and their pupils taught these men that by merely holding the thought that
they were sound of limb and body, they would at once be healed of their
disfiguring wounds. This they immediately did. Now all newcomers, when
they are able to understand matters over there, are at once healed of
their wounds and amputations in this manner, so that to look at them
nobody would think they has passed over in consequence of an accident in
the Physical World.
Another evidence of the readiness with
which desire-stuff is molded by thought is where many people on Earth
think along similar lines. In such cases their thoughts mass themselves
and form one grand whole.
Thus, in the lower regions of the Desire
World, the thoughts of people who believe in a fiery, furnace-like Hell
make of the desire-stuff there such a place of torture. There we may see
devils with horns, hoofs, and tails, prodding the unhappy sinners with
pitchforks, and often when people pass out at death, after having lived in
that belief, they are in a sad state of fear on beholding this place which
they have helped to create. There is also in the higher regions of the
Desire World a New Jerusalem with pearly gates, with a sea of glass and
its great white throne upon which is seated a thought-form of God, created
by these people and appearing like an old man. This is a permanent feature
of the Desire World, and will remain so as long as people continue to
think of the New Jerusalem in that way. These forms have no life apart
from the sustained thoughts of mankind, and in time when humanity has
outgrown that faith, the city created by their thoughts will cease to
exist.
THE BORDERLAND: Purgatory occupies the
three lower Regions of the Desire World. The First Heaven is in the three
upper Regions. The central Region is a sort of borderland--neither heaven
nor hell. In this Region we find people who are honest and upright; who
wronged no one, but were deeply immersed in business and thought nothing
of the higher life. For them the Desire World is a state of indescribable
monotony. There is no "business" in that world, not is there, for a man of
that kind, anything that will take its place. he has a very hard time
until he learns to think of higher things than ledgers and drafts. The men
who thought of the problem of life and came to the conclusion that "death
ends it all," who denied the existence of things outside the material
sense world--these men also feel this dreadful monotony. They had expected
annihilation of consciousness, but instead of that they find themselves
with an augmented perception of persons and things about them. They had
been accustomed to denying these things so vehemently that they often
fancy the Desire World an hallucination, and may frequently be heard
exclaiming in the deepest despair, "When will it end? When will it end?"
Such people are really in a pitiable
state. They are generally beyond the reach of any help whatever and suffer
much longer than almost anyone else. Besides, they have scarcely any life
in the heaven world, where the building of bodies for future use is
taught, so they put all their crystallizing thoughts into whatsoever body
they build for a future life. Thus a body is built that has the hardening
tendencies we see, for instance, in consumption. Sometimes the suffering
incident to such decrepit bodies will turn the thoughts of the entities
ensouling them to God, and their evolution can proceed; but in the
materialistic mind lies the greatest danger of losing touch with the
Spirit and becoming an outcast.
THE FIRST HEAVEN: When the purgatorial
existence is over, the purified Spirit rises into the First Heaven, which
is located in the three highest Regions of the Desire World, where the
results of its sufferings are incorporated in the seed-atom of the desire
body, thus imparting to it the quality of right feeling, which acts as an
impulse to good and a deterrent from evil in the future. Here the panorama
of the past unrolls itself backward, but this time it is the good acts of
life that are the basis of feeling. When we come to scenes where we helped
others, we realize anew all the joy of helping which was ours at the time,
and in addition we feel all the gratitude poured out to us by the
recipient of our help. When we come to scenes where we were helped by
others, we again feel all the gratitude that we then felt toward our
benefactor. Thus we see the importance of appreciating the favors shown us
by others, because gratitude makes for soul growth. Our happiness in
heaven depends upon the joy we gave others, and the valuation we placed
upon what others did for us.
It should be ever borne in mind that the
power of giving is not vested chiefly in the monied man. Indiscriminate
giving of money may even be an evil. It is well to give money for a
purpose we are convinced is good, but service is a thousandfold better. A
kind look, expressions of confidence, a sympathetic and loving
helpfulness--these can be given by all regardless of wealth. Moreover, we
should particularly endeavor to help the needy one to help himself,
whether physically, financially, morally, or mentally, and not cause him
to become dependent upon us or others.
The First Heaven is a place of joy
without a single drop of bitterness. The Spirit is beyond the influence of
the material, earthly conditions, and assimilates all the good contained
in the past life as it lives it over again. Here all ennobling pursuits to
which the man aspired are realized in fullest measure. It is a place of
rest, and the harder has been the life, the more keenly will the rest be
enjoyed. Sickness, sorrow, and pain are unknown quantities. This is the
Summerland of the Spiritualists. There the thoughts of the devout
Christian have built the New Jerusalem. Beautiful houses, flowers, etc.,
are the portion of those who aspired to them; they build them themselves
by thought from the subtle desire-stuff. Nevertheless, these things are
just as real and tangible to them as our material homes are to us. All
gain here the satisfaction which Earth life lacked for them.
This heaven is also a place of
progression for all who have been studious, artistic, or altruistic. The
student and the philosopher have instant access to all the libraries of
the world. The painter has endless delight in the ever-changing color
combinations. He soon learns that his thought blends and shapes these
colors at will. His creations glow and scintillate with the dull pigments
of Earth. He is, as it were, painting with living, flowing materials and
able to execute his designs with a facility which fills his soul with
delight.
The poet finds a wonderful inspiration
in the pictures and colors which are the chief characteristics of the
Desire World. Thence he will draw the materials for use in his next
incarnation. In like manner does the author accumulate material and
faculty. The philanthropist works out his altruistic plans for the
upliftment of man. If he failed in one life, he will see the reason for it
in the First Heaven and will there learn how to overcome the obstacles and
avoid the errors that made his plan impracticable.
Our life in the First Heaven is always
blessed and filled by the presence of those we love, whether relatives or
friends. Those who love each other and are, therefore, in a sense,
necessary to each other's happiness, are united in a bond of closest
friendship during the stay in the First Heaven if they pass out at or near
the same time. If one remains in the body for a number of years after the
other has passed over, the one who is in the heaven world will, with his
or her loving thought, create an image of the other and endow it with
life; for we must remember that the Desire World is so constituted that we
are able to give bodily shape to whatever we think of. Thus, although this
image will only be ensouled by his thought and the thoughts of the other
person still living in the physical region, it embodies all the conditions
that are necessary to fill the cup of happiness of this inhabitant of the
heaven world.
Similarly, when the second person passes
on, if the first person is no longer in the First heaven but has
progressed on into the Second, the disintegrating desire body in which he
or she lived will remain in the First Heaven and seem perfectly real to
the second person until his or her life in this realm is ended. It must
not be thought that this image is pure illusion, for it is ensouled by the
love and friendship sent out by the absent one toward the person of whose
heaven they are a part.
Then, when they both pass into the
Second and Third Heavens, forgetfulness of the past comes over them, and
they may part for one or more lives without loss. But some time,
somewhere, they will meet again, and the dynamic force which they have
generated in the past by their yearnings for each other will unvaryingly
draw them together so that their love may reach its legitimate
consummation.
Children in the First Heaven lead a
particularly beautiful life. If we could but see them we would quickly
cease our grief. When a child dies before the birth of the desire body,
which takes place about the fourteenth year, it does not go any higher
than the First Heaven, because it is not responsible for its actions, any
more than the unborn child is responsible for the pain it causes the
mother by turning and twisting in her womb. Therefore the child has no
purgatorial existence. That which is not quickened cannot die, hence the
desire body of a child, together with the mind, will persist until a new
birth, and for that reason such children are very apt to remember their
previous life.
For such children the First Heaven is a
waiting-place where they dwell from one to twenty years, until an
opportunity for a new birth is offered. Yet it is more than simply a
waiting-place, because there is much progress made during this interim.
When a child dies there is always some
relative waiting for it, or, failing that, there are people who loved to
"mother" children in Earth life who find delight in taking care of a
little waif. The extreme plasticity of the desire stuff makes it easy to
form the most exquisite LIVING toys for the children, and their life is
one beautiful play; nevertheless, their instruction is not neglected. They
are formed into classes according to their temperaments, but quite
regardless of age. In the Desire World it is easy to give object-lessons
concerning the influence of good and evil passions on conduct and
happiness. These lessons are indelibly imprinted upon the child's
sensitive and emotional desire body, and remain with it after rebirth, so
that many a one living a noble life owes much of it to the fact that he
was given this training. Often, when a weak Spirit is born, the invisible
Leaders who guide our evolution cause it to die in early life that it may
have this extra training to fit it for what may perhaps be a hard life.
This seems to be the case particularly where the etching on the desire
body was weak in consequence of a dying person having been disturbed by
the lamentations of his relatives, or because he met death by accident or
on the battlefield. He did not, under these circumstances, experience the
appropriate intensity of feeling in his post-mortem existence. Therefore,
he is caused to be reborn and die in childhood in his next Earth life, so
that the loss can be made up. Often the duty of caring for such a child in
the heaven life falls to those who are the cause of the anomaly. They are
thus afforded a chance to make up for the fault and to learn better. Or
perhaps they become the parents of the one they harmed and care for it
during the few years that it lives. It does not matter then if they do
lament hysterically over its death, because there would be no pictures of
any consequence in a child's vital body.
THE SECOND HEAVEN--REGION OF CONCRETE
THOUGHT: In time a point is reached where the result of the pain and
suffering incident to purgation, together with the joy extracted from the
good actions of the past life, have been built into the seed-atom of the
desire body. Together these constitute what we call conscience, that
impelling force which warns us against evil as productive of pain and
inclines us toward good as productive of happiness and joy. Then man
leaves his desire body to disintegrate, as he left his dense and vital
bodies. He takes with him the forces only of the seed-atom, which are to
form the nucleus of future desire bodies, as it was the persistent
particle of his past vehicles of feeling.
At last the man, the Ego, the threefold
Spirit, enters the Second Heaven. He is clad in the sheath of mind, which
contains the three seed-atoms--the quintessence of the three discarded
vehicles.
When the man dies and loses his dense
and vital bodies, there is the same condition as when one falls asleep.
The desire body had no organs ready for use. It is now transformed from an
ovoid to a figure resembling the dense body which has been abandoned. We
can easily understand that there must be an interval of unconsciousness
resembling sleep and then the man awakes in the Desire World. It not
infrequently happens, however, that such people are, for a long time,
unaware of what has happened to them. They do not realize that they have
died. They know that they are able to move and think. It is sometimes even
a very hard matter to get them to believe that they are really "dead."
They realize that something is different, but that they are not able to
understand what it is.
Not so, however, when the change is made
from the First Heaven, which is in the Desire World, to the Second Heaven,
which is in the Region of Concrete Thought. Then the man leaves his desire
body. He is perfectly conscious. He passes into a great stillness. For the
time being everything seems to fade away. He cannot think. No faculty is
alive, yet he knows that he IS. He has a feeling of standing in "The Great
Forever"; of standing utterly alone, yet unafraid; and his being is filled
with a wonderful peace, "which passeth all understanding." In occult
science this is called THE GREAT SILENCE.
Then comes the awakening. The Spirit is
now in its home world--heaven. Here the first awakening brings to the
Spirit the sound of "the music of the spheres." In our Earth life we are
so immersed in the little noises and sounds of our limited environment
that we are incapable of hearing the music of the marching orbs, but the
occult scientist hears it. He knows that the twelve signs of the zodiac
and the seven planets form the sounding-board and strings of "Apollo's
seven-stringed lyre." He knows that were a single discord to mar the
celestial harmony from that grand Instrument there would be "a wreck of
matter and a crash of worlds. Celestial music is a fact and not a mere
figure of speech. Pythagoras was not romancing when he spoke of the music
of the sphere, for each one of the heavenly orbs has its definite tone,
and together they sound the celestial symphony which Goethe also mentions
in the prologue to his FAUST.
Echoes of that heavenly music reach us
even here in the Physical World. They are our most precious possession,
even though they are as elusive as a will-o-the-wisp, and cannot be
PERMANENTLY created here as can other works of art such as a statue or a
book. The World of Thought, however, where the Second and Third Heavens
are located, is the sphere of tone, and the musician here finally reaches
the place where his art will express itself to the fullest extent.
The power of rhythmic vibration is well
known to all who have given the subject even the least study. For
instance, soldiers are commanded to break step when crossing a bridge,
otherwise their rhythmic tramp would shatter the strongest structure. The
Bible story of the sounding of the ram's horn while marching around the
walls of the city of Jericho is not nonsensical in the eyes of the
occultist. (Joshua 6:13-20; Hebrews 11:30). In some cases similar things
have happened without the world smiling in supercilious incredulity. A few
years ago a band of musicians were practicing in a garden close to the
very solid wall of an old castle. There occurred at a certain place in the
music a prolonged and very piercing tone. When this note was sounded the
wall of the castle suddenly fell. The musicians had struck the keynote of
the wall and it was sufficiently prolonged to shatter it.
When it is said that this is the world
of tone, it must not be thought that there are no colors. Many people know
that there is an intimate connection between color and tone; that when a
certain note is struck, a certain color appears simultaneously. So it is
also in the heaven world. Color and sound are both present; but the tone
is the originator of the color. Hence it is said that this is particularly
the world of tone, and it is this tone that builds all forms in the
Physical World. The musician can hear certain tones in different parts of
Nature, such as the wind in the forest, the breaking of the surf on the
beach, the roar of the ocean, and the sounding of many waters. These
combined tones make a whole which is the keynote of the Earth--its "tone."
As geometrical figures are created by drawing a violin bow over the edge
of a glass plate, so the forms we see around us are the crystallized
sound-figures of the archetypal forces which play into the archetype in
the heaven world.
The life in the Second Heaven is an
exceedingly active one, varied in many different ways. The Ego assimilates
the fruits of the last Earth life and prepares the environment for a new
physical existence. The Second Heaven is the real home of man--the Ego,
the Thinker. Here he dwells for centuries, using the sound or tone which
pervades this Region as his instrument, so to speak.
It is this harmonious sound vibration
which, as an elixir of life, builds into the threefold Spirit the
quintessence of the threefold body, upon which it depends for growth. This
spiritualization of the vehicle is accomplished by cultivation, during
earthly life, of the faculties of observation, discrimination, memory,
devotion to high ideals, prayer, concentration, persistence, and right use
of the life forces.
As much of the desire body as the man
had worked upon during life by purifying his desires and emotions will be
welded into the Human Spirit, thus giving an improved mind in the future.
As much of the vital body as the Life Spirit had worked upon, transformed,
spiritualized, and thus saved from the decay to which the rest of the
vital body is subject, will be amalgamated with the Life Spirit to insure
a better vital body and temperament in the succeeding lives. As much of
the dense body as the Divine Spirit has saved by right action will be
worked into it and will bring better environment and opportunities.
It is not enough, however, to say that
conditions in the forthcoming life on Earth will be determined by conduct
and action in the life just ended. It is required that the fruits of the
past be worked into the world which is to be the next scene of activity
while the Ego is gaining fresh physical experiences and gathering further
fruit. Therefore all the denizens of the heaven world work upon the models
of the Earth, all of which are in the Region of Concrete Thought. They
alter the physical features of the Earth, and bring about the gradual
changes which vary its appearance, so that on each return to physical life
a different environment has been prepared, wherein new experiences may be
gained. Climate, flora, and fauna are altered by man under the direction
of higher Beings. Thus the world is just what we ourselves, individually
and collectively, have made it; and it will be what we make it. The occult
scientist sees in everything that happens a cause of a spiritual nature
manifesting itself, not omitting the prevalence and alarmingly increasing
frequency of seismic disturbances, which it traces to the materialistic
thought of modern science.
Man's work in the heaven world is not
confined solely to the alteration of the surface of the Earth which is to
be the scene of his future struggles in the subjugation of the Physical
World. He is also actively engaged in learning how to build a body which
will afford a better means of expression. It is man's destiny to become a
Creative Intelligence and he is serving his apprenticeship all the time.
During his heaven life he is learning to build all kinds of bodies--the
human included.
Man is directed in this work by Teachers
from the higher creative Hierarchies, which helped him to build his
vehicles before he attained self- consciousness, in the same way he
himself now builds his bodies in sleep. During heaven life they teach him
consciously. The painter is taught to build an accurate eye, capable of
taking in a perfect perspective and of distinguishing colors and shades to
a degree inconceivable among those not interested in color and light.
The mathematician has to deal with
space, and the faculty for space perception is connected with the delicate
adjustment of the three semi- circular canals which are situated inside
the ear, each pointing in one of the three dimensions in space. Logical
thought and mathematical ability are in proportion to the accuracy of the
adjustment of these semi-circular canals.
Musical ability is also dependent upon
the same factor, but, in addition to the necessity for the proper
adjustment of the semi-circular canals, the musician requires extreme
delicacy of the "fibres of Corti," of which there are about ten thousand
in the human ear, each capable of interpreting about twenty-five
gradations of tone. In the ears of the majority of people they do not
respond to more than from three to ten of the possible gradations, but the
master musician requires a greater range to be able to distinguish the
different notes and detect the slightest discord in the most complicated
chords.
The instrument through which man senses
music is the most perfect sense organ in the human body. The eye is not by
any means true, but the ear is, in the sense that it hears every sound
without distortion, while the eye often distorts what it sees.
In addition to the musical ear, the
musician must also learn to build a long, fine hand with slender fingers
and sensitive nerves, otherwise he would not be able to reproduce the
melodies he hears.
It is a law of Nature that no one can
inhabit a more efficient body than he is capable of building. He first
learns to build a certain grade of body and afterwards he learns to live
in it. In that way he discovers its defects and is taught how to remedy
them.
All men work unconsciously at the
building of their bodies during ante- natal life until they have reached
the point where the quintessence of former bodies--which they have
saved--is to be built in. Then they work consciously. It will, therefore,
be seen that the more a man advances and the more he works on his
vehicles, thus making them immortal, the more power he has to build for a
new life. The advanced pupil of an occult school sometimes commences to
build for himself as soon as the work during the first three weeks (which
belongs exclusively to the mother) has been completed. When the period of
unconscious building has passed the man has a chance to exercise his
nascent creative power, and the true original creative
process--EPIGENESIS--begins.
Thus we see that man learns to BUILD his
vehicles in the heaven world, and to USE them in the Physical World.
Nature provides all phases of experience in such a marvelous manner and
with such consummate wisdom that as we learn to see deeper and deeper into
her secrets we are more and more impressed with our own insignificance and
with an ever-growing reverence for God, whose visible symbol is Nature.
The more we learn of her wonders, the more we realize that this world
system is not the vast perpetual motion machine unthinking people would
have us believe. It would be quite as logical to think that if we toss a
box of loose type into the air the characters will have arranged
themselves into the words of a beautiful poem by the time they reach the
ground. The greater the complexity of the plan the greater the argumental
weight in favor of the theory of an intelligent Divine Author.
THE THIRD HEAVEN--REGION OF ABSTRACT
THOUGHT: Having assimilated all the fruits of his last life and altered
the appearance of the Earth in such a manner as to afford him the
necessary environment for his next step towards perfection; having also
learned by work on the bodies of others, to build a suitable body through
which to express himself in the Physical World, and having at last
resolved himself in the Physical World, and having at last resolved the
mind into the essence which builds the threefold Spirit, the naked
individual Spirit ascends into the higher Region of the World of
Thought--the Third Heaven. "I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years
ago (whether in the body, I cannot tell; or whether out of the body I
cannot tell; God knoweth;) such as one caught up to the third heaven."--II
Cor. 12:2 Here by the ineffable harmony of this higher world, it is
strengthened for its next dip into matter.
After a time comes the desire for new
experience and the contemplation of a new birth. This conjures up a series
of pictures before the vision of the Spirit--a panorama of the new life in
store for it. But--mark this well--this panorama contains only the
principal events. The Spirit has free will as to detail. It is as if a man
going to a distant city had a time-limit ticket, with initial choice of
route. After he has chosen and begun his journey it is not sure that he
can change to another route during the trip. He may stop over in as many
places as he wishes, within his time limit, but he cannot go back. Thus as
he proceeds on his journey, he becomes more and more limited by his
choice. If he has chosen a steam road, using soft coal. He must expect to
be soiled and dusty. Had he chosen a road using anthracite or using
electricity, he would have been cleaner. So it is with the man in a new
life. He may have to live a hard life, but he is free to choose whether he
will live it cleanly or wallow in the mire. Other conditions are also
within his control, subject to the limits of his past choices and acts.
The pictures in the panorama of the
coming life begin at the cradle and end at the grave. This is the opposite
direction to that in which they travel in the after-death panorama which
passes before the Spirit immediately following its release from the dense
body. The reason for this radical difference in the two panoramas is that
in the before-birth panorama the object is to show the returning Ego how
certain CAUSES or acts always PRODUCE certain EFFECTS. In the case of the
after-death panorama the object is the reverse, that is, to show how each
EVENT in the past life was the EFFECT of some CAUSE further back in the
life. Nature, or God, does nothing without a logical reason, and the
farther we search the more apparent it becomes to us that Nature is a wise
mother, always using the best means to accomplish her ends.
DIAGRAM
NO. 5: The Tenfold Constitution of Man
End of THE PASSING--AND LIFE AFTERWARD
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